Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn Captain Marvel. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng
Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn Captain Marvel. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng

Number 1571: Captain Marvel goes Mad...then Nuts

Người đăng: Unknown on Thứ Hai, 5 tháng 5, 2014

A couple of things caught my eye when I read this Captain Marvel-King Kull tale in Captain Marvel Adventures #141 (1953). First, it has walking dead. That’s good. Second, it is told in the second person, which isn’t good or bad, just different than the usual third person that Captain Marvel stories were written in by chief scripter Otto Binder.

Then there is the so-so, which is a satire on Captain Marvel, “Captain Marble Flies Again,” done for Premier’s Nuts!#5 (1954), after Captain Marvel was cancelled. The story has its moments, but it depends on your tolerance for this type of satirical treatment. (It has a hooker under a street light putting the moves on Captain Marble; that’s interesting and solidly pre-Comics Code).









You remember another story done for Mad #4, “Superduperman” (below) featuring Captain Marbles and Superduperman in battle. It was a reference to the lawsuit against Fawcett by DC for copyright infringement, which which was ultimately decided in favor of DC. Go to Apocolyte’s World of Comics for the Mad story and some bonuses.

Ross Andru drew “Captain Marble Flies Again.” He and partner Mike Esposito published their own short-lived satire comic, Get Lost!. I wonder if this story was originally something they had prepared for that book.







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Number 1502: “So Captain Marvel zapped him right between the eyes...” — John Lennon

Người đăng: Unknown on Chủ Nhật, 5 tháng 1, 2014

In reading and cleaning up the scans of this UK version of Captain Marvel Adventures #69 (US issue #124), John Lennon crossed my mind. In “The Continuing Story of Bungalow Bill”* on the 1968 album, The Beatles, there is this lyric:
“Deep in the jungle where the mighty tiger lies
Bill and his elephants were taken by surprise
So Captain Marvel zapped him right between the eyes...”
One Beatles' song website believes the reference to Captain Marvel means John Lennon was spoofing Americans on superheroes. I think it is more likely that because Lennon was a kid when the British Captain Marvel comics were published (he was 11-years-old when this comic was published in 1951, for instance), he may well have seen or read comics featuring Captain Marvel. Captain Marvel was popular enough that in 1953 when his American adventures ended the British publisher, L. Miller, had Mick Anglo do a close version called Marvelman. Captain Marvel was known in England, so John Lennon using the name wouldn’t seem surprising.


























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*You can read the story of the song’s origin in this Wikipedia page on “The Continuing Story of Bungalow Bill”.

At the end of 2012 I scanned and posted the UK version of Fawcett's adaptation of the science fiction movie, The Man From Planet X, and last July I posted a UK edition of The Marvel Family Go to them by clicking on the thumbnails:




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Review: Superman vs. Shazam! trade paperback (DC Comics)

Người đăng: Unknown on Thứ Năm, 26 tháng 12, 2013

[Guest reviewer Greg Elias writes for Speed Force]

When Superman vs. Shazam! was released, it marked the first reprint of the top-shelf 1978 DC treasury comic of the same name. Whether intended as a video game tie-in or a companion to Geoff Johns and Gary Frank’s Shazam! hardcover, any excuse for DC to present the balance of Rich Buckler’s Superman/Captain Marvel team-ups is good enough.

The idea of The Man of Steel facing off against The World’s Mightiest Mortal has likely existed since the 1940s, where the two vied for the attention of children at newsstands and drug stores. Without getting into the gory details, DC essentially sued Captain Marvel and Fawcett Publications out of existence in the 1950s and kept the characters in suspended animation, until they acquired their rights in the 1970s.

Analogues of Superman and Captain Marvel appeared in the seminal 1953 Mad Magazine story “Superduperman,” which inverted their heroic qualities and mirrored the legal demise of The Big Red Cheese. Once DC revived The Marvel Family, they were kept separate from the main DC Universe. Superman fought an alternate-Earth Captain Marvel, “Captain Thunder,” in Superman #276, but wouldn’t run into the genuine article until the "Crisis on Multiple Earths" story from Justice League of America #137. Neither of those issues is included here, but that brings us up to the starting point.

Superman vs. Shazam!, originally printed in the 1978 All New Collectors' Edition #C-58 at treasury-size, is simply one of the most satisfying DC stories of the Bronze Age. It is a pure, wide-screen tour-de-force with panel-shattering poundings delivered by both heroes. Buckler, with Dick Giordano on inks, turns in the type of top-flight DC artwork associated with Neal Adams, Mike Grell, and the rest of the best. It is smartly plotted by Gerry Conway, giving readers 72 overflowing pages with multiple confrontations between the title heroes. They’re joined by Supergirl, Mary Marvel, Black Adam, and even the Quarrmer (“Sand Superman”), the latter making his only pre-Crisis appearance outside of the “Kryptonite Nevermore” storyline.

