Thursday, October 11, 2007

Something Simple for Today!

Today we’ll take a look at two placemats for Junior. Imperfectly melded together, ’tis true, but that’s the best we can do with 20th-century graphics technology.

The placemat from 1977 features another Neal Adams Superman grinning a big ol’ smile. So much for dirty-gritty Adams art. Not with MY Superman you don’t.

But ... If Superman is flying towards us, then who's in that rocket headed for Earth?
And ... Is Superman smiling at us because he thinks it's funny to cover the North Pole with Hershey's Choclate Syrup? Oh my.


The one from 1992, fifteen years later, features art by – we’re guessing here – Dan Jurgens. (Please correct me if I err).


Do not worry, never fear … Three-Part Thursday will soon be here! (Next week that is.)Sayonara!

Wednesday, October 10, 2007

Welcome to Weirdo Wednesday!

In honor of the forthcoming Hallow-Day at the end of the month, on Wednesdays we’ll be looking at some sinister goings-on in the DC neighborhood.

Our first Weirdo Wednesday concerns Action 324, cover-dated May, 1965. Drool over that great Curt Swan art. Put your finger over those devil-horns on Supergirl and just concentrate on her expression. Man, that’s just EVIL !!

Next we have the splash page for this tale. Being the back-up feature (even though it’s the cover story), the art is by Jim “Swoony” Mooney (I call him that because all his art makes the men look all girly).

The story is all about how Supergirl saves a fellow in the Middle East, only to find out he is a *gulp* demon! He passes his evil on to her, whereupon she grows horns, as you can see.

Next is Mooney’s version of the same scene featured on our cover. Compare Curt Swan’s devilish lines with Mooney’s anemic version of Supergirl. Cover up the horns on Mooney’s Devil Supergirl, and she looks like she’s being tickled or something. No meanness there!
As we sign off on this first Weirdo Wednesday, here’s a version of the cover with the speech balloons blanked out, so you can fill in your OWN ideas. Also here’s a silly little example to start you off.










Tuesday, October 09, 2007

More from Arlen!




Here are more images from Arlen Schumer, a great Pop Celebrationeer (that's a word I just invented).









Enjoy!
And stay tuned tomorrow evening for "Weirdo Wednesday!"
Once again, the website for Arlen's Studio is

Monday, October 08, 2007

Look at These Cool Images!

Monday and Tuesday we're going to look at the work of a Super guy, Arlen Schumer. My connection with him is, I won one of his books -- Visions from the Twilight Zone -- and I was thrilled to discover that he had produced the color section in the Swanderful bio, Curt Swan: A Life in Comics .








So when Arlen sent me some pix, I just had to share them with you! In the first panel Arlen explains his childhood, and adult, attraction to comic art.








The next panel covers our topic, "The Art History of Superman."








Then we have a spread featuring Joe Shuster and his studio, and another covering the Fliescher Studios cartoons.








Enjoy, enjoy, enjoy!
PS Arlen's studio's website is
PPS stay tuned for "Weirdo Wednesday" ... in just TWO days!

Friday, October 05, 2007

Letters, They Got Letters!

One of the most dearly-missed (by ME, anyway) features of comics gone by, is the Letters Column. In it, readers would brag, ask questions, offer up explanations for goofs spotted by themselves or another reader, and so on.

Here’s the Metropolis Mailbag contained in the Superman comic featured yesterday in Three-Part Thursday – Superman 158.

You should read all the letters, and the sometimes-wisecracking editorial responses. Gosh, weren’t those great times?

If you’ll notice the last letter at the bottom of the left-hand column, and its reply at the top of the right side, check out the name of the sender. Yes, this reader with the convoluted, continuity-saving suggestion, E. Nelson Bridwell, is the same guy who came to work for DC via Mad magazine.

In the early 1970s, he became the kind of continuity guru towards which many of us aspire, and became the Brain Trust for DC and its reprint series, most of which were edited by Bridwell.

