Showing posts with label Blue Bolt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Blue Bolt. Show all posts

Friday, May 10, 2024

MINOR SUPER-HERO ROUND-UP 008

Some real highs and lows in this one.

the Twister

The Twister is a quite minor Golden Age super-hero - he managed more than one appearance but not more than seven - who has the distinction of having one of the most well-designed costumes of the era. Not my favourite costume, mind you, but boy oh boy, you can really tell that his creators (Ray Gill and Paul Gustavson as it happens) really sat down for a good think about how to evoke "tornado" via the medium of clothing.


The Twister turns out to be Bob Sanders, and he turns out to be a descendant of perennial fave Greek hero Odysseus. It turns out that the story of Aeolus gifting Odysseus two bags of wind and his men opening the bag of storm winds thinking that it was full of treasure was more than just another delay in Odysseus' Bad Voyage, it was akin to the opening of Pandora's Box and Aeolus had charged Odysseus or his descendants to round up all of the evil violent winds and return the to captivity. 

Evidently over the years the charge to gather up evil winds has expanded to fighting all evil, and the Twister's power set allows him to run roughshod over just about anyone using wind control, a tornado form and invulnerability to anything that couldn't harm actual wind. There is some attempt to establish that he is vulnerable to being locked up somewhere with no airflow but that proves even easier to defeat than all the times that Silver Age Aquaman is locked up and forced to source water from unexpected places.

The Twister's other claim to fame is that he was introduced as a mysterious tornado that appeared in the Blue Bolt, Sub-Zero and Dick Cole stories in the issue he first appears in, which is enough to be counted as a rare Golden Age crossover even though none of them shared words. (Blue Bolt v2 001, 1941)

Freezum:

On an adventure that takes him to Alaska, Sub-Zero happens upon a little Inuit or Aleut boy frozen in a glacier.



Thawing the kid out and finding him to miraculously be alive, Sub-Zero (as well as an unfortunate doctor) is further astounded to discover that they share the same sort of cold-based powers due to their similar near-death freezing experiences. The kid names himself Freezum, and that's just the first salvo of a barrage of tired comic relief sidekick shenanigans. Yes, we'll be sighing and rolling our eyes for the remainder of Sub-Zero's run - the joys of the Golden Age, friends! (Blue Bolt v2 005, 1941)

Lois Blake:

Lois Blake is a woman who Blue Bolt meets while attempting to take down a gang that was swindling immigrants using fake citizenship papers and decides to team up with. At some point when the gang is being particularly elusive he remembers that his pal Dr Bertoff down in the underground Kirby world has a viewscreen that can see virtually any location and so they head down there to use it. Bertoff then very helpfully offers to transfer some of Blue Bolt's power to Lois and a new crimefighting team is born! (small aside: Golden Age comics don't get a lot of praise for their art but I really enjoy both the small detail of Lois gripping Blue Bolt's arm for comfort in the first panel above and her delighted expression in the third).

Lois never gets a super-hero name and only really makes a handful of appearances before Blue Bolt ditches his costume and powers to become a regular if oddly-named soldier, but he's such a nonentity post Simon and Kirby that I can't help but love her for adding some life to the strip.(Blue Bolt v2 007, 1941)

the Marvel:

The Marvel is your classic mask-and-tuxedo vigilante, who specializes in showing up to bail reporter Scoop Cody out of the kind of jams you can get in when you've cracked a juicy crime story but not accounted for the possibility that the criminals involved might want to stop you from reporting on it.

Three things about the Marvel: 

1. The nose cutout never looks as cool as the full-face cowl does but I reckon it's a heck of a lot more comfortable, so you have to give him some credit for choosing function over form.

2. Scoop Cody and thus the Marvel only had two appearances and both of them had a teaser at the end promising that the Marvel's identity would be revealed in the next issue. It's always possible that they were planning on making the Marvel a completely new, never-before-seen guy but if they weren't then literally the only suspect is this guy, Scoop Cody's crusty old unnamed editor.

