Only a Few Clicks Away

Người đăng: lecuongle on Thứ Tư, 29 tháng 6, 2011

When I was a kid, there were times when I found myself thinking about some odd topic or other and would stop and say to myself, "Now where did that come from?" And I'd work the logical chain backwards. Okay, I was thinking about W, and that led to X, which led to Y and then to Z.

Surfing the internet can be like that at times. I surfed over to Comics Should Be Good, which is having a poll on next month's features. One of the features was "When We First Met" and so I read about the first time Lois suspected Clark was Superman. A very cool post, I think you'll agree.

In the comments, someone pointed to a comic strip take on the Superman/Lois relationship. Cool and funny stuff.

And at the bottom of that post, was a link to this pitch for a Lois Lane, Girl Reporter series of young adult novels. Nice art, interesting idea.

Elsewhere, Commander Benson has a very challenging trivia quiz for Silver Age Marvel zombies. How challenging? Well, I couldn't get any of them off the top of my head, although I did know where to look for a couple of the answers. BTW, don't scroll down to the comments on that post, as most of the answers are there. When you give up, here's Commander Benson's answer sheet.

With the release of the Green Lantern movie, Jacque Nodell posts a picture of herself with her grandpa, GL co-creator Martin Nodell.
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Gene Colan, RIP

Người đăng: lecuongle on Thứ Hai, 27 tháng 6, 2011

Another Silver Age legend falls by the wayside. Colan was best known for his long, terrific runs on Daredevil, Iron Man and Batman. I'm reposting here some of my favorite panels from various issues:


From the brief Black Widow series in Amazing Adventures. As you can see, he could draw some exceptionally beautiful women.


From My Greatest Adventure #74. Note the almost photographic quality of her face.


Note the action, and again the photographic realism of the man's face. It looks easy.

Colan created the Falcon, the first actual African-American superhero (the Black Panther doesn't count, as he was not American). Here he is in an early appearance:


His run on Iron Man was legendary:

As was his long tenure on Daredevil:
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Frew 1160 - The Devil's Library (Part 4)

Người đăng: lecuongle on Thứ Bảy, 25 tháng 6, 2011

The Devil's Library Pt.4: The Secret Chamber
 Story: Claes Reimerthi
 Art: Kari Leppänen


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Scanned & edited by Laki.. All credits go to him.
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Flash Gordon - S116 - "Robot War" (5/9/71 to 7/18/71)

Người đăng: lecuongle on Thứ Sáu, 24 tháng 6, 2011

Art: Dan Barry 

Summary: Approaching Earth after their ordeal in space Flash, Dale, Zarkov and Kara pick up a distress signal in sub-space and steer their ship towards the area where the space wreck is floating.
Managing to salvage a number of survival pods from the wreck whilst repelling a robot attack, the quartet is told of a war-torn planet where robots rule and where the original inhabitants have taken refuge in a "Third World" beneath the surface...

(Source of summary: www.ipcomics.net) 


 It's from Roldan's e-collection. It was originally scanned by Beowulf &  digitally cleaned and enhanced by Roldan. All thanks & credits go to both.
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2 Unpblished Russ Manning's works: THE IMMORTAL CENTURIAN & THE GLORIOUS

Người đăng: lecuongle








These are from Sumit's e-collection. All credits go to him.
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Darwin of the Guardians

Người đăng: lecuongle


I confess I had not read this story in decades and it didn't make much of an impression on me back as a teen. But re-reading it last night, I have to confess I was flabbergasted.

The story starts with the Golden Age Green Lantern protecting Gotham City from a falling meteor. As it happens, the meteor hits a tree, which is about to fall on Doiby Dickles' taxi, Goitrude. GL is shocked when his protective beam deflects the tree, as his power ring has never worked on wood. He has an idea:

But when he reaches Hal Jordan, it turns out that his beam still doesn't work on wood. Hal suggests that he get the ring to tell him what really happened. It turns out the meteor wasn't a meteor, but a disembodied mind inside a packet of pure energy that was ten billion years old. The ring contacted the mind and learned it was from the planet Oa. The Oans were immortal and used their time to learn things:

But there was one forbidden subject:

And right there I came to a screeching halt. The pursuit of knowledge about the Oans had led to the invention of evil? That doesn't make a whole lot of sense, and the "reasoning" behind it is the classic fallacy of post hoc ergo propter hoc (after this, therefore because of this). Krona insisted on continuing his pursuit of the origin of the Oans, and so they:

Since one of their fellows had unleashed evil on the universe, they started the Green Lantern Corps to battle the malignant forces.