He also wrote some Superman comics stories, most of which were concerned with Super-history, or in someway contributed background to the Super Mythology.

ENB was born in Sapulpa, but when this letter was printed, he was in his teens, and writing from my own burg, Oklahoma City.

Here are a few web listings with a little more information about one of my many heroes, E. Nelson Bridwell of OKC!


http://www.starland.com/sus/2006/sus060112.htm


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E._Nelson_Bridwell

Thursday, October 04, 2007

Number 1 in a Great New Series!

Yes, friends, beginning today, it’s …
THREE-PART THURSDAY!


Today we look at a “Great Three-Part Novel,” written by SF great Edmond Hamilton and penciled by Curt Swan. On the cover, it’s called “The Invasion of the Super-People,” but on the inside splash page, it’s given the more descriptive moniker, “Superman in Kandor!” This is Superman 158, cover-dated January, 1963.




Our story begins with incredible multiple robberies of scientific labs around the world. Crimes committed by men with … super powers! Superman interrupts a group of super-thieves, only to be beaten to a standstill by multiple attackers who … speak Kryptonese! Accompanied by his pal, newshound Jimmy Olsen, the Man of Steel makes the obvious deduction and heads to his Fortress of Solitude. They find its door torn off from … the inside!

In the space of a few pages, Jimmy and Superman shrink themselves with Brainiac’s ray, parachute into Kandor, and meet Nor Kann, a longtime friend of Superman’s father, Jor-El, on Krypton. When Superman attempts to reason with the Kandorians they turn on him, pulling down his statue (like Stalin’s or Hussein’s) and hunting Supes and Jimmy with telepathic hounds.



Why is Superman suddenly the most hated man in Kandor, the last city of Krypton, his homeworld? Find out in Part II!






The second chapter of this three-part novel introduces “The Dynamic Duo of Kandor!” Yes, this tale introduces the names Nightwing and Flamebird to the DC universe.

By something similar to self-hypnosis, Jimmy and Superman divert the telepathic hounds and manhunting party of Kandorians, and discover from Nor Kann why the Man of Tomorrow is so vilified. Turns out a Kandorian scientist named Than Ol has not only supposedly discovered a way to enlarge Kandor, he’s used this method to enable those super-powered raiders to steal supplies from Earthly scientists.

Several Kandorians have started a rumor that Superman knew of this process all along, but has been deliberately NOT restoring the Kandorians, for fear they might compete with him or overrun Earth. Not only does Superman not trust them, he fears his Kryptonian cousins, public opinion says.

While Superman worries about the safety of Than Ol’s process, Nor Kann leads him and Jimmy underground, where the aged scientist uses his resources to set up his friends with uniforms and flight-belts. Soon Kal-El of Krypton is garbed as Nightwing, and the fiery redheaded Olsen takes flight as … Flamebird! They overpower one of Than Ol’s men and Superman discovers a horrible secret about the enlargement process.


To learn more, he goes undercover to Than Ol’s lab, disguised as Van-Zee, a member of the Superman Emergency Squad of Kandor. But Kal-El is recognized and knocked unconscious, thus ending Part II.



Jimmy and Nor Kann plan a clever ruse, leading a squadron of the Superman Emergency Squad to Than Ol’s lab, demanding “the evil Superman.” When the Man of Steel is produced for trial, he is “kidnaped” by Van Zee (disguised as Nightwing) and Jimmy (Flamebird) Olsen. Jimmy and Superman quickly escape the bottle into the Fortress, and from there they flee their Kandorian pursuers by escaping into the Phantom Zone.

Thus is the cover scene enacted: Jimmy and Superman float helplessly, silently, in the Phantom Zone, mocked by Krypton’s immaterial criminals, while renegade Kandorians enlarge themselves and take the bottle city to an open area on Earth, there to restore it to its original size.

