Showing posts with label Not Who You Think. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Not Who You Think. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

Reading Room: NOT WHO YOU THINK: "Penguin"

You thought The Penguin was a fat guy with umbrellas who fought The Batman?
His first cover appearance, but his second story!
Hoo Boy! Are you WRONG!!!
He was an athletic masked mystery man/detective who fought evil!
Want proof?
Read on...
Hate to tell you this, but I don't have the next issue!
(Even the Grand Comics DataBase doesn't have it!)
But, since The Penguin continued as the cover feature for several issues after that (until #26), we're pretty sure he got out of this situation.
Note: The Penguin is miscolored on the cover above.
His mask is actually dark blue/black to match the tuxedo he wears, as shown on this later cover appearance...
Created by Adrian Dingle, probably the most prolific Canadian comics writer/artist of the 1940s.

This story was from the Canadian-produced "WOW" Comics (note the quotes), not to be confused with Wow Comics from Fawcett which featured Mary Marvel, Mr Scarlet, and others.
(and, yes, he first appeared a year after The Batman's waddling foe made his debut in 1941's Detective Comics #58)
Originally, Canada imported American comic books and pulp magazines, filling their newstands with Superman, The Shadow, and loads of other American characters.
But, when World War II broke out, Canada banned all "non-essential" imports, including comics and pulps!
This opened up a whole new industry for Canadian writers and artists to finally do their own characters!
One major difference between the American and Canadian comic books was that the World War II Canadian books were black and white inside, not four-color like American comics!
(British comics were also b/w inside until the 1950s, when they started using a second color on some books.)
Some American companies licensed Canadian publishers to reprint US comics, but the interiors for those were b/w as well.
In addition, there was a limit to how much "non-Canadian content" could be included in Canadian magazine print runs, so there were relatively-few American reprints during the war.
After the war ended American comics were again imported, so most Canadian publishers began doing color insides to compete with the imports.

BTW, this is the debut of a new feature, NOT WHO YOU THINK, featuring Golden and Silver Age heroes and heroines with the same name as better-known characters, but different costumes, powers, even secret identities.
You'll be surprised how many of today's characters had totally-different predecessors!
Some, like the Golden Age Daredevil and Ghost Rider, are pretty well-known to modern audiences.
Some made only one appearance, never to be seen again.
Some, like this Penguin, had healthy runs, but are unknown today.
Next week...the previous holder of the name of a Marvel hero who currently has his own comic!

Monday, July 25, 2011

Reading Room: IMPOSSIBLE MAN "Inhuman Menace"

Sadly, we present the final tale of Hugh Mann aka The Impossible Man...
...as he adapts to life on a world where everyone except him has super-powers!
And on that note, the recorded adventures of the original Impossible Man came to a conclusion.
Not that it was easy to find his funky fables!
All of Impossible Man's adventures were in the backs of different comics, none of which featured or even mentioned him on their covers!
This third and final tale is from Meteor Comics #1 (and only!) and it actually appeared several months before his second story, which we ran here, was published!
As we said earlier, some attribute the art to George Marcoux, who created SuperSnipe, the Kid with the Most Comic Books in America! and some say Charles "C.A." Voight, who did humor strips like Captain Milksop and Sir Prize.
And these related goodies from Amazon.com...

Thursday, July 14, 2011

Reading Room: IMPOSSIBLE MAN "Electro"

As we promised...the return of Hugh Mann, the Impossible Man!
His second appearance, in the back of the 1946 one-shot Captain Wizard #1!
"Knight of Light"?
Nah, stay with "Impossible Man"!
Much cooler!
This story, chronologically the second in the series, was published almost a year after his third story was printed in Meteor Comics #1 in 1945!
Also note the first appearance of a villainous Electro.
There already was a couple of heroic Electros (in Fox's Science Comics [who was renamed Dynamo] and Timely's Marvel Mystery Comics), but both were gone by the time of this story (though the Timely Electro has reappeared in Marvel books including The Twelve).
There would be a couple of other one-shot villainous Electros after this one, a mad scientist in Shadow Comics and a communist agent in Captain America before Marvel's long-running Spider-Man foe appeared in Amazing Spider-Man #9! (The Communist Electro has since appeared in flashback tales.)
As we said earlier, some attribute the art to George Marcoux, who created SuperSnipe, the Kid with the Most Comic Books in America! and some say Charles "C.A." Voight, who did humor strips like Captain Milksop and Sir Prize.
Impossible Man will return in his final appearance...soon!

