Showing posts with label Superman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Superman. Show all posts

21 June 2018

Easing Troubled Minds

No, of course i wasn't going to leave things like that.

The Kryptonoid kept Superman on the defensive through most of the next issue's story, until the penultimate page. In addition to featuring the turning point of the fight leading to our villain's defeat, that page also reveals the answer the question posed in the previous post - How did the Kryptonoid animate the lightpost?


Freaked out at the notion of bonding with his own destruction, he's down for the count in only 3 panels.

My guess of the eye-beams transmitting the microorganisms to enable control was correct, but i didn't think to specify having the beams generated by the X-17 robot.

Now you can sleep easy with the knowledge of how Kal-El prevailed.

page art by Curt Swan & Frank Chiaramonte, words by Martin Pasko, for Superman #329 (1978)

How To Bake A Super-Villain


Villains are often as much the stars of comic books as are the Heroes.
As in most forms of storytelling, the heroes are to a large extent defined by their villains. While easy enough to populate the book with generic thieves and politicians (or whatever sort of villainous type one might prefer to insert), trying to create a memorable villain can be a far more difficult feat.

And when your hero is Superman...  well, the complaints about the difficulty of writing villains for him are nearly as legendary as Kal-El himself these days. And understandably, especially back in the days when he could juggle planets while kissing Lois. Whatcha gonna do?

Well, let's jump back 40 years and see how Marty Pasko handled the problem. This morning we saw Clark using the telephone landline to his Fortress Of Solitude (of which Clarks seem to be so fond). The reason he was calling was to check with the computer on a bit of Kryptonian history. Like nearly all Kryptonian history, it involved his father, Jor-El.

Step One) Begin with a Kryptonian organism.

A friend of Jor-El named Ser-Ze had developed a type of commensal (sort of a non-parasitic symbiote) that could animate synthetic component and react to nerve stimuli...


Once again, however, that dreaded X factor pops up. They hadn't considered that living organisms, by nature, multiply. What happens when they grow past the material they were designed to inhabit?


It didn't go well, and soon they were faced with outright revolution and invasion from within...


In the aftermath, some remaining samples are discovered which, of course, means they're going straight into Jor-El's usual trashcan - outer space...


Decades later on Earth, since Jor-El shot most of his trash in the same direction that he launched his son...


Superman, in space dealing with the bus the Commensals rode in on, notices the Kryptonian origin of the piece that got away...


...and, as we well know, anything from Krypton gets a massive level-up upon entering Earth's biosphere...


The two collide, sending each flying in opposite directions and dropping Superman unconscious into the sea.

Step Two) Add one high-powered military officer with a bitter grudge against our hero.

The general in charge of the mission that was scrapped by Superman's mission in space (for the government), has shown a consistently hostile attitude toward the Man of Steel. Far more than one might think we'd see from just having his command undermined...


Step Three) Add one recovered & reprogrammed Superman robot.


Step Four) Combine Kryptonian Organisms and Superman Robot.


Step Five) Blend in Military Officer (Mix Well)


Step Six) Fold in Surprise Ingredient - an unexpected power.
(I know what my theory was as to how this power worked. Have you got one?)


Step Seven) Combine hatred of Superman with hatred of Jor-El for added spice. (Caution - may get too hot!)


There you have it - ready to serve.
But, we're all out of comic, so i guess we're done here, eh?

page art by Curt Swan and Frank Chiaramonte for Superman #328 (1978)

C.K. Phone Home

Sorry about yesterday. Spent all my words elsewhere. I'm sure i'll dig up some more for today.
But, first - a quick reminder of life in 1978 - 40 years ago, Superman had a land line* to his Fortress Of Solitude...



...and the president of Tri-State Bell had what even the President didn't have - Kal El's phone number!

panels by Curt Swan and Frank Chiaramonte from Superman #328 (1978)

===
*(For younger readers, a "Land Line" refers to an ancient practice wherein phone signals actually traveled along a physical wire. This required a "Phone Line" to be in place connecting both ends of the conversation. Whether strung along a series of poles or buried underground, it was referred to either way as a "land line".)  

05 May 2018

Saturday Super Solutions

Here are the solutions to yesterday's FF&G, simple though they may be...








puzzle pages from Amazing World Of DC Comics #7,  Superman Jumbo Color And Activity Book, Superman-Tim (July47), Superman Annual UK '72 (1947, 1972, 1974, 2006)

04 May 2018

Friday Fun & Super Games

It's Friday? When Did This Happen?

As noted earlier, the week was off to a rough start and my grasp of time can be tenuous, at best.
But - Hey! I finally noticed that it's Firday and time for  -


As you probably couldn't escape noticing, it's Superman's 80th birthday this month. So let's go with a quick assortment of Superman puzzzles this week:







puzzle sources tomorrow - wouldn't do to give those hints today, would it?

28 March 2018

Shazam! Up In The Sky!

It was 40 years ago at the American Nostalgia Convention in Dallas, in 1978? (Or was it '77 and i didn't see it reported until '78? I'm not entirely certain.)