3. Love a super-hero calling card, even in the rare cases when it's a literal calling card.

Also here is the Marvel's second appearance in its entirety. (Blue Ribbon Coimcs 002, 1939)

Thursday, May 2, 2024

MINOR SUPER-VILLAIN 509: KING ROCKY THE FIRST

(Blue Bolt v1 010, 1941)


Some preamble: in Blue Bolt v1 007 the Green Sorceress managed to capture the Blue Bolt and thus in Blue Bolt v1 008 she was able to force Dr Bertoff to surrender to her forces. Her incompetent scientists subsequently triggered a series of devastating explosions while attempting to extract radium from Bertoff's mineral fields, with the one positive effect of opening a passage to the surface world. The Green Sorceress then travelled to the surface to do espionage, followed by the Blue Bolt, who had escaped paralysis and freed Bertoff's people since her departure.

The Green Sorceress' main surface henchman was gang boss Rocky Roberts, King of the Rackets, who got pretty thoroughly beaten up by the Blue Bolt but then manages to pop out of a little hatch in the Green Sorceress' escape rocket and propose an alliance against Dr Bertoff and the Blue Bolt, to which the Sorceress agrees.

This goes poorly! Rocky immediately takes over the Green Kingdom and declares himself King Rocky the Foist.


Rather than rule in a traditional manner, King Rocky establishes himself as the head of a gang consisting of the Green Sorceress' former army, with the citizens of the Green Kingdom being subjected to gang-style protection rackets, kidnappings, torture and garden-variety murder. This is a Jack Kirby idea, it has to be - even if he never made up another one to vex someone like Jimmy Olsen with the Sci-Fi Gangsterocracy is one of the most Kirby ideas I can think of.

It's tough to articulate but I respect King Rocky for his decision to murder the Green Sorceress. Believe it or not, it's a refreshing change for a Golden Age villain, most of whom would see an attractive captive and start yelling about making her "my Queen!"

But of course if you shoot at a super-villain you best not miss. King Rocky the Foist's plans are interrupted by Blue Bolt and he meets the traditional end for a super-usurper: giant laser blast.

Saturday, April 27, 2024

MINOR SUPER-VILLAIN 505: MARTO

(Blue Bolt v1 006, 1940) 

Blue Bolt is a fine comic book character in the classic setting of a vast underground world full of sci-fi/fantasy concepts but 100% the best thing about him is that 10 or so of his first dozen appearances were by Jack Kirby and Joe Simon and boy does Marto here show it. Just look at this classic Kirby creation!


Marto was originally Martin Hall, a scientist who accidentally bombarded himself with the very cosmic rays he had been studying and found himself mutated into your prototypical future human: big brain, tiny shrivelled body and compulsion to change his name to something short that sounds like an Australian gave him a nickname. 

"Martin Hall" doesn't sound like a Voltoran name to me (they trend more to things like Count Gorth, Major Kadronin and Captain Drogar), so Marto presumably made his way to the Green Sorceress' underground kingdom from the surface in his little chair-bot.

Marto's initial offer is to help the Green Sorceress in her quest to conquer the underground world but he pretty swiftly reveals that he is a little incel creep and his real plan is to either stick his head on Blue Bolt's body or to merely transfer his mind into Blue Bolt's head. Either way, his next step is to mate with a mind-controlled Green Sorceress, create a super-race and subjugate the world (and the way that he says this makes it clear that he is racist against everyone). 100% creep, in other words.

Luckily for literally everyone, Marto failed to factor "armed resistance" into his plans and he is crushed by rubble during an attack by Doctor Bertoff's air force.

Tuesday, April 23, 2024

MINOR SUPER-VILLAIN 502: THE GREEN SORCERESS

(Blue Bolt v1 001, 1940) 

The Green Sorceress! Possibly named Norzimo, absolutely the ruler of the underground kingdom of Voltor aka the Hidden Empire aka the Green Empire. Locked in a cold war with Dr Bertoff, leader of Deltos aka the Scientific City, as she wants the Deltosan radium fields in order to power her war machines and invade the surface while he wants to destroy her kingdom and everyone in it.

