Showing posts with label george papp. Show all posts
Showing posts with label george papp. Show all posts

Friday, September 7, 2018

Adventure Comics #244 (1958)


Adventure Comics #244 (January, 1958)
"The Poorest Family in Smallville"
"A Medal for Roy"
"The Man Who Mastered the Air"
"The Copy Cat Creature"
Script - Alvin Schwartz, George Kashan & Robert Bernstein
Art - John Sikela, George Papp & Ramona Fradon
Edits - Whitney Ellsworth, Jack Schiff & Mort Weisinger
Cover Price: $0.10

Today we're going way back to the past... sixty years, in fact!

We'll take a look at a trio of tales from the very infancy of the Silver Age... if we're counting Showcase #4 as it's beginning (and we are), covering three (well, four) heroes that actually survived the bridge between the Golden and Silver Ages!

It's sure to be a good... if not a bit overwritten... time!  But, if you're reading this blog, you already know a thing or two about "overwritten"!

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We open with Ma and Pa Kent returning home to Smallville after going on vacation.  They arrive to find that their Kent General Store... has burned to the ground!  Whuh-oh.  The friendly Milkman lumbers by and tells them that the fire started with a strange green flame.  Well, sez the Kents, least we still have a home to return to.  Welllll... ya see, that burned down too.  Well, further sez the Kents, at least we're up to date on our insurance.  Wellllll... maybe not so much.


Later, the people of Smallville gather around the grieving Kents, and as a show of good-neighborliness, they offer them the $20,000 they'd collected!  By the way, that's $176,227.97 in 2018 monies.  The Kents, proud as they are (and, uh, also the parents of Superboy) pass on the money.  News of said act travels far and wide, even reaching Metropolis... where the editor of NOW Magazine insists his reporters follow up with the fam.


Elsewhere, Superboy is helping out on a secret government mission.  When he learns the news of the fire, he returns home to check in.  He suggests he just whip up a new house and shop... but, ya know... then everyone will know that Clark Kent is Superboy (somehow)... perhaps worse yet, everyone in town will expect Superboy to attend to all of their tragedies (which, I thought he already did?).  Clark figures one way he can help is squeezing a piece of coal into a diamond that Ma and Pa can sell to raise the money for rebuilding.  A Smallville jeweler takes one look at the rock (which is massive, by the way) and dismisses it as glass.


And so, the Kents fly off to Metropolis to try selling it there (using "advance money" Pa was given in order to buy food).  One look at the rock... and the hoity-toity Metropolis jeweler calls the cops... because something this large was surely stolen!


Back in Smallville, Superboy reclaims the camera, which somehow survived the inferno, from the shop to see what might've caused the fire.  Turns out, the green flame was his doing... sorta.  Ya see, he brought some glowing green rocks back from outer space... and left them in the store and the house for "safe keeping".  Being in Earth's atmosphere caused them to ignite... bada bing, bada boom... both the store and the Kent house burned to the ground.


After explaining the situation to his folks, they're pretty understanding, by the way... more understanding than I'd be... anyhoo, Lana Lang arrives to offer Clark a job repairing her roof.  It'll give him a few bucks to pitch in for repairs on his own house.  He tires of this pretty quick, and performs some super-ventriloquism to make it seem like Superboy knows of a better paying gig.


That "better paying gig"... well, howsabout digging deep into the Earth, tapping the vein of an oil reserve, and making it look as though the Kent's sprung a gusher?!  Only... Superboy's super-trajectory is two feet off... leaving the gusher on Neighbor Smith's property.  Whoops.


Pa takes it all in stride, and decides to head off fishing... after all, the Kents gotta eat... and they spent all of their food money on that fabulous trip to Metropolis.  Superboy hatches another plan... he'll make it seem as though Pa "caught" a treasure chest, chock full of diamonds and pearls.  Only, he hooks the loot to the wrong hook.  Whoops.


But wait, there's more.  Later, Superboy sees a high-speed chase.  The police are in hot pursuit of a low-flying plane full'a bank robbers.  He overhears that there's a $10,000 reward for nabbin' these guys, and comes up with a plan to make it seem as though his Ma and Pa caught the baddies.


Now, if you've read more than a handful of comics in your day, it should come as no surprise to you that this whole "bank robber" thing is... just a movie being filmed.  Whoops.