And these related goodies from Amazon.com...

Monday, June 27, 2011

Possibly...the (non-Popuppian) Impossible Man!

Long before Jim Valentino created the hilarious NormalMan series, there was another, short-lived Golden Age saga, about a guy without super-powers on a world where everyone else had them...
Never heard of this guy?
The only "Impossible Man" you know is the Stan Lee/Jack Kirby Popuppian wacko from Fantastic Four?
It's understandable.
Hugh Mann: the Impossible Man, made only three appearances, each one in a different comic title, and all hidden away in the back of the book!
This was his first, in 1945's Red Band Comics #3 and #4 (the two issues have identical covers and contents, but different indicias).
As to who the creators are...some attribute the art to George Marcoux, who created SuperSnipe, the Kid with the Most Comic Books in America! and some say Charles "C.A." Voight, who did humor strips like Captain Milksop and Sir Prize.
Either way, it's a hoot!
Enjoy, and be assured that Impossible Man will return...
And these related goodies from Amazon.com...

Friday, June 10, 2011

The SECRET Captain Marvel!

You know the guy who says SHAZAM...
You know the numerous Marvel Comics characters who've used the name...
 But do you know this guy?
In an era where Sean Connery was James Bond 007, Adam West was Batman, and A.C.R.O.N.Y.M.S. were all the R.A.G.E., a number of companies leaped into the fray to compete against Marvel and DC for entertainment dollars...
One of them was M.F. Enterprises, named after it's publisher, Myron Fass, a former comic book artist!
In 1966, Fass took a look to see what already-established names for comics characters were no longer being used, and discovered several were no longer trademarked...including the Golden Age Captain Marvel, whose last appearance had been in 1954, and whose trademark had expired!
Just as Stan Lee had done at Marvel Comics with the name "Daredevil", Fass decided to create a new character using the title, reworking certain elements (like yelling a word that triggered a transformation) and adding new ones (The hero is an alien robot).

Trivia:
The writer/artist who handled the character was Carl Burgos, creator of the Golden Age Human Torch (also an android), The White Streak (also an android), The Iron Skull (also an android)...is it just me or is there a pattern here?
Besides Captain Marvel, Fass also used the names of several other Golden Age characters, including Plastic Man and Dr Fate as new characters (but, they were villains)!
Captain Marvel lasted thru five issues of his own title as well as a one-shot Captain Marvel presents the Terrible Five before M.F. Publications gave up on color comics and concentrated on b/w magazines including Golden Age horror and sci-fi reprints under the Eerie Publications imprint!
That was the end of this Captain Marvel, but not the end of...Captain Marvel!
In late 1967, Marvel Comics took their reprint title Fantasy Masterpieces, retitled it Marvel Super-Heroes and added new stories to the front of the book.
The first new story featured a totally-new character, an alien named Mar-Vell, a captain in the Kree spacefleet.
Guess how the humans he met mispronounced and misspelled his name...
Awww, you guessed!
Mar-Vell received his own title, went thru a costume and format change...
...but eventually was cancelled.  He continued to appear as a guest-star in other titles to maintain the trademark.
In 1973, DC Comics revived the Golden Age Captain Marvel...
...but though they could call him "Captain Marvel" on the inside, they couldn't use the name as the book's title, so they called it SHAZAM!
Marvel Comics, meanwhile, revived Mar-Vell in his own comic, cancelled it, killed him off, used the "Captain Marvel" name for several different characters (and their books) since, and brought him back as a disembodied spirit.
That's a story for another time...

We'll be presenting more of the FIRST Silver Age Captain Marvel's never-reprinted adventures, so bookmark us!