Showing posts with label Ulysses Q. Wacky. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ulysses Q. Wacky. Show all posts

10 October 2017

Meanwhile, Back On The Snipe Hunt...

You may recall, from the long gone days of last weekend, this image of Supersnipe's imaginings of The Man Of 1955:


That strange child's head on a man's body showed up again in the following issue. We see young Koppy McTodd McFad in the hoosegow, tossed in to calm him down after a minor rampage with bees...


...and the pattern was set. Whenever imagining himself as an adult, he always visualized himself as he is now, but with the superhero body. Later in that same issue, he teams up for the first time with Ulysses Q. Wacky for an adventure that expanded the scope of the book in a mildly insane way:

I find myself mixed with admiration and horror at the placement of the advertisement in the story like that. But, we digress...

And so, with the second issue of his comic, George Marcoux has effectively opened Supersnipe up for unlimited story telling.
But the breaking down of barriers wouldn't stop there. In that same issue...


Supersnipe interacting with real, honest-to-comics superheroes?

More next time...

pages from Supersnipe #7 (1942)

06 October 2017

Six Of One

Army & Navy Comics surrendered after their encounter with Supersnipe in #5, and so issue #6 was the first for our hero:


"At Last - A "Comic" With A Sense Of Humor" 
And an oddly twisted sense of humor it was, i'm happy to report.

Though the book was most definitely Supersnipe's now, it did still hold traces (or already paid for stories) from its' predecessor with strips like these:





The new title added some new heroes, some more heroic than others...



...and the oddest of the bunch, Wing Woo Woo. Reading now, this is quite cringe-worthy as a horribly racist caricature of a person, especially to someone like myself who grew up in Asia. But viewed in historical context, it was actually considered progressive at the time. While we were rounding up Japanese Americans and tossing them into our own concentration camps, a large percentage of Americans were completely unable to differentiate between Japanese & Chinese and would gladly have lumped them in together. (You know, much the way too many modern Americans will gladly lump all Muslims together) If you'd asked most about the Rape of Nanking, they'd wonder whose grandma you were talking about.
Showing a 'Chinee' who was a patriotic American helping the war effort was an attempt at positive depiction of Chinese Americans. It was definitely a "one step at a time" kind of thing, where they had yet to really grasp that by depicting the character as they were was inherently demeaning - to them that was just how you showed someone was Chinese. It was more a matter of ignorance than malice, and while perhaps disquieting to view, it should be remembered that Gruskin was trying. Hell, he may even have had military contacts with the Flying Tigers* for all we know. Our history my be uncomfortable, but forgetting it only serves to make us feel better, and prevents learning the lessons of the past.
So, as a general policy, you won't find these sort of strips censored or glossed over on an automatic basis here at The Voice Of ODD! But you may have to suffer through one of my rambles.


All three of our new heroes returned for further adventures in Supersnipe.

But the real stars of the book were Supersnipe and his friends & family. Koppy (Supersnipe's secret identity) routinely showed up in other stories, like this one featuring his Grandfather:


It doesn't end well...


One of Koppy's friends you've already met, the star of this week's Sunday Morning Funnies:


Let me tell ya somethin'...  Back in them days, ya got some damn comics for yer dime!
With all this going on, there's still the lead story, 22 glorious pages of Supersnipe!
We're mostly covering the odd nature of the title itself this time, so we're not going to run a full 22 page story, or even a breakdown, this time out. Just peek to show how odd things are starting to get. Check the major events that open up this story:


Oh, yeah! Supersnipe is a real and actual hero now. Ain't no stopping the future!
And note the "Jap Trap" sign in the background, referencing Ulysses's own story later in the book. (seen above) George Marcoux instills a sense of fun throughout, in both writing and artwork. And he enjoys picking on comic book tropes, way back in 1942, as in these two pages:


And we're still in the first issue here. Wait until you see the explanation for that pic from Saturday's Behold The Future post.

And the book continued to get odder over time...


But we'll get there...

all art except Huck Finn from Supersnipe #6 (1942), Huck from early next year (1943)


*(The Flying Tigers were an American squadron of pilots fighting World War II for China before America got involved. There's comics, movies, books... go enjoy)

01 October 2017

Sunday Morning Funnies

Let's go back for some old school comedy with this week's Sunday Morning Funnies, starring Master Ulysses Q. Wacky and featuring a variety off old time oddities: