Spellbinders

Spellbinders is a comic book published by Marvel Comics, as part of that company's Marvel Next imprint. It was a six-issue limited series written by Mike Carey with art by Mike Perkins. It is part of the Marvel Universe, though it features no obvious links to other titles.[1]

Spellbinders
Cover to Spellbinders #1
Picture from left to right Mason, Renata, Paul, Kim, Foley, Mink and Liza Beth
Art by Mike Perkins
Publication information
PublisherMarvel Next (Marvel Comics)
ScheduleMonthly
FormatLimited series
Publication dateMay - October 2005
No. of issues6
Creative team
Created byMike Carey
Mike Perkins.
Written byMike Carey
Penciller(s)Mike Perkins
Inker(s)Drew Hennessy
Colorist(s)GuruFX

The series is set around John Hathorne High School, a fictional high school in Salem, Massachusetts, where magic is accepted as a fact. There are rivalries between magical students ('wicks') and non-magical students ('blanks'), and between the various covens. The story centers around Kim Vesco, a girl who has strange dreams and an interest in sculpture.

Creation and publication series

At the time Carey was mainly associated with DC Comics, particularly their mature readers Vertigo Comics line and the title Lucifer; he hoped the series would help him get away from being pigeonholed as a 'dark' writer. He referred to the title as a "magical horror fantasy". While Carey was an avowed fan of Joss Whedon television series Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Angel, he stated most of the ideas for Spellbinders came from brainstorming sessions with editor Mackenzie Cadenhead, and his recent reading of Garth Nix's Abhorsen fantasy novels. He also denied any similarities to W.I.T.C.H. or WildStorm's The Intimates.[1]

Synopsis

Kim Vespa and her family move to Salem from Chicago. On her first day she meets neighbour Chad Barrow, who tells her she'll be fine in school - as long as she isn't a nerd or a 'wick'. Her first day at school is rough; she is attacked by an air elemental, but is saved by two wicks, Mink and Liza Beth. Later at home, she is attacked by a wall.[2] After the wall attacks her Kim discovers that she can talk to ghosts when she spirit-walks and accidentally summons a horde of ghosts. One of the ghosts tells her that she has to weld the Salem covens into a single unit, a Seven. Another ghost warns her 'not to go to the pillar'. At a science class, the bunsen burners explode and the lab catches fire. Kim saves herself by making a mora poultice that smothers the fire. Chad asks her to go to a party; when he asks her about her parents, she mentions that she is adopted. The Salem witches reason that if Kim is adopted, she may be one of them. On the night of the party, they secretly guard her against all forms of magical attack.[3]

At the party, the lights go out and someone attacks Kim with a knife. Realising they have not protected Kim against physical attack, the Salem witches rush to the party just in time to see Kim running from a wolf-monster. Shapeshifter Renata changes into another wolf creature, and the two fight until the thing sees the rest of the witches arriving, turns into a flock of birds and flies away. The Salem witches drag Kim away from the party before the police arrive, and explain the secret history of the witch families of Salem - they are descendants of refugees from 'somewhere else' who came to Salem fleeing the Thief, an occult being. They brought an artifact called the Pillar of Smoke with them, and certain families can work certain kinds of magic. When they offer to take her to the Pillar, Kim declines on the grounds that the ghost told her not to. She goes home, to discover that something trashed her sculpture tools. Meanwhile, Chad is revealed as the one from the party who tried to kill Kim.[4]

Kim finally agrees to go to the Pillar of Smoke and the witches take her to the woods near Salem. They meet Apocaledon, the guardian of the pillar. Along the way, Kim realises that witches have been dying in unusual circumstances involving their powers backfiring and killing them. The group gets to the Pillar, unaware that Chad is following them, and discovers that Kim is a witch - but have no idea what her powers are. Suddenly, the wrecked body of Apocaledon falls into the clearing followed by Chad, who reveals that he is a new version of the Thief, a witch who can copy the powers of other Salem witches. He explains that mutations within the humans of Salem built up over years of interbreeding with the witches eventually culminated in a new Thief. He then easily defeats the group and destroys the Pillar.[5]

When the group wakes up, they find themselves in a washed-out world, where their magics won't work fully. They realise that this must be the 'somewhere else' the Salem witches came from. Kim and seer Foley make contact with a ghost, who tells them to apologise to the Pillar. Kim does so; magical energy shoots out of the remains of the Pillar and the pair find themselves in a white space where a line of corpses are guarded by flying skeletons. Meanwhile, the rest of the group encounters the original Thief but escape by pooling their powers and teleporting back to Salem. While they were away Chad has stolen the powers of every witch in town and is now using their powers to bring his girlfriend back to life.[6] In the land of the dead Kim and Foley are confronted by the flying skeletons. They tell Kim that she is the Gatekeeper, chosen by the Pillar to guard the way between the lands of the living and dead and mend breaches made by magic. Back in Salem, Chad has resurrected his girlfriend and has Kim's friends trapped within one of their own spells. They break free just as Kim and Foley arrive. The whole group confronts with Chad; using her necromancy powers, Kim first frees Chad's girlfriend from his control and then lets her die again. Because she is bound to him, Chad dies as well. In the afterlife, Chad is punished by the skeletons for raising the dead and the girlfriend is taken to the next life.

The group of witches leave the school. Before she leaves, Kim notices a small lizard - one of the first witch casualties, a wick boy who died the night Kim was summoned to Salem. She tells it to hold on, as things are starting to work out.[7]

Collected editions

Like other Marvel Next titles, Spellbinders was collected in a digest-sized trade paperback shortly after publication. In 2012 it was again collected, this time in a full-size volume.

TitleISBNRelease dateIssues
Spellbinders: Signs and Wonders 9780785117568 26 October 2005 Spellbinders #1-6
Spellbinders: Signs and Wonders 9780785164883 11 July 2012 Spellbinders #1-6

Reception

While the series was planned as a 6-issue limited series, Carey and Perkins said they would consider working on any further adventures for the characters, depending on the success of Spellbinders. [1] This never happened, but even though Spellbinders was one of the less successful Marvel Next titles the publisher would later revisit the idea of a magical school in the Marvel Universe.[8]

References

  1. "Magic Mikey: Mike Carey talks "Spellbinders" | Comic Book Resources". web.archive.org. March 3, 2016.
  2. Mike Carey (w), Mike Perkins (p), Drew Hennessy (i). "Signs and Wonders Part 1 of 6" Spellbinders #1 (May 2005), Marvel Comics
  3. Mike Carey (w), Mike Perkins (p), Drew Hennessy (i). "Signs and Wonders Part 2 of 6" Spellbinders #2 (June 2005), Marvel Comics
  4. Mike Carey (w), Mike Perkins (p), Drew Hennessy (i). "Signs and Wonders Part 3 of 6" Spellbinders #3 (July 2005), Marvel Comics
  5. Mike Carey (w), Mike Perkins (p), Drew Hennessy (i). "Signs and Wonders Part 4 of 6" Spellbinders #4 (August 2005), Marvel Comics
  6. Mike Carey (w), Mike Perkins (p), Drew Hennessy (i). "Signs and Wonders Part 5 of 6" Spellbinders #5 (September 2005), Marvel Comics
  7. Mike Carey (w), Mike Perkins (p), Drew Hennessy (i). "Signs and Wonders Part 6 of 6" Spellbinders #6 (October 2005), Marvel Comics
  8. "A Guide To Marvel's Lines And Imprints". CBSI Comics. October 20, 2022.
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