According to Bertoff, the Green Sorceress is descended from a long line of black magic practicioners. Appropriately, she demonstrates some magical skill herself, mostly related to teleportation via a green mist, though she does summon at least one demon.

There's a Batman/ Catwoman aspect to the relationship between Blue Bolt and the Green Sorceress, in that they are absolutely horny for one another and keep infuriating their allies by letting the other get away rather than taking victory at the cost of the other's life. The Green Sorceress even reforms a couple of times (well, sh'e brainwashed by Bertoff once and reforms another) but just can't quit her evil ways.

(Professor Bertoff would absolutely be a super-villain if a) his main opponent weren't a bigger one and b) his main ally weren't a super-hero)

The greatest change to the status quo of the underground kingdoms comes in Blue Bolt v1 007 when the Green Sorceress manages to force a surrender of Scientific City by capturing Blue Bolt (note the incredible power play of calling from bed). Her hamfisted scientists set off an series of enormous explosions in the radium fields and open a passage to the surface. This is the point at which a captured surface man calls the inhabitants of the Green Kingdom "scientific barbarians" and it's a really terrific characterization that has to have been a Kirby contribution if only because of how prominent a theme it would be in his later work.

In Blue Bolt v1 009 the Green Sorceress hits the surface in a new identity: the Masked Princess! Supposedly European royalty travelling incognito, the Masked Princess was actually a highly efficient one woman espionage unit who vamped intelligence agents and other important men and then hypnotized them into revealing their secrets. Unfortunately for her, the very instant she left her minions managed to let Blue Bolt get away and he ends up following her to the surface to bust up the Masked Princess' operation.

Simon and Kirby leave Blue Bolt after issue 10, at which point the Green Sorceress has reformed again, this time after being saved by Blue Bolt from a terrible end that will be detailed soonish. We will eventually see her again but it's not the triumphant return that she deserves - I reckon that in the right hands and with a slightly more interesting foe the Green Sorceress could be a real classic super-villain - the hot-headed wizard-queen of a nation of Kirbyesque scientific barbarians striking from a land beneath those we know, plus there's a different, slightly less evil guy trying to kill her at the same time? this is fertile storytelling ground! BRING her BACK, someone!

Monday, April 22, 2024

GENERIC COSTUMED VILLAIN ROUND-UP 010

The thing is that they have some but not all of the attributes of a super-villain.


A sea-raider who uses a stolen acid gun to build a psychically-controlled army of skeleton men? If only he had a name or had a bit more swagger! Alas for him the Shark puts him down before he could do enough to elevate himself out of this gathering of also-rans. (Amazing-Man Comics 021, 1941)

This gang of guys dressed as mailmen don't give the Blue Beetle much trouble even when wielding compressed air guns that fire explosive pellets. I admire the visual, though. (Big 3 005, 1941)


The Scooby-Doo style "fake haunting to drive people away from treasure/natural resource/property" is of course super-villain adjacent, but there are so many instances of in comics that I tend to disregard them as generic criminality. This unnamed fellow, however... not only was he attempting to scare off a homeowner so that he could look for pirate treasure in her basement but he went and "I would have gotten away with it..." -ed at that meddling Marvelo, Monarch of Magicians. (Big Shot Comics 009, 1941)

Just some nameless goons that take part in an usurpation attempt against Blue Bolt villain the Green Sorceress but they're Jack Kirby goons so they look fantastic. (Blue Bolt v1 004, 1940)

Saturday, April 20, 2024

MINOR SUPER-HERO ROUND-UP 006

Minor super-heroes need to be rounded up now and then.