When the GA Green Lantern's power beam contacted the mind of Krona, he used it to free himself and followed Alan Scott into our universe. The Oans, alerted to the danger, warn the two GLs that they cannot locate Krona by normal means, but to expect an outbreak of evil nearby. Sure enough:

After handling the various crises, the Oans summon the two GLs to their home planet, where the cover scene takes place. Hal does not accept his demotion gracefully:

And yet, a moment later he seems surprised that Alan's not laying down for him:

Via a flashback, we learn that Alan's body has secretly been taken over by Krona, and that the Guardians are being controlled by the GA Green Lantern's ring. But (and this is a key point) Hal doesn't know this yet. So his revolt against the Guardians and his battle with Alan are not excused by this knowledge.

Krona erects a yellow shield to protect himself and then kayos Hal, after which:

We can see that Krona is rather reckless with other people's lives but not his own.

But Alan's disembodied mind contacts Hal, wakes him up, and the two combine their willpower to defeat Krona, with the aid of some trickery; Hal uses the GA power ring rather than his own so that yellow won't work against it. Krona is sent back on his endless journey, but this time the Guardians make sure his orbit will never intersect any planet or star.

Comments: The story can be taken as an allegory to the book of Genesis, with Oa before Krona as the Garden of Eden, and Krona as Adam releasing evil by eating from the Tree of Knowledge. According to the letters column in GL #43, that was the way writer John Broome intended it:

But you can also read it as anti-science, and anti-Darwinian. That the Oans turn out to be correct in their ancient superstition against studying the origin of their species is hardly surprising. It's a basic principle in fiction that the Cassandras of doom are always proven right (as was the original Cassandra, who warned the Trojans against bringing the wooden horse into their walls). But I have a hard time believing that the Oans were justified in their original banishment of Krona. Given what happens in this story you can argue that the subsequent exile was merited, but you can also argue that ten billion years as a disembodied mind might be the cause of his callous disregard.
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Frew #1155: The Devil's Library (Part 3)

Người đăng: lecuongle on Thứ Tư, 22 tháng 6, 2011




Writer Claes Reimerthi
Artist Joan Biox



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Scanned & edited  by "Laki" All credits go to him.
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Amazing Spiderman #3

Người đăng: lecuongle on Thứ Ba, 21 tháng 6, 2011


Anybody who read only the Steve Ditko issues of Amazing Spiderman would know exactly who was Spidey's arch-enemy, and it wasn't the Green Goblin. It was Dr Octopus, who was the first villain to appear in a two-part story (ASM #11-12,) the first to appear in a three-parter (#31-33), and who also headlined the first Spiderman Annual.

His initial appearance here also features the debut of the Spider-Signal:

It's a neat reversal of the Bat-Signal, indicating that trouble is here for the crooks who see it. I don't recall it getting much use in the Romita era, other than on the cover to ASM #72.

We get our first glimpse of the good doctor here:

The apparatus he uses is vaguely similar to a "Waldo":

Incidentally, the name "Waldo" for that device, which allows scientists to handle dangerous chemicals and elements from behind a protective barrier, comes from a Robert Heinlein short story.

But Doc Ock gets a little careless and:

With the result that the arms are grafted to his body and he's just a mite touched in the head. He takes over the hospital where he's been recovering. Peter gets involved when JJJ demands that he obtain some pictures. As with Clark Kent's job at the Daily Planet, Parker's employment at the Bugle guarantees he'll know where he's most needed.