The action also includes the first time Captain Marvel considers using his Magic Lightning to attack Superman, something that would inspire the memorable confrontation in Mark Waid and Alex Ross’s Kingdom Come, as well as the Justice League Unlimited cartoon and even the recent DC Universe video games. Given the cost and assumed condition of most originals, this volume is worth the price of admission for the treasury story alone. It is thrilling, blaringly violent, and revels in the clash of the biggest power players of the DC Multiverse.

The three DC Comics Presents issues that follow, written in part by Conway, Roy Thomas, and Paul Kupperberg, complete a cohesive trilogy. The first two stories maintain Giordano as inker and remain as gorgeous as the treasury pages. The story is a lighter-toned team-up, with the heroes doing their only “fighting” over their uniforms. Starring the combined villains of Earth-One and Earth-S, Buckler continues to deliver a whirlwind of action while the writers branch further into the magical and whimsical dimensions and denizens of both Superman and The Marvel Family.

The final Buckler-drawn story is a stand-alone gem that introduces the Earth-One Billy Batson, who is not (yet?) a Captain Marvel counterpart. Featuring an exciting Central Park clash between Superman and Black Adam that recalls the cross-country landmark tour seen in the first story, Captain Marvel shows up only in the final third for one last round of Buckler’s high-flying fisticuffs. The hopeful final image of the Earth-One Batson is a fitting end to a trilogy of memorable clashes and victories between the two superheroes. The volume’s last story is the oft-reprinted DC Comics Presents Annual #3, a Gil Kane showcase that, at the risk of repeating myself, cannot be over-printed. This one even showed up another big collection this year, playing the role of final story in Adventures of Superman: Gil Kane.

DC finally got around to reprinting their best treasury comics in the last couple of years, like those found in Superman vs. Shazam!, almost as if they were saving them as some secret reserve. Whether packaged in artist-focused hardcovers, movie tie-ins, or a paperback-first trade like this one, they are each important and high-level stories by any measure. There are plenty of other true confrontations between Superman and Captain Marvel, from All-Star Squadron #36 and 37 to the Eclipso-fueled Action Comics Annual #4, and hopefully they’ll see reprints soon, because this volume is an absolute blast.
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Review: Shazam! Vol. 1 hardcover/paperback (DC Comics)

Người đăng: Unknown on Thứ Năm, 26 tháng 9, 2013

There's just a handful of references to the larger DC Universe in the new Shazam! collection (collecting the Justice League back-up stories). This dearth of outside influence, plus the presence of writer Geoff Johns and especially artist Gary Frank, puts the reader heavily in mind of their recent Batman: Earth One collaboration.

Shazam! could as easily be Shazam!: Earth One, and it succeeds as a new graphic-novel type introduction to the former Captain Marvel, of a kind we haven't seen since Jerry Ordway's seminal Power of Shazam graphic novel. Ordway's graphic novel and subsequent series (overdue for large-scale collection) made Captain Marvel modern for the time, while still hewing to the character's classic elements and tone. Shazam! nods to those elements, but the tone is modern now for the present day; Billy Batson has never been farther from his "gee whiz" elements.

This may offend some, but Johns's Shazam nee Captain Marvel is far from unrecognizable. In all this is an auspicious new beginning for the classic character.

[Review contains spoilers]

Johns's opening salvo to the story is introducing a saccharin-sweet Billy Batson who's verily what some readers might have feared -- before revealing that this Billy is really a troublesome brat. It's a moment in the same vein as Johns's Earth One Batman falls off a roof -- Johns, effectively if heavy-handedly, declares this a new, different take on an old favorite. Billy and fellow foster child Freddy Freeman try to vandalize a bully's car; when Billy becomes Shazam, one of their primary goals is to go buy beer. Johns's success is in making Billy, finally, someone the reader can accept as a "regular" adventure story-type kid, rather than the wise-beyond-his-years radio personality of iterations past.

Traditional Captain Marvel fans need not worry that Johns has leaned too dark here. The splash page of Billy and Freddie reveling in Billy's newfound power of flight perfectly reflects both the innocence and wish fulfillment aspects of the Captain Marvel legend. Neither does Johns shy away from the cornier elements of the mythos; by the end of the book, yes indeed, both Freddie and Mary (Marvel) get their powers, along with some new members of the Shazam family. Johns even works in "Tawky" Tawny (no Uncle Dudley yet, sorry). Billy's iconic red-and-yellow shirt is gone, but his jacket gives a nod to the striped elements.

