As many of you probably know, Superman's heat vision was not an early power. Both Superman and Superboy originally used "the heat" of their X-ray vision to melt things. This changed at some point fairly early in Weisinger's tenure. I am not quite sure why; was it because of the obvious problem that bullets were made of lead and thus not affected by X-rays? So I started going through the early Weisinger Action issues, looking for the changeover. What surprised me at first was how common the "heat of my X-ray vision" meme was in Superman. To give you an idea, it popped up in Action #254,, #255, #256, #258, #259, #262, #263 and #264, or in 8 of 11 issues. But after that it vanished for awhile, only appearing in Action #271. And even that appearance comes with an asterisk: But in actuality that particular panel is being narrated by a fake Superman and Luthor henchman named Gypo. So it is far from certain that really represents a real instance of the heat of Superman's X-ray vision being used. On the other hand, it is fairly easy to pinpoint the first use of Superman's heat vision in Action; it appears in Action #275 (April 1961): Okay, so in the second appearance of Brainiac, heat vision was established? But you know the problem; there are several other Superman mags to check, so I decided to start walking it back from April 1961, partially to see if there was an earlier appearance and partially to see if there was a more credible last mention of the "heat of my X-ray vision". There was no mention of Superman's heat from eyes power in Superman #144 (April 1961), but I did find this in Superman #143 (February 1961): End of story, right? Not quite, however, for when I went forward to see when the first mention of Superman's "heat vision" came, I found mention of the heat of his X-ray vision in stories published after April 1961. The latest mention I can find now is from Superman #146 (July 1961): The first mention of heat vision I can find in Superman issues comes from #148 (October 1961): The transition from "heat of X-ray vision" to "heat vision" is pretty easy to track in Superboy. From Superboy #87 (March 1961): While in the following issue (April 1961): So it appears pretty obvious that the changeover came between the issues published in March 1961 and April 1961. Update: This is also one of those areas where you cannot trust the reprints. When I went to read the Superman story in Action #259, the closest issue at hand was the reprint in 80-Page Giant #1 (August 1964), where this sequence occurs: But after noticing that there were several mentions of "heat of my X-ray vision" after this, I hunted down the original, and sure enough:
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Home » Archives for tháng 8 2012
When Did Superman's Heat Vision Start?
Người đăng: lecuongle on Thứ Tư, 22 tháng 8, 2012
Nhãn:
Heat Vision,
Mort Weisinger,
Superman,
X-Ray Vision
D-235: Mexico’s Phantom (A Detente With Crime Part III)
Người đăng: lecuongle on Thứ Sáu, 10 tháng 8, 2012
Character: The Phantom
Title: Mexico’s Phantom (A Detente With Crime Part III)
Number: 235
Writer: Tony DePaul
Artist: Paul Ryan
Kind: Daily Strip
Start date: 2012-04-09
End Date: 2012-08-18
Count: 114 strips
Note: This is the third and last part of the story arc.
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------------
Contributed by "Emile".
Frew 1636: The Poisoned Land
Người đăng: lecuongle on Thứ Năm, 9 tháng 8, 2012
Story: Falco Pellerin
Art: Cesar Spadari
Cover artist: Antonio Lemos
Fantomen 14-15/2012
Fantomet 13-14/2012
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Enhanced Version (2000px width) 25 MB
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Art: Cesar Spadari
Cover artist: Antonio Lemos
Fantomen 14-15/2012
Fantomet 13-14/2012
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Original Version (1400px width) 10 MB
Enhanced Version (2000px width) 25 MB
Scanned by Kit Walker. All credits go to "Kit Walker".
Can't See the Fortress for the Keys...
Người đăng: lecuongle
When I wrote the last post, I looked ahead for the next few from Action #251 to see if there were any more appearances of the small (or large) key to the Fortress of Solitude. However, when I slowed down to actually read those stories, I found something rather amusing. In Action #253, Superman cautions Jimmy Olsen:
Okay, Supes, mum's the word. Except, in Action #252, the issue published just one month before that panel:
DOH!
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Okay, Supes, mum's the word. Except, in Action #252, the issue published just one month before that panel:
DOH!
1957-58-59: The Mort Weisinger Superman Era Begins
Người đăng: lecuongle on Thứ Ba, 7 tháng 8, 2012
This is one of the most important dividing points in the Silver Age of Comics, and yet, when you try to draw it, you realize just how shaky the line is. If we look at, for example, Action #230, the July 1957 issue in the Grand Comics Database (a terrific resource), we find the following under editor:
Well, there are problems with even this chain of command. First, both the Weisinger titles (the Superman line) and the Schiff titles (which included Batman, Detective, World's Finest and Blackhawk, among others) dramatically changed once the name on the indicia was adjusted to reflect the "actual" editorship of those books.
This indicates to me that Ellsworth still exercised some strong control over DC even from Hollywood. Remember, this is in the days before email and when even fax machines were uncommon, so it's unlikely he could have been vetoing art.
Ah, but there's the rub. The inability to veto art implies also that art goes through, and if we look at the DC Superman art before Weisinger's name officially appears on the indicia, we can see that art tended to go through in that era, whereas it got stopped once Mort was given official credit.
For example, consider this panel from Action #231:
As you can see, that bears only a slight resemblance to the Silver Age Jimmy Olsen. And that's not some fluke; Jimmy's appearance was only consistent in his own magazine.