We wrap up with the "movie people" buying the footage of the Kent General Store going up in flames for $50,000!  They're filming a flick called "Invasion From Space", and would have had to pay $75,000 to "stage" the fire... so, this is one heckuva bargain!


That's the end of the Superboy feature... but we're not done yet!  Next up, Green Arrow... featuring Speedy!  We open with one of those "spoilery" panels that shows us where we're headed.  In it, Roy Harper is receiving a medal from the President of the United States (would've been Eisenhower at this point).  Somehow, he (Roy/Speedy, that is) is also 200 miles away identifying a crook.  But how?!


The story proper begins with Green Arrow and Speedy chasing down all-around bad dude Clyde Roker.  Out of "sheer coincidence" Roker attempts to flee to and hide out in the same building where Ollie and Roy live as civilians!  Roy rushes inside before they break in... however, the baddies see him duck into the Queen/Harper apartment... they shoot the lock off the door and... are surprised to see... not Speedy, but another redheaded kid.  Roy takes advantage of their momentary discombobulation and kayos 'em both.


That night, news of Roy Harper's bravery is all over the television.  Ya see, it's believed that Roy saved Speedy's life.  As Ollie and Roy watch the evening report, they receive a phone call... from the President of the United States!  Ike asks Roy to head to D.C. to receive a medal the following morning.  Roy faints.


A bit later, as the Arrows get ready to go out on their nightly patrol... Ollie posits a question.  How can Roy Harper be in Washington accepting a medal, at the same time Speedy needs to be down at the Precinct to point Clyde Roker out of a police lineup?!  Ruh-roh.


While going about their "rounds", Speedy suggests they whip up a Roy Harper robot to accept the medal... ya know, overnight.  Ollie thumbs his nose at the suggestion.  Also, on this page we get three "trick arrows", a Police Siren Arrow, a Searchlight Arrow, and a Harpoon Arrow.


Moments later, they come across an apartment fire.  Here we see a Fire-Extinguisher Arrow and a Rope Ladder Arrow (I'll include images of all the trick arrows down below).  Toward the end of their patrol, the Arrows are attacked by some of Roker's men... they are no match for a Buzzsaw and Scissor Arrow.  Ollie and Roy tie the baddies up... and call it a night.


The next morning, Roy Harper is in Washington, D.C. being pinned by the Commander-in-Chief.  Also, at the local Precinct... Speedy's there!  Turns out, Clyde Roker comes clean before the whole Police Lineup thing... which is exactly what Roy hoped would happen.  Ya see, this way, any ol' kid could dress up like Speedy... and not be lying when they identified Roker in the lineup.  Any ol' kid... even perhaps the President of the United States' son!


It's pretty hinky, ain't it?  Ya see, the night before, Speedy dialed up Ike and explained everything to him.  The Prez was totally okay with having his son step in and "play" Speedy.  Now, Eisenhower's grandson Dwight David would have been about 10 years old at this point... so, it's a pretty even trade I guess.  Worth noting, the disguise even fools Ollie!


Time to take a break with a text piece!  Which means, go refresh your beverage and we'll just pretend we read this.


Onto our last story... featuring Aquaman, as he explores a "remote part" of his watery domain.  He comes across a creature embedded in the ice.  It's like a mix of a dragon and a cat.


The iceberg cracks, and the creature is freed.  Lucky for everyone, it appears to be friendly.  Aquaman names it Myron... okay.  Together they patrol the seas looking for those in aid.  They come across a ship that has spotted a swarm of locusts that will surely destroy the nearby farmers' crops.  Aquaman commands some flying fish to pop out of the drink and gobble up the critters.  Seeing this, Myron decides to copy the behavior... he leaps out of the water, and takes a big ol' bite out of a passing plane!


After rescuing the pilot of the plane (by creating a "net" of octopuses... which is somehow softer than a water landing), Aquaman lectures his prehistoric pal about not doing stupid things.  Myron sheds a single tear.  Later, there's a fire in a small forest!  Aquaman calls for swordfish to cut down the trees.  Seeing this, Myron gets an idea and takes another big ol' bite, this time out of a nearby lighthouse!