Meanwhile – whew! – a timer on the Phantom Zone projector kicks in and Superman and Jimmy rematerialize. The Action Ace shows Mr. Action just why Than Ol’s process is so dangerous, by enlarging a tiny model of the Eiffel Tower, outside the Fortress.

Superman explains that the process produces enlargement by spreading apart the atoms of any given body. But, after three hours, anything so enlarged disintegrates completely, its atoms losing cohesion. The enlarged Eiffel Tower becomes a mere eyeful of dust!

Soon Superman tracks down the now-enlarged once-capital city of Kandor, and tries once again to convince the ringleaders of their danger. Still stinging with jealousy toward the Man of Steel, they hunt him down with Green Kryptonite missile launchers, and are prepared to propel him into a Green-K pit when, just in time, “the dream suddenly turns into a nightmare … for the people of Kandor!”

Yes, the three hours have begun to run out, and Superman just has time to re-shrink the city to safety. Yes, they’ve been “saved by Superman, after we distrusted him, pursued him, tried to kill him!”

The final two panels of the story show Jimmy and Superman watching via telescreen as the grateful Kandorians unveil a new statue to replace the old one – this time featuring Nightwing and Flamebird!

And the story closes with the Man of Tomorrow repeating his vow to someday find a way to restore Kandor to its original size.

Great art, great additions to the Superman Mythos, great story, great use of the strange world of Kandor. Yes, an auspicious beginning for Three-Part Thursday!
I am so grateful that I was growing up and reading comics in this Silver Age of Superman!

Write and tell me what you think! Suggest other Great Three-Part Novels of Superman’s past!
Tomorrow, as a denoument, we'll look at another fascinating Super-Feature to be found in this issue!

Wednesday, October 03, 2007

Let's Establish Some Creds Here







These photos were taken last year for a front-page story in the Oklahoma City Oklahoman that ran on the day Superman Returns opened.










Of course they took more photos than they printed. Here are some.
One caveat -- I really am skinnier now!
STAY TUNED for tomorrow's thrilling instalment, the introduction of ...
Three-Part Thursday!
















Tuesday, October 02, 2007

Just Wait for Another Day!

Yes, Super-Friends, inspired by the indubitable Robby Reed's Dial B for Blog , your peerless reader will present a new feature to the ol' Super Blog.

Once in a while we'll take a look at ...


but that would be telling!


Just be here Thursday evening to check it out!


One hint ... there's a clue in my photo, to the right, in my profile!


Until then, enjoy this great Curt Swan cartoon, taken from Curt Swan: A Life in Comics .

Monday, October 01, 2007

Feeling Be-Trayed!

Here we have a Superman II folding metal tray. The legs are about 10 inches long. If you sat on the floor with your legs outstretched you might be able to set its legs across your legs, but maybe not.

Of course if you're eight years old, it will fit just fine!

Sunday, September 30, 2007

They Say It's My Birthday

And we had a good time


I'm glad it's my birthday


happy birthday to me


Saturday, September 29, 2007

More news on "The Success Story"

Well, friends, Good ol' Robby Reed (see the permanant Dial B for Blog link on the right)heard from good ol' Mark Evanier, about our little "Bob Kane parallel," Eerie #13's "The Success Story."






Since the previous post won't "maximize" page one of the story, let's try again!


Robby informs us that "Success Story" WAS written about a specific comics "creator," bot NOT about Bob "Batman" Kane.
Here's what Robby told me:
Here's what Mark Evanier said:
"First of all, not that it matters a lot but I believe this story was reprinted in EERIE from CREEPY #1. Secondly and more important: It's not about Bob Kane. The story by Archie Goodwin and Al Williamson was inspired by a cartoonist named Don Sherwood who had hired them (separately) to ghost a newspaper strip called DAN FLAGG. At various times, other friends of theirs -- including Angelo Torres, George Evans, George Woodbridge, Al McWilliams and others -- had worked on the strip and it was a recurring joke (almost) for them to discover they were working "with" each other. Goodwin based his script on that situation. Williamson, however, did not draw Sherwood. Al made the lead character of Baldo Smudge (which was the pen name for a few earlier stories where Williamson collaborated with Torres) look like himself. The writer was based on Goodwin. The inker was based on Torres. I'm not sure about the penciller but I think I heard it was Al McWilliams. There were actually other strips where a similar trick was employed of hiring ghosts like that and there are a few parallels to the situation with Bob Kane. But that's not who Archie was writing about."
So that's where it stands, kiddos! The next time we chat, I'll be a year older! I leave it up to you to guess HOW MANY years that makes!