As Spidey climbs up the outside wall of the hospital, he muses that it's all too easy; he almost wants a villain worthy of his talents. In fiction as in real life, that's just begging for trouble and sure enough, Spiderman discovers that Doctor Octopus is a handful and more:

Spidey is thrown unceremoniously out a window. Doc Ock returns to the atomic research center where he worked, and makes it into his own fortress. Meanwhile, Peter mopes about, having never been defeated before. Fortunately the Human Torch comes by his high school to give a demonstration and a pep talk:

Once inside the atomic research center, Spiderman puts his science background to work:

He creates an acid that fuses Doc Ock arms together. But he's still hard pressed until:

Comments: Solid, entertaining story with the usual terrific Ditko art. I particularly liked the bit with Peter sulking about after being beaten; that's a common teenaged reaction.
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Frew #1600, #1601, #1603 & #1604

Người đăng: lecuongle on Thứ Bảy, 18 tháng 6, 2011

Enjoy 4 new Frew!









Writer: Claes Reimerthi
Artist: Sal Velluto

1600_-_The_Skull_Murders

















Writer: Claes Reimerthi
Artist: Kari Leppänen






















Writer: Claes Reimerthi
Artist: Heiner Bade








Writer: Claes Reimerthi
Artist: Felmang & Ferri

1604_-_Dangerous_Escape




These are Kit Walker's contributions. All Thanks & credits go to him.
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The Superboy Legal Case

Người đăng: lecuongle

Covered adeptly by Bill Jourdain. The post contains lots of information that I was not aware of previously, including the fact that DC Comics had formally passed on the Superboy concept, and then published the first stories (starting in More Fun #101) while Siegel was in the army and without his consent.
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The Sinestro Story

Người đăng: lecuongle on Thứ Sáu, 17 tháng 6, 2011

With the release of the Green Lantern movie, I thought I would talk about GL's main enemy, Sinestro. Sinestro first appeared in GL #7 as the renegage Green Lantern. This was during the brief period when GL was not aware that he worked for the Guardians, and so they summoned his "energy duplicate" to fill him in on Sinestro's origin. He was originally another member of the Green Lantern corps, until the power infected him:

The Guardians stripped him of his ring and power and banished him to the evil anti-matter universe of Qward (which Green Lantern had battled previously in GL#2-4).

Sinestro comes up with a plan that basically involves him saying evil a lot:

But as it happens GL misses his appointment in Valdale, and thus, unlike the 100,000 citizens of that fair metropolis, is not teleported to Qward. At the end of this back story, the Guardians decide to allow him to know that he works for them.

Hal makes it to Qward, but Sinestro plays his trump card; unless GL surrenders, he will kill the Valdale residents. GL agrees and is imprisoned in a yellow globe. Sinestro has an eeeeevil plan:

But GL manages to fool him by pushing the clock ahead a few minutes. He escapes from Qward, leaving Sinestro imprisoned in a green bubble. But when Sinestro returns in GL #9, we learn that he must have been a Boy Scout, for he believes in the motto, Be Prepared:

This time around he comes up with a scheme to siphon off the power from Green Lantern's ring to enhance his own. Once he succeeds in doing so, he imprisons GL inside a cage and goes off to a meeting of the other GLs where he again steals their power. He then zips to Oa to attack the Guardians, but Hal has gotten free by now and hits on a Silver Age cliched way to defeat him:

The Guardians put Sinestro in a capsule and launch him on an 18,000-year orbit of the universe.

In GL #11, Sinestro returns. It seems the Guardians forgot to check his heel, where he stored a backup power ring. He returns to Qward, where he uses a mind-control device to cause Green Lantern to screw up several times on the job. Then, at a trial held by the other Green Lanterns, Hal pleads guilty and requests to be sent to Qward (again by the force of Sinestro's mind control). Fortunately the other Green Lanterns were only agreeing to find out who was behind the plot, and after a brief subplot where Hal uses some high school chemistry to escape from a death trap, they use Sinestro's mind control machine on him:

But in GL #15, Sinestro escapes. Once again, thinking a step ahead of the Green Lanterns, he had set the mind control device so it would not work on him. He's back on Qward, competing in the annual "Most Evil Citizen Contest", with a sidekick that should be familiar to Golden Age fans:

Yep, that's Doiby Dickles (although Sinestro calls him Magot in this story and the next). Sinestro has a plan to win the contest; he'll trap GL on a world where everything's yellow, and that's not all:

It's all terrifically eeeeevil, but Sinestro makes one mistake; he decides to televise GL's death, and the beam he uses to do it turns out to be purple, giving Hal his one chance at escape. He fixes the mind control machine so it will work on Sinestro, and locks the villain away.