I know in the main ballroom of the convention, the Public Address system suddenly erupted with "SHAZAM!" and Jackson Bostwick emerged in full costume. Back in the 70s, Bostwick was the man who brought Captain Marvel to life on TV. The crowd, of course, erupted at the surprise of having the costumed superhero suddenly appear.

Moments later, the PA sang out again - "Look! Up In The Sky! It's A Bird! It's A Plane!" and from the wings a fully costumed Kirk Alyn appeared - the first man to play Superman in the movies. The crowd at this non-comics convention were treated to a legendary comics encounter that has yet to be repeated (though that may soon change) - the meeting of Superman & Captain Marvel -


Somehow, this odd encounter has been forgotten, it seems, and lost to modern memory. But not, i'd wager, forgotten by those who were there for this legendary meet.

Kirk Alyn & Jackson  Bostwick getting their hero on at Dallas (1978)

10 September 2017

Sunday Super Funnies Timewarp

Wasn't i here before? I don't think you were with me last time. Now we're late with the Sunday Funnies!
Who can we turn to for help?
How about - a Sunday Superman Selection!



That comes from Wally Wood way back in the days when Mad was a color comic book, before relaunching as a black & white magazine to escape Comic Code tyranny. The cover, by Harvey Kurtzman, from that issue (#4):

Now let's shift to more modern comics, via the web.

Our first is modern in origin, but actually older in design aesthetic. It comes from Kerry Callen, and you can find more of his Super Antics on his blog.


Superman/Batman fun from the Brazilian Dragonarte site:



That last one looks like the URL ends in .bk - it's actually .br (Brazil)

And to make sure i'm not inundated by Batfanatics, here's a counterpoint from Nebezial:


comics from Mad #4 (1953) and attributed websites (see links)

30 July 2017

Sunday Morning Funnies - Intermedia Romance


When i go mining through the lost archives on my Comics Archeology jaunts, comic books are not the only focus of the digs. I'm also tapping veins of pre-comicbook magazines going back to the old half-dimes of the 19th century, and men's magazines of the 20th century. There's a  lot of interesting art to be found in the story illustrations, advertising, comics and cartoons hiding in some of those pages.
Sometimes Comics and Cartoons cross-pollinate.
45 years ago...

NOTE: Due to restructuring of the blog,
the artwork has been moved to our back room.

Art Lutner having fun in bed from Gallery #2 (December 1972)

Down Memory Lane - a half century later


50 years back, in the January 1967 of Superman a very interesting "Letters Page" ran under the heading of DOWN MEMORY LANE. The previous August in Adventure comics, the editors asked for letters from parents instead of the readers. Their purpose being to get their perspective on how Superman had changed since he debuted three decades earlier. Can you imagine that? The editors at DC actually wanting to hear from the public?
It was a different time.

Let's take a look at their responses. Perhaps it might provide some insights half a century later.


"One thing never changed - stories dealing with the brotherhood of man."
Oh, damnit. Can't think to type. Music in head too loud...

...Your lifelong membership is FREE
keep agivin' each brother all you can
OH aren't you proud to be
in that Fraternity
the great big Brotherhoo-

Oh - um...  Draw your own conclusions.


Good stories. Yup, can't argue with that being key.


Well, he wasn't wrong there.(then?)


For younger readers, when he says 'scanning' he means perusing, not archiving. Scanners weren't even telepathic head poppers yet, much less personal archiving & duplicating machines.


"A great improvement in your comics is the letter page."
For younger readers (again), this was back in a time when the publishers wanted Readers, so the idea of the letters page made sense. In the current market, readers are an annoyance, Collectors are much preferred.  Readers want actual stories to follow, and they often share what they read. Collectors just want events that might be worth money later, and they often buy multiple copies, sometimes without wasting their valuable time 'reading'.
Readers once vastly outnumbered collectors, but today are mostly anecdotal. They're out there, but when's the last time you actually saw one?


Through all the subsequent evolution, Superman has ben a human character..."
Umm....  not last time i looked.

Skipping past a time when 10 cents was hard-earned money...  Times changed on that one, eh? It's a lot harder to convey Patriotic messages in a time when directly opposed views are both labelled "patriotic" and both called "treason". Patriotism gets confused with Old World Nationalism with Fascism with whatever Extremism the speaker has embraced.
Hard to fault not heavily embracing that one. It comes across as parody too often.
And it can come back to bite you in the ass when definitions change again. (See 1950's Captain America and later retcons)

Fifty years later, how much of the above still holds true?
I really couldn't say. I gave up on the comics a while back. Worked out pretty well for me. The world in my head never suffered through the depredations of villain worship, among many other horrors inflicted upon them (and their readers). What shuddering whispers pass my way keep me from wanting to return to the books any time soon.

Last i saw in the comics, and most certainly in the movies, there's little recognizable from that character 50 years ago.

Here's the whole page, from Superman #192:



I wonder if Tyler Hoechlin's going to be brought back for Season 3?

DOWN MEMORY LANE from Superman #192 (Jan 1967)