Thứ Bảy, 26 tháng 6, 2010

D2-013 The Trail of the Vulke (7 Feb 1955 to 25 Apr 1955)

Writer: Harvey Kurtzman
Art: Dan Barry

Summary: Reunited with the Space Kids on his birthday, Flash is invited to accompany them in their new spacecraft to visit Mr Pennington and young Cyril in distant Zorania (see D2-007 Space Kids on Zoran).

However, on arrival it soon becomes clear that the entire population is on the run from a vicious menace called 'the Vulcan' and that the only way for Flash to safeguard the progress the planet has made under Mr Pennington is to leave the walled city and take up the challenge...
(Source of summary: www.ipcomics.net)

Image and video hosting by TinyPic 
It's from Emile's e-collection. All credits go to her & original scanning person.

The Specimen! / Lost!

Creature Double Feature Day, with two eerie horrors from the March 1953 issue of Mystery Tales #9. It's wet and slimy Joe Maneely creeps from the deep, vs. a fanged 'n hairy murderin' monstrosity by Jim Mooney (maybe?) --hold onto your money bags!














Thứ Sáu, 25 tháng 6, 2010

D2-012-The Martian Baby (15-Nov-1954 to 5-Feb-1955)

Writer: Harvey Kurtzman
Art: Dan Barry

Summary: Enjoying a rare moment of relaxation after the conclusion to the 2554 drama (read D2-011 Peril Park), Flash and Dale are once more interrupted when a flying saucer lands nearby and the only inhabitant proves to be an abandoned baby from space

With all the clues leading to Mars, Flash and Dale prepare to land on the planet to solve the mystery, unaware that they are heading straight into a heavy conflict zone as pawns in a ruthless political game...
(Source of summary: www.ipcomics.net)


Image and video hosting by TinyPic 

It's from Emile's e-collection. All credits go to her & original scanning person.


Number 760


Let's see Batman do this!


Madam Fatal is one of the most unique concepts in comics, especially 1940, when these two tales originally appeared. Madam Fatal was actually a man, a wealthy "retired actor" who spent his time dressed as a woman, chasing down the man who killed his wife and kidnapped his daughter. There's the crossdressing element that makes it seem titillating today. Or maybe not. Madam Fatal is an old "lady" after all. Despite its originality Madam Fatal as a feature didn't last long. There were a lot of comic books to fill and a lot of ideas for heroes that didn't work out, and Madam Fatal was one of them.

Underground cartoonist Kim Deitch did a hilarious take on Madam Fatal in Corn Fed Comics #1...but it's pornographic and I can't show it, much as I'd like to.

The stories are from Crack Comics #1 and #3, respectively, 1940, drawn by Art Pinajian.










Thứ Năm, 24 tháng 6, 2010

Detective #395


Often cited by those who are big on dividing lines as marking the end of the Silver Age Batman, Detective #395 includes the first O'Neil/Adams team-up on Batman. It's a terrific story, amazingly illustrated, and is featured (deservedly) in many "Best of Batman" collections.

But the idea that this is far from the rest of the (late) Silver Age Batman is a bit silly. Following the demise of the Batman TV show in early 1968, Julius Schwartz found that he needed to reinvent yet again the character he'd inherited as editor just before Batmania hit. And this time he hit on the correct formula: Bring in strong artists like Irv Novick (and occasional guest stars like Adams and Gil Kane), and return Batman to the nighttime man of mystery that he had been in the early Golden Age. This he did starting with Batman #204-205's solid (if not classic) Operation Blindfold. The stories published in Batman and Detective from about mid-1968 on all are pretty high-quality, especially compared to what came before.

And it's not as if Adams hadn't been doing Batman in The Brave and the Bold for the last year or so, even if it's O'Neil's first crack at the Caped Crusader. So Secret of the Waiting Graves is not some bolt from the blue; it's a continuation of a trend that had been gathering for about 2 years at the time it was published.

The story begins with Bruce at a party being hosted by a wealthy Mexican couple, the Muertos. The party takes place in a graveyard at night. The first event is a balloon race (yeah, a balloon race in the dark), in which the balloon occupied by one Pedro Valdes, is attacked by hawks and shredded. The man seems fated to fall on the rocks below when suddenly:

Batman's momentum carries the two of them into the river below instead of death on the rocks. Notice how the camera angles are chosen to present the maximum action against a large backdrop?

As the story continues, we begin to understand that the Muertos are not as youthful as they appear:

It subsequently becomes obvious that Valdes himself is definitely a target for murder, when a pottery explodes next to him, revealing the presence of a sniper. Bruce is already suspicious of the Muertos for holding this party anyway, since they are normally hermits. It turns out that they are being kept alive by the Sybil flower, which causes insanity and, oh, by the way, hallucinations:

Anybody, what are they really talking about there? Anybody? Bueller?

Batman saves Valdes and torches the plants:

And they topple into the waiting graves.

Comments: There are some holes in the story. For starters, would the Muertos be so foolish as to have only one patch of the plants that keep them alive? And why would the graves be dug out for them to collapse into? But overall those are quibbles about a tale that certainly does appear to be leading the way into the Bronze Age, with more adult-oriented plots. Adams' art, as always, is spectacular.

The Robin story is a continuation of a two-part tale. It's rather ridiculous. Dick has arrived at Hudson University, only to find a demonstration going on at the registrar's office. The demonstrators are trying to get the Dean to call in the cops, but he is insistent that he will talk with the leaders. A squad car arrives anyway, and the cops inside rough up the protestors. But Dick quickly realizes that the police are phonies as their car has an inspection sticker on it. It's all a plot to give the demonstration ringleaders more credibility with the students, and it appears to be working.

The cops? They're communist infiltrators. No kidding:

Comments: Silly story, enlivened quite a bit by the Gil Kane art.

Thứ Tư, 23 tháng 6, 2010

D2-011 Peril Park (31-Aug-1954 to 13-Nov-1954)

Summary: Relaxing in a park after returning from the Moon (Read D2-010 The Deadly Touch), a baffled Flash and Dale find and read a message in a bottle pleading for urgent help - from 600 years into the future!

Ignoring pleas from Dale to let the matter rest, Flash convinces Dr. Zarkov to catapult him into year 2554 so he can rescue 'Elda', the author of the message, and find out why the park he has just left is dubbed 'Peril Park' in the future...

Writer: Harvey Kurtzman
Art: Dan Barry
(Source of summary: www.ipcomics.net)

Image and video hosting by TinyPic  

It's from Emile's e-collection. All credits go to her & original scanning person.

MAD Magazine #504


MAD Magazine #504
CBR | English | 61 MB | 60 pages
Download MIRROR #1

Download MIRROR #2