Người đăng: vanmai yeu em on Chủ Nhật, 29 tháng 5, 2011


Number 955


Basil "Weirdwit" Wolverton's funny business


Amongst other comic artists, Basil Wolverton is unique. You look at a strip by BW and you know immediately it's his work. I've thought about it, and wonder if it had something to do with having a name like Basil Wolverton. Right away that name would set a fellow apart from the John Smiths and Joe Joneses. Perhaps having an unusual name gave him the impetus, in a conscious way or not, to fill his pages with the outrageously original and unique comic book characters he did. I don't know that for sure. I'm just sayin'.

Back to what I do know: "Powerhouse Pepper" was scanned from a black and white reprint in one of those cartoon magazines published by Martin Goodman, who also published Marvel Comics. In this case it was from a 1973 issue of Wheely Nuts. It originally appeared in comic book form in Powerhouse Pepper #4, 1948. I have shown it before.

"Scoop Scuttle" is from Lev Gleason's Daredevil #16, published in 1942, and the "Jumpin' Jupiter" stories are from Weird Tales Of the Future numbers 2 and 4, from 1952.


















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Suicide Tower!

Người đăng: vanmai yeu em on Thứ Bảy, 28 tháng 5, 2011

It's been a few years since I posted a Dr. Thirteen "Ghost-Breaker" story, so here's a weird one, originally presented in the January 1952 issue of Star Spangled Comics #124, art by Leonard Starr.








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Silly Panel Saturday

Người đăng: vanmai yeu em


See, Superboy is looking through his time telescope at Superman, who's looking through his time telescope at Superboy, who's looking through his time telescope at Superman, who's looking....

The whole thing results in Superman being sucked into the past and Superboy being sucked into the future.
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Flash Gordon Sundays: S162 - "Expedition to Kkorbu" (3/20/83 to 10/7/84) & S163 - "The Monster Pit" (10/14/84 to 2/17/85) (Incomplete)

Người đăng: vanmai yeu em on Thứ Sáu, 27 tháng 5, 2011

Very thankful to Roldan for providing these gems . All credits go to him & original uploader(s).
         Although some strips are missing, the stories are readable. Some parts of these strips  were printed in Indrajal Comics.

Art: Dan Barry

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Người đăng: vanmai yeu em


Number 954


Here he comes to save the day...



Jim Tyer did these stories, didn't he? I've had trouble in the past identifying Tyer, who has been represented in this blog a few times. Fans of his work in animation and comics have been kind to remind me that I haven't given him credit, so I hope I'm right this time.

David Miller did the scans from Paul Terry's Comics #125. Thanks, Dave.

Besides Mighty Mouse, Dave provided the hilarious Heckle and Jeckle episode from the same issue. The over-polite talking magpies appear to be inspired by the early 20th Century comic strip, Alphonse and Gaston, by Frederick Burr Opper.















There was a Mighty Mouse Saturday morning animated cartoon from our friends Ralph Bakshi and John K. (see his blog here). With all due respect to Andy Kaufman's pantomime of the Mighty Mouse theme song, I thought the a capella version of that theme song from that show was the best, so I've included the YouTube clip of the one minute opening.




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I've always been fascinated by this "miniature dog" ad that ran in comics for a time, and which appeared in this issue of Paul Terry's Comics.

Did anyone ever receive one of these dogs? How did they ship the dogs so they arrived alive at their destination? After doing some research on the company I found that in 1960 they were issued a cease and desist order by the Federal Trade Commission for false advertising.
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Some Forgotten Beast Prototypes

Người đăng: vanmai yeu em on Thứ Năm, 26 tháng 5, 2011

As I've been reading much of the early Superboy stories in Adventure and now Superboy, I've been surprised to see that many of the things we thought were newly introduced in the Silver Age actually were reworkings of Golden Age storylines and characters.

For example, consider Titano, the giant ape with Kryptonite vision:

It turns out that in Adventure #219 (December 1955), well before Titano's 1959 debut came Chandu, the gorilla:


What about the Thought Beast from Krypton?

Turns out he was swiped from Superboy #22, (Oct-Nov 1952):

I haven't yet been able to locate a third example, although I'm certainly looking for the metal-eating beast.
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