The Curious Case of the Time Trapper

Người đăng: Unknown on Thứ Năm, 27 tháng 10, 2011

Faithful readers of the Legion of Superheroes must have been confused at this sequence, which appeared in Adventure #317:
Why confused? Well, it turns out that this was the first mention of the Time Trapper in a Legion story. At the very end of that story (which mostly did not concern TT) came a semi-explanation:
In the next issue, we got our first glimpse of the villain:
Note in particular his physical appearance there. Over the next year or so, we'd see more futile efforts by the Legion to break through:
The Time Trapper turned out to be working behind the scenes in that story, trying to find out the secret of the Legion's super weapon, the concentrator:
But it turns out that he does not have the real secret of the concentrator and flees into the future again. Amazingly, the Time Trapper story would not be resolved until Adventure #338, almost two years after he was first mentioned:
In that story, the Time Trapper has recruited an evil female, Glorith of Baalour, to help him doom the Legion. We get a strong indication of the plot here:
However, when she tries the trick on several members of the Legion, they do not regress in age past babyhood:
Frustrated in his plot to turn the Legion into blobs of protoplasm, he joins Glorith, after first letting Superboy and Brainiac 5 through the Iron Curtain of Time. He leaves them trapped in the future and sets about training the baby Legionnaires to rob for him:
Then he brings them to a planet where elements in the atmosphere will resume their devolution. But this causes problems, too:
But one of the babies has spotted the Time Trapper's ring, which is responsible for keeping Superboy and Brainiac 5 in the future. He switches it off, allowing them to join the group. The Trapper makes a proposal:
Brainiac 5 agrees, but there is a trick:
End of story? Well, yes and no. Yes, in the sense that it quite literally is the end of the Time Trapper in the Silver Age; he did not appear again outside of a hallucination sequence in Adventure 363. Which, if you think about it, is very odd. Here's this villain whose confrontation with the Legion had been built up over the course of two years, and yet they dispose of him in a single 16-page story? It doesn't make a whole lot of sense. So I began digging for clues and speculating a bit. The first clue is that initial mention of the Time Trapper in Adventure #317. It appears obvious that there was supposed to be a Time Trapper story which appeared before that, but which was bumped for some reason. And if we look at the cover to Adventure #317, we get a pretty good second clue:
Speculation: Perhaps the Time Trapper story which appeared in Adventure #338 was intended to appear just before #317, but editor Mort Weisinger belatedly realized that this would give him two consecutive stories featuring Legionnaires turning into babies? This fits, especially when you consider that Adventure #338 was written by Jerry Siegel, while #317 was written by Edmund Hamilton. Weisinger could have instructed Hamilton (or artist John Forte) to include a couple panels mentioning the Time Trapper.

There are certainly still some problems with this speculation. For example, the story does not end with the Time Trapper in the future, creating the Iron Curtain of Time. But this objection is easily overcome; Weisinger simply had the ending of the story rewritten because now it took place after the events in #317, instead of before. Note as well that the story in Adventure #338 did not explain what secret the Time Trapper was supposedly concealing from the Legion in the future.

So my best guess is that the Time Trapper story that was supposed to be published before Adventure #317 was in fact the story that ended up being published in Adventure #338, with some changes. Incidentally, the Time Trapper himself may have been based on the Time Master, a similar character that appeared in Wonder Woman #101:
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Người đăng: Unknown on Thứ Tư, 26 tháng 10, 2011


Number 1041


Al Fago's Atomic Rodent


Alfred "Al" Fago was a comic book editor, writer and cartoonist. The earliest strip I have attributed to him is from EC Comics Animated Comics from 1946, when EC was about kiddie comics and not walking corpses. I showed it in Pappy's #824. A little over a decade later, after spending much of his time at Charlton, Fago founded his own comic book line, which was comprised of ten issues of five different comics. Easy come, easy go...I showed you stories by Dick Ayers from one of Fago's comic books, Tense Suspense, in Pappy's #972.

Fago's most famous creation (for me, anyway) was Atomic Mouse.* Fago created the character in 1953 for Charlton. Atomic Mouse joined the ranks of other superhero cartoon mice: Supermouse and Mighty Mouse. Supermouse ate super cheese, and Atomic Mouse popped Uranium-235 pills. (The inset panel of A.M., with crazed expression, on the final page of this posting exclaiming "Gosh! I'll have to take a couple more pills!" should have disturbed Dr. Wertham.)

