"The
Turtles do have parents. They are Kevin Eastman and Peter Laird,
who put up their last 2,000 dollars to create the comic book of
their dreams.
"When
Peter and I came up with the Ninja Turtles -- The Teenage Mutant
Ninja Turtles -- in a lot of ways out out of a love of comics,
and some silliness. Late one night after watching some bad TV,
and feeling really silly, I did a drawing of a turtle with a mask
on and nunchucks strapped to his arms -- to make Peter laugh.
"So
then I had to do my own version of it, and change a few things,
tweaked it a little bit, threw it back at Kevin -- kinda dueling
sketches. And, ended up Kevin drew a -- made a drawing of four
turtles, each with a different martial arts weapon and in pencil,
which I inked, and added to his "Ninja Turtles", "Teenage Mutant."
So then we had Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, and that was the
beginning of it.
"I
wanna stress that we were laughing to kill ourselves at the time.
Sort of chucked the drawing aside, and the next morning we get
up and looked at the drawing and said, "Geeze, we should really
come up with a story to tell how they got to be Teenage Mutant
Ninja Turtles, and that's when we began working on the first issue."
The
Turtles have been given different origins, but each have the same
essential facts. According to the original story, a truck driving
out of control had to swerve to avoid collision with a blind man.
The jolt shook free a parcel of its cargo -- a glass canister
containing mutanagenic material. The jar bounced a good distance
until it struck a glass aquarium in the hands of a small boy named
Chet. The bowl shattered, dropping all four of his baby turtles
into an open manhole, along with the canister. As it hit the sewer
floor, the container oozed a sticky liquid that covered the unharmed
turtles. Splinter saw the whole ordeal and attempted to clean
them off. The next few days brought Splinter some astonishment;
they had all begun to grow in size and he grew most in intellect.
After several years, the turtles and Splinter had reached maturity.
Their growth level had slowed dramatically -- the turtles at the
teenage level and Splinter at the middle age level. Splinter being
older at the time of mutation and being mammalian, grew much more
rapidly. He began training the Turtles in the art of Ninja, in
order to avenge his master's slaying. Splinter found a discarded
Renaissance book in the sewer and decided to name the turtles
after his four favorite artists -- Leonardo, Donatello, Raphael,
and Michaelangelo. Leonardo was trained in the art of katana wielding,
Donatello mastered the Bo-staff, Raphael's weapons are the three
pronged sai daggers, and Michaelangelo whirls the deadly nunchacku.
Leonardo is the unofficial leader, as well as the most mentally
and physically toned. Donatello is the "gadget guy"
and curious shy type, while Michaelangelo is the wisecracking,
fun-loving partier. Raphael is the loner, a guy who harbors anger
and rage, loves to hate, but is strangely devout and loving of
his family.
The
cartoon origin differs some from the original story line A small
boy trips over his own feet, and loses grip on the bowl of turtles.
They fall down the sewers, just as the Shredder is pouring what
he thinks to be a deadly chemical into a drain pipe. His aim was
for the elusive Hamato Yoshi who had been living in the sewers
since his exile to America. When Yoshi finds the turtles in the
ooze, they each transform into a mixture of their former selves
and whatever animal they had last come into contact with. The
turtles had last been in contact with Yoshi, but Yoshi had last
touched his pet rat. Unlike the Mirage universe, the characters
mutated instantly. Yoshi trained the Turtles and named them after
his favorite Renaissance painters. Their mission was to defend
the world from evils, unlike the somewhat dark assignment of assassination
as in the Mirage series. "Splinter taught them to be ninja
teens. Leonardo leads, Donatello does machines, Raphael is cool
but rude, Michaelangelo is a party dude!"
Splinter's
character is based on a character of Marvel's Daredevil series
-- Stick. He was meant to be a parody, but the character just
grew as the Turtle phenomena took off. It began in Japan. The
rat Splinter's master Hamato Yoshi was one of Japan's finest shadow
warriors. His only competition was a ninja by the name of Oruku
Nagi. They competed in all things, but none more fiercely than
for the love a woman Tang Shen. Shen's love was only for Yoshi,
and when Nagi tried to force himself on her, Yoshi killed him.
By honor, he was to commit kabuki, or suicide, to keep from dishonoring
his family, but Shen forced him to flee with her to New York.