This is an old-fashioned lighthouse... no bulb in this thing, only flame.  And now, the flame is in the water... and Aquaman has to summon several whales to put it out with their blowholes.  We jump ahead a few days, to Aquaman and Myron happening across a stuck-ship.  Aquaman calls for some dolphins to act as a tow service.  Myron sees this, and decides to do 'em one better by towing a giant pirate-looking ship... which makes waves, and tips the other boat over.


Aquaman creates a "line" out of eels, and saves the boaters.  Imagine grabbing a hold of that?  Eesh.  After that, it's time for yet another lecture for Myron.  Aquaman decides that he's just too much of a menace to remain.


He tricks Myron into ducking into a waterfall at the South Pole... then has a platoon of blowfish breathe freezing cold water at him... leaving him, once more, frozen in an iceberg.  Well, that ended on a kinda somber note, didn't it?


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Boy, you sure got your dime's worth sixty years ago, didn'tcha?

Okay, so where to begin... I guess Superboy is as good as any!  Now, books of this vintage are a pretty new and novel thing to me... it's not often I travel further back than the early Bronze Age, so I'm not sure if Superboy being depicted as such a spectacular goofball was "the norm" or not.  But here... wow, dude can't win for losin'!

I guess we've all had one'a "those" days... where absolutely nothing goes the right way.  For me, it usually begins with me spilling coffee in my lap or something.  At that point, I know I may as well just tap out and try again the next day.  For Superboy, though, it starts with him inadvertently burning down both his home and parents' General Store.  I've said it a few times already, but... whoops.

I appreciate his well-meaning attempts to make things right... it's very much what you'd expect a kid (with super-powers) to do.  It's just that he failed so spectacularly throughout... it was quite a thing.  I mean, let's just look at the diamond he created from the coal... c'mon dude... a little critical thinking, please.  You maybe make it the size that might fit in an engagement ring... you don't just hand off a diamond the size of a softball.  What jeweler A) would, and B) could pay for something that insanely large?!  I mean, Clark's heart was in the right place... but you'd at least think that his folks would be like "Ehh, maybe couldja chip a piece of this off?"

Another thing I didn't quite understand... why couldn't Superboy help rebuild the Kents' home?  I mean, everybody knows that Superboy lives in Smallville... and I'd assume that he'd help any other family in a similar situation... so, wouldn't it maybe stand out as strange that he doesn't help Ma and Pa?!  Yeah, I've reached that point where I'm thinking too hard.

Time to move along to the Green Arrow story.  Really not much to this one... a little switcheroo action with Speedy and the Grandson-of-Ike.  This is a Presidential appearance I don't much mind... just a faceless dude pinning a medal on a brave kid's chest.  Could do with more like this.  Thought it was neat that he revealed his secret identity to Eisenhower... even going so far as to say "If you can't trust the President... whom can you trust?"

The final story was a hoot... but, ya know... I can't help but feel horrible for poor Myron.  Gotta wonder if there might'a been another "Myron" in the comics biz who might've been seen as a "copy cat".  Dunno, maybe I'm thinking too hard again.

Thought this was a fun one... a neat little story, worth being told.  Really though, kiiiiiinda heartbreaking in the end... you just imagine that happy-go-lucky cat-dragon staring out of that waterfall to see Aquaman command the blowfish to "lock 'im up".  How confused he must've been.  How betrayed he must've felt.  Poor Myron.

Worth noting, the art throughout this issue was pretty great!  I'll go the obvious route and call out Ramona Fradon's (artist on Aquaman) as being some of the best of the time.  You really get quite the package here for ten-cents (adjusted for inflation... are you ready for this... 88-cents).  Tell ya what, I wouldn't mind paying three-times that for this much content today.  Too bad that ship has already long left the port.

Overall... not "must reading" by any stretch, but a really good time.  If you were to happen across this one on the cheap, I'd tell ya not to hesitate... after all, you'd be getting the first (and only) appearance of Myron!

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Thursday, March 30, 2017

Superboy #134 (1966)


Superboy #134 (December, 1966)
"The Scoundrel of Steel!"
"Krypto's First Romance!"
Writers - Leo Dorfman & Jerry Siegel
Artist - George Papp
Cover Price: $0.12

Got a couple of firsts today... we've got our first Imaginary Story (and it might not be the one you think), and it's our first Jerry Siegel story!