Except that Sinestro again had planned ahead for this eventuality. We learn in Green Lantern #18 that he placed a hypnotic suggestion in GL's mind, instructing him to turn the mind control device off at a point in the future. Sinestro's again in the contest for "Most Evil" and after getting Hal to Qward without his power ring, he reveals his diabolical plan:

Well, it turns out that GL had anticipated all this (two can think ahead!) and only faked not having his power ring. He uses Sinestro's own plot against him:

Having made five appearances in less than a year and a half, Sinestro now went into hibernation for over four years. In his next appearance he came back as a car (Doiby Dickles taxi, Gertrude). This of course is a nod to the insane 1960s TV show, My Mother the Car:

This time his plot is to steal the giant power lantern on Oa, but Green Lantern foils the plot with the assistance of the Golden Age GL and Doiby Dickles.
Sinestro returned one final time in the Silver Age, in GL #74, in which he teams up with Star Sapphire.

Overall, the qualities that I would associate with Sinestro and hope will appear in the movie, are his preparedness, and his desire for revenge against GL and the Guardians.
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Flash Gordon (English) D2-052, S-032 to S-044, S-046 and 67 Spanish Coloured (D& S) Strips

Người đăng: lecuongle

Here are some incomplete English Dailies & Sundays.

Daily strips: 
Name: D2-052 - Horseparlor In The Sky  1961-12-25 to 1962-03-17

Name: D2-052 - Robert Worker - 1961-12-25 to 1962-03-17 (Pls correct your file name & download complete version HERE)

Size: 22.73MB
URL: http://www.mediafire.com/?u9eljuflymtlcfe
Missing pages 0, 2

14 Sunday strips:
Name: S032 - The Mystery Moon of Mongo - 1948-08-01 to 1948-09-19
Size: 4.19MB
URL: http://www.mediafire.com/?y3jbv4h6sh63xg8
Missing pages 0, 1, 2, 4, 7

Name: S033 - On the Doom Comet - 1948-09-26 to 1949-06-12
Size: 38.77MB
URL: http://www.mediafire.com/?a1r8kua1naj4o47
Missing pages 0, 14, 24, 26, 35

Name: S034 - Merma - 1949-06-19 to 1949-09-11
Size: 13.45MB
URL: http://www.mediafire.com/?grcu9tl4kz0s75x
Missing Pages 0, 2, 5

Name: S035 - Polaria - 1949-09-18 to 1950-01-01
Size: 11.93MB
URL: http://www.mediafire.com/?cttbj8ikmjb549m
Missing page 0, 7, 9, 11, 12, 13, 16

Name: S036 - Tropix - 1950-01-08 to 1950-03-26
Size: 8.94MB
URL: http://www.mediafire.com/?x5198e3f12t00k2
Missing page 0, 1, 3, 6, 12

Name: S037 - Exila - 1950-04-02 to 1950-11-05
Size: 28.66MB
URL: http://www.mediafire.com/?bwpocsn2h7qxwpz
Missing pages 0, 1, 2, 23 to 25, 30, 32

Name: S038 - World Without Metal - 1950-11-12 to 1951-03-25
Size: 12.09MB
URL: http://www.mediafire.com/?qs7d5rs9akmamvi
Missing pages 0, 1, 3, 8 to 11, 14, 16, 17, 19



Name:    S039 - Missiles from the Moon - 1951-04-01 to 1951-06-17
Size:    12.14MB
URL:    http://www.mediafire.com/?atyoa9ew3b6zupn
       Missing pages 0, 5, 12