Johns is no stranger to Billy's adventures, having written him in JSA (JSA fans will join me in hoping to see this New 52 Shazam encounter the New 52 Justice League of America's Stargirl). Johns spent even more time writing about Billy's nemesis (and sometimes ally) Black Adam pre-Flashpoint, and so it's interesting to see how Johns conceives him here. Whereas Adam had been a member of Kahndaq's ruling circle before, he's now a slave granted the power of Shazam to take revenge on his oppressors. It would seem at one point that Black Adam is a young orphan just like Billy, but we understand later that Black Adam stole the power from his nephew before murdering him.

As is the case with many of Johns's villains, Black Adam is not all bad, and this keeps too with Adam's JSA portrayal. Here, Adam works out of a misguided sense of justice, believing the slavery he once toiled under still exists. It's hard to see the "old" Black Adam in Johns's confused villain, but neither do I believe that Adam's death at the end of this story holds any permanence; I'm eager to see Johns continue to re-build Black Adam into the anti-hero we enjoyed for so many years.

The book only struggles a bit, as many of the New 52 titles have, with trying at times to seem too modern. Billy's mention of his "podcast" trips off the tongue; Johns is no codger, but it's adult-speak, not teen-speak. An iPad factors heavily into the story, surprisingly, both because I wonder about trademark issues and also because most every other New 52 has used Oliver Queen's Q-pad as their iPad equivalent; again, in the way it both stands out and potentially dates the story later on, I'd as soon the Q-pad was the device. Elsewhere in the story, the iconic Seven Deadly Sins statues are now holograms; I tend to think that's a too-self-conscious update rather than a necessary one.

Overall, however, I'd be thrilled to see Geoff Johns's much-discussed next DC series be a continuation of Shazam! -- with Gary Frank, too, or failing that, Cully Hamner might have an interesting take on the "Marvel orphans." That there are six "Shazams" now bothers me not at all, especially when there were at least that many before when you include Hoppy and so on; certainly no one could claim Johns's new Shazam! is more corny than what came before. Johns positions the new Shazam! somewhere between Goonies and Harry Potter, and it works quite well. Could Shazam! be the most successful New 52 relaunch so far?
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Review: Captain Marvel Vol. 2: Down trade paperback (Marvel Comics)

Người đăng: Unknown on Thứ Tư, 25 tháng 9, 2013

[Review by Doug Glassman, who Tumblrs at Hell Yeah '80s Marvel!]

When the current Captain Marvel title launched, there were doubts that it could make it past six issues. By the end of the issues collected in Captain Marvel Vol. 2: Down, however, the book warranted a five-part crossover led off by a special one-shot.

Much of Captain Marvel’s success can be owed to a strong and passionate fanbase called the “Carol Corps.” Mobilizing through Twitter and Tumblr and in constant contact with author Kelly Sue DeConnick and the various artists, the Corps has established itself as a bulwark against sexism in comics. I even got official Carol Corps dog tags after meeting DeConnick at a signing in Tampa. Many new readers have flocked to Marvel Comics with Captain Marvel as a gateway, and while Down isn’t perfect, it’s easy to see the character’s appeal.

The two-parter that kicks off the trade teams Carol Danvers with Monica Rambeau, a previous Captain Marvel and one of the stars of Nextwave. Her look and somewhat gruffer persona from that title remain intact despite its supposed non-canonicity. While they bicker over their respective choices of code name, it becomes clear that Carol and Monica have a close friendship. More history is added with the return of Frank Gianelli who, like the irascible Tracy Burke, is a returning character from the '70s Ms. Marvel title and Carol's old job at Woman magazine. Later on, private eye Dakota North, who had her own title in the '80s, appears as another of Carol’s friends. These characters fit into the overall theme of Down and the issues which come after it: Carol’s past is catching up with her in dangerous ways.

To cement this concept, Carol and Monica are forced to fight a giant, regenerating robot built from the wrecks of crashed ships and Air Force planes. Carol even calls it a metaphor for her life: everything she holds dear coming down at her with a massive fist. Simultaneously, DeConnick and co-writer Christopher Sebela pull a neat trick on the reader by ascribing the robot’s creation to an enemy of the Avengers, the fearsome Dr. Hogarth Hamontree. If you’re never heard of him … that’s because he was made up for this story. The whole scenario sounds like a classic issue of The Avengers, though, and it adds to the backstory while simultaneously making the reader (and the Marvel Universe Appendix website) question what they know.

