Flesh of my Flesh (Marvel)
Where: Master of Kung Fu #118 When: November 1982 Why: Doug Moench How: Gene Day
The Story So Far...
A deck of cards spilled by the assassin Death-Dealer reveals the Honan fortress of Wang Yu-Seng -- alter-ego of the international criminal mastermind Dr. Fu Manchu!
For Shang-Chi, the Chinese retreat is a homecoming. The Master of Kung Fu spent his formative days training within its walls. Beckoned by a note left with one of his father's hideous scientific creations, he parachutes in for a final showdown with the man who literally wants his blood to enhance the Elixir Vitae -- serum of youth and vitality!
Accompanied by MI6 agents, Jack "Blackjack" Tarr and Clive Reston, Shang-Chi defeats the many loyal factions of Fu Manchu in the so-called "Madness of the Running Beasts". It will be but one of many challenges faced when Shang-Chi confronts his past and his destiny, where the villainous Death-Dealer waits!
Tale of the Tape...
Strength: Draw 2 (Average)
Intelligence: Draw 3 (Straight A)
Speed: Draw 3 (Athlete)
Stamina: Draw 4 (Athlete)
Agility: Shang-Chi 4 (Gymnast)
Fighting: Shang-Chi 7 (Living Weapon)
Energy: Death-Dealer 3 (Explosives)
Total: Draw 24 (Champion)
Li Ching-Lin was a double-agent embedded within MI6 who was secretly working for Fu Manchu. His brutal methods made him a priority target for the British intelligence agency, who soon deployed Shang-Chi to take him out!
Where: Master of Kung Fu #118 When: November 1982 Why: Doug Moench How: Gene Day
The Story So Far...
A deck of cards spilled by the assassin Death-Dealer reveals the Honan fortress of Wang Yu-Seng -- alter-ego of the international criminal mastermind Dr. Fu Manchu!
For Shang-Chi, the Chinese retreat is a homecoming. The Master of Kung Fu spent his formative days training within its walls. Beckoned by a note left with one of his father's hideous scientific creations, he parachutes in for a final showdown with the man who literally wants his blood to enhance the Elixir Vitae -- serum of youth and vitality!
Accompanied by MI6 agents, Jack "Blackjack" Tarr and Clive Reston, Shang-Chi defeats the many loyal factions of Fu Manchu in the so-called "Madness of the Running Beasts". It will be but one of many challenges faced when Shang-Chi confronts his past and his destiny, where the villainous Death-Dealer waits!
Tale of the Tape...
Strength: Draw 2 (Average)
Intelligence: Draw 3 (Straight A)
Speed: Draw 3 (Athlete)
Stamina: Draw 4 (Athlete)
Agility: Shang-Chi 4 (Gymnast)
Fighting: Shang-Chi 7 (Living Weapon)
Energy: Death-Dealer 3 (Explosives)
Total: Draw 24 (Champion)
Li Ching-Lin was a double-agent embedded within MI6 who was secretly working for Fu Manchu. His brutal methods made him a priority target for the British intelligence agency, who soon deployed Shang-Chi to take him out!
In his original incarnation: Shang-Chi was the son of Sax Rohmer's controversial literary villain Fu Manchu, and an American woman who was chosen by the fiend for beneficial genetic characteristics.
He was trained intensively from birth to be a master of multiple forms of martial arts: Fu Manchu's living weapon! However, on a mission he soon learned his father was not the hero he'd claimed to be, and swore to destroy his evil empire!
In doing so, Shang-Chi chose to align himself with Denis Nayland Smith, and MI6, entering a world of espionage and adventure. He travelled the world fighting evil, crossing paths with a parade of assassins and killers from its four corners.
Li Ching-Lin received the codename Death-Dealer from his master, wielding a sword of three blades, and wearing a costume with the death's head for a mask.
He fought Shang-Chi multiple times in England, and although he isn't as proficient a fighter as the Master of Kung Fu, his disregard for humanity and use of modern arms, such as grenades, has made him an incredibly lethal adversary.
We know from a much later battle that Death-Dealer sired a son of his own. Huo Li (LI Huo) took up his father's vendetta and tracked Shang-Chi to Hong Kong, but the son was unsuccessful in his bloodfued. Did his father fare better? If you've read about that encounter you already know the answer! Let's take a look...