Name:    S040 - Space Platform - 1951-06-24 to 1951-10-14
Size:    12.31MB
URL:    http://www.mediafire.com/?uhf5wa1l9mua582
Missing pages 0, 2, 5, 7, 11, 12, 15, 18

Name:    S041 - Menta, Queen of Mars - 1951-10-21 to 1952-02-24
Size:    12.25MB
URL:    http://www.mediafire.com/?obtwcwxb075pnwt
Missing pages 0, 4, 5, 6, 9, 10, 12, 15, 16

Name:    S042 - Rhea, Moon of Saturn - 1952-03-02 to 1952-07-06
Size:    16.89MB
URL:    http://www.mediafire.com/?qah3kvxhhga8r7d
Missing pages 0, 4, 11, 13, 17, 18

Name:    S043 - Pyron, the Comet Master - 1952-07-13 to 1952-10-05
Size:    13.67MB
URL:    http://www.mediafire.com/?1a6m3vpjk7n6ccc
Missing pages 0, 1, 10

Name:    S044 - Venus - 1952-10-12 to 1953-02-22
Size:    21.75MB
URL:    http://www.mediafire.com/?4q9uwmqadmmorwq
       Missing pages 0, 6, 7, 19

Name:    S046 - Titan - 1953-06-07 to 1953-09-13
Size:    15.76MB
URL:    http://www.mediafire.com/?pk1o8cj1poo3itg
Missing pages 0, 5, 8, 11



************************************
Last time I  missed this file. This PDF file contains covers & links of 67 Spanish Coloured (Dailies & Sundays) strips. 



Don't miss, even you can't read Spanish like me. 


Flash Gordon - In Spain 


New Link:  http://www.mediafire.com/?b4sfty630obp10u

These are from Emile's e-collection. All credits go to her & the original uploader(s).
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The Least Heroic Hero

Người đăng: lecuongle on Thứ Hai, 13 tháng 6, 2011

A long time ago, I talked about Tin, the Metal Man who was arguably the bravest character in the Silver Age, because he always showed great valor despite obviously lacking an iota of self-confidence.

At the opposite end of the spectrum was Volstagg the Voluminous, a Marvel hero who first appeared in the Tales of Asgard backup feature in Journey into Mystery #119:

It is somewhat remarkable that Volstagg is shown fighting in his initial appearance, as he generally avoided combat whenever possible:

All the while blustering about what a mighty warrior he was.

The Tales of Asgard feature, which had started as a way for Stan to work in some background on the Norse gods, rapidly evolved into the adventures of the Warriors Three: Volstagg, Hogun the Grim and Fandral the Dashing (with Thor often joining in):

Hogun looks a bit like Attila the Hun, and Fandral was inspired by Errol Flynn's version of Robin Hood (and would later inspire Green Arrow's extreme makeover).

Volstagg himself was based on the character of Falstaff, who appeared in three Shakespeare plays, most notably the two parts of Henry IV. In the first part, Falstaff is the drinking and debauching companion of Prince Hal (the future Henry V). Like Volstagg, he's portly and given much to braggadocio, and is the frequent subject of the jests of his companions. Thor himself can be seen as similar to Hal; the son of the King who sorely tests his father's patience yet shows great heroism. Falstaff is repudiated by Hal in the final scene of the second part of Henry IV, as a sign that the young prince has renounced his former dissolute lifestyle and is ready to assume his duties as king. As far as I know, Thor never similarly abandoned Volstagg.

One aspect of Volstagg's characterization must be commented on, and that is his steed. While Hogun and Fandral had sterling and mighty chargers, Volstagg was given a mount that would not seem capable of supporting his girth:

This further emphasizes the comical nature of the character.
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Flash Gordon Sundays by Jim Keefe: S196 to S243

Người đăng: lecuongle on Chủ Nhật, 12 tháng 6, 2011

Here are three archives holding nearly all Flash Gordon's Sundays by Jim Keefe.

