06 December 2017

Living The Live


I just finished re-watching Cutie Honey: The Live - the 2007 live-action TV series adaptation of Go Nagai's Cutie Honey. I mentioned the show on a previous Blue Monday installment, but as mentioned then it doesn't really qualify for Blue Monday. There is one bare breast in the show, a girl in a mob boss's bed - and they show it twice. (It's a 25 episode series, but they still managed a "clip show" featuring segments of past episodes. I believe it was after a mid-season break, used to draw in new viewers. That would also be why they inserted the bare breast shot again, repeating the lure from the first episode.)

As we saw in the comic, when she Flash!es, Honey's clothing disappears as it's reconfigured. On the TV show, they kinda/sorta hid that she was wearing a body suit in the beginning with the special effects, but along the way they just decided those details must be getting reconfigured, too, and stopped worrying about it. The crowds, of course, certainly appreciated it - as when Honey leads a group of homeless and unfortunates who have been assessed with an "Existence Tax" by Panther Claw...


One of the fun aspects of this incarnation of Cutie Honey (my favorite of the 3 live-action versions to date) is the way the embrace the spirit of cartoons at times. In that same scene, the crowd (including several of Honey's homeless friends) are unwilling to let Honey fight the battle alone. Gen-san steps up with the support of some of the gang...


And they even come together to give him some "powers" in the fight...


The 2004 Cutie Honey movie embraced the anime heritage more openly and deeply, but Cutie Honey: The Live embraced the spirit in a way i found most appealing. 2016's Cutie Honey: Tears... had some nice effects. I'll stand by the TV version.
How can i not love a hero who wraps up a fight like this:


But don't get the wrong idea. By the end of the series, half the cast (including heroes) is dead, some of them twice. Parts are light and bubbly, parts are silly, and parts are much more grim than anything in the dark & gritty reboot. But they always try to remember it's supposed to be fun. What a difference that makes.
This was one of those shows that i was watching 1 or 2 episodes a day as part of my viewing routine, but wound up watching the last 6-8 episodes in one sitting. We'll come back for a deeper look, as well as a peek at the movies after i re-watch the 2004 film. But, you know how it is at the end of a series..?
One often wants to milk the enjoyment a little longer, and so you wind up with this post.

stills from Cutie Honey: The Live (most from s01e20) (2007)

05 December 2017

Moon Girl Bonus Qubit

It is Moon Girl, and yet - it isn't.

We saw this morning that with issue #9, Moon Girl Fights Crime changed once again to become this:


Now that A Moon, A Girl... Romance was the title, you might assume that Moon Girl was gone. Yes, and No. You see, they did this terrible thing to her - made her a background character who now fights heartbreak instead of alien invasions.


We learn of Mary Lou's tribulations in her generic romance tale with no sign of Moon Girl until the final two pages:


Better to have left her in publishing limbo than in this state.
And, yet...  I can still find more of Moon Girl in that comic than i can in the 2011 revival-


The only connection seems to be pirating the old names to new characters and relations. I wasn't able to wade through much, so no full analysis here.
No Moon Girl (nor The Prince), either.

Moon Girl Bonus Bit 1


So...

I wrote up this morning's post and put it in the queue last night.
This morning Happy Houligans #1 and Animal Fables #7 arrived.

Those two statements might seem unrelated, but there is a direct connection.
EC was pretty proud of this new character they created with Moon Girl. In their advertisements, they referred to "This Amazing New Magazine Destined To Make Comic History!"

They thought they had something here, and they wanted to make sure it got seen. And so, her first tale also appeared in Animal Fables and Happy Houligans. (And International Crime Patrol #6? I haven't found that issue as yet, so i don't know if it's a new tale or another presentation of her origin story.)

This is particularly nice for us. You see, i'd only been able to work with library microfiche copies of some of those early Moon Girl issues, including the first. So now we have a better quality page to work with than that which we used for the original post.

That being the case, let's take a better look at that first story. Here is the 8 page tale in its entirety, as it appeared in Happy Houligans #1:


Moon Girl by Bill Woolfolk and Sheldon Moldoff from Happy Houligans #1 (1947)


Moon Girl Bonus Bit 0

A few extra bits on Moon Girl to follow this morning's post.

