A few odds-and-ends from the Gold Key Green Hornet Silver Age comic.
The first two were the inside covers for #1, and were probably the proposal pieces submitted to the licensor for approval.
You'll note that the illustrations are of the characters in costumed form.
The next one is from the inside back cover of #3 showing the Hornet's equipment...
The Hornet Sting shown is the original version seen in the pilot and early promo photos.
The later version had a...focusing dish or somesuch on it...
But, the mask shown is the later, molded-to-the-face version, not the one used in the pilot episode and promo photos...
...which I think looks kooler and actually hides the wearer's identity better, but limited Van Williams' and Bruce Lee's peripheral vision, potentially making fight scenes hazardous.
BTW, all art was by Dan Spiegle.
Hope you've enjoyed reading them as much as I've enjoyed bringing them to you.
There's much more Golden Age Green Hornet stuff coming up in the Reading Room, so keep an eye on this blog!
Wednesday, May 4, 2011
Tuesday, May 3, 2011
Origin of the Golden Age Thor: God of Thunder
He's muscular, super-strong, has long blonde hair, uses a hammer named Mjolnir, and can control lightning, but he's NOT Don Blake!
Nor is he the real Thor!
Confused, True Believer!
Well, read on and all will be made clear...probably...
So, while Grant transforms into a Thor, the real Thor (with the mythologically-correct red hair and beard) sits comfortably back in Valhalla and watches the fun.
This version of Thor would run from Weird Comics #1 (this appearance) to #5, never once making the cover.
Interestingly, issue by issue, he lost elements of Thor's costume (including the helmet, cape, and long hair), until by his final appearance in #5, he just looked like Grant Farrel in a blue swimsuit!
After that, he disappeared until 2008, when he, and an assemblage of forgotten Golden Age heroes, popped up in Savage Dragon #141, in full "Thor" regalia.
Nor is he the real Thor!
Confused, True Believer!
Well, read on and all will be made clear...probably...
So, while Grant transforms into a Thor, the real Thor (with the mythologically-correct red hair and beard) sits comfortably back in Valhalla and watches the fun.
This version of Thor would run from Weird Comics #1 (this appearance) to #5, never once making the cover.
Interestingly, issue by issue, he lost elements of Thor's costume (including the helmet, cape, and long hair), until by his final appearance in #5, he just looked like Grant Farrel in a blue swimsuit!
After that, he disappeared until 2008, when he, and an assemblage of forgotten Golden Age heroes, popped up in Savage Dragon #141, in full "Thor" regalia.
We'll be posting the other four adventures of the first Thor over the next few weeks.
Watch for them.
Posted by
Britt Reid
at
5/03/2011 01:01:00 AM
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Monday, May 2, 2011
Reading Room: THE GREEN HORNET "The Counterplot Affair" Conclusion
Attempting to protect the boy prince of the oil-rich Mid-Eastern country of Bahratta from foreign spies, The Green Hornet and Kato discover the lad's uncle has arranged for the kid to be kidnapped.
Kato shadows the young king-to-be, and during a kidnapping attempt loses the boy, who escapes into the depths of the city's biggest park.
Now costumed and armed, the Hornet and Kato return to the park, only to run into the kidnappers...
Written by Paul S Newman and illustrated by Dan
The other tale from the final issue of the Silver Age Green Hornet's Gold Key run can be found HERE.
While lp albums and cassettes of his radio adventures continued to be released thru the 1970s and '80s, the Hornet and Kato wouldn't return to comics until the 1990s, when NOW Comics revived and revised the character, combining all the different incarnations into one big crime-fighting family!
Tomorrow, on the day of the 2011 Green Hornet film's release on DVD/Blu-Ray, we'll have a couple of rarely-seen Hornet goodies!
Kato shadows the young king-to-be, and during a kidnapping attempt loses the boy, who escapes into the depths of the city's biggest park.
Now costumed and armed, the Hornet and Kato return to the park, only to run into the kidnappers...
Written by Paul S Newman and illustrated by Dan
The other tale from the final issue of the Silver Age Green Hornet's Gold Key run can be found HERE.
While lp albums and cassettes of his radio adventures continued to be released thru the 1970s and '80s, the Hornet and Kato wouldn't return to comics until the 1990s, when NOW Comics revived and revised the character, combining all the different incarnations into one big crime-fighting family!
Tomorrow, on the day of the 2011 Green Hornet film's release on DVD/Blu-Ray, we'll have a couple of rarely-seen Hornet goodies!
Sunday, May 1, 2011
Reading Room: THE GREEN HORNET "The Counterplot Affair" Part 1
"Hi-Ho Hornet! Awayyy!"
The Green Hornet takes a page out of his grand-uncle's edition of the Hero Handbook in this, his final Silver Age tale!
The Green Hornet takes a page out of his grand-uncle's edition of the Hero Handbook in this, his final Silver Age tale!
How will The Hornet and Kato keep the Prince safe?
Why is the Hornet riding "a fiery white horse with the speed of light" at the beginning of this story?
Same Blog Time!
Same Blog Feed!
Friday, April 29, 2011
Video Fridays: Dr Who and the Daleks
The British have a long tradition of taking successful tv series in every genre from sitcom to sci-fi, and remaking them into feature films.
So, it seemed only logical that, with "Dalekmania" reaching a frenzied peak in 1965, a feature film adapting the first tv appearance of the lethal pepperpots, would be a box office smash.
It didn't quite turn out that way.
Amicus Productions, basically a lower-budget Hammer Studios, acquired the rights, and produced Dr Who & the Daleks, starring Peter Cushing as Doctor Who.
Note: I said "Doctor Who" and not "The Doctor".
That's because the movie's Doctor is an eccentric human inventor named "Who", not an alien Time Lord using the title "Doctor"!
The TARDIS, while still a space-time travelling device bigger on the inside than the outside, is now the product of one man's expertise, not the culmination of the technology of an advanced civilization.
Beyond that basic change to the concept, the movie was a fairly straightforward condensation of the seven-episode serial, utilizing the original story's major plot points.
With the benefits of
Encouraged by the ticket sales, Amicus adapted the second Dalek story into an even more-expensive feature film, Daleks Invasion Earth: 2150 AD.
But that's a story for another time...
So, it seemed only logical that, with "Dalekmania" reaching a frenzied peak in 1965, a feature film adapting the first tv appearance of the lethal pepperpots, would be a box office smash.
It didn't quite turn out that way.
Amicus Productions, basically a lower-budget Hammer Studios, acquired the rights, and produced Dr Who & the Daleks, starring Peter Cushing as Doctor Who.
Note: I said "Doctor Who" and not "The Doctor".
That's because the movie's Doctor is an eccentric human inventor named "Who", not an alien Time Lord using the title "Doctor"!
The TARDIS, while still a space-time travelling device bigger on the inside than the outside, is now the product of one man's expertise, not the culmination of the technology of an advanced civilization.
Beyond that basic change to the concept, the movie was a fairly straightforward condensation of the seven-episode serial, utilizing the original story's major plot points.
With the benefits of
- being the first color version of Dr Who (the tv show was shot in black and white until 1970)
- a bigger budget than the tv series and
- a music score by Thunderbirds composer Barry Gray
Encouraged by the ticket sales, Amicus adapted the second Dalek story into an even more-expensive feature film, Daleks Invasion Earth: 2150 AD.
But that's a story for another time...
The British Trailer
The American Trailer
And, you can watch the ENTIRE MOVIE HERE!
Posted by
Britt Reid
at
4/29/2011 01:01:00 AM
Labels:
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Dr Who,
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