Trivia Quiz #11 Answers

Người đăng: Unknown on Thứ Hai, 29 tháng 9, 2008

1. Adrian Toomes and Blackie Drago were the first and second Vultures in Spiderman.

2. Abel Tarrant was the Tattooed Man, a villain in the Green Lantern series.

3. Leonard Snart was Captain Cold, a major member of the Flash's Rogue's Gallery.

4. Zebediah Killgrave was the Purple Man, who battled Daredevil and had the interesting power of convincing people of anything he wanted them to believe. He should have been a great salesman.

5. Flint Marko became the Sandman, a major character in the Marvel Universe and a charter member of the Frightful Four.

Michael Rebain got 3,4 and 5, while Mark Waldfogle and Mike P. were able to name all the villains.
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#065. Goversons comics' covers

Người đăng: Unknown on Chủ Nhật, 28 tháng 9, 2008

Goversons comics introduced me one of my all time favorite character "Asterix". In near future these will be posted, if you like. If anyone can help to make a list of all Goversons comics with month & year, will be very thankful.

These are Anurag's contributions. All Thanks & credits go to him.








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Single Issue Review: Mystery In Space #90

Người đăng: Unknown on Thứ Sáu, 26 tháng 9, 2008

Mystery in Space was one of the best science fiction magazines of the 1950s and 1960s, featuring lots of entertaining "one-shot" stories, as well as some pretty nifty features such as Captain Comet, and the Star Rovers.

But the big hero of Mystery in Space (MIS) was Adam Strange. An archaeologist by training, he first appeared in Showcase #17 (Nov-Dec 1958) and after a three-issue test run there, was assigned to the cover feature for MIS, starting with #53 (January 1959). While trying to escape some natives in South America, he finds himself suddenly transported to the planet Rann, millions of light-years away from from Earth. It turns out that a scientist named Sardath had sent a "Zeta" beam of energy that had the effect of transporting Adam across space.

Adam meets Sardath's lovely daughter Alanna, and it soon becomes evident that they are falling in love. He also helps save Rann from various perils that seem to pop up whenever he arrives on the planet. Because the Zeta beam wears off eventually, Adam only stays on Rann for two weeks at a time, but armed with information from Sardath as to the locations of future Zeta beams, he is able to return to Rann periodically.

The series was terrific, with entertaining stories and gorgeous artwork by Carmine Infantino and (mostly) Murphy Anderson. Several Adam Strange stories are considered among the finest of the 1960s, including MIS #75's book-length story featuring a crossover with the Justice League of America, Planet That Came to a Standstill, which won the Alley Award for the best book-length story of 1962.

In Mystery in Space #87, Hawkman was added as a feature character. The Adam Strange story in that comic overlapped a bit with the Hawkman story, and Adam even appeared with Carter and Shiera in one panel. Hawkman had been having trouble graduating to his own magazine despite six tryout issues in the Brave and the Bold, so DC switched the artist chores to Murphy Anderson, resulting in a beautiful four-issue run that launched the Winged Wonder into his own title.

In Mystery in Space #90, Hawkman and Adam Strange collaborated to save the Planets in Peril. Shortly after arriving on Rann, Adam is startled to learn that a new planet has entered its solar system. It is rotating around Rann's sun. Even more startling is when Adam sees the new planet:



It turns out that Earth is orbiting at a slightly faster speed than Rann, and thus the two planets will eventually collide. Alanna, Adam and Sardath hop into a spaceship and head towards Terra to find out what's going on, but they return to Rann when they hear that strange objects have suddenly appeared on the surface of that planet. We learn the identity of the villain and the strange objects in these two beautiful panels:



Orin Dargg looks like a classic Infantino villain, with the receding hairline and the smug grin being frequent themes in his characters. And note the action sequence of Alanna and Adam arriving at the location of the Sphinx and other monuments. Doesn't it look like Adam's rear would get a roasting from those jets?