I wonder why mice became the good guys in animated cartoons and comics and cats were the bad guys? I depend on my cats to keep mice away, since I don't want them in my house. It saves me the humiliation of standing on a chair shrieking like a girl while a mouse does figure eights on my kitchen floor. I guess maybe it's the David and Goliath thing, the little guy prevailing over the big guy? I'm all for that, but mice? Vermin. Ugh.

Atomic Mouse's nemesis was Count Gatto, a cat of course. These two stories are from Atomic Mouse #4, 1953:














*He also created Atomic Rabbit.

**********

In 2007 I showed the first issue of Dell's Yak-Yak, illustrated completely by Jack Davis. Yak-Yak is a very oddball comic which is numbered as part of the Four Color series, at #1186. You can find it in Pappy's #200.

There were at least two editions of this issue, one with an ad on the back cover, and one without. Jim Gray has found the non-ad edition and has kindly shared a scan of the back cover. For you completists out there, and for all of us Jack Davis lovers, it's really nice of him to go to the trouble. Thanks, Jim!
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Around the Horn

Người đăng: Unknown on Thứ Ba, 25 tháng 10, 2011

Check out Blogged and Boarded, a blog that is going through the complete Marvel 1960s catalog in order of publication.  Entertaining and informative.

Steve Does Comics has done a couple of recent polls on the greatest enemies of Spiderman and the Fantastic Four.  The first place finishers are not surprising, but there is a good argument to be made for one of the runners-up in Spidey; "himself".

Jacque Nodell covers some fashion mistakes in romance comics so bad, it looks like they're Halloween costumes.

Mark Ginocchio reminisces on the desire, nay the lust, he felt for ASM #32.  As I mentioned in the commentsover there, a friend of mine traded me all his Spiderman back issues except for ASM #33, and so, irrationally, I decided that wasn't such a special issue.  I subsequently recovered my senses.

Was Batman in his late 40s in the 1960s?  Over at Nothing but Batman I cover Bob Haney's (and Neal Adams') Brave and Bold #84, which features Bruce Wayne parachuting into occupied France just before D-Day.
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Grimm Fairy Tales #62

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Grimm Fairy Tales #62
2011 | English | 37 pages | CBR | 19.8MB
The city of Tallus has been destroyed and Sela and her companions lay beneath the body of the slain Shadow Dragon....whether alive or dead remains to be seen. Even if they have survived they still have Orcus to contend with. Don't miss the exciting conclusion to the Mother Nature story arc!
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Grimm Fairy Tales: Myths And Legends #7

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Grimm Fairy Tales: Myths And Legends #7
2011 | English | 32 pages | CBR | 17.2MB
With the Piper as their prisoner Baba Yaga and Samantha go in search of the one weapon that will give them a chance against the Dream Eater. But the weapon is not only in a different dimension but a different time all together and getting there may only be half of the battle in the fight to destroy something that cannot die and who's only purpose is the destruction of all beings from the four realms. Part seven of the event that will change the Grimm Fairy Tales universe forever is here.
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Grimm Fairy Tales: The Dream Eater Saga #6

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Grimm Fairy Tales: The Dream Eater Saga #6
2011 | English | 47 pages | CBR | 23.4MB
Braden and Anna investigate a small town being ravaged by a strange sickness that leaves it's victims old and aged. The only people not affected by the disease are those whose who visit an old healer who lives on the outskirts of town but his price is high and few can afford his services. But the truth of the source of the sickness is something not of this world and Anna and Braden may be its next victims. Grimm Fairy Tales and the Old West collide in this MUST READ issue. Part six of the event that will change the Grimm Fairy Tales universe forever is here.
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Fathom Vol. 4 #1

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Fathom Vol. 4 #1
2011 | English | 35 pages | CBR | 20.3 MB
Michael Turner's Fathom makes its return for the sensational fourth volume! Aspen Matthews is back once again! But now, Aspen must deal with the global ramifications of the Blue and Black's exposure to the rest of the world. However, this is an Aspen that is through being manipulated by the outside forces surrounding her life. It's a brave new world for her and the rest of the cast of FATHOM, as they must attempt to piece together the fragments of a world shattered by the knowledge of their existence. With FATHOM's long awaited return at hand, some new creators and several familiar names are along for the ride! Artist extraordinaire Alex Konat of Mindfield fame is joined by acclaimed writer Scott Lobdell, a newcomer to the world of FATHOM, but ready to make his mark on the series unlike anything you've ever seen before. Colorist Beth Sotelo also joins the FATHOM family and brings her lush color pallet to the world of the Blue! For the legions of FATHOM fans who have been waiting to see Aspen in her element, taking control of her life, now is the time to jump on in-the water's just fine!
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