These are  from Emile's e-collection. All credits go to her & the original uploader(s). 
-----------
She wrote:
----------
Hi,

Here is the story listing of the complete Jim Keefe run:

a. The original print:
S189 [jk01] - Demon From the Dark Dimension - 1996-01-21 to 1996-04-21
S190 [jk02] - Nightfall on Mongo - 1996-04-28 to 1996-08-25
S191 [jk03] - The Way it Began - 1996-09-01 to 1996-09-29
S192 [jk04] - The Return of Ming - 1996-10-06 to 1996-12-22
S193 [jk05] - Durok's Revenge - 1996-12-29 to 1997-05-11
S194 [jk06] - Lair of the Damned - 1997-05-18 to 1997-07-13
S195 [jk07] - Wartog - 1997-07-20 to 1997-10-12
S196 [jk08] - Alania Under Siege - 1997-10-19 to 1998-05-03
S197 [jk09] - Traitor In Our Midst - 1998-05-10 to 1998-10-18
S198 [jk10] - The Way It Began - 1998-10-25 to 1998-11-01 (condensed version)
S199 [jk11] - Shadowland - 1999-11-08 to 1999-01-03
S200 [jk12] - Return To Syk - 1999-01-10 to 1999-03-28
S201 [jk13] - Back to Earth - 1999-04-04 to 1999-10-31
S202 [jk14] - Garden of Evil - 1999-11-07 to 1999-12-19
S203 [jk15] - Gallery Page - 1999-12-26
S204 [jk16] - The Way It Began - 2000-01-02 to 2000-01-09 (Reprint)
S205 [jk17] - To Melt a Queen's Heart - 2000-01-16 to 2000-06-18
S206 [jk18] - Operation - Escape - 2000-06-25 to 2000-08-06
S207 [jk19] - Peace Offering - 2000-08-13 to 2000-11-05
S208 [jk20] - Secret Agent X-9 - 2000-11-12 to 2001-06-17
S209 [jk21] - Nesting Ground - 2001-06-24 to 2001-08-12
S210 [jk22] - Flashback - 2001-08-19 to 2001-10-28
S211 [jk23] - Slithers - 2001-11-04 to 2002-05-12
S212 [jk24] - Crowning Glory - 2002-05-19 to 2002-08-18
S213 [jk25] - Hatchlings - 2002-08-25 to 2002-09-22
S214 [jk26] - Tournament of Death - 2002-09-29 to 2003-03-16

b.The Reprint I:
S215R [jk27] - The Way it Began (Re-Edit) - 2003-03-23 to 2003-03-30
S216R [jk28] - Wartog - 2003-04-06 to 2003-06-29
S217R [jk29] - Demon From the Dark Dimension (Partial) - 2003-07-06 to 2003-09-28
S218R [jk30] - Traitor in Our Midst - 2003-10-05 to 2004-03-14
S219R [jk31] - The Way it Began (Re-Edit) - 2004-03-21 to 2004-03-28
S220R [jk32] - Return to Syk - 2004-04-04 to 2004-06-20
S221R [jk33] - Back to Earth - 2004-06-27 to 2005-01-23
S222R [jk34] - Garden of Evil - 2005-01-30 to 2005-03-13
S223R [jk35] - The Way it Began (Re-Edit) - 2005-03-20 to 2005-03-27
S224R [jk36] - To Melt a Queen’s Heart - 2005-04-03 to 2005-09-04
S225R [jk37] - Operation “Escape” - 2005-09-11 to 2005-10-23
S226R [jk38] - Peace Offering - 2005-10-30 to 2006-01-22
S227R [jk39] - Secret Agent X-9 - 2006-01-29 to 2006-09-03
S228R [jk40] - Nesting Ground - 2006-09-10 to 2006-10-29
S229R [jk41] - Flashback - 2006-11-05 to 2007-01-14
S230R [jk42] - Slithers - 2007-01-21 to 2007-07-29
S231R [jk43] - Crowning Glory - 2007-08-05 to 2007-11-04
S232R [jk44] - Hatchlings - 2007-11-11 to 2007-12-09
S233R [jk45] - Tournament of Death - 2007-12-16 to 2008-06-01