Shelly Moldoff's introduction, from Moon Girl #6-


...and the original art for it, if you like that sort of thing-


Here's the art for one of issue #8's splash pages that we saw previously-


...and, just for Kid - because of the blog timing - here's an advertisement that links our posts:


Moon Girl and Dandy together!
(Sorry, folks - that makes so little sense, i know)

Mooning for the Girl

Hm...

I've needed a feature title for a while now - what to call those great old characters that i'd purely enjoy seeing revived in modern times. Maybe a nice movie or three. Of course, my Odd brain tends towards totally obscure titles, like perhaps The Buck Board. Treated as a bulletin board upon which to post these characters, that name references Frank Buck, the big game hunter who popularized the phrase "Bring 'em Back Alive" as a nod to the hunt for these old characters to revive.
Sure, a feature title like that could work - but it's not very intuitive, is it?

So, for now, the notion percolates and we go without until something tasty bubbles to the top. (Who knows? Maybe it'll happen in the next 12 hours or so, and i'll modify this post before  you see it!)

Meanwhile (70 years ago)...
As astute readers might already suspect, today's feature is one such character. Two, if you count her sidekick. Ladies, Gentlemen, and Other Determinations - may i present, fresh from 1947, the amazing Moon Girl (and the Prince). (The real Moon Girl, not some Janie-come-lately using the name)


Comic History Footnote:* Moon Girl is sporting the high heel sandals look here, a year before Wonder Woman adopted the look. Was this where WW's team got the idea?**

Though filled with potential, Moon Girl lasted only 8 issues in her own title. One issue of Moon Girl and The Prince...


...five issues of Moon Girl...






...and two issues of Moon Girl Fights Crime!:



Moon Girl was well ahead of the cultural curve, not only holding her own title in the '40s, but with a male sidekick to rescue for turnabout-


Hey! Look at that.
She even beat Captain America, actually managing to rescue her sidekick from the rocket.
The "Lady" above, Satana, was arch-nemesis to Moon Girl, with her debut in the first issue:


Interestingly, Satana's first appearance was the only time Prince Mengu got top billing.
The typical issue contained 3 stories, so there's about two dozen Moon Girl tales (including an appearance in International Crime Patrol #6). She faced a wide variety of often impressive foes in those tales...












Perhaps, by this point, you are wondering about our hero's origin/back story, hm? Fortunately, the first story covered that for us:

It likely comes as no surprise that the Queen informs the Princess that she is the "direct descendant of the daughter of King Kaidu! It is decreed that the man who takes you for his wife must first prove his superior strength."
"No man can do that!"
But is that true? After all, Prince Mengu is "a true son of Hercules". But while wearing the moonstone, her power is increased and she defeats the Prince in all his trials. But, as he leaves, she regrets having defeated him, finding that in winning, she has lost what she desired...


...and so began their epic adventures.

Moon Girl was initially scripted by Bill Woolfolk with art by Sheldon Moldoff and covers by Johnny Craig. Gardner Fox joined the team on issue #2, writing half the stories, and by #3 he was the primary author on the book. Shelly Moldoff took over the covers and, oddly enough, Johnny Craig stepped inside to do a story or two.

But, alas - it seems Moon Girl was too ahead of the cultural curve. Issue #9, the title changed once again...


Yeah, Feldstein's got a neat signature, but i'd have preferred more Moon Girl.

Roy Thomas was a fan, too. After Crisis On Infinite Earths he wanted to use Moon Girl to replace Wonder Woman in the restructured Justice Society. But the rights weren't secured and he wound up using Miss America instead.***

I'd wager a revived version of Moon Girl and The Prince, done well, would find a lot of fans in today's market and could kick some serious movie butt.

all pages from Moon Girl #s 1-9 (1948-9)

===

*(Sometimes those bad puns just cannot be resisted)
**(Thanks to Luke Blanchard over at Captain Comics for pointing out the timeline)
***( Thanks, also, to Phillip Portelli for offering that info tidbit over at the Captain's forum)