#024.The Phantom - Charlton Comics

Người đăng: Unknown on Thứ Ba, 10 tháng 6, 2008

More about

Stan Lee's Literary Covers

Người đăng: Unknown on Thứ Hai, 9 tháng 6, 2008

One of the things I always noticed about Marvel covers was that they had such overwrought titles for the story inside:







You can see a pattern. Stan uses somewhat archaic words and title structures to make the stories seem more mythical/legendary/biblical. "Lo" was not a common word back in the 1960s, and is even less common today (except as a shortening of "Hello"). "When the Mighty Fall" would be pretty boring, but "When Fall the Mighty" would be worthy of being inscribed in stone. Similarly with "If This Be Doomsday"; much more dramatic than "If This Is Doomsday". Same theme here:



Of course, Thor was made for these flowery titles:



But even Spidey got into the act:



What was Stan doing? As usual in the 1960s, something pretty smart. One of the problems that comic books faced then was that they were for kids. Only. This was a situation that mainly applied during the Silver Age. When comic books had first been issued in the mid-1930s, they tended to be like the comics sections of the newspaper with diverse features designed to appeal to the whole family. The early comic books often had a mixture of funny animals, western features, science fiction, and soap opera; something for everyone.

Except that where the newspaper was delivered and had to appeal to the whole family, comic books had to be bought at the newsstand by one particular person in the family. Hence the books quickly sorted out into genres to appeal to that particular person. The kids bought the funny animals, the young men bought the superhero and war books, and the ladies and adolescent girls bought the romance comics. Comics were avidly read by soldiers and sailors during World War II, and the notion that they were somehow inappropriate entertainment for adults had not yet taken hold.

But Fred Wertham changed all that. Comics were for youngsters only, and the Comics Code Authority ensured that the stories were bland enough that they would start to get unappealing as the kids reached their teenage years. In addition, there was strong social pressure from parents, peers and educators to drop the comic book habit as one became an adolescent.

The problem with that was demographics. Publishers basically had only a five year client base, from roughly ages 8-12. But they could see from the birth rates in the country that cohort was going to decline substantially. The number of births in the US peaked in 1957 at about 4.3 million babies. By 1965 the number was down to 3.8 million, and it fell to 3.6 million the following year, and 3.5 million the year after. It was not hard to see that translated into a lot fewer customers only a few years hence.

So Stan decided to push the envelope on the top end of the band, trying to appeal more to teens and even college students, with longer stories, deeper characterization and yes, more literary titles. For a brief period, Marvel even eliminated the "comic book" label itself, referring to its products as Marvel "Pop Art Productions". That particular change didn't take, but the marketing of comics to older buyers had just begun.
More about

Người đăng: Unknown



Number 321



Devil's Diary


Charles Biro, who wrote this story, wanted you to make sure you understood the connection to that big red devil on the splash page from Crime Does Not Pay #49, January, 1947. So he named the main character "Denvil."

Before the horror comics of the 1950s finally pushed parents, legislators and Dr. Wertham over the edge, the main complaint about comics was with the crime comics. Lev Gleason's Crime Does Not Pay was the most popular. Wertham reserved particular antipathy to comics with the big word CRIME on the covers, seeing that word as a kid magnet. This story, "Devil's Diary," is a classic of the sort that Wertham was most bothered by, a record of a criminal career only wrapped up in the last couple of panels when the criminal is finally apprehended. To be fair to writer Biro, in this story Denvil is a stupid sociopath who doesn't learn from getting caught, and keeps making mistakes until it's too late. I guess there's a moral in there somewhere, but Wertham wasn't buying it. He thought what this type of story represented to its young readers is that crime is OK…until you get caught.

The artwork, some of the best I've seen by artist George Tuska, really serves this story. That goofy Mr. Crime--who was supposed to represent the dead end of crime--could have been excised without hurting the story at all.

Page 1 / Page 2 / Page 3 / Page 4 / Page 5 / Page 6 / Page 7 / Page 8 / Page 9 / Page 10 / Page 11 / Page 12

*******

Say What?!

Could you just describe it to me instead?

More about

#023.The Phantom- King Comics

Người đăng: Unknown on Chủ Nhật, 8 tháng 6, 2008

More about

#022.The Phantom - Gold Key Comics

Người đăng: Unknown on Thứ Bảy, 7 tháng 6, 2008


Phantom - A Publishing History in the U.S.A.


#01 - #17 - Gold Key Comics - Nov 1962 - Jul 1966
#18 - #28 - King Comics - Sep 1966 - Dec 1967
#30 - #74 - Charlton Comics - Feb 1969 - Jan 1977

All rest are coming in next two posts very soon. Keep visiting.

The Phantom - Gold Key Comics - #01 to #17 (Nov 1962 - Jul 1966)



Gold-01-1962-Phantom

Gold-02-1963-Phantom

Gold-03-1963-Phantom

Gold-04-1963-Phantom



Gold-05-1963-Phantom

Gold-06-1964-Phantom

Gold-07-1964-Phantom

Gold-08-1964-Phantom



Gold-09-1964-Phantom

Gold-10-1965-Phantom

Gold-11-1965-Phantom

Gold-12-1965-Phantom



Gold-13-1965-Phantom

Gold-14-1965-Phantom

Gold-15-1965-Phantom

Gold-16-1966-Phantom



Gold-17-1966-Phantom

Visit for more details http://www.deepwoods.org/phantom.html

More about

#021.The Phantom - 50 Cent Comics

Người đăng: Unknown on Thứ Sáu, 6 tháng 6, 2008

More about

Người đăng: Unknown


Number 320



Jungle Vengeance



How many white girls in tight-fitting animal-skin costumes were running around in the comic book jungle, anyway? Off hand I can think of Sheena, Rulah, Jann, Lorna, Judy, Tiger Girl, Shanna the She-Devil, Nyoka (who wore shorts) Jun-Gal…and Taanda, White Princess of the Jungle. I wonder if thosse jungle babes formed a coffee klatsch, got together in a hut somewhere once a week to swap stories of lions they'd killed, witch doctors they'd foiled, or white hunters they'd chased out of their jungles.

Well, whatever. Taanda appeared for a time in Avon Comics, drawn by Everett Raymond Kinstler, who went on to become a famous portraitist. This is from Skywald's 1971 Jungle Adventures #1, reprinted from White Princess Of The Jungle #2, from 1952.








More about