c. The Reprint II - The Whole Run From The Beginning:
S234R [jk46] - Demon From the Dark Dimension - 2008-06-08 to 2008-08-31
S235R [jk47] - Nightfall on Mongo - 2008-09-07 to 2009-01-04
S236R [jk48] - The Way it Began - 2009-01-11 to 2009-02-08
S237R [jk49] - The Return of Ming - 2009-02-15 to 2009-05-03
S238R [jk50] - Durok’s Revenge - 2009-05-10 to 2009-09-20
S239R [jk51] - Liar of the Damned - 2009-09-27 to 2009-11-22
S240R [jk52] - Wartog - 2009-11-29 to 2010-02-21
S241R [jk53] - Alania Under Siege - 2010-02-28 to 2010-09-12
S242R [jk54] - Traitor In Our Midst - 2010-09-19 to 2011-02-27
S243R [jk55] - The Way It Began - 2011-03-06 to 2011-03-13
S244R [jk56] - Shadowland - 2011-03-20 to 2011-0-

Comments about what I have and what I miss:
a. I do not have / found the stories starting with 189 (jk01) to 195 (jk07). No folder in the archive about these 7 stories. However, these stories have been reprinted and we have these in other archives (one or both Reprints archives...)

b. I miss some strips in the story "S196 [jk08] - Alania Under Siege - 1997-10-19 to 1998-05-03". That story have also the smallest strips width: 480 pixels!

c. The Daily Ink Strips (900 pixels wide) starts with story "S220R [jk32] - Return to Syk - 2004-04-04 to 2004-06-20", with the three last strips. This story saws the strip width starting with a width of 600 pixels (2004-05-02), then with a larger width (760 pixels starting with the 2004-05-16 Sunday) and ends with a 900 pixels width (2004-06-06, 2004-06-13 and 2004-06-20).

d. The larger strips start by the last strip of story "S231R [jk43] - Crowning Glory - 2007-08-05 to 2007-11-04" (strip dated 2007-11-04).

e. There is three distinct parts in Jim Keefe run:
       1. The original print (1996-01-21 to 2003-03-16)
       2. The first reprints (2003-03-23 to 2008-06-01)
       3. The second reprint (2008-06-08 to … running)

f. The currently 'in reprint' story is "S244R [jk56] - Shadowland - 2011-03-20 to running"…
  • The first reprints… reprints some stories (no specific order);
  • The second reprint (which is actually running) reprints the whole original print in the chronoloq-gical order without any Sundat Strip missing.
  • Due to the low size of each story (the smallest archive is 127KB, the largest archive is 7.8MB!), I generated all stories as zip archives, then I generated three archives (from those) following points above.
The original print: (S196 to S214)
Name:   Jim_Keefe_Print.zip (38.6 MB)

The Reprint I: (S215 to S233) 
Name:   Jim_Keefe_Reprint_I.zip (56.9 MB)

The Reprint II - The Whole Run From The Beginning: (S234 to S243)
Name:   Jim_Keefe_Reprint_II.zip (41.7 MB)

That was a long saturday afternoon!

Enjoy,

Emile
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Plastic Man #1

Người đăng: lecuongle on Thứ Năm, 9 tháng 6, 2011



Plastic Man had a long and storied history in the Golden Age of comics with over 100 appearances in Police Comics, most of which had him as the cover feature and 64 issues of his own magazine. He outlasted all of the GA superheroes with the exception of Superman, Batman and Wonder Woman.

Part of this was due to the artistic genius of his creator, Jack Cole. Cole was a master cartoonist and he made full use of his talents to make his pliable character as amusing as possible. When Plas laughed, Cole contorted his features so that he resembled a braying donkey. A recurring theme had him changing himself into an inanimate object, such as a couch or a rug or a lamp in the crooks' hideout, only to reveal himself at the critical moment.

