Massimo Belardinelli

Massimo Belardinelli
Born (1938-06-05)June 5, 1938
Died March 31, 2007(2007-03-31) (aged 68)
Nationality Italian
Notable works
Ace Trucking Co.

Massimo Belardinelli (5 June 1938;[1] - 31 March 2007)[2] was an Italian comics artist best known for his work in the British science fiction comic 2000 AD.

Biography

Early work

Belardinelli was born in Rome. His father was an amateur oil painter.[1] Inspired by the Disney film Fantasia, Belardinelli went into animation in the 1960s,[3] painting backgrounds for films produced by the Sergio Rosi studio. He then moved into comics, again through the Rosi studio, drawing backgrounds for "The Steel Claw" in the British weekly Valiant in a team which also included Giorgio Cambiotti on pencils and Sergio Rosi himself on inks. In 1969 he moved to the Giolitti Studio, which got him work in Italy, Germany, the UK and the USA.[1] He collaborated with Alberto Giolitti on Gold Key Comics' Star Trek series in the USA, with Giolitti drawing the characters and Belardinelli the spaceships.[3] In the UK in the mid-70s he drew "Rat Pack" for Battle Picture Weekly and "Death Game 1999" and "Green's Grudge War" for Action.[1]

2000 AD

When 2000 AD was in preparation in 1977, an artist was needed for the revamped "Dan Dare", and Belardinelli tried out for no pay and got the job,[4]:pp. 19–20 and the rare honour of a byline,[5] despite editor Pat Mills' reservations: although he excelled at visualising aliens, alien technology and alien landscapes,[6] Mills thought "the hero looked awful".[4]:pp. 19–20 Belardinelli's work on the strip was not popular, and after a year he was switched to future sports series "Inferno", the sequel to the popular "Harlem Heroes",[1] while former "Harlem Heroes" artist Dave Gibbons took over "Dan Dare".[4]:p. 37

Belardinelli then drew the second series of "Flesh", in which the time-travelling meat-farmers moved into the prehistoric oceans, in 1978-9. He also drew "The Angry Planet", a sci-fi serial set on colonised Mars, written by Alan Hebden, for Tornado in 1979, and then took over "Blackhawk", Gerry Finley-Day's strip about a Nubian slave who became a Roman centurion, when Tornado merged into 2000 AD later in the year. The strip was given a sci-fi twist by new writers Alan Grant and Kelvin Gosnell, with the hero being abducted by aliens and forced to fight in a galactic arena.[1] Grant believes the strip's popularity was down to Belardinelli's art.[4]:p. 66

"Meltdown Man", a year-long cliffhanger serial written by Alen Hebden, followed in 1980-81, in which an SAS officer was caught in a nuclear explosion and blasted into a future where humans have enslaved genetically-engineered humanoid animals, and leads the fight for their liberation.[4]:77–78 In 1981 writers John Wagner and Alan Grant created a new series for him, space haulage comedy "Ace Trucking Co.". Grant says they wanted to exploit Belardinelli's "fevered imagination" and wrote a series which featured "as few actual human beings as possible" - almost all the characters were aliens.[1]

Belardinelli also drew several storylines of the Celtic barbarian strip "Sláine" in 1983-84, whose writer, Pat Mills, selected him to visualise the hero's body-distorting "warp spasm".[1] Although his strips were popular with the general readership, the fan audience never really took to him, and his "Sláine" stories were not collected by Titan Books.[7]

Later work

His last major 2000 AD strips were "The Dead", written by Peter Milligan (1987) - a philosophical yet psychedelic series set in a future where an evolved human race thinks it has conquered death, until demons start erupting from their bodies, and the hero, Fludd, has to travel to the land of the dead to save mankind[1] - violent future sport series "Mean Team" (1985, 1987)[4]:p. 107 and space opera "Moonrunners" (1988–89).[4]:p. 126 He also drew "Joe Alien" for short-lived younger-readers sci-fi comic Wildcat, in 1988. Among his last comic work in the UK was for Fleetway's Teenage Mutant Hero Turtles comic in the early 1990s.[1]

He stopped working in British comics in 1993 when his agent, Alberto Giolitti, died.[8] Having suffered from heart problems,[9] Belardinelli died on 31 March 2007.[2]

Bibliography

Comics work includes:

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Michael Molcher, "Belardinelli: Loving the Alien", Judge Dredd Megazine #259, 26 June 2007
  2. 1 2 Massimo Belardinelli on Lambiek Comiclopedia
  3. 1 2 Romano Felmang, The Massimo Belardinelli Interview, Ink #39, June 2006, translated from the Italian at ComicBitsOnline, 6 September 2010
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 David Bishop, Thrill Power Overload, Rebellion, 2009
  5. David Bishop, 28 Days of 2000 AD #3.1: Kevin O'Neill talks, Vicious Imagery, 3 February 2007
  6. Patrick Brown, Reappraising 2000AD's Dan Dare revival, 18 February 2011
  7. Massimo Belardinelli 1938 - 2007: A Tribute by Pat Mills, Down the Tubes, April 2007
  8. Steve Holland, Comic Clippings - 14 April 2007
  9. Steve Holland, Massimo Belardinelli, Bear Alley, 18 August 2006]

References

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