17 June 2019

Somebody's Stuck And Even We Don't Know Who...

Captain Marvel is now available for watching at home, and the "other" Captain Marvel is due for home video release in a couple of weeks. How amazing is it that we not only got movies for both, but that they were in theatres at the same time?

It's just so tragicly lame that somebody decided to tag him with the name Shazam. After a half century of people laughing at Freddy Freeman because he can't say his own superhero name one might think they'd avoid looking so stupid. Guess not.

And it's not like they didn't have another name they could easily use. Before he was called Captain Marvel, he was originally Captain Thunder. They even used this name for the Kingdom Come stories. And it's not like they couldn't splash SHAZAM! on all the promotional material to keep the branding prominently displayed. It makes so much more sense than the inherent stupidity of speaking his own name causes him to lose his powers (and reveal his identity to whomever he was talking).

So why not use the name Captain Thunder?

It couldn't have anything to do with this guy, right?











One odd thing here is that Captain Terry Thunder was a fairly straightforward adventure strip - Captain Terry Thunder And The Congo Lancers. Then a dame came through the camp and he had to spank her and he had to kiss her and she gave him a camel and left. After that, he went a little crazy for a year or two before settling back down to normal.

Odder yet, after settling back down, Richard Case took over the art chores. You may recall that name from yesterday's post on the Doom Patrol. Very strange, since that was 1943 and Case wasn't born until 1964.

Who knew there was another Richard Case drawing comics? Yeah, we'll be circling back this way. We already had a bunch to look at in Jungle Comics anyway. (Kind of thought that we'd get to Fantomah or Wambi or the White Panther or one of the others first. But here we are.)


panel art by Bill Bossert and Al Stahl from Jungle Comics #s 17, 18, 23, 26-31, & 36 (1941, 1942)

16 June 2019

Reality And Unreality Have No Clear Distinction In Our Present Circumstances

While i've been off, there's been some truly odd happenings out there. I usually tend towards things further in the past, but -

Even more odd than T-Rump palling with Canya SeeMe for a new stop on the Putting The Ass In Class tour. The "weirdest team in comics" got a tv series that deeply embraces that weird and brings it to live action in ways i could never have hoped for. And with a delightful attitude, too...

(Yeah, i blurred the caption to be nice for the censors. Oops - i mean redactors. I forget that we censor the word censor these days.)
Yeah, that's Cyborg on the right along with our core team, Robotman, Negative Man, Elastigirl, and Crazy Jane. Those names might not ever be actually used on the show, other than Crazy Jane. They're not heroes, excepting Cyborg. They're just Cliff Steele, Larry Trainor, Rita Farr and Jane (Kay and company) - misfits, not heroes.

3 months older than the X-Men, outcast freaks gathered together by a rich genius in a wheelchair to protect a world that shuns and fears them. They're the


Unsurprisingly, the show leans heavily on the Grant Morrison / Richard Case years. What is surprising is how much crosses over from the comics. And they've also dived deep into the Arnold Drake / Bob Haney / Giordano Bruno Premiani years. Things are definitely remixed a bit, changed both to cross mediums and for cohesion - They've only got 15 episodes in season one and over a half century of comic history to work with. Even longer on the show, actually. Rita has her transformative origin in the 1950s. Larry in the '60s, Cliff in the '80s, and Kay/Jane in the '90s, with the primary timeline being in this century. Things get changed, but in ways that work to serve the characters.

Cliff Steele is our entry character. His rebuild and awakening after the crash is how we meet the characters of the show. He's the newest member of Caulder's menagerie. Though he may have had his accident before Crazy Jane's transformation, it took years to rebuild and get him up and running.

Rita Farr, who generally was given the least character development in the old comics, has the most changes. Those changes work to make her more of a misfit - oddly to make her fit better on the team.

Larry Trainor is Negative Man, not Rebis - the gender fluid construct merging the male Trainor with the female Dr. Poole and the negative energy being binding them. Maybe later, but Rebis is a bit much to introduce in the limited framework of a single season. Instead, they found a different non-binary angle for his sexuality.

Jane, amazingly, is the least modified of the four. There's no mention of the Gene Bomb from the alien Invasion! mini-series which triggered the metagene, activating powers in all 64 of her personalities, but that's hardly surprising. Not only do we meet several of her well known personae, including some one might not expect, like Sun Daddy...


...and Silver Tongue, whose words form in the air, allowing her to use them as weapons...





 That's one of those things that works so easily in comics (since the words are already there anyway) but was rather surprising, but fun, to see on vid.

And, yes - we do go into the Underground...


Besides the core team, you know who else shows up on the series?

Danny The Street!


If you haven't read the old comics, Danny The Street is just what he sounds like - a Street named Danny. Of course, he's not a 'normal' street. Aside from being sentient, he's also mobile - able to shift his location around the planet at will. Also, he's a transvestite...

