Monday, March 4, 2024

Russkie-Smashers PLASTIC MAN "Trio of Tyranny"

What does comics legend Jack Cole's best-known creation look like without Jack Cole?
Like this never-reprinted cover by Quality Comics stablemate Blackhawk's Dick Dillin and Chuck Cuidera, and the following never-reprinted story by scripter Dick Wood and illustrator Charles Nicholas!

This tale from Quality's Plastic Man #50 (1954) was typical of the direction the book took after Jack Cole left.
Plas and sidekick Woozy battled Commies (as we also showed HERE), monsters, and aliens in the lead stories by a plethora of writers and illustrators while the rest of the book was filled with reprints of Jack Cole's earlier tales.
A couple of issues later the book went entirely reprint (except for new covers and one-pagers) until it was cancelled with #64 when Quality closed its' doors and sold its' inventory (both published and unpublished) to DC in 1956.
DC continued publishing BlackhawkG.I. CombatHeart Throbs and the short-lived Robin Hood Tales and left the other characters and strips unused until the mid-1960s when Plas was revived in 1966 in all-new stories in a short-lived series!
(Note: around the same time, IW/Super Comics reprinted several issues of Plas's Golden Age book since they had purchased the actual printing plates from a printer where they had been abandoned by Quality. The timing appears to have been a coincidence.)
Since then, he's been revived and revamped several times in the humorous spirit of Jack Cole by a variety of creatives including Kyle Baker and Phil Foglio, and eventually incorporated into the DC mainstream universe...whatever its' current incarnation is as of this year!

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Featuring classic tales from each of his eras (Golden Age/Silver Age/Bronze Age)
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Monday, February 26, 2024

Russkie-Smashers YOUNG MEN COMICS "Captain America Turns Traitor!"


...This Time, He's the Real Deal!
(At least 1950s readers thought he was, though he was later retconned into one of several Cap replacements before the real Star-Spangled Avenger was defrosted by The Avengers!)
The Super-Soldier Serum makes Cap invulnerable to psyche-controlling drugs?
Written by Don Rico and illustrated by John Romita Sr, this tale from Atlas' Young Men Comics #26 (1954) also features Bucky killing an entire Russkie sub crew!
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(Which reprints this story)
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Monday, February 19, 2024

Russkie-Smashers 1963: TALES OF THE UNCANNY "U.S.A. in 'Double-Deal in Dallas!' "

In 1993, writer Alan Moore and a team of very talented illustrators...

...created a loving tribute to the Silver Age of comics, a six-issue mini-series mimicking the era's style right down to the advertising...
...and covers!
With pardonable pride, we now present a tale of the series' resident Russkie-Smasher...
Note the date on the newspaper under U.S.A.'s foot!
In the universe of 1963, JFK survived the assassination attempt which succeeded in real-life!
While the six-issue mini-series came out as scheduled, the sequel 1963 80-Page Annual, a crossover featuring WildC.A.T.S., Spawn, Supreme, ShadowHawk, YoungBlood and Savage Dragon in the Image Comics multiverse, was never produced.
There were rumors in 2022 of writer/artist Don Simpson doing the book, but they've apparently been just rumors!
1963 the mini-series has never been reprinted in any format...and never will!

Monday, February 12, 2024

Russkie-Smashers CONFESSIONS OF THE LOVELORN / MY ROMANTIC ADVENTURES "Communist Kisses" / "Iron Curtain Romance"

Wednesday is Valentine's Day...
...and we're about to prove that True Love can conquer anything, even Russkie brainwashing!
Appearing during the height of anti-Commie fervor in ACG's Confessions of the LoveLorn #56 (1955), the tale by currently-unknown writers and artists was reprinted in ACG's My Romantic Adventures #108 in 1960...with only one change...the title!
Did the newly-created Comics Code Authority insist on the change?
We'll never know...
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Volume 6
So This is Love!

(which reprints the original-titled version of this story)
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Monday, February 5, 2024

Clobberin' Korean Commies with The Duke! JOHN WAYNE ADVENTURE COMICS "Bridgehead"

You know John Wayne did a Vietnam War movie (Green Berets)...

...but he never did a Korean War flick!
(Jet Pilot is a Cold War movie involving Russians.
No Koreans or scenes set in Korea.)
Comic books were a different matter...

Trivia: Besides not doing a Korean War movie, Wayne never did a film set in World War II Europe!
Correction: Wayne did appear in a film with flashbacks to WWII, Cast a Giant Shadow, and an actual WWII movie, The Longest Day, as part of an all-star ensemble!
(Though, to be fair, neither one had a comic adaptation!)
Thanks to reader Lawrence for catching my gaffe and inspiring me to do a little more research!
This never-reprinted tale is from Toby's John Wayne Adventures #15 (1952), penciled by Mel Keefer.
(The other credits are unknown)
You'll note that Wayne is referred to as "John Wayne", not "John Wayne as Sgt Stryker" or some other character he played in movies...or a totally-new character!
The conceit of this 31-issue series, John Wayne Adventure Comics, was that Wayne was always himself in the stories, no matter where or when they were set!
Tales ran the gamut from Wayne in the French Foreign Legion to putting out oil-rig fires to big-game hunting in Africa to tracking spies in Hong Kong, with at least one Western-themed story every issue.
Oddly enough, though there are numerous comic adaptations of Wayne's Western movies, and even a comic based on The Conqueror (where he portrayed Genghis Khan), there are no comics adapting any of his war movies!

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