I really need to read again the graphic novel Modesty Blaise, produced in colour in 1994, published by DC comics and illustrated by the great Dick Giordano, which was a direct adaptation of Peter O’Donnell’s original book, first published in 1963 that introduced the dynamic anti-heroine to the spy thriller genre in the midst of the Cold War. As is well-known, O’Donnell wrote the novel a little speculatively, creating an admittedly exotic, female version of James Bond. But Modesty Blaise was always a lot more than a feminised version of Ian Fleming’s super-spy. Modesty’s origin story, richly illustrated in this comic book, was a world away from Bond’s privately-educated hyper masculine Englishman. Forging a life on the streets of Tangiers, O'Donnell's orphaned character rose to become an underworld queen, ruling a criminal organisation known as The Network, with her platonic companion, the cockney knifeman, Willie Garvin, always at her side. After cashing in on her criminal enterprise, the always curiously moral Blaise was recruited into British intelligence where she battled Communist spies and infiltration, together with bad guys of all persuasions, frequently using her former criminal associates to help her fulfil her missions. Modesty however always remained her own woman and in the post-Cold War years, developed a much more subtle and questioning relationship with her secret service handlers, even if her loyalty to her father figure, Sir Gerald Tarrant, never wavered.
Skilled in multiple martial arts, armed with her lethal kongo and possessed of an intelligence and independence of spirit Bond coud only dream of, Blaise, beautiful and sensual, was never particularly sexualised, and was nobody’s bimbo, although artist Enric Badia Romero, the long standing illustrator of the comic strip, lovingly portrayed her physical assets to great effect. However, this one-off, published entirely in colour, as well as being a faithful re-telling of the Blaise story, was also a visual treat by Giordano, and is, in my opinion, perhaps the greatest depiction of O’Donnell’s extraordinary character. The fact that O’Donnell’s last Blaise comic strip adventure was published in 2001 tells its own story, not just of Modesty’s longevity, but also her enduring appeal to espionage fans and admirers of strong female fictional characters alike.
Modesty, despite the brutal world in which she plied her trade, retained a humanity that meant she never killed gratuitously and retained a compassion for life’s victims throughout. She was an atypical criminal in this respect and had no trace of the sociopathy so many male spies in fiction seem to exhibit. She appears to depart from this in the panel above, but the context to the torture and murder of the man she throws to his death is that her victim had just knifed a young woman in the stomach, leaving her to bleed to death in the street. Even when carrying out lethal violence, it seems, Modesty always retained a recognisable moral code.
Source for the comic book panel: readallcomicsonline