Thursday, September 27, 2007

Won't You Stick with Me?

My my, such a foo-fa-rah about my little contribution to the Bob Kane story!




Let's chill out a little bit and check out some niffty stickers, one set from 1991, and some spiffy foil ones from 1994.
See you in the funny papes, and don't forget to write!

Wednesday, September 26, 2007

Eerie Takes You Behind the Scenes of the Comics Industry’s Number One Fraud!


























In the sockamagee blogazine Dial B for Blog (see the running link in the right-hand sidebar), a recent instalment shows how Bob “Batman” Kane was a free borrower of “stuff” originated by other creators – writers, artists, what-have-you.

This reminded me of a story I read way, way back in Eerie #13, cover-dated February 1968. Eerie magazine and its sister mag, Creepy, were magazine-sized bi-monthly publications from Warren Publishing Company.

The artists included such greats as Joe Orlando, Al Williamson, Reed Crandall, Angelo Torres, Gray Morrow, and Alex Toth.

Writers included Archie Goodwin, Don Glut, and Otto Binder.

Anyways, Mr. Random-Access-Memory (that’s ME!) remembered this little tale, entitled “Success Story,” wherein a sly “creator” gets a li’l ol’ come-uppance.

This story is written by Archie Goodwin and drawn by Joe Al Williamson. It was originally published in the February 1968 issue of Eerie magazine, and was copyrighted 1967 by Warren Publishing Company.







By the way, the title of today’s post is Eerie’s own title-page blurb of “The Success Story.” I leave it up to you to decide if -- in some way -- comics veterans Goodwin and Orlando were laying in an oblique reference to the dashing Bob Kane.

Tuesday, September 25, 2007

Tom Grummett's Art Could Start a Clock!

This clock dates, I think, from around the time of DC Comics' "Zero Hour" -- around 1994 or so. It was a-hangin' on the wall of OKC's Atomic Comics. Tracy (I don't know his last name) was kind enough to sell it to me during one of their big Warehouse Sales, even though it was "in use" at the time.

The colors are a little brighter in person.

Actually, this must be a POST-Zero Hour image, or Kyle Rayner wouldn't be Green Lantern! You may now say "Duh!" loudly to me.

Monday, September 24, 2007

Didn't Lay a Glove on Me!

That's because I have them hanging up on display!

As you can see, they're copyright 1984. They look kind of like a Dick Giordano Superman to me.

Ciao, and don't forget to write!

Sunday, September 23, 2007

Clark Kent's SSN

Here's a little bit o' Super-Trivia for you. The August 1966 issue of Action, #340, had several interesting features. There was Swanderful cover art, the cover story introducing The Parasite (with so-so Al Plastino art), a Supergirl story ("The Supergirl Identity Hunt!", a centerfold pin-up of Superman, signed "with Best Wishesfrom your Super-Pal -- Superman" -- and that wonderful thing that comic books USED to have,

the Letter Column.




This was where fans could write in with insightful, worrisome, dumb, or "trick" questions.


Well, in this issue the editors (probably good ol' E. Nelson Bridwell, originally from Oklahoma City) laid Clark Kent WIDE OPEN to identity theft by publishing his Social Security number! (see detail)

Saturday, September 22, 2007

Paint Superman Yourself!


