Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn Race For The Moon. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng
Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn Race For The Moon. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng

Number 1195: Forty-three years ago today...

Người đăng: vanmai yeu em on Thứ Sáu, 20 tháng 7, 2012

On July 20, 1969 Mrs. Pappy and I, younger and with much more energy, were moving into a new apartment. We stopped, set up our 20" black and white television, and watched the historic moon landing. I don't recall much more moving being done that day, just us sitting in front of the tube watching ghostly images from a quarter million miles away.

Race For the Moon #2 (1958) is a comic I have shown before, but these are new scans. Kirby penciled the whole book. Inks are by Marvin Stein for “The Thing On Sputnik 4” and inks for the other stories and cover are by Al Williamson.

Forty-three years ago today I figured by the 21st century we'd have a permanent base on the moon and have gone to Mars and back several times. What I didn't realize then was how much all of it cost, and how the visions of a Jack Kirby didn't impact decisions by politicians and engineers. So there are the real things like sending astronauts to the moon to pick up rocks, and then there are the Jack Kirby things that seem so much more interesting.

There was a real race to get to the moon between the U.S. and Soviet Union. It was in our minds that we might be sharing it with our ideological Cold War enemies, the Russians.


The fictional response to a U.S./Soviet Union race shows in this '50s cover of Saturn Science Fiction from Cracked publisher, Robert Sproul, and also from the story “Lunar Trap,” in RFTM which treats the Russians as enemies, but in a surprising turn for comics, also people we could reach on a human level.






















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Người đăng: vanmai yeu em on Thứ Tư, 15 tháng 10, 2008


Number 396


Two x 3 Rocketeers


The last two Jack Kirby 3 Rocketeers stories were scheduled for the canceled Race For The Moon #4. The first in the series was published in Race's third and final issue and it was shown in Pappy's #315. These two stories appeared about seven years after being drawn by Jack Kirby and Al Williamson, published in Blast-Off #1, a Harvey one-shot from 1965.

I love the energy in these stories. I love the artwork, full of Kirby's inventiveness, but complemented by Williamson's elegant and sometimes delicate inking. Check out page 4 of "The Great Moon Mystery," classic Kirby, drawn just prior to his stint on Stan Lee's monster books.










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Người đăng: vanmai yeu em on Chủ Nhật, 22 tháng 6, 2008


Number 328



Saucer Man!


Since the first reports started coming in of flying saucers in 1947, they were big news and moved into popular culture fast. Movies, comics, magazines were full of flying saucers. Jack Kirby did several flying saucer stories, including "Saucer Man" for Race For The Moon #3, 1958. In my opinion, the 5-pagers Kirby did with inker Al Williamson in Race For The Moon are some of the best he drew during that period. A couple of years later when Kirby was doing science fiction and fantasy for Stan Lee, a similar story would have probably involved an invasion. For the feverishly paranoid 1950s, "Saucer Man" seems pretty sensitive.





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Người đăng: vanmai yeu em on Thứ Hai, 16 tháng 6, 2008


Number 325



Space Garbage!



What's fun about Kirby's short run of Race For the Moon stories is how much story he packed into five pages. In "Space Garbage" he has a space criminal, an exploration team, and a medical discovery. Any one of those ideas could carry a whole story.

This story starts out with a startling scene: Wiley Breck, the criminal, is shackled to an asteroid "until his air runs out." Apparently his "friends" did it to him, and Wiley is the guy who originated the idea. But with friends like that...





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Người đăng: vanmai yeu em on Thứ Hai, 26 tháng 5, 2008



Number 315



Jack Kirby's Three Rocketeers



Race For The Moon #3, November 1958, was the last issue.


It contained the first Three Rocketeers story by Jack Kirby and Al Williamson, but while it was the only Rocketeers story in that issue it wasn't the last Three Rocketeers story to be published. Two more episodes by Kirby and Williamson were published in Harvey Comics' Blast-Off #1 from 1965, and there were a couple of other stories, not drawn by Kirby, in other magazines.







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Back in Pappy's #228 I had an article about a wonderful British fanzine from 1964, The Shudder. I wondered about the editor, cartoonist Mike Higgs, and his later British comic character, The Cloak. Here's a blog entry from Lew Stringer's Blimey! It's Another Blog About Comics! with a picture--well, sorta--of Mike Higgs.

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