05 October 2019

Batmanimation - TVoO! Style

So...

You're all familiar with Wally Wood's classic parody of Batman, right? That one from way back in Mad (the comic, not the magazine) #8...


...and you've probably at least heard of the manga version of Batman...

(This 2-page spread is why we're using the digital version instead of the print)

But, you may be wondering why the old hermit is rambling about odd Bat-comics when i said this was a Batmanimation post up in the title.

But, surely you knew they did a toon version of the Wally Wood classic,right...?

(They even had groovy print-dot patterns way back before Into The Spiderverse)

And, yep - they kept the spanking scene...


...and kept it with glee. 

Oh, look! There's no starbursts, but that sure looks like our old friend, the Blonde Phantom, hanging out on the right>>>


So, you probably figured out by this point that the anime version of Jiro Kuwata's manga exists, too, huh?






Of course, they added a little change at the end for the gaijin audience...


(Spoiler: Even his mask was shredded in the explosion)

Now, mind you - I'm not trying to claim that Batman is the only one with animated tales that too many haven't seen...




But, that's another post, right?

page art by Wally Wood and Jiro Kuwata for Mad #8 and Shonen Kingu #23 (1953, 1966)
you know where the animation's from, right?

04 October 2019

What To Do In Case You Get Attacked By A Shark.

I'm pulling some bits for a Batmanimation post this weekend. In the meantime, here's a special lesson for all you beach swimmers out there...


I feel better knowing you're all a little bit safer now.

01 October 2019

And Now That Title Makes More Sense...

Yesterday we featured two short tales that didn't seem to read quite right. Character names changed, details didn't line up... something was a bit Off.  Or just Odd.

And that oddness is what both had in common. To answer yesterday conundrum - what made the stories nearly identical is that both were re-published twice, each time with the names, even story details, changed.

Both of these stories originally ran in Red Seal Comics, just a few issues apart in 1946. Both were republished two years later in 1948, and then again in 1950 & '52, diverging a bit at the end.

George Tuska's Gay Desperado, not to be confused with Fred Guardineer's Gay Desperado, ran from mid-1945 to mid-'47 and has had stories reprinted as recently as 2016. The Gay Desperado name seems to have lost its cachet over the years, and he was renamed The Bold Buckaroo and The Lone Vigilante in the republished versions. But that wasn't enough, it seems. Jim Collins became Tim Rollins became Tom Cullen. Here are all three versions of this story, in publication order -




In a demonstration of customer contempt that would fit right in with today's corporations, that last version of the tale above was published only 8 issues after the previous version - in the same damn title.

Meanwhile, the second version below is from Authentic Police Cases, running a retread of a Lady Satan story. Authentic enough for the History Channel.

Another link between these two stories - although this Lady Satan tale is drawn by Ralph Mayo, the original artist on the series was none other than George Tuska. Mayo drew three Lady Satan stories that i know of, putting him even with Tuska.

You'll note more dramatic changes to the story on this next one, especially since she's not a superhero in the later versions -




Lady Satan was also reprinted in 2016, along with The Gay Desperado. Both were in Gwandanaland Comics, if you want to go hunting. Lady Satan saw more action with them.

page art by George Tuska and Ralph Mayo for Red Seal Comics #s 15 & 18, The Texan #s 1 & 9, Authentic Police Cases # 5, and Strange Terrors #1 (1946, 1948, 1950, 1952)