I found this somewhere at (where else) a thrift store. Evidently you can buy these little figurines or statues and paint them yourself. This isn't one of those big ol' "figure collector" type things, it's only about four inches tall.
As you can partly see by the lettering on the back, this little guy is "TM and © DC Comics Inc. 1978".
The lettering is very un-level, as you can see. But what would you expect? I'm just amazed they were able to get the thing into a typewriter!

Tuesday, September 18, 2007

Non-Spoiler Review: Superman - Doomsday

Well, I just finished watching the first time through. The guys were *pretty darned* creative, I'll say. In this storyline, there ain't nobody else, superhero-wise, on the planet. At least not mentioned at all in this story!


Superman keeps his moral code intact in the end, except the part about keeping his pants zipped before marriage. Of course, we have Superman: The Movie as a precedent!


Actually, several incidents and "camera angles" are deliberate homages to that film.


I did notice, on the very first viewing, ONE BLOOPER.


During the big fight between Doomsday and Superman in Metropolis, after a while they take it underground, as in onto the subway tracks. At about 23:40 into the film, Doomsday knocks Superman up from the subway, through the street, and into the side of a building. Superman hits the building horizontally and rolls toward us. The blooper is, the“S”-shield on his chest is mirror-reversed as he rolls toward the viewer.


This is a quick faked-up shot to show you what I mean.

Anyway, it's pretty good overall. However, I wonder why Perry White can talk about Superman being there to save Lois's "ass," while LuthorCorp can only stick up probe up Satan's "rectum."

Anyway, it's pretty creative and pretty darned good. You can see in advance what "has to happen" storyline-wise in a place or two, but that's just the way it is with serial fiction, folks!

Monday, September 17, 2007

More (Sincere) Imitations

"Ida Freeman" is the name of an elementary school in Edmond, OK. I bet that's where this plastic mug came from.

Of course, in my opinion, that kid looks A LOT like Alfred E. Neumann.

Now you can compare the previous few days' pants-up-holders with a very intentional but-not-quite-infringing design, copyright-wise, shown below.
Note how the buckle even says, "FASTER THAN A SPEEDING BULLET."
Just to the right of the buckle is a striped image that is a freight train being outrun by Mr. Anonymous. You can see a bit of him between the belt cinch and the buckle assembly.
Next (to the right) we see Mr. You-Know-Who breaking a rod in half at waist-height.
Next you will see a Metropolitan skyline (wink, wink).
The last image you see to the right is a telephone booth. Hmm, I wonder. Who might need to use a phone booth?
As you can see, the firm that produced this belt was willing to go to almost any length to produce a kids' Superman belt -- except get the licensing rights!
See you next time, and don't forget to write!

Sunday, September 16, 2007

Remember STAR TREK V?

Bill Shatner, as Jim Kirk, had at least one great line in STAR TREK V.

Even if you think the film was silly, you'd have to agree with him when he asked, "What does God need with a starship?"

Similarly, you might ask, "What does Superman need with a parachute?"
Why, to enter Kandor, of course!
This non-authorized Superman parachute guy from the 1970s is actually kind of a foreshadowing of all those "variant" action figures for sale nowadays. For example, you don't just have a STAR TREK "Captain Kirk" action figure, you have a "Captain Kirk as a Romulan" action figure, or "Captain Kirk sitting on a Tribble" action figure, or whatever.
Similarly, you can buy a "Kingdom Come" Superman, or a "Superman forgot to shave with his heat vision" Superman, or what-have-you.
In the Swanderful Superman tale containing these comics panels, Superman takes Jimmy Olsen into Kandor to find out why super-powered Kryptonians are ripping off high-tech equipment on Earth. Since these super-powered Kryptonians are obviously Kandorians, Supes and his pal go right to the source, via Brainiac's shrinking ray.
Of course, this "great three-part novel" is from Superman 158, cover-dated January 1963.
It's also the comic that I'm holding up in my Blogger Profile photo. Of course, I was a lot younger then.
How about you?

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