He was trained intensively from birth to be a master of multiple forms of martial arts: Fu Manchu's living weapon! However, on a mission he soon learned his father was not the hero he'd claimed to be, and swore to destroy his evil empire!
In doing so, Shang-Chi chose to align himself with Denis Nayland Smith, and MI6, entering a world of espionage and adventure. He travelled the world fighting evil, crossing paths with a parade of assassins and killers from its four corners.
Li Ching-Lin received the codename Death-Dealer from his master, wielding a sword of three blades, and wearing a costume with the death's head for a mask.
He fought Shang-Chi multiple times in England, and although he isn't as proficient a fighter as the Master of Kung Fu, his disregard for humanity and use of modern arms, such as grenades, has made him an incredibly lethal adversary.
We know from a much later battle that Death-Dealer sired a son of his own. Huo Li (LI Huo) took up his father's vendetta and tracked Shang-Chi to Hong Kong, but the son was unsuccessful in his bloodfued. Did his father fare better? If you've read about that encounter you already know the answer! Let's take a look...
The Tape: Draw Ranking: Shang-Chi (#334)
What Went Down...
Penetrating deep into Fu Manchu's Honan fortress, Shang-Chi becomes lost in the chamber of his own thoughts as he confronts the secrets of a room forbidden to him during his formative years.
Inside the silent quarters is evidence of a life lived in parallel -- a genetic clone raised exactly as he was -- but that isn't all that lurks within these shadows...
Shang-Chi's blood streams through the air as a stinging pain snaps him out of deep thought.
The martial artist has allowed distraction to enter his mind and paid the price on the sharp edge of Death-Dealer's blade!
The assassin lunges with his three-pronged sword, but Shang-Chi side steps -- driving his elbow into the Death-Dealer's stomach. A good counterstrike, but the assassin never the less pushes him towards the fire of a nearby incense brazier.
The tall ,torch-like stand impedes his movement as Shang-Chi pivots away from his attacker. Death-Dealer responds with his free hand, delivering an overhanded chop into Shang-Chi's naked shoulder while also raising his sword!
The skull-masked killer prepares a downward strike with the middle blade of his sword, but Shang-Chi grabs the brazier and swings it wildly!
The fire whips across Death-Dealer's body and the burning embers begin to ignite the dark materials of his costume!
The white "death-mask" rapidly burns away, revealing Li Ching-Lin's face -- twisting with agony as his body is engulfed in flame!
Death-Dealer's lone scream tapers into a "bubbling moan" as his spasming body disappears into the raging fire.
The writhing body dances into the "whining" flame and Shang-Chi holds his head in his hands for just a moment, struck by the awful sound.
The martial artist's back straightens as he steels himself for the tasks ahead and accepts his role in dealing death to the Death-Dealer: a killer who has come for him many times before, but will enact his brutality no more.
I was surprised and thrilled when 2009's Shang-Chi: Master of Kung Fu One-Shot introduced a new character called Huo Li, (LI Huo in Chinese naming convention), whose backstory specifically connected with the original run of Master of Kung Fu.
Marvel's short-lived black & white retro specials obviously owed a debt to their roots in the 1970s, but I hadn't expected anything quite so detailed from its throwback reference. After all, that issue in particular was one that featured the decisively nineties creation and noughties phenomenon, Deadpool, on the cover.
Li Huo carried his father's three-bladed sword in the name of revenge, but otherwise required very little specific knowledge about Death-Dealer: a character who first appeared in Master of Kung Fu #115 and, as we've seen, only made it as far as three issues before meeting his grisly demise at the hands of Shang-Chi.
The fight with Li Ching-Lin is only one panel more than a single page, but it certainly leaves an impression. Such is the sometimes fast and cruel nature of Shang-Chi's world, which owed a heavy debt to the lethal kung fu and espionage genre films of the sixties and seventies: also a peak period for Sax Rohmer's 1913 creation, Dr. Fu Manchu, in cinema, portrayed by Christopher Lee.
Although the controversial pulp villain was embedded in Marvel canon as Shang-Chi's father, the creation of the Deadly Hands of Kung Fu and Master of Kung Fu comic book series, as well as their starring character, is most specifically tied to the legacy of Bruce Lee.
The fusion of modern kung fu and Ian Fleming style espionage is right there in 1973's Enter the Dragon -- released theatrically right around the time Marvel created Shang-Chi for the December cover-dated Special Marvel Edition #15.