Yeah, the Bureau Of Abnormality wants him bad.

Among others, we also get Flex Mentallo and the white space between the panels...


Did you ever think we'd see Animal/Vegetable/Mineral-Man, even in a minor role?


And big Cheers for casting Curtis Armstrong as Brother Ezekiel! (yes, he's a cockroach)


The most off-model character is Mr. Nobody, but that makes sense unless you wanted a fully CGI intentionally-unreal-looking character. Instead, the ever cool Alan Tudyk winds up looking like this...
 ...it works well for the concept, if not for the descriptor "looks like you're always seeing him out of the corner of your eye" that's used once or twice in the comics. But, the comic version(s) didn't really fit that notion either.

And they even touch on the other versions/incarnations of the Doom Patrol. Here, for example, we see the Chief with Celsius, Mento, and Lodestone...


There's a great deal more - even mentions of The Brain and Mssr. Mallah.

The show takes its time, digging into each of the characters and building their world over the first 13 episodes with a big 2-ep final confrontation. And, yeah - it forgoes the typical conclusion to find a more appropriately odd ending to the tale.


Will there be a second season?
The show was quite well received, but the DCU streaming service itself might not last long. Now everybody is launching new streaming services to grab a slice of the pie (forgetting that what made streaming so popular in the first place was being able to go to one source for shows), and Warner Brothers wants in. They own DC and are likely to decide to kill DCU so they can make their service the home for the characters.

Only time will tell, but we got one true bit of Odd and perhaps more will follow. Maybe we'll get to see the Scissormen if there's a next time! (How does one represent the hole in reality after the scissormen have cut someone out of it? It's a lot easier on a white page, eh?) Maybe we'll even get to see the Brotherhood Of DADA (we got the Brotherhood Of DA this time, so maybe not)

We can hope.

screens from Doom Patrol season one (2019)
panel art by Richard Case and Scott Hanna for Doom Patrol #21 (1989)

NOTE: Post edited, but only to add bold face to names.

15 June 2019

Let's Go Recolonelize The Multiverse!

A quickie post to reassure all that i didn't just post a couple and crawl to the back of the cave again. Still working back up to daily posting (need to grab a few more visuals for the piece in progress), but should be a full post tomorrow.

Meanwhile, under the heading of Chickens Before Spiders...

Remember that one in the middle where Colonel Sanders had to posse up his multiversal counterparts to save Fried Chicken?


From the 2nd of 3 DC/KFC comics, featuring the evil Colonel Sunder from Earth 3. (And that chicken headed Kolonel in the back is from Kamandi's world, if you was wondering)

page art by Tom Derenick and Trevor Scott for KFC: Crisis Of Infinite Colonels (2016)

14 June 2019

Boy! That Elephant Sure Is BAD!

So...
I was planning an Ellis Chambers post for The 1940s Funny Animalphabet featuring his work in Buster Bunny. Then i noticed a slight technical problem. Though the title debuted in the late 1940s, the stories didn't appear until 1950-52.

Oops. I guess they'll have to wait a spell.

Holly didn't do a whole lot for the book - only eight stories ranging from one to eight pages. We ran his Tommy Turtle tale from Buster Bunny #3 previously. Here are the rest of his signed stories from Buster Bunny, with one exception. The only copy i've ever found of #13 was a scan, and that was destroyed by a clumsy attempt to 'restore' it. That Chester Cat tale will have to wait until either i find a paper copy or have the hours and patience to try to repair the damage. Today we've got Buster & Bill Bunny, Cuffy, Dizzy Duck and Goofy Gander.

Ellis' first and longest tale for Buster Bunny comics appeared in #4 -







On a side note, i don't know what the frell is wrong with the way Blogger is displaying the standard text for the post. It should be larger and easier to read. Maybe it is on your system. For reference, this text is "normal" sized. The credits note below is "smallest" size. This should display almost twice the size of the text below, but on my system they're pretty much the same size.
But maybe it's my settings...

page art by Ellis Holly Chambers from Buster Bunny #s 4, 5, 7, 9 & 10 (1950, 1951)

13 June 2019

Is It Sooperman? NAW!

Nearly a full decade before Krypto came along in Adventure Comics, we got Superdog in Zoo Funnies. For extra fun & oddness, the strip combined some old faves from around these parts - take one part from characters like Koppy "Supersnipe" McFadd and "Comics" McCormick, who essentially receive their 'powers' from comic books, and mix them with the semi-insane stylings of Ellis Chambers for this short little 6 page oddity from 1946...


Do you think he was trying to get kids to bang their heads against trees?

Alas - there were no further adventures of Superdog, nor have i found any other references to "the Spirit Of Comic Book Super Animals". But, i'm looking...

(And, yes - further posts to follow. I'll talk about down time, but first get things up and running again)

page art by Ellis Holly Chambers for Zoo Funnies #5 (1946)