Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn Centaur. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng
Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn Centaur. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng

Number 1533: I spy, with my little Eye...

Người đăng: vanmai yeu em on Thứ Sáu, 28 tháng 2, 2014

“The Eye Sees” by Frank Thomas appeared for a short time in Centaur Publication’s* Keen Detective Funnies, and in a couple of reprint issues, Detective Eye. The Eye was a mysterious creature whose origin was never explained, although in one issue the splash panel proclaims, “The Eye! A symbol of the haunting voice of man’s inner conscience! That mystic all-powerful force that causes evil deeds to boomerang and destroy those who plot them!” With that sort of mystical status you’d think The Eye would be an unseen force, but it has a physical presence, as we see in this story (the second published) from Keen Detective Funnies #18 (1940) when it is spotted by one of the gang members plotting sabotage.








**********
*Centaur has the distinction of being a comic book company that went out of business during comics’ original heyday. According to Wikipedia, “Centaur Publications, Inc. ceased production at the end of 1940, but continued to produce comics under the name Comic Corporation of America. Centaur ceased publication four years later, primarily due to poor distribution.”

**********
 Here’s the first story featuring The Eye. Just click on the thumbnail:


More about

Number 1330: The big green cannibal monster-head

Người đăng: vanmai yeu em on Thứ Hai, 11 tháng 3, 2013


Finally collected into one high quality trade paperback, Basil Wolverton’s early Target Comics feature, “Spacehawk,”* is now available from Fantagraphics. Wolverton loved science fiction, rocket ships, weird worlds and weirder characters, and Spacehawk has all those.

Another space feature by Basil was “Space Patrol,” which appeared in Amazing Mystery Funnies. With its old-fashioned look Wolverton’s science fiction has a steam punk charm right out of the industrial age; rocket ships looking like riveted boilers, for instance.

This episode is from the last issue of Amazing Mystery Funnies #24 (1940).







**********

*Click this pic for a Spacehawk story.

More about

Number 1271: Eye in the sky

Người đăng: vanmai yeu em on Thứ Tư, 28 tháng 11, 2012

The introduction of the Eye, by Frank Thomas, is our third posting of four in our early superhero/costumed characters comics week. It's the earliest story, having appeared in Keen Detective Funnies Volume 2 Number 4 (whole number 16), published by Centaur in 1939.

Despite inclusion in our theme week, the Eye doesn't really count as a costumed hero, although he could be said to be super. That is, if working miracles is a super power. So what was the Eye? No one knew, because he was never explained. I assume, as do some other comic historians, that the Eye was some sort of comic book version of God. He appeared for a year, until Keen Detective ceased publishing. He appeared in two issues of his own comic, then went wherever old comic book characters, including comic book gods, go.

Thomas did features like “The Owl” and “Billy and Bonny Bee.” He was a talented cartoonist and writer. I've featured him before, the post before this being this past February: Pappy's #1105.

Tomorrow, the Face.









More about