28 February 2018

The Road To Wakanda

The Black Panther, like T'Challa, is King these days - ruling the box-office world. While he made his debut in 1966, it wasn't until 1977 that he finally got his own title. That slow start is fairly indicative of the rough ride getting here to mass market star. If we had over 8000 folks so intimidated by the idea of a black hero that they were voting against the film before they could even have seen it, just imagine what it was like a half century back. It was a struggle to even get the idea of a black hero out there, in any form.

There were other attempts to do a black hero in comics - some savage social parody, some straight-up heroes, and some a mix of both. But - damn. It's been a bumpy road...




With the way of underground comics of the time, one often could expect to find conventions subverted and cultural norms toppled. It wasn't too surprising to find the "hero" of a story (or comic) to be more villain in perception, and so our hero in the second issue of Captain Guts appears as the villain -

 NOTE: This tale, and one page in the story below, contain nudity and such,
and have been moved to our back room for adult content.



Their main confrontation occurs in chapter two -





It was his comic, however, so he eventually drank more beer, got over it, and came back to screw her white. (seriously)

On very rare occasion, a black hero even got his own book. Back in 1972, the same year Luke Cage became the first black hero to headline his own book at Marvel, strange things were afoot over at Kitchen Sink -


This one was quite the odd mix. It's parody, sort of, with an underpining of dark social commentary - but not all outwardly directed. Richard "Grass" Green had a unique blend here that's tightly bound to the time of its creation.


Page Omitted for nudity as our hero meets a naked woman who's never
been to bed with a superhero and wants to fix that problem... 



Despite any proclamations above, nobody on this page was ever seen again to my knowledge.

Next post, we'll look at a few heroes more serious in tone.


Ace Of Spades from Up Your Nose #1, Afro Boy from Pervert Comix #1, other strips from the comics indicated in the provided covers (1969-1972)


 

27 February 2018

Covering Ferstadt

We've been looking inside the comic work of Louis Ferstadt. It's time to step back and take a look outside. So here's a gallery of 21 golden age Ferstadt covers -















As noted in previous comments by our local Ferstadt Fan, this cover evokes Ferstadt's mural work.







That last image has to be one of the most "Pre-Code" covers i've seen on a superhero comic book. Fairly grim for a 75 year old comic.

all covers by Louis Ferstadt for the respective magazines

26 February 2018

Beauty By Manara

When looking at erotic and naked art in comics, it was inevitable that we'd feature Milo Manara on multiple occasions. Nevertheless, let's do something a little special for his return to this edition of



Jumping back just under two decades to 1999, let's go to Aphrodite: Book One.
Les Humanoids published a translated edition of Pierre Louys' 19th century classic in a series of four books, each illustrated by a different artist. Presented here are the 15 plates Manara produced for the first volume.

NOTE: The images for this post contain much nudity and
have been moved to our back room for adult content.
The text remains for context, to let you know what you are missing.
Please follow this link to The Other Voice Of ODD! archive



If that doesn't make you want to read it, what would?


art by Milo Manara for Aphrodite: Book One (1999)



 

Blue Monday Calendar 2018 Week 09

This week's Gil Elvgren painting is Ruffled Feathers from 1965 -


25 February 2018

Sunday Matinee - Return Of The Clown


After yesterday's matinee with Joe Guy, i made reference to The Clown being Magno's big bad.

I suspect that prompted a fair number of "Huh?"s and the like. So let's return to Louis Ferstadt once again for another matinee comic today - from Four Favorites and his ongoing Magno & Davey series. Originally the strip featured a different villain each episode, but in #8 The Clown appeared and he became their recurring mastermind to face off with each month.

Issue #12 of 4 Favorites also featured a cover by Ferstadt (right) and the Lash Lightning tale, which is probably his most frequently referenced artwork - and arguably some of the oddest. So i guess i should run it here, even though i've avoided it thus far due to the frequency of use elsewhere.

Anyway, that's another day - or at least another post.
For now, here's Magno & Davey vs. The Clown -