He took his rat with him. They lived in the States for some time,
but one day Nagi's younger brother showed up and murdered the
couple. Splinter was forced to live on the streets alone. Upon
witnessing a truck accident involving a blind man, a young boy
with a bowl of turtles, and a mysterious flying projectile, Splinter
went down the storm drain to investigate. The shattered canister.
and bowl lay in a puddle of radioactive gel on the sewer floor.
After Splinter cleaned the Turtles off, he noticed that the material
had begun to give each of them human qualities. When he and the
Turtles had evolved both mentally and physically, Splinter began
the training. He named the turtles, and told them of their mission
to avenge his master's death.
Similarly,
the cartoon and Archie universe has origins in Japan, where Yoshi
and Saki were fierce competitors. By having Yoshi banished to
the US, Saki could take over the clan. Yoshi, meanwhile, was forced
to take refuse beneath the streets of Manhattan. One day, he and
his pet rat came upon four baby turtles crawling in a strange
ooze. The mutagen immediately transformed the turtles and Yoshi
into cross hybrid creatures -- their genes were combined with
those of the last animals they had each come into contact with.
The turtles had most recently been with Yoshi, and he had most
recently been carrying his pet rat. Splinter became half rat,
half man and the turtles named him Splinter because of his ability
to splinter foes easily.
The
idea of the Shredder was brought to life when Kevin Eastman found
some cheese graters that you can slip onto your arms. The idea
was to turn the cheese graters into something more lethal, like
the razor sharp blades that we are all too familiar with. Originally
the younger brother to Oruku Nagi, Yoshi's mortal enemy, Oruku
Saki trained heavily in the Foot Clan to seek revenge. Yoshi had
killed his brother in the fight for Tang Shen, and Saki did everything
in his power to return the favor. Saki built up the American branch
of the Foot into a dishonorable gang of thieves and drug smugglers.
In New York, he found Yoshi and Shen, and killed them both. The
chain of revenge still had another link, and it lay with Yoshi's
pet rat Splinter. Saki began calling himself Shredder and dressing
in blade-decked dogis. When the Turtles were smart enough, and
physically capable, Splinter assigned the them to avenge his master.
It took two tries, but Shredder was destroyed.
In
the cartoon, Saki was a student of Yoshi's who was riddled with
jealousy, had Yoshi exiled, became Foot leader, formed an alliance
with an alien warlord named Krang, and was ultimately responsible
for the mutation of the Turtles and man-to-rat Splinter.
April
O'Neil wasn't meant to be a television reporter, but hey a girl
can make a strategic career move, ne? She was introduced as Baxter
Stockman's lovely lab assistant in the second issue of TMNT. After
being chased throughout the sewers by vicious Mousers, the Turtles
came to her rescue and told her their story. She was given a dad,
a sister, an archaeologist friend, a limited wardrobe, and a love
life ...and about six different haircuts. But she's a babe, and
we all love her. She was originally a brunette with a standard
shoulder length haircut, and a blue jump suit, and she was the
scientific assistant to the insane Baxter Stockman (don't worry,
she didn't have a clue). A few issues later, April got a new "do"
and began her adventures with the TMNT.
When
the cartoons debuted, April's jumpsuit was replaced with a yellow
one, and she was given a new job as a television field and anchor
reporter. April is a diverse character, and seems the most realistic
in the Mirage and Archie Comics universes.
I
asked Kevin Eastman who he modeled Casey Jones after, and he gave
me a satisfactory answer. "Ever see Big Trouble in Little
China?" So his point was clear. Casey Jones is molded after
the Kurt Russell character in the early '80s movie. Here is a
great quote from the movie that I think pretty much sums up Casey's
character: "Just remember what ol' Jack Burton does when
the earth quakes, the poison arrows fall from the sky, and the
pillars of Heaven shake. Yeah, Jack Burton just looks that big
old storm right in the eye and says, 'Give me your best shot.
I can take it.'" Truly, Casey has had his share of ups and
downs. He fell for April, killed a kid, lost April, fell for Gabrielle,
lost her forever, raised her kid, fell for April again, and settled
down with her. He is beneficiary to the old farmhouse his family
owns and that served as TMNT HQ for a long time, and his mother
sold April the apartment building that she tended.
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