The second chapter features Hawkman and Hawkgirl. They observe as a Zeta beam starts to steal Lake Superior, just as it has the monuments. Heading to Rann in their spaceship, they discover that Dargg is blackmailing Ranagar (the capital city) by holding Lake Superior over their heads and threatening to drop the water and destroy the town.

As usual with Murphy Anderson, the details on the individual panels are exquisite:



In the final chapter, the villain is defeated and Earth sent back to its normal orbit. Adam pops the question:



Overall, the story was excellent, and the artwork outstanding. This is one of the finest comics produced by DC during the 1960s and thoroughly worth reading.

Unfortunately it marked the high tide for the Adam Strange series. Two issues later Mystery in Space was transferred from Julius Schwartz's editorship to Jack Schiff, as part of the shakeup that led to the "New Look" Batman. Under Schiff, the cover feature was handed over to Space Ranger, and the Adam Strange stories began to take on the Monster of the Month Club look that had plagued Batman during Schiff's tenure. Infantino went with Schwartz to help out on Batman, and Murphy Anderson also had a new magazine:

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Friday Trivia Quiz #11: Villains

Người đăng: Unknown

Your task this week is simple; figure out the villains from their real names:

1. Adrian Toomes and Blackie Drago

2. Abel Tarrant

3. Leonard Snart

4. Zebediah Killgrave

5. Flint Marko
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#064.Indrajal Comics 22 (Hindi)

Người đăng: Unknown

Few Hindi Indrajal Covers: 6, 202, 203, 218, 219, 221 & 223









V26N24-1989-Phantom-Maut ke munh mei



Except cover of IJC 6, rest covers & comic are Anurag's contributions. Cover of IJC 6 is provided by Ajay.
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Trivia Quiz #10 Answers

Người đăng: Unknown on Thứ Ba, 23 tháng 9, 2008

1. The Trigger Twins, Walt and Wayne Trigger. Walt is the heroic local sheriff, while Wayne is apparently a meek and mild shopkeeper. But unknown to others, Wayne is secretly the hero and Walt simply a goof-prone lawman who relies on his brother to dress up as him and capture the bad guys. In an amusing twist on the Lois/Clark/Superman theme, Linda, Wayne's assistant, notices how often her boss disappears from view whenever there's trouble, but she attributes it not to him sneaking off to dress up as the sheriff, but as real cowardice.

2. Pow-Wow Smith, Indian lawman. A Sioux deputy sheriff who appeared for several years as a backup in Detective Comics and was often cover-featured on Western Comics:



3. The Nighthawk:


The Nighthawk was a "fix-it" man, who while roaming from town to town repairing items also solved crimes in a secret identity as a masked man with a hawk emblem on his chest.

4. The Wyoming Kid was a wandering cowboy who fought cattle rustlers and other western crooks.

5. Strong Bow was a 1400s Native American who traveled around North America, righting wrongs and fighting foes.

Kudos to Michael Sensei, who got them all!
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Friday Trivia Quiz #10: Way Out West

Người đăng: Unknown on Thứ Sáu, 19 tháng 9, 2008

For whatever reason, western movies were extremely popular in the 1950s, and comic publishers were not far behind. DC had Tomahawk, Western Comics, All-Star Western and All-American Western as well as magazines featuring Jimmy Wakely, Dale Evans and Hopalong Cassidy. Among them, only Tomahawk would last to the end of the 1960s (and that just barely).

Your mission is to identify these five DC western heroes:

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#063.Spider Man 3

Người đăng: Unknown

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Thursday Links

Người đăng: Unknown on Thứ Năm, 18 tháng 9, 2008

Diversions of the Groovy Kind has a terrific post on the problems caused by licensed characters, and how it means some stories may never be reprinted. I highly recommend this blog to those who love the comics of the 1970s; the Groovy Agent's got a wonderful and entertaining writing style, and really knows his stuff.

Superman Fan reviews an interesting Superman tale from the Silver Age that I have to admit not having read myself previously, but it sounds worth reading and chortling over as Aldous does here:

The local cops, their gunfire having no effect, attack the big man with a flame thrower! (We need some cops like this in my neighbourhood.)