It's pretty clear that Weisinger began exerting more control over Superman's appearances at least as early as Action Comics #241, which featured the first appearance of the Fortress of Solitude:
Reading the Superman stories in Action 230-240, I found no real continuity; each story was a one-off, and they could have been published in any order. But starting with the above issue, there was a definite change, as the Fortress and the Bottle City of Kandor (which appeared in the following issue) became continuing plot points. So it's tempting and natural to assume that Weisinger began to really take charge around this time. But there are still problems. A one-time mistake on the depiction of the key, for example? Nope, it was often shown that way in the next few issues:
That's from Action #247, a full six months after the intro, and given that the key had been established a few times as looking nothing like that (for example):
Weisinger, a stickler for detail, apparently accepted the artwork shown for #247. A similar problem arises with #249:
However, with #250, the editorial change became official; Weisinger's name first appears in the indicia of that March, 1959 issue. That does not mean that the problems ended. Action #251 showed the small key again. But after that, things pretty much got standardized across the entire Superman line. Oh, there were still some occasional bloopers, like this oddball version of Kandor from #253:
And, as I discussed many moons ago, Supergirl's skirt was occasionally colored red instead of blue.
So, my take? I accept that Weisinger edited the line well before 1958, but that he did not take anywhere near as active a role as he would starting with Action #241. After #250, he definitely made a more serious attempt to standardize the looks of characters and objects like the Fortress Key and the Bottle City.
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Whitney Ellsworth (credited); Jack Schiff (managing); Mort Weisinger (actual).We know that Ellsworth was in Hollywood, pushing DC's properties for TV and movies, and that his involvement in the comics was presumably minimal. Schiff probably ran DC's offices at the time, and Weisinger did the Superman books. But....
Well, there are problems with even this chain of command. First, both the Weisinger titles (the Superman line) and the Schiff titles (which included Batman, Detective, World's Finest and Blackhawk, among others) dramatically changed once the name on the indicia was adjusted to reflect the "actual" editorship of those books.
This indicates to me that Ellsworth still exercised some strong control over DC even from Hollywood. Remember, this is in the days before email and when even fax machines were uncommon, so it's unlikely he could have been vetoing art.
Ah, but there's the rub. The inability to veto art implies also that art goes through, and if we look at the DC Superman art before Weisinger's name officially appears on the indicia, we can see that art tended to go through in that era, whereas it got stopped once Mort was given official credit.
For example, consider this panel from Action #231:
As you can see, that bears only a slight resemblance to the Silver Age Jimmy Olsen. And that's not some fluke; Jimmy's appearance was only consistent in his own magazine.
It's pretty clear that Weisinger began exerting more control over Superman's appearances at least as early as Action Comics #241, which featured the first appearance of the Fortress of Solitude:
Reading the Superman stories in Action 230-240, I found no real continuity; each story was a one-off, and they could have been published in any order. But starting with the above issue, there was a definite change, as the Fortress and the Bottle City of Kandor (which appeared in the following issue) became continuing plot points. So it's tempting and natural to assume that Weisinger began to really take charge around this time. But there are still problems. A one-time mistake on the depiction of the key, for example? Nope, it was often shown that way in the next few issues:
That's from Action #247, a full six months after the intro, and given that the key had been established a few times as looking nothing like that (for example):
Weisinger, a stickler for detail, apparently accepted the artwork shown for #247. A similar problem arises with #249:
However, with #250, the editorial change became official; Weisinger's name first appears in the indicia of that March, 1959 issue. That does not mean that the problems ended. Action #251 showed the small key again. But after that, things pretty much got standardized across the entire Superman line. Oh, there were still some occasional bloopers, like this oddball version of Kandor from #253:
And, as I discussed many moons ago, Supergirl's skirt was occasionally colored red instead of blue.
So, my take? I accept that Weisinger edited the line well before 1958, but that he did not take anywhere near as active a role as he would starting with Action #241. After #250, he definitely made a more serious attempt to standardize the looks of characters and objects like the Fortress Key and the Bottle City.
Frew 1638 - Three Story Special
Người đăng: lecuongle
This 100 Page Special is reprinted version of followings:
- "Wings of Death" (Frew: 976; Fantomen: 22/1989; Fantomet: 7/1990) by Michael Tierres, Felmang, and Ferri
- "The Man in the Iron Mask" (Frew: 956; Fantomen: 8/1989; Fantomet: 18/1989) by Donne Avenell and Hans Lindahl
- "Worubu" (Frew: 977; Fantomen: 14/1990; Fantomet: 23/1990) by Norman Worker and Jean-Yves Mitton. Note:
Download Frew 1638 (except "Worobu") scanned & edited by Kit Walker.
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Worobu story you can download HERE (Thanks a lot Kit Walker for uploading!)
Flash Gordon - S066 - Weird World (1957-09-08 to 1957-11-24)
Người đăng: lecuongle on Thứ Hai, 6 tháng 8, 2012
Story & Art: Mac Raboy
Original run: 1957-09-08 to 1957-11-24
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Original run: 1957-09-08 to 1957-11-24
Summary: Leaving Superba in yet another attempt to reach their home planet (see S-065 The Black Box), Flash, Dale and Zarkov immediately end up in more trouble as a huge swarm of space-moths are attracted to their ship and weigh it down towards the gravitational pull of a nearby planet.
Bailing out over the surface before the vessel disintegrates, the ship-wrecked crew find themselves in a reality inhabited by a number of incongruous races, including a rubber-limbed people with mischief in mind...
(Source of summary: www.ipcomics.net)
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All credits go to "spax".
Nhãn:
English,
Flash Gordon,
Strips