The Fall Guy - On The Trail Of Dandy Munce (TWO pages) (Original)
Artist: Jim Baikie
Medium: Watercolours on Acid-free Paper
Size: 15" x 20" (390mm x 520mm)
Date: 1984
Code: BaikieJTFG03
These are the unique original Watercolour paintings by Jim Baikie.Colt and Jody follow a tip to a hotel in Twin Rivers but they have missed Munce by only half an hour. Colt searches Munce's room and finds a scrap of paper that reads 'Martinez Brothers'.
Jody, meanwhile, has gathered details of Munce's vehicle information from a nearby garage. Moments after, the Martinez brothers arrive and speak to the same mechanic, who informs them of Colt and Jody's interest in Munce.
On route, Colt and Jody's car is attacked by a plane, flown by the Martinez brothers.
The Fall Guy originally broadcast from November 4, 1981, to May 2, 1986. It starred Lee Majors, Douglas Barr, and Heather Thomas as Hollywood stunt performers who moonlight as bounty hunters.
All the Look-In adaptations were drawn by the late great Orcadian artist Jim Baikie. Published in Look-In in 1984.
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Jim George Baikie (28 February 1940 - 29 December 2017; Orkney Islands, Scotland)
Jim Baikie was a Scottish comic artist whose career stretched from the mid-1960s until the turn of the 21st century, taking in a wide and eclectic range of UK and US strips, from early Doctor Who and Star Trek adventures in titles like TV21, to a lengthy stint on the British girl's comic Jinty in the late 1970s, and work on US properties such as Star Wars and Clive Barker’s Nightbreed in the late 1980s and 1990s, for companies including the superhero giant DC Comics.
Yet his position as one of the finest artists the British comics industry has produced in the past half-century is based largely on his time with the cult British sci-fi comic 2000AD, in particular the first strip he worked on for the title, 1983's Skizz. Co-created with writer Alan Moore, who went on to become the definitive comics creator of his time via titles like Watchmen and V for Vendetta, Skizz was essentially the story of ET: The Extra Terrestrial – at that point a huge hit in cinemas – but transplanted to Birmingham and dressed up with references to unemployment and apartheid, placing it firmly in Thatcher's Britain.
Baikie served as a Corporal with the Royal Air Force in 1956–1963 before joining a printing company. Baikie joined Morgan-Grampian studio as an artist in 1964 and was an illustrator for the National Savings Committee in 1965–1966. Balkie was a bass guitarist in bands James Fenda and the Vulcans and Compass among others.
Baikie began his comics career illustrating the romance comic Valentine for Fleetway. Over the next twenty years, he built a solid reputation working for TV comics such as Look-in, including adaptations of The Monkees and Star Trek, all scripted by Angus Allan. He also worked extensively in British girls' comics such as Jinty. In the 1980s, Baikie drew The Twilight World in Warrior.
In Britain, he is probably best known for collaborating with Alan Moore on Skizz. Baikie was so attached to the character that he went on to both write and illustrate Skizz II and Skizz III for 2000AD. The 2000AD spin-off Crisis also saw Baikie produce the art for the New Statesmen story.
Baikie also worked extensively in the United States, on superhero strips such as Batman and The Spectre. In 1986, he co-created Electric Warrior with writer Doug Moench. A new collaboration with Alan Moore also appeared in the guise of the First American.