Upon her return to New York, Carol gets a new job thanks to Tony Stark, and the artist changes from Dexter Soy to Filipe Andrade, to the book’s detriment. Soy was the weaker artist on In Pursuit Of Flight and while he does a great job drawing the giant robot enemy, his female figures are still sort of off. Andrade is a good artist, but is not the right artist for Captain Marvel. His spindly figures and odd faces just look wrong; Tony Stark’s mouth in issue #9 looks like it’s bigger than his face, and everyone has weird, pointy noses too low on their heads. He’s definitely an artist that needs an inker to get rid of some of the sketchiness. This isn’t helped by Comixology’s guided reading function, which zooms in on every panel as if to point out how odd the people look. I tried reading it with guided reading turned off, and that helped only slightly.

The strength of the writing is what saves Captain Marvel from the weakening art. Carol coming home introduces or reintroduces us to her supporting characters, demonstrating her strong connections to everyone from Spider-Woman to the little girl who lives in her apartment building. When her life begins to fall apart, people are there to both help her and be affected by her decisions. It’s one of the best counter-arguments to the stupid statement that superheroes shouldn’t be allowed to have happiness in their lives. Really, it’s the opposite: if they’re happy, then they have more to lose.

This is when Carol receives the diagnosis about a series of headaches and power issues she’s been having: she has a lesion on her brain created by her powers which expands every time she flies. Considering how important flight is to her life -- as seen in the aptly-titled Captain Marvel Vol. 1: In Pursuit of Flight -- this is devastating to her. At the same time, the writers inject some humor, as when Captain America gives her his flying motorcycle so that she can fight Deathbird, a returning Shi’ar enemy. Much like Dr. Hogarth Hamontree, Deathbird is a continuity issue, since she should be dead after events in the X-Men titles. Her true nature is tied into Carol’s illness; like many brain tumor victims, Carol is having hallucinations … and thanks to her powers, they’re far more real and dangerous.

Carol’s tumor plotline has had a stronger impact on me over the last few weeks. I recently learned that a good friend of mine has a similar tumor; she actually happens to look like Carol as well. Watching Carol deal with her medical issues has been inspiring, and it’s why I’ve kept following Captain Marvel and why I whole-heartedly recommend Captain Marvel Vol. 2: Down despite my qualms with the art. Who should take over the art duties on Captain Marvel? Well, now that Journey Into Mystery was boneheadedly cancelled three months before the next Thor film, Valerio Schiti is open to take on the task. He's proven that he can draw gorgeous yet badass women with the right amount of sexuality without veering into cheesecake.

Next week, I’ll take another look at Carol in the pages of Avengers Assemble as I review some of my favorite Marvel NOW! titles begins. And tomorrow at Collected Editions, more "Captain Marvel," of sorts, with a review of DC's new Shazam! hardcover.
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Number 1419: Captain Marvel “moons” the earth!

Người đăng: Unknown on Thứ Tư, 14 tháng 8, 2013

Putting the moon back together after it has split in half is no problem for Captain Marvel. “Menace of the Moon” is a fairly typical tale of the Big Red Cheese, drawn by C. C. Beck and written by Otto Binder for Captain Marvel Adventures #106 (1950). Binder had a light touch, even with such a story, which seems like it needs more of a treatment considering such epic subject matter as the destruction of the moon.

Despite the light touch, Binder, whom I met in 1970 at his home in Chestertown, NY after his comic book career had ended, impressed me as a man who took all writing assignments seriously. He was writing freelance at the time, turning out science fiction novels on a regular basis. I admired his work ethic. He told me he got up in he morning, five days a week, and wrote until he had 2,000 “usable words” — about 10 pages of typescript. I did the calculations in my head (“Ten pages, novel 160 pages long, sixteen working days to write.” Wow, although I’m sure there were days he wrote less or more, depending on circumstances.) As an article from the Roy Thomas-edited fanzine, Alter Ego #9 (1965) explains, during the golden age of comics Otto was a busy man writing comic book scripts. So busy he didn’t have time to dress; he wrote in his pajamas and robe. I’ve included that article in this post. It has some snapshots supplied by Otto, which show some of his friends. The snapshots aren’t great quality, but we get a tantalizing glimpse of people Otto worked with at Fawcett.

Binder and Beck retained copyrights to the Captain Marvel character, Mr. Tawny, the Talking Tiger. Along with the article there were two pages of samples (a week’s continuity) of a proposed Mr. Tawny newspaper comic strip. It has the same lightness of touch that Otto used so effectively with Captain Marvel.













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