Let's get to it!

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We open with a quick and dirty origin of Superboy.  Really, it's just four panels.  Today that'd be a trade paperback!  Anyhoo... it's the story of how on the anniversary of Clark's arrival, his adoptive parents thought it would be a great idea for him to wear a costume made from the blankets found in his rocket ship, and fight crime.  Wonderfully simplistic... we don't need to think much harder on that.  Anyhoo, we interrupt the story in progress to start another... and IMAGINARY STORY!

We join Superboy's anniversary again... however, this time his first mission has nothing to do with stopping a runaway train, but instead... a chunk of red rock soaring through the sky.  Superboy makes short work of this crisis, grabbing the crag... and sending it into space!  As he returns home, he notices that his body is tingling... could the rock have affected him?  A helpful editorial note tells us, that wasn't an ordinary meteorite... it was a chunk of Red K!



Superboy returns home, and it would seem a young hero's job is never done.  He heads off to assist in a prison break at Alcatraz.  The officers are happy to see him arrive, however... should they be?  Instead of herding the baddies, he pushes the entire island to the mainland to aid in their escape!



Back at the Kent farm, Jonathan and Martha (or is it Eben and Sarah?) are huddled around the radio... crying.  They cannot believe that their boy would behave in such a way.  In mere moments, Superboy comes crashing through the living room window.  He demands food, however, when it arrives... he tells his mother how he really feels about her cooking!



The next scene is pretty amazing.  Pa Kent decides he's had enough of Clark's sass, and so he puts him over his knee for a paddlin'.  It doesn't quite go according to plan.



The following morning, Superboy decides to attend school... in costume.  He crashes through the window and demands that the teacher learn him something.  She puts on a filmstrip about King Arthur yanking Excalibur out of the stone.  Superboy has had enough and decides to lash out... and even teach his "classmates" a new poem.



Outside he rings the school bell which draws all of the students out of the building.  Superboy's next trick is... using his super-breath to blow down the schoolhouse!  He also finishes his poem... "No more teacher's sassy looks?!"  I don't remember it going that way... growing up it was always "No more teacher's dirty looks"  I dunno, maybe that was the New York variation.



Superboy returns home and has himself an apple.  Pa runs in and threatens to call the police... to which, Superboy yanks the phone out of the wall.  To further ensure his parents don't squeal, he proceeds to dig a moat all around the farm... which, would definitely buy him... what, a half-hour?  When he finishes digging, he notices through the use of telescopic vision that the military has declared him public enemy number one (which seems to happen quite a bit).  At the proving grounds, the soldiers are taking aim at Superboy statues... which they made really quick, right?  I mean, the kid first appeared... yesterday!



Seconds later, Superboy arrives at the grounds... and topples all of the statues.  The soldiers proceed to just riddle him with ballistics.  That doesn't work out too well.  Superboy swipes the statues and deposits them at the Kent farm.



Days later, Superboy flies out to the Rock of Gibraltar.  He is met by a naval fleet, and so he lifts the entire rock out of the water and slams it down creating a terrific splash.  As he heads home, he sort of gets his wits back about him.  He doesn't understand what he's doing flying over the ocean... and so, he returns home.



He throws on his Clark Kent duds, and heads to school... oh wait a sec, the school is just a pile of rubble!  The best part of this is, the teacher is conducting class in the middle of a field... with a chalkboard and all!  Before Clark can mingle with the group, he is bum rushed by his father and some FBI agents.  Pa Kent spills the beans about his son's dual identity... and poor Clark gets cuffed.



The FBI agent reads Clark his list of crimes... and somehow, the boy puts two and two together... realizing the meteor was Red Kryptonite.  He recalls the events of the past few days, and comes to the conclusion that all of his crimes had to do with "rocks".  Oooh.  He begs the G Men to let him off the hook, and he will fix everything he'd broken... and, wow... they do!



After all is set right, Superboy knows that there's no going back to the way things were.  His secret's out... and everybody is afraid of him.  He decides to exile himself from Earth... and find his home elsewhere.