The Simon & Kirby Museum takes on several late-1940s crime comics produced by the S&K team. If Kirby is your King, you really need to be reading the S&K museum.

Christine at the Other Murdock Papers has a very amusing post about a brief scene in the subway with Daredevil. It is often these minor bits that stay with us years later, and do a better job of characterization than ten fights with the Kingpin.
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Superior Silver: Splash Pages

Người đăng: Unknown on Thứ Tư, 17 tháng 9, 2008



This just might be the single greatest splash page of the Silver Age of comics from X-Men #7 (September 1964). The X-Men reflected in the lens of the camera, the flash featuring Magneto, and the smiles of the four X-Men, and the rather grim expression of Cylcops, all add up to making this page just about perfect. Of course, there is one rather obvious flaw, but aside from that, it's King Kirby at his finest.
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The God In the Wheelchair

Người đăng: Unknown on Thứ Ba, 16 tháng 9, 2008

One of the things that writers are constantly warned about is to avoid the "God in the Machine" or Deus ex machina ending. Apparently some of the Greek playwrights would script their characters into an impossible situation. To get out of the consequences, the writers would have a god come down from the heavens in a machine and set things right.

This is, of course, a very unsatisfying ending for the audience which expects the characters to get out of their problems through dint of hard work and inspiration and not by divine providence.

The X-Men in their early issues had a god in a machine; a wheelchair machine to be specific. Professor X was just too doggone powerful, and when they got into a big battle with a major mutant he could just wave his magic wand and make everything all right:



And in the following issue, X-Men #3:



So of course by the following issue, the X-Men were getting a little too used to having the Prof pull their bacon from the fire:



At the end of that story, Professor X is injured by a bomb blast:



But it turns out to be all part of a larger plan:



I suspect this was plotted all along by Stan. I will have to read further in the series to see if Professor X used his brain-wiping abilities again.
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Trivia Quiz #9 Answers

Người đăng: Unknown on Thứ Hai, 15 tháng 9, 2008

1. What was Scott Summers' seldom-used nickname? (Not Cyclops)

Scott Summers' nickname was "Slim" and if you vaporized your food every time you took off your glasses to eat, you'd be slim too.

2. What historical effort were the parents of Professor X involved in?



Professor X seems to be implying that his parents' work on the Manhattan Project resulted in his mutation, but this seems unlikely. According to Wikipedia, the Manhattan Project grew out of an earlier effort that began in 1939. This would mean that Professor X is, at most, 24 years old in September 1963. But he looks much older.

3. Which member of the X-Men had the same name (but different abilities) as a Golden Age Marvel character?

The Angel was a Golden Age Marvel character with no superpowers.

4. Name the FBI agent who appeared in several early X-Men stories.

Agent Duncan.

5. Who was the first person to decline admission to the X-Men?



CJGeers got them all right. Lito S. got all but #5. Michael Rebain got the first three, and Kryp44 chimed in with the correct answer to #5.
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Friday Trivia Quiz #9: The X-Men

Người đăng: Unknown on Thứ Sáu, 12 tháng 9, 2008

1. What was Scott Summers' seldom-used nickname? (Not Cyclops)

2. What historical effort were the parents of Professor X involved in?

3. Which member of the X-Men had the same name (but different abilities) as a Golden Age Marvel character?

4. Name the FBI agent who appeared in several early X-Men stories.

5. Who was the first person to decline admission to the X-Men?
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#062.Indrajal Comics 21 (Hindi)

Người đăng: Unknown

Indrajal Comics covers played major role in their popularity. Here are few: #146, #148, #159, #164, #171, #175, #190, #201 & #303.




An interesting Flash Gordon adventure


Power & politics is very unpredictable; sometimes helping old enemy is better choice than an unpredictable new ruler. Why and how Flash Gordon helps Ming ……..

Password: bookscomics.blogspot.com


These are Anurag's contribution, all credits & thanks go to him only.
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