Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn Punches Landed. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng
Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn Punches Landed. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng

Single Issue Review: Teen Titans #19

Người đăng: Unknown on Thứ Tư, 14 tháng 1, 2009



This was the beginning of the "hip" new Teen Titans, and in some ways it worked, but in others you can only shake your head in amazement. The story begins with a rather nervous-looking young man approaching the "School of Criminology" with a proposal:



Pretty efficient way of setting the stage, but it also fails to impress us with the major villain for the issue.

Speedy shows up at the Teen Titans' headquarters. There are two cases requiring the attention of the youngsters, and Speedy does the math in his head quickly:



That's pretty cool; Speedy comes off well. Together, he and Wonder Girl head for a school in New England, where prejudice has reared its ugly head, with fights between Jews and (presumably) Christians. They help to break things up:



But are captured by Sepastopol, who taunts them with his snazzy new uniform:



Note to villains: Do not incorporate the color pink into your costume. And for God's sake, don't wear a dunce cap!

In the second part, Robin, Kid Flash and Aqualad arrive just in time to prevent a bunch of farmers from attacking some kids who've created a discotheque in a barn. But once again, it's just a pretext to capture them.

With all the Titans now captured, Punch decides to call the principal of the School of Criminology. Even Speedy senses this is rather foolish:



With the Titans quickly freed, all that remains is for the mop-up:



Damn, that Gil Kane could draw a punch!

Comments: Obviously an exceedingly silly story, this issue nonetheless has plenty of charm. The hip new Speedy goes over well and the storyline flows right from the opening panel. Thanks to writer Mike Friedrich, the teen characters talk like teens of the late 1960s (and not like teens of the 1950s), with the exception of one "Daddio" which did make me cringe. I don't think Sylvester Sepastopol ever returned in the DC universe.
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The Punches of 1965: Batman

Người đăng: Unknown on Thứ Năm, 19 tháng 6, 2008

I did a post the other day counting all the punches landed in Spiderman during 1965. My idea was to compare this to Batman during 1965, to determine whether the common rumor was true that Marvel had more physical fighting than DC during the Silver Age. I found that Spiderman had 102 punches landed in 240 pages. How does that compare to Batman?

It's not even a contest:

Batman #169 had a grand total of 2 punches landed in 24 pages; ironically enough in the same panel:



Batman #170: Four punches landed (including one at a bear) in 25 pages.
Batman #171: 14 punches landed in 25 pages.
Batman #172: 12 punches landed in 25 pages.
Batman #173: Nine punches landed in 25 pages.
Batman #174: 21 punches landed in 25 pages.
Batman #175: 18 punches landed in 24 pages.
Batman #177: 12 punches landed in 24 pages

(Note: I skipped Batman #176 because it was a reprint issue of stories published prior to 1965). The total is 92 punches in 197 pages, or .467 punches per page. That's actually about 10% more punches in Batman stories in 1965 than in Spiderman.

So the theory that Marvel comics were more violent than DC does not seem backed up by this analysis. It is possible that a larger study might find some differences, but I particularly picked two comics that were notable for featuring lots of fight sequences.

Update: One addition. It was definitely my impression that Spiderman had more panels with punches in them. Batman had some very concentrated violence. For example, here's the cover to Batman #174, which had the most punches thrown of any of the comics:



So the plot involves having punches thrown, which not surprisingly add up to a lot in a very few panels.

Still, my overall conclusion remains the same.
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The Punches of 1965: Spiderman

Người đăng: Unknown on Thứ Tư, 18 tháng 6, 2008

This is something I've thought about doing for awhile. Back in the 1960s, one of the frequent claims was that Marvel had a lot more physical fighting going on in its mags than DC, which emphasized more the mental battle. So I thought that just for the heck of it, I would look at a couple of features from that era to see if there was any truth to the claim. I chose 1965 because most of the Marvel fixtures of the Silver Age had been established by then. The following year, 1966, saw the beginning of the Batman craze, which resulted in a lot more "Pow!", "Bang!" and "Zap!" in the comics.

So let's do a running punch count, starting with ASM #20:



I'll count hits with the Scorpion's tail, since they are effectively the same as a punch.











That puts us up to six so far, all incredibly from the ninth page of that story.







I'm going to count that as two punches, since the Scorpion hits two cops in that panel. Running count: 10 punches. I am not including missed punches, although that has not been a factor so far.















That's it, a total of 17 punches in 20 pages, or 0.85 punches per page. I won't crop all the punches in the subsequent issues, I'll just give you the totals I counted:

ASM 21: Six punches landed in 20 pages.
ASM 22: Nine punches landed in 20 pages (counting a couple of headbutts by Cannonball).
ASM 23: Six punches landed in 20 pages.
ASM 24: Six punches landed in 20 pages.
ASM 25: Zero punches landed in 20 pages! The irony here is amazing because this is one of my favorite all-time Spiderman stories. And yet despite containing plenty of implied violence, the story has no real fighting as such.
ASM 26: Seven punches landed in 20 pages (counting a couple of times the Green Goblin hits Spidey with his mini-glider).
ASM 27: 17 punches landed in 20 pages (a lot of them by NY City cops).
ASM 28: 15 punches landed in 20 pages.
ASM 29: 10 punches landed in 20 pages.
ASM 30: Six punches landed in 20 pages.
ASM 31: Three punches landed in 20 pages.

So there you have it. A total of 102 punches that connected in the course of 240 pages of Spidey action. Average number of punches is 0.425 punches per page, or roughly one punch for every 2.4 pages.

How does that compare to DC? Coming up next, a count of Batman's punches.

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