Thursday, June 28, 2012

MARVEL TALES "Gateway to Horror"

You think Commies were the only things to fear in the 1950s?
This story reveals the awesome truth and has been suppressed ever since, as this never-reprinted story from Marvel Tales #104 (1951) shows!
Marvel Comics (known as this point as Atlas Comics) embraced horror comics as much as any other publisher during the 1950s, occasionally pushing the borders of "good taste" with work by Basil Wolverton, Russ Heath, Bill Everett, Joe Maneely, Steve Ditko, and others.
As we mentioned, this creepy-cool tale by the amazing Wolverton has never been reprinted since it's initial publication in 1951!
Wonder why?  ;-)

Join us next week as we present another tale your grandparents didn't want your parents to see!

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Thursday, June 21, 2012

WEB OF EVIL "Hangman's Horror"

If you think political campaigns these days are bad...
...let's look at how things were handled (at least in comics) back in the 1950s!
Jack Cole, best-known for creating Plastic Man and doing great spot cartoons for Playboy, wrote and illustrated this tale from Quality Comics' Web of Evil #2 (1953).
He also did the most famous story lambasted in Wertham's Seduction of the Innocent; "Murder, Morphine, and Me", which we posted HERE.
BTW, "Hangman's Horror" was redrawn for Terrors of Dracula V3N2 in 1981 using the exact same script, but the art on the re-do is vastly inferior.

Join us next week as we present another tale your grandparents didn't want your parents to see!

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Thursday, June 14, 2012

MISTER MYSTERY "Brain-Bats of Venus"

There are some comic stories that would make absolutely killer b-movies today...
...and this wild tale by Golden Age legend Basil Wolverton is one of them!
From Key Publications' Mister Mystery #7 (1952), one of the best horror/sci-fi tales ever!

Join us next week as we present another tale your grandparents didn't want your parents to see!

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Thursday, June 7, 2012

BLACK CAT MYSTERY "Colorama" Before and After the Comics Code!

One of the most notorious stories in 1950s comics went thru some changes...
Art by Howard Nostrand
 ...when it was reprinted after the Comics Code Authority came into existence!
Actually, the theory that "Black" has all the colors together is true only in printing!
It's called "subtractive color", and when you combine all the inks in four-color printing (CYAN, MAGENTA, and YELLOW) as solid colors, they DO produce a BLACK effect on the printed page!
However, the effect that light produces when it's reflected from objects around you (or generated from a tv or computer screen) is called "additive color" and when all the colors are added together, they produce WHITE!
But, at the point where this story appeared in Black Cat Mystery #45 (1953), there were no computer screens and what little commercial tv existed was almost totally b/w!

When the story was reprinted in Black Cat Mystery #61 (1958), the Comics Code insisted on some alterations, beginning with the cover...
Art by Bob Powell from Page 1 with additional art by Howard Nostrand
...adapted from the first panel on Page 1, but featuring a character not seen in the story itself, and with the protagonist shown in the rear-view mirror wearing glasses he doesn't wear until the end of the story!
Quite frankly, there's nothing too gross or disgusting about the original cover, so why it wasn't used is unknown...
Page 1 in the reprint is unaltered.
Page 2 has only one minor change; the policeman's less-snarling expression in Panel 5...
There are no changes on Page 3
Page 4, on the other hand, has a major change...the optometrist survives!
And the final page is unchanged.
Script and art are by Golden Age great Bob Powell.

Join us next week as we present another tale your grandparents didn't want your parents to see!

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