Plastic Man's adventures were published by Quality Comics, which sold out to DC in late 1956. DC continued several Quality titles, including Blackhawk, GI Combat and Heart Throbs, but Plastic Man did not make the jump. If this seems puzzling, remember that superheroes were at their all-time low in publication around this time; Showcase #4 had been issued a few months earlier, but several publishers had tried and failed with superhero revivals of Captain America, the Human Torch, the Blue Beetle and a new hero called Captain Flash.

And so Plastic Man slumbered for a full decade. Meanwhile, several other characters were introduced who ahem, borrowed his stretching abilities, including Reed Richards aka Mr Fantastic, the Elongated Man, and Elastic Lad. In House of Mystery #160 (July 1966), Robby Reed used his Dial H for Hero skills to transform himself into Plastic Man.

Shortly before that, however, Jules Feiffer published his landmark book, The Great Comic Book Heroes. This was one of the very first books to take comic books seriously, and reprinted many classic Golden Age stories, including the origin of Plastic Man from Police Comics #1.

DC evidently felt confident enough in Plastic Man to launch him directly into his own title, something of a rarity for the company in the Silver Age. I would attribute this to a confluence of several factors, including the runaway success of the campy Batman TV series, the increasing influence of Golden Age fans who remembered Plas from their youth and the success of Feiffer's book.

Unfortunately, those are also probably the reasons the series failed. First, the Batman fad imploded like all fads do, and superheroes who were anything less than super-serious were no longer cool. And the new Plastic Man was not faithful to the Golden Age character, doubtless turning off the older fans.

For starters, Cole was not available, having committed suicide in 1958. This first issue was illustrated by Gil Kane, and while I admire Kane's amazing body of work on features like Green Lantern, the Atom and Spiderman, the plain fact is that he was not cut out for cartoonish characters like Plastic Man. You definitely had the feeling that he was trying hard here:

But I suspect that's one of the secrets of great cartooning; it has to look effortless, with very simple lines.

For some reason, Plastic Man's old sidekick, Woozy Winks was not brought back for this series. Instead, Plas picked up an earnest young man with a crewcut named Gordon K. Trueblood:

The chemistry wasn't there between them. In the Golden Age, the goofy sidekick was a staple of superhero comics, from the Flash's Winky, Blinky and Noddy to Green Lantern's Doiby Dickles and Wonder Woman's Etta Candy. Indeed, Alfred, Bruce Wayne's butler was initially played for laughs. But for the most part they were not reincarnated in the Silver Age. Gordie mostly comes off as Bud Abbott to Plastic Man's Costello; a straight man or foil.

The villain is Dr Dome, shown wearing the chromium headgear on the cover. He's a standard mad scientist with the inevitable curvaceous daughter (wearing the Emma Peel jumpsuit). Plas has also picked up a girlfriend, Micheline DeLute 3rd; as you can probably guess, she's wealthier than Richie Rich. A significant subplot of this issue concerns her family's dislike for her goofy and playful boyfriend:

That bit with the cops calls to mind that the Golden Age Plastic Man was originally a crook named Eel O'Brian, but after being left for dead by his gang (and gaining his powers), he turned into a crimebuster.

Dr Dome sends the second greatest villain, Professor X (no, not that Professor X) to attack Plastic Man, but our hero manages to defeat him. At one point the curvaceous daughter (named Lynx) seduces him and slips a mickey in his lemonade, then dumps him into the ocean, but he gets away from that death trap as well.

The series meandered on for ten issues, with Win Mortimer taking over the art duties starting with #2, and Jack Sparling sitting in for the final three installments.

Although the series was mostly forgettable, it did have the salutary effect of introducing Silver Age readers to Plastic Man. In the early to mid-1970s DC reprinted quite a few of Cole's Golden Age classics.

Update: Marc Burkhardt makes a terrific point about the GA Plastic Man in the comments:
Plas was essentially the straight man in an insane world (kind of like Pogo); a key ingredient that doesn't work in shared universes all that well.

Yes, I think that nails it. In Cole's world, everybody was about 90 degrees off kilter. Plastic Man, while he had a sense of humor, was relatively sane. The Silver Age Plas became a prankster in a world that was stuffy and serious which can be amusing but is not terribly original.
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