Our second tale (tail?) starts with Krypto taking off from Smallville and heading into space, where he destroys a bunch of meteors.  We shift to the planet Mogar, where some Lanthian scientists are loading a dog into a rocket.  The pup wears Lanthia's flag like a cape, so that these fellas can send her to the moon... and then claim it in the name of their nation.  Sounds pretty solid, right?  Oh yeah, and the dog will likely die upon impact... so, there's that.



Elsewhere on Mogar, we join Lanthia's arch-enemies, the (fruit?) Rollops.  They are watching the doggy launch, and are lamenting the fact that their attempt at sabotage didn't work.  Krypto notices the Lanthian craft, and decides to investigate.  He sees what's about to happen to this "cute" dog, and decides to redirect the craft back to Mogar and lands it safely.



After landing (and an introduction... her name is Kolli, by the way), the Rollops approach with the goal of killing the pink pup.  Krypto ain't gonna cotton to all that, and so, pulls the (cement?) rug out from under them.



After the Rollops run away, Krypto remembers that there is a planet with a super-power giving pond.  He asks Kolli if she'd like some powers, and she's down with it.  He flies her to the planet of Zena, and directs her to drink.



She laps up the magical water... and, wouldn'tcha know it, she's now got superpowers!  She can fly, and even has x-ray vision.  She sees a giant skeleton deep underground, and decides to dig it up so she can have a bone.  Moments later, she bumps into Krypto... which, to his surprise, hurts him!  He's lost his superpowers!



Krypto wracks his brain to understand what's going on.  He concludes that because of Kolli's newfound powers, mixed with science, his powers have been stolen.  Moments later a lightning-breathing dragon-ish thing attacks.  Kolli launches into action while Krypto flees.  Clumsily, Krypto runs into a boulder... and the boulder splits!  His powers are back?



Krypto now realizes that as long as Kolli is nearby, his powers will be gone... and so, he decides to desert her on this dangerous planet.  What a dog!  We wrap up with both pups looking skyward crying over their losses and what might have been.



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Now... if I were to tell you we've got a pair of stories, one has Superboy acting erratically due to exposure to Red Kryptonite... and the other is a romance story starring Krypto, which one would you think was the Imaginary Story?

Had a lot of fun with this issue... as ridiculous as it was.  There's something to be said for the simplicity of the Silver Age.  These stories just "happen"... there isn't a need to explain everything to the nth degree, things are just accepted.  Superboy's origin is told in four panels... and it's ridiculous, but even looking at it with 2017 eyes, I accepted it and moved along into the story.

I don't have much experience with Imaginary Stories... and I'm not one who subscribes to the "aren't they all?" philosophy.  I think the first time I saw that Moore quote I thought it was pretty mind-blowing... that sensation has passed.  I think there is a marked difference between a silly story a writer wants to tell, and a story which adds to the overall lore of a character or franchise.  Imaginary Stories are all in good fun... they're harmless, though, I will say that if I were a kid in 1966 waiting for the next issue of Superboy... and received a "fake" story, I'd probably be disappointed.  Hell, maybe not... I dunno.  I can say with a fair amount of certainty that if I plopped down $3.99 for an issue of a contemporary book, and it turned out to be a story that "didn't happen" or "didn't matter", I'd feel ripped off.  I'm probably comparing apples to elephants at this point, so I should just move along.

Our main story provided so many moments that I actually struggled with what pictures to include.  There was so much fun, and so many great lines... I think to get the full effect, folks are going to have to actually track down the issue.  So weird, crazy, and fun.  You gotta wonder if artists were chomping at the bit to draw Superboy as a delinquent.  I would assume the creative team had a ton of fun here too.

The backup story... that "really happened".  Oy.  Lotsa leaps of logic here... and yeah, I understand how silly that sounds when we're discussing literal "puppy love".  At the end of the day, this wasn't written for a dude in his mid-30's to unpack and analyze... it was fun, less fun than the Scoundrel of Steel, but fun enough.  I think the neatest part was that it was written by Jerry Siegel.  I have precious little from him in my (single issue, non-reprint) library.  Even though the issue is ridiculous, it still feels like I'm holding a piece of history.

Overall... ehh.  If you come across any Silver-Age book for a buck or two, of course I'm gonna say you should consider nabbing it.  I doubt this has been collected, and as far as I can tell, it hasn't been made available digitally.  A fun little book, worth a look if you happen across it.  Just be prepared to disengage your contempo-comics fan mind.

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