Tank Girl was quite possibly the antithesis to Halo Jones. Where Halo Jones provided us with a female comic book character who contemplative, scared of guns and lacked any sort of abrasive attitude, Tank Girl was the complete opposite. This scary chick first appeared in the magazine Deadline in 1988 and the creators were the now famous Jamie Hewlett and Alan Martin.
An early picture of the Tank Girl character had appeared in a fanzine called Atomtan, created by Hewlett and Martin but Deadline contained the first proper story. Deadline was something of a mould breaking magazine; it was largely centred on the British music scene of the late 1980s and early 1990s but the addition of comic strips (Tank Girl was not the only one).
It was Tank Girl which is credited for carrying Deadline through to its final demise in 1995. The character picked up on many of the cultural happenings of the era, indie music, girl power, a renaissance of punk culture; because of her appearance she also became a pin up for the anti-homophobia movements of the time.
Tank Girl lives in a post apocalyptic Australia where she is a former tank driver turned outlaw after an incident in which she failed to deliver a shipment of colostomy bags to the Australian Head of State, resulting in an embarrassing incident. Consequently she became an outlaw, acquiring an on-off kangaroo boyfriend named Booga.
The paragraph above should give the reader some idea of what Tank girl consisted of and occasionally we also met Jet Girl, Sub Girl, Boat Girl and a couple of Tank Girl’s deranged outback friends. The global popularity of Tank Girl led to the release of a fairly unsuccessful film in 1995 which dragged Deadline down with it. Hewlett and Martin later complained bitterly about the production process and the script writing problems they encountered.
While Jamie Hewlett never worked with Tank Girl again, in the last few years Alan Martin has begun to write and release new material with comic book artist Rufus Dayglo.







