Showing posts with label crossover. Show all posts
Showing posts with label crossover. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 3, 2024

NOTES - DECEMBER 2024

Drawn Without Reference

The Rocket and the Queen of Diamonds find themselves facing a very off-model spider in the lad of the Batmen. (Pep Comics 003, 1940)

Cops Shooting at Fleeing Suspects:

I was briefly tempted to give the cops of the MLJ universe a pass on shooting at the Comet because he did after all kill a bunch of them while mind controlled but then I remembered that a) that's still no excuse to gun someone down in the street, and b) it's still bad that they're just blazing away at a flying man in the middle of a large city full of other people. (Pep Comics 004, 1940)


 And they do it again... (Pep Comics 005, 1940)


 And again... (Pep Comics 006, 1940)

... and again (in a crowded state legislature building!) (Pep Comics 008, 1940)


Louisiana cops try to blow away Naval Academy Midshipman Lee Samson for escaping jail and stealing a police car. (Pep Comics 006, 1940)

Crossovers:

Oft touted as the first super-hero crossover in comics, the Shield shares a total of four panels with the Wizard as they both set out to foil some dastardly Mosconian spies. (Pep Comics 004, 1940)


Less frequently mentioned are the brief encounters between the Wizard and Lee Samson, aka the Midshipman and the Shield and Keith Kornell, aka the West Pointer, two very similar and very dull military academy students from different branches of the military-industrial complex. And they are less interesting, so that makes sense.

The next issue features another appearance by the Wizard, this one less highly touted as it's the second time it happened plus he just shows up to loan the Shield a plane. I personally think that that's remarkable, as Golden Age crossovers tended more toward the one-off. (Pep Comics 005, 1940)

Minutia

The Shield briefly pitches pro baseball under the name the Masked Marvel, as part of an investigation into a protection racket targeting players. (Pep Comics 007, 1940)

Wednesday, April 17, 2024

MINOR SUPER-VILLAIN 499: NELS LAMBERT

(Big Shot Comics 017, 1941) 

Like a lot of Skyman's enemies Nels Lambert is a disaster causing guy. Specifically, he has a rig called an Electrical Wave Generator, with which he can create waves - presumably of all sizes but as he is a criminal scientist he's mostly focused on the largest and most destructive ones.

A note on naming: the Electrical Wave Generator is an okay name at best but he does refer to his base here as Nels Lambert's Floating Island and I personally choose to believe that that is it's official name because it's extremely whimsical..

Like our old friend the Ice Menace, Nels Lambert's plan is to weaponize the ocean and demand ransom from nations bordering the Atlantic in return for not being flooded. And he almost gets away with it, thanks to the fact that the Electrical Wave Generator is a multifunctional doomsday device: not only can it be used to create waves using electricity but that same electricity can be discharged into the atmosphere around Nels Lambert's Floating Island™ in order to for example very nearly electrocute Skyman and his pal Chubby as they fly in to investigate the source of this wave nuisance.

And speaking of Skyman's pal! Chubby Weeks is an old college friend of Allan "Skyman" Turner who ends up going along on this adventure through medium-level plot contrivance. The real interesting thing about Chubby is that he's a radio news reporter and that according the the callsign in the background of this picture he works at Station WBSC, which is the same station that Tony "the Face" Trent owns and/or works at. This is my first time reading any comics from the Columbia Comic Corporation so I have no idea if there's any further crossover action in the future but this evidence of a very mildly shared universe is very mildly exciting!

Wednesday, August 16, 2023

MINOR SUPER-VILLAIN 328: THE NAZOMBIES

(Human Torch v1 005a, 1941)


This is kind of a weird one in a few ways, the first being that the foundation of the plot is that a) Namor the Sub-Mariner and the Angel both own Caribbean islands and b) that they are good enough friends for Namor to pay the Angel a visit. During this visit one of Namor's servants bursts in and promptly drops dead in an effort to deliver a note cryptically warning of a zombie takeover.

Namor takes off on his own and indeed! Zombies have taken over his island! Kind of!


I mean, even by 1940s standards of zombie these are clearly either costumed goons or some sort of monstrous humanoid group. They're not explicitly identified as fancy dress Nazis until the third-to-last panel, but come on. Buncha goose-steppers establishing military bases and concentration camps across the Caribbean? That's Nazis.

The Nazombies mostly employ conventional weaponry but seem to have hit up the "underwater" section of the Comic Book Nazi Superweapon department, as not only are they fielding undersea tabks but these extremely cool personal shark submersibles


This is, by the way, your go-to comic if you have ever wanted to see the Golden Age Angel get crucified by a bunch of Nazi zombies. Not to worry though: Namor rescues him and from then on it's strictly Nazi-punching time.

I don't reckon that the Nazombies have enough potential to be BRUNG BACK but it really seems like the shark-sub tech is ripe for revival in the hands of coastal raiders or something. Once such a revolutionary technology is unleashed it can't be put back in the bottle.

Monday, January 2, 2023

RANCE KEANE MEETS SHARK EGAN: THE CROSSOVER EVENT OF 1941

(Feature Comics 045-046, 1941)


Golden Age crossovers were a pretty rare thing, other than in places like All-Star Comics where that was the whole idea, but one place you occasionally encounter them is in the kind of adventure strips that filled out the bulk of anthology comics before the super-heroes really got into full market domination mode, and especially if the same person was working on both characters and wanted to have them meet up and say what a good series of adventures each other was having. 

The weird thing about this meetup is that Rance Keane, a Quality character and star of the strip, is meeting Shark Egan, a Dell character whose own adventures had been cancelled more than a year earlier, in Popular Comics 053! The characters are roughly equivalent - Shark is a sea dog-style adventurer while Rance is a cowboy who transitioned into the same - but this dockside mutual admiration moment is very unlikely!

If I were to advance a theory it would be to speculate that Rance Keane scribe William A Smith might have had a hand in Shark Egan too - some of the earlier strips in Popular look a bit like his work - and decided to reappropriate his creations once they were defunct at Dell. We will never know what his plans were though, as both Shark and Rance made but one more appearance in Feature 046 before setting off for parts unknown.

(Shoutout to Comic Book Plus user Ed Love, who is the only person I could find mentioning this in a cursory search)

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 ...