Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn José Delbo. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng
Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn José Delbo. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng

Number 1488: Monsters of Karloff

Người đăng: Unknown on Thứ Tư, 11 tháng 12, 2013


Boris Karloff Tales of Mystery was a title of the 1970s from Gold Key/Whitman, which featured monster stories. What I remember about it from seeing it on the comic racks of its era was the art in each issue seemed uneven to me, a problem I found with most of the anthology comics of the time.

These two stories I found interesting and well drawn. “The Eternity Monster” is from issue #60 (1975), drawn by José Delbo; “The Axeman and the Taxman” is from #68 (1976) and identified (if you can call it that) as being by “West Coast artist?” by the Grand Comics Database.
















There are more Boris Karloff monsters at Karswell’s The Horrors Of It All.
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Người đăng: Unknown on Thứ Sáu, 8 tháng 7, 2011


Number 978


Flying Saucer Day at Pappy's


Today marks the 64th anniversary of the headline in the Roswell (New Mexico) Daily Record, which claimed the Air Force had recovered a crashed flying disk. The story was quickly retracted, but the story has blossomed into something that has a life of its own, still causing discussion over six decades later.


At some point aliens from space were said to have been recovered from the crash site, so our postings today feature little alien guys.

First up we have Swift Morgan, scanned from the 1954 Spaceways annual from the UK. The writer/artist is famed British illustrator Denis McLoughlin. Since I know little about this artist, due to the paucity of information on this side of the Atlantic about comics from the UK, I've included a link to the Wikipedia entry on McLoughlin, who died in 2002. Even though the annual with the story is dated 1954, according to sources the story itself comes from 1949, and is an early entry in the comic book flying saucer mythos.

More aliens, this time white and not gray, come from Dell's Flying Saucers #1, 1967. There were several UFO "flaps" around that time, and interest was high. These three stories appear to have been coordinated to make the aliens look like one species. The tales themselves, while part of UFO lore, are a bit suspicious as to their credibility. I'll leave that to you to determine. As for me, I'm a skeptic, but even so, I love the iconography and images of flying saucers, and have all my life.

The stories are drawn by José Delbo, Sam Glanzman and Sal Trapani.































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