Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn St. John. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng
Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn St. John. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng

Number 1601: The stolen saucer

Người đăng: Unknown on Thứ Hai, 7 tháng 7, 2014

Tomorrow is July 8, the 67th anniversary of the famous headline from The Roswell (New Mexico) Record, claiming a flying saucer had been found on a local ranch. You may have heard the stories about it.


A few times in the past I have posted flying saucer stories in honor of that day, and this year we have a story of alien abduction, spaceflight to another planet to rescue the abductees, and a stolen flying saucer. Thankfully, flying the the saucer is “simplicity itself,” or our intrepid rescuers might still be stuck on Planet Hyston trying to figure out how to get home.

Story from Atom-Age Combat #5 (1953). Art by Ben Brown and David Gantz.










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Number 1565: Giving 3-D a Whack

Người đăng: Unknown on Thứ Sáu, 25 tháng 4, 2014

Three dimensional comic books and movies were a quick-moving fad in 1953, and the story is told that only the first 3-D comic book (Mighty Mouse from St. John) actually made money. Other publishers jumped in on the fad, only to lose money.

Whack #1, also from St. John, was not only a 3-D comic, but an attempt to cash in on the success of EC’s Mad. To be fair, EC put out a couple of 3-D comics to compete with St. John. But with the 3-D fad finished, Whack lasted one issue as a 3-D comic, then reverted to a 10¢ four-color format for two issues using stories prepared originally to be printed as 3-D.

Get out those red-blue anaglyphic glasses if you have them to see one of Whack’s attempts at humor and satire with the story, “Ghastly Dee-fective Comics” drawn by Norman Maurer and inked by Joe Kubert. It’s scanned from my copy of Whack #1. If you don’t have the red-and-blue lenses you can read the story in a black line version, directly below the 3-D version. It was prepared by a fan and posted online. By now the ink on all fifties 3-D comics has pretty much faded so the conversion isn’t perfect, but my thanks to that person anyway for their trouble.

If you would like to know how to make your own 3-D glasses. Click on the thumbnail, a link to an article from Boy’s Life to tell you how.


Following that is one of the stories prepared for 3-D but instead printed in standard comic book format. It’s by Kubert, inked by Maurer. The claim in the story, belied by having to print it in four colors rather than 3-D, is that the 3-D comics were best sellers. For me it’s of interest because it has caricatures of Kubert and Maurer, and even their boss, Archer St. John, as “St. Peter.”



















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Number 1554: Abbott and Costello Meet Lily Renée

Người đăng: Unknown on Chủ Nhật, 6 tháng 4, 2014

Abbott and Costello #6 (1949) from St. John presents a time-worn scenario: mirages, oases, sword-wielding sheiks and beautiful babes in bra-tops and harem pants. Oh yeah, and a lot of silly jokes and cornball word play. How many movies used the same setting?

The point of showing this, even for those who don’t remember how popular Bud Abbott and Lou Costello were in their era, is the art of Lily Renée and Eric Peters. Renée, born Lily Renée Wilhelm,  was a teenage war refugee from Austria. She came to America having never seen a comic book, and yet soon found herself drawing comics for Fiction House (Señorita Rio, The Lost World, Werewolf Hunter). Peters was Renée’s husband for a time. He also come from Austria. As I understand the division of labor, Peters drew the caricatures of Abbott and Costello, and Renée the other stuff, including the beautiful women.





















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