Blackstone the Magician

There are a fair number of comic versions of real life people: movie cowboys by the dozen, big game tracker Clyde Beatty a couple of times, etc. Not too many of them quite cross over into the super-hero side of things, but here we have magician Harry Blackstone Sr, who absolutely did (Blackstone is also a great example of someone who was at one point wildly famous and has now receded far enough from the public consciousness that you might not have heard of him unless you're really into the Dresden Files).

Blackstone's adventures fall more into the Action-Packed World Travel to Places Where Ethnics Live category of comics, with the gimmick that he uses stage magic to overcome various obstacles. But stage magic in a controlled environment using your own props and ad hoc stage magic using random items out in the world are different things, comic! (Super-Magic Comics 001, 1941)

Black Fury:

Rex King is an adventurer who spares the life of a panther in the jungles of Borneo because it has a white star marking on its throat. Later, that same panther saves Rex from a leopard attack and he takes this as a some grand life lesson about how animals can be full of humanity while men are bestial - long story short, he dresses up like something halfway between Black Condor and Wildcat and teams up with the panther (now named Kato) to beat up evil. (Super-Magic Comics 001, 1941)

the Blue Bolt:


Harvard University student Fred Parrish had the misfortune to be struck by lightning twice in the same storm, the second time while he was attempting to fly his light aircraft for help. Lucky for him, he crashed near the underground lair of Doctor Bertoff, a scientist looking for just such a lightning-charged person to experiment on and empower to fight in his ongoing war of Bertoff's land of Deltos with the Green Sorceress and her kingdom of Voltor (later sumply "Bertoff's Scientific City" vs "the Green Kingdom").

Blue Bolt was a willing conscript in this war, although he tempered Bertoff's bloodthirstiness somewhat by seeking to reform the Green Sorceress rather than kill her outright, destroy her kingdom and salt the earth. This could be traced to a "don't hit girls 1940s sense of fair play and also because he had the hots for her.

Up to Blue Bolt v1 010 the Blue Bolt comic was written by Joe Simon and drawn by Jack Kirby and it was full of all kinds of crazy fun sci-fi malarky. Sadly, the instant they left to create Captain America it all went out the window and Blue Bolt became a regular-syle super-hero fighting Nazis on the boring old surface of the planet.

For a few issues, Blue Bolt follows his kid brother Kip Parrish around as he serves with the RAF but this gets boring after a while and he heads back to the States. Once the US enters the war he ditches the costume entirely and seemingly forgets that he has super-powers and becomes a regular-style soldier with the unusual name Blue Bolt. Ho hum.

This, by the way, is part of a pattern with the good folks at Novelty Press. They had it in their heads that their readers didn't want stories that were "too fantastic" and this was reinforced by their letters page which every month featured missives from little killjoys asking for more boy inventors and fewer giant robots. I assume that these kids grew up to be the people hectoring DC every time Batman cracked a joke in the 60s and 70s and that their children form the vanguard of the "gritty realism" movement.

Sergeant Spook:

Sergeant Spook here started out as a cop already named Sergeant Spook in a clear case of nominative determinism. After blowing himself up with a carelessly placed pipe in perhaps the least dramatic origin of any of the surprisingly large number of dead police officers to return as undead super-heroes, he basically just carries on as normal. He's intangible and invisible, per regular ghost rule, but can interact with the material world just fine. (Blue Bolt v1 001)

Then, in Blue Bolt v1 006 Sergeant Spook meets legally-distinct-from-Sherlock-Holmes ghost detective Dr Sherlock, who informs him that not only is he not unique but that there is a large community of ghosts that he is flouting the rules of by for instance beating the tar out of gangsters who can neither see nor touch him. He relocates to Ghost Town and becomes the de facto troubleshooter of its President, George Washington until rounding up the ghosts of dead troublemakers begins to get stale, at which point Spook heads back to the mortal world to deal with human/ghost conflicts.

DEMONIC ROUND-UP 003

Two shorts and two longs. Bajah : Minor Golden Age Marvel magician Dakor has to travel all the way to the fictional Indian kingdom of Nordu ...