In the film: Bruce Lee's character is persuaded to collaborate with British intelligence by attending a martial arts tournament on an island that doubles as the fortress lair for an international crime baron. It's a James Bond plot with a slightly harder edge and fighting you can actually believe in. Bruce Lee's specialty!
Fast-paced kung fu action may've made Lee an international icon around the world, but on the comic book page these references could sometimes read a little bit dry, so it's always welcome to see costumed enemies like Death-Dealer add a little extra colour and spice to the martial arts-spy action.
I absolutely love the iconic simplicity of Death-Dealer's design and character, cut from the same cloth that inspired G.I. Joe's revamp in 1982.
The ever-present threat of death may have complimented the pulp atmosphere of Shang-Chi's adventures, but it seems a real shame a character like Death-Dealer was so casually killed off. He's exactly the kind of remorseless costumed killer that could've outlived his Fu Manchu ties to become a staple Marvel mercenary.
To the best of my knowledge: Li Huo hasn't made any subsequent appearances since his debut in the black & white one-shot, either. Which gives me some shred of hope that he might yet make a return to comics wearing his father's regalia, especially now that a version of Death-Dealer is set to appear on the big screen in Marvel's Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings.
No doubt we'll be taking a closer look at more of the comic book originals that have inspired the movie, but if you'd like to get more of Death-Dealer's story, you can find the entirety of his existence in The Hands of Shang-Chi: Master of Kung Fu Omnibus Volume 4.
Marvel's short-lived black & white retro specials obviously owed a debt to their roots in the 1970s, but I hadn't expected anything quite so detailed from its throwback reference. After all, that issue in particular was one that featured the decisively nineties creation and noughties phenomenon, Deadpool, on the cover.
Li Huo carried his father's three-bladed sword in the name of revenge, but otherwise required very little specific knowledge about Death-Dealer: a character who first appeared in Master of Kung Fu #115 and, as we've seen, only made it as far as three issues before meeting his grisly demise at the hands of Shang-Chi.
The fight with Li Ching-Lin is only one panel more than a single page, but it certainly leaves an impression. Such is the sometimes fast and cruel nature of Shang-Chi's world, which owed a heavy debt to the lethal kung fu and espionage genre films of the sixties and seventies: also a peak period for Sax Rohmer's 1913 creation, Dr. Fu Manchu, in cinema, portrayed by Christopher Lee.
Although the controversial pulp villain was embedded in Marvel canon as Shang-Chi's father, the creation of the Deadly Hands of Kung Fu and Master of Kung Fu comic book series, as well as their starring character, is most specifically tied to the legacy of Bruce Lee.
The fusion of modern kung fu and Ian Fleming style espionage is right there in 1973's Enter the Dragon -- released theatrically right around the time Marvel created Shang-Chi for the December cover-dated Special Marvel Edition #15.
In the film: Bruce Lee's character is persuaded to collaborate with British intelligence by attending a martial arts tournament on an island that doubles as the fortress lair for an international crime baron. It's a James Bond plot with a slightly harder edge and fighting you can actually believe in. Bruce Lee's specialty!
Fast-paced kung fu action may've made Lee an international icon around the world, but on the comic book page these references could sometimes read a little bit dry, so it's always welcome to see costumed enemies like Death-Dealer add a little extra colour and spice to the martial arts-spy action.
I absolutely love the iconic simplicity of Death-Dealer's design and character, cut from the same cloth that inspired G.I. Joe's revamp in 1982.
The ever-present threat of death may have complimented the pulp atmosphere of Shang-Chi's adventures, but it seems a real shame a character like Death-Dealer was so casually killed off. He's exactly the kind of remorseless costumed killer that could've outlived his Fu Manchu ties to become a staple Marvel mercenary.
To the best of my knowledge: Li Huo hasn't made any subsequent appearances since his debut in the black & white one-shot, either. Which gives me some shred of hope that he might yet make a return to comics wearing his father's regalia, especially now that a version of Death-Dealer is set to appear on the big screen in Marvel's Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings.
No doubt we'll be taking a closer look at more of the comic book originals that have inspired the movie, but if you'd like to get more of Death-Dealer's story, you can find the entirety of his existence in The Hands of Shang-Chi: Master of Kung Fu Omnibus Volume 4.
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Winner: Shang-Chi
#106 (+228) Shang-Chi [+1 kill]
#961 (new) Death-Dealer
#106 (+228) Shang-Chi [+1 kill]
#961 (new) Death-Dealer
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