Showing posts with label Frankenstein SuperHero. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Frankenstein SuperHero. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 21, 2014

Frankenstein the SuperHero "The Trap"

...so let's continue as Alfred...I mean William...deals with Vicki Vale...I mean Ann Thrope...before considering how to help The Batm...I mean Frankenstein...
Will Frankenstein get free and stop the Criminal Computer!
Will Ann Thrope escape...and file her scoop?
Tune in...TOMORROW!
Same Frank Time!
Same Frank Blog!
(One hint, the weirdest is yet to come!)
This odd, never-reprinted, combining of Superman and Batman tropes is from Dell's Frankenstein #3 (1966), written by Don Segall and illustrated by Bill Fraccio & Tony Tallarico.

Monday, October 20, 2014

Frankenstein the SuperHero "No One is Safe!"

Once more, we return to the super-strong hero with a secret identity and nosy girl reporter...
...bet you thought we meant the Man of Steel, eh?
Can the Criminal Computer's hold over Our Hero be broken?
Will Miss Thrope discover Frankenstein's secret identity?
For the answers to these and other questions...
...be here tomorrow...
...Same Frank Time!
Same Frank Blog!
One hint...the silliest is yet to come!
This odd, never-reprinted, bit of Silver Age Comic history is from Dell's Frankenstein #3 (1966), written by Don Segall and illustrated by Bill Fraccio & Tony Tallarico.

Friday, October 3, 2014

Frankenstein the Superhero "Reward"

The Silver Age was an odd period of comics history...
 ...when anyone from spies (T.H.U.N.D.E.R. Agents) to soldiers (Blackhawk) to monsters could be remade into superheroes...with decidedly-mixed results!
You can read the origin of this funky, far-out revamp of Frankenstein HERE, the second part HERE, then continue with the cataclysmic conclusion to his premiere appearance...
How many elements from Silver Age Superman and Batman stories can you find in this tale?
(I found at least five, some for both Superman and Batman, some just from Batman.)
The art was by Tony Tallarico, who was working steadily for both Dell and Charlton, producing literally reams of pages per month in every genre from romance to Westerns to superheroes!
(And most of the time he was inking himself, as well!)
Monday join us for the even weirder origin of the original "Bat-Man": Dracula the SuperHero!

Thursday, October 2, 2014

Wednesday, October 1, 2014

Frankenstein the Superhero "Resurrection"

We're doing something really scary for Halloween this year...
...presenting the campy "pop art" versions of the Monster of Frankenstein , Dracula, and The Wolfman, as seen in the Swinging '60s, when everyone in comics was either a spy, a superhero, or both!
Will the Monster use his powers for Good instead of Evil?
And how the heck did this whole thing come about, anyway?

In 1964, Dell Comics published a line of comic adaptations of Universal Monster movies to tie in with their successful revival on tv.
Two years later, Dell decided to take the monsters' base concepts and rework them into then-trendy superheroes and spies!
Frankenstein and Dracula became superheroes while WereWolf (the name Wolf Man was trademarked) was a secret agent (albeit one with a "stealth" suit to avoid detection).
Yeah, it was as dumb as it sounds, and none of them ran more than three issues.
This was part one of the Silver Age Frankenstein's three-part origin tale from Frankenstein #2, illustrated by Tony Tallarico, who did a lot of work for Dell and Charlton in the 1960s.
(Frankenstein #1 was the previously-mentioned movie adaptation.)
We'll be presenting the other two parts of the origin over the next two days, beginning tomorrow.
You'll get a better look at how Dell shamelessly ripped-off both Superman and Batman by taking elements from both of them for this series.
Scary, eh?

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