Monday, July 29, 2024

MINOR SUPER-HERO ROUND-UP 019

Look at all these dang guys

Lobo, the Flying Sleuth

Lobo, the Flying Sleuth, aka the Lobo, had a pretty short run. But! He's a cowboy and a pilot and a detective. That's a lot of things! (Champion Comics 006, 1940)

Doctor Miracle:



We've seen guys like Dr Miracle before: the nigh-omnipotent magician with so much power at his fingertips that his only real challenge is in finding a foe tough enough that he doesn't defeat them instantly. He's even got the obligatory Huge Asian Manservant, a Nepalese man named Akim depicted with all of the racial sensitivity that one might expect from 1940s comics.

Dr Miracle's real mark of distinction is that he is also a scientific hero, as likely to be blasting a foe with disintegration rays as to be slinging spells. 

It's a neat bit of variation in his adventures and of course it gets dropped almost immediately, as his second appearance establishes him as a student of the Elders of the aptly-named City of the Elders in Tibet. After passing a test to show his magical aptitude, Dr Miracle is sent out into the world to battle injustice, with Akim coming along as a... gift? Unsettling. (Champion Comics 009, 1940)

Doctor Hormone:

Doctor Hormone exemplifies a particular sort of cultural ingestion/ regurgitation of scientific ideas that permeates all fiction but really found a home in the medium of comic books. Any sufficiently impressive scientific discovery can be reinterpreted as being tantamount to magic, the major example of which is of course the part that radiation would play as a catch-all origin in the Silver Age (and nanotech and genetic engineering in turn as time marched on) but as in any field there are many also-rans for every big hit: vitamins and radio waves and transistors (in the case of Silver Age Iron Man) as science-magic that can accomplish any task. With Doctor Hormone it's hormones. Obviously.

As we join the Doctor and his destined-to-be-bullied granddaughter Jane Hormone, he has just been saved from age-related death by a youthening hormone. He and Jane subsequently set out to help the beleaguered nation of Novoslavia defend themselves from the depredations of Germany/Russia analog Eurasia.

Hormone's first major antagonist is Rassinoff, aka Assinoff, a Novoslavian official secretly working for Eurasia and dosed with donkey hormones by Jane due to his initial bad vibes. Assinoff is exactly the jackass that his form reflects and is a very satisfying villain to see be repeatedly defeated and humiliated.

Highlighting some of the more noteworthy hormone effects: the youth hormone (calibrated to make anyone who takes it 25 years old) is cool and fun when used on the elderly but the implications of using it on the young swiftly become horrific. At least the baby was turned into an adult man to save his life - these poor boy scouts are signing up to be adult child soldiers.

It's not particularly visually interesting but Hormones second appearance concerns his deploying a gas-based hormone that turns Eurasians into Novoslavians, which raises the question of just what they thought a hormone was over at Popular Comics.

In Popular Comics 056, Assinoff tries to destroy Hormone's credibility by injecting Novoslavian citizens with random samples from a captured selection of Hormone's work, which completely backfires when it turns out that the Novoslavian national character is extremely okay with being turned into some random animal. It's a nation of furries! 

These eagle-men pilots are the first of many Novoslavian animal-man hybrids, btw.

Issue 57 of Popular Comics involves Novoslavian locust, wasp, termite and rat hybrids going out into the world to gather up plagues of their respective animals to unleash on Eurasia. Pictured here is the rat-man, my personal fave.

The ultimate expression of Hormone's hybridization efforts are these five Novoslavian volunteers who were turned into fleas and then restored to human form. Though they no longer look like fleas, they retain proportional jumping, flea-strength, etc, Spider-Man style. And the transformation is very gross-looking!

So that's Doctor Hormone in a nutshell: a bit light, plotwise, but full of charming characters and a cavalcade of new and interesting concepts in body horror. (Popular Comics 054, 1940)

Martan the Marvel Man:


 I feel a bit bad making Martan follow Dr Hormone, honestly, because his adventures are at least as wild, but they aren't as unique. In brief: Martan and his wife Vana are Antacleans, aliens from a super-advanced race a few million light years off. They kind of accidentally land on Earth and almost immediately get mixed up in the affairs of primitive humans. At first it's regular old "they war amongst themselves, how foolish!" stuff but eventually they discover in incipient invasion by Antaclea's ancient enemy the Martians and really throw their weight behind the Earth cause: supplying technology, setting up a world government etc. - Martan and Vana's impact on the world is much greater than your typical comic book characters'. (Popular Comics 046, 1939)

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