#018.The Phantom - Moonstone

Người đăng: vanmai yeu em on Thứ Sáu, 30 tháng 5, 2008

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Number 317



Robotbody Meets a Body!*



This Robotman story is from Detective Comics #152, October 1949. It's drawn by Jimmy Thompson, who I understand was an old timer, an artist who went back to pre-comic book days, working for newspapers. His drawing style is excellent and well-suited for DC Comics of the 1940s, so he adapted well to then-current art styles. I love the panels where Robotman wears different bodies: a midget body, a glass body, a helicopter body…

The story shows me again what I've said before: backup features in DC Comics could be as good as the lead features. DC's B-list characters were often better than other companies' A-list. I wish I had more of these to show you, but this is my sole comic with Robotman.

*The Grand Comics Database calls this story "Robotboy Meets A Body", a misreading of the title.







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The Hairy Green Eyeball posts a rare 1990s fanzine, It's Melvin, devoted to the EC days of the late Will Elder. It includes an index of Elder reprints up to the date of publication.


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Message in a Bottle

Người đăng: vanmai yeu em on Thứ Tư, 28 tháng 5, 2008

What was the most frequently referenced single event in the DC Silver Age of Comics?

I'll give you a clue; although it was mentioned very frequently, the first time we learned of it, we did not see the event itself, we just heard about it.

The answer?



The shrinking of Kandor by Brainiac (the renegade scientist mentioned) is undeniably the most commonly referenced event. It comes up constantly in the DC Silver Age, because Kandor turned into a very popular topic for the Superman writers.

Kandor had been the capital city of Krypton. When Brainiac originally shrank it and put it into a jar, it was obviously seen as a horrific crime. But it turned out to be a blessing in disguise as Kandor was (apparently) the only city to survive the destruction of Krypton.

Why did Kandor suddenly appear? It seems obvious from an editorial standpoint. Superman stories set on Krypton tended to sell, as did stories of other Supermen on Earth, and yet they were difficult to create given Mort Weissinger's simultaneous effort to establish continuity in the Silver Age Superman.

Kandor succeeded in creating many memorable Krypton-type adventures for Superman. It had some success in bringing other Supermen to Earth, although this part represented a mixed blessing.

The problem of Kandor is obvious. Superman had always been sold as the only survivor of an ancient race; now he was one of millions of survivors. It diminishes Supergirl's appearance the next year. And Superman's inability to expand the city (other than a convenient character or two at a time) was one of his few (but frequently mentioned) failures, like his inability to cure Mon-El of his reaction to lead poisoning.

But overall the positives of the new locale for stories outweighed the negatives. In many ways, Kandor is another way of weakening the Silver Age Superman. It's a place where he no longer has his powers and must survive instead on his wits.

Kandor spawned many fine stories. One of the best appeared in Lois Lane #15 (February 1960). Here's the "puzzle" cover:



Of course, it is a trick. It turns out that the Superman on the cover is Van-Zee, a Kandorian subbing for Superman, while the woman is Sylvia, an unrelated gal who's Lois' doppelganger. Van-Zee and Sylvia returned many times, starting with this mention in Lois Lane #21:



The Exchange Ray was a clever idea and although it was used fairly often it had one significant drawback; it required that one Kandorian come out of the bottle, which means effectively another Superman/Woman on Earth. As a result, other means were commonly used to get into and out of the bottle.

Van-Zee became an even more important character when he became a member of the Superman Emergency Squad. Here's a discussion of their function from Action #276:



In Superman Annual #5, we learned (from a brief text feature) that the leader of the Superman Emergency Squad is named Don-El. Another relative of Kal-El, perhaps?

There was another important squad in Kandor:



Whether they were helping out Superman and his friends or Weissinger and his writers, I can't say.

But the best Kandor stories were those that took place inside the bottle. As noted above, the idea of putting Superman on Krypton was irresistible to writers of the time, but it was becoming harder. In the Golden Age, I think there's one story where Superman just flies back in time to Krypton. By the Silver Age that was verboten since we all knew that Supes would lose his powers under the higher gravity and red sun of his home planet. So it became a challenge to the writers; how do you put Superman on Krypton without having him somehow then rescue his parents before the planet's explosion (or die himself)? Answer: Put a little bit of Krypton on Earth.

This also creates a place where ordinary humans can interact with Superman on an equal footing, creating a new dynamic in their relationships with the Man of Steel. Jimmy Olsen, for example, went from being the clown in the bowtie to Flamebird, the Boy Wonder:



And Batman established he was the alpha male in World's Finest #143:



This hits on a theme I've talked about before; one of the big changes that Weissinger made was to make Superman more vulnerable, because he realized a legitimately invulnerable character made the series rather dull and forced the more comical approach which he clearly did not favor. Kandor was a place where Supes placed his life on the line.

It also was a place where we got to observe the wonders of Kryptonian science and technology in action:



Lois gets the techno tour from yet another Superman double (Dik-Zee, Van's twin):



Jimmy samples the movies in Kandor:



I'll be adding to this post over time, as Kandor is a very involved and interesting topic.
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#017.Enid Blyton's Famous Five

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The Famous Five is the name of a series of children's books written by Enid Blyton. The first book, Five on a Treasure Island, was published in 1942.

The Famous Five are a group of children who have the sort of adventures most kids dream about, in a world where ginger beer flows and ham rolls are a staple diet. Julian, Dick and Anne get together with their cousin George in the first adventure, Five On A Treasure Island.

George is actually a girl who wants so desperately to be a boy she crops her hair and struts about doing boy things. She hates it when people call her by her correct name, Georgina. She has a dog called Timmy—oh yes, and an island. Most kids just have a dog, but George's parents own Kirrin Island and let her run around on it as if it were her play-thing. Her parents are known to Julian, Dick and Anne as Uncle Quentin and Aunt Fanny.

At present only these comics scans are avaliable . All credits and thanks goes to contributor.



Enid Blyton Five Go Down To Sea

Enid Blyton Five Go Off To Camp

Enid Blyton Five Got Into A Fix

Enid Blyton Five Got Into Trouble

Enid Blyton Five Have A Mystery To Solve
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Người đăng: vanmai yeu em


Number 316



Love-sick!



Speaking of love--without the sick--I really love Jack Bradbury's comic art from the late 1940s and early '50. The work he did later for Disney comics I find less interesting, but he was working in a stricter panel format on characters well established by other artists. I don't know who created Spunky and Stanley, published in Spunky Junior Cowboy, but it's Bradbury's genius that makes the strip so good.

Every panel with Stanley, the love-sick horse, is funny. Spunky's horse belongs to an animation tradition, and I'm thinking of Ichabod Crane's horse in Disney's The Legend Of Sleepy Hollow. Bradbury had a true gift for comic exaggeration and every time I look at his work I admire it more.

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