Showing posts with label mind swap. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mind swap. Show all posts

Sunday, September 7, 2025

MINOR SUPER-VILLAIN 850: DR MORTAL

(Weird Comics 001, 1940)


Dr Mortal, in contrast to his fellow Weird Comics character the Sorceress of Zoom, is your typical comic-headlining super-villain, in that he is a mad scientist with an obsession with making monsters. Like most of his ilk, Mortal is opposed by a heterosexual couple of upstanding moral character, and in his specific case they are his niece Marlene Mortal and her lover Gary Brent (as Marlene's surname is never actually given in print, I'm just making an assumption that it is also a Mortal, because I want it to be). Dr Mortal's main distinguishing characteristic is that thanks to his eyebrow/mustache/skin droopiness he kind of looks like he's melting.

Some 1940 Dr Mortal highlights:


In his first appearance, Dr Mortal is up to some basic mad scientist stuff: he is kidnapping and mutating people into big gobliny guys called the Monster Men. He is of course mind controlling these Monster Men to serve him, but it's not very good mind control, as can be seen above as it is broken by Gary Brent. Dr Mortal seemingly dies in a fire but actually just scuttles out the back door.

Weird Comics 002 sees Dr Mortal rebuilding, with the aid of his faithful assistant Salvo, and includes the immortal line "Now, Salvo - get me the lion entrails!!"

Just what are the lion entrails for? Why, to create Lion-Men, of course! And what are the Lion-Men for? Why, to terrorize the countryside to no stated end, of course! They just kind of rampage around, smashing up local farms.

Whatever the reasoning behind this, it ends up backfiring on Dr Mortal, as when Gary Brent shows up to rescue Marlene (and here I must say that any time that Marlene Mortal is not explicitly mentioned one can safely assume that she has been captured by Dr Mortal and is about to have something terrible happen to her) he is able to round up an armed group of farmers with relative ease, and it turns out that the Lion-Men are less effective against pitchforks and shotguns than they are against isolated farmsteads. Dr Mortal supposedly dies in a fire for a second time, and for a second time he's just fine.

 

Weird Comics 003 is one of those off-model appearances that you get in longer Golden Age series and especially in Fox Features comics, that could either be a different artist taking over for one issue or a comic intended for another character with a few minor edits. My money's on the latter, but only because Marlene keeps calling Dr Mortal "father" instead of "uncle" throughout.

Whatever its provenance, this story features Dr Mortal in a pretty straightforward "I'll show 'em all!" revenge scheme in which he is creating a robot with a human brain and the terrific name "Jaque the Super Automaton." After an interruption by Gary and Marlene, Jaque goes rogue and beats up Dr Mortal before setting his sights on the world at large.

Poor Jaque meets his end at the barrel of a ray gun, while for the first time Dr Mortal is carted off to jail instead of seeming to perish.


Dr Mortal shows some flexibility in Weird Comics 004, as he plays on the tremendous 1940s obsession with class to lure Gary and Marlene into a trap. He convinces the two of them that he has turned over a new leaf by surrounding himself with beautiful, high-class people who he has made in his lab. Called "Pseudo-Socialites" at least once, these are in my opinion Dr Mortal's greatest creations.



Mortal invites Gary, Marlene and a few other people who he presumably has beef with to a dinner party liberally stocked with Pseudo-Socialites, then excuses himself and uses a beam to revert his creations to their true, monstrous forms. It's a great little plan, spoiled only by the fact that Gary Brent manages to electrocute all the monsters and capture Dr Mortal.


Weird Comics 005 sees Dr Mortal experimenting with mind transferral and is mostly concerned with a poor ape who has been injected with the memories of a dead man. Oh, that poor ape.




Any mad scientist worth their salt eventually gets into shrinking people and Weird Comics 006 is Dr Mortal's shrinking phase. He of course uses this technology in an attempt to get revenge on Gary and Marlene and is immediately betrayed and shrunk by his own butler Kalak, forcing the three tiny enemies to team up against him.


All of this revenge-based science must have drained Dr Mortal's cash reserves, because Weird Comics 007 features him charging rich middle-aged people big bucks in order to transfer their minds into young, attractive bodies. As per usual, Mortal shoots himself in the foot by attempting to get revenge on Gary and Marlene and the whole scheme falls apart, leading to the deaths of all the old rich body snatchers. 

Of particular note is the lady above, who just wants to have her mind placed in the body of Marlene Mortal and ends up in the body of a gorilla instead. And then Marlene shoots her dead. 

(important note - Gary and Marlene only know about this scheme beacuse he calls them and tells them to stay away. They didn't even know he was alive!)


Weird Comics 008 features another mad scientist classic: giant insects, which Dr Mortal releases after the police take their first-ever on-panel interest in him and attempt to raid his laboratory. Hearkening back to the old days, this one ends with Mortal seemingly dying as his lab explodes.



This is of course not the end, and Weird Comics 009 sees Dr Mortal in the South Pacific. He abducts men from nearby islands to test his devolution ray on, but is foiled when Gary and Marlene (who just happen to have been vacationing in Waikiki) rally the local police to raid his yacht.


That's it for Dr Mortal in 1940, but don't worry, he wasn't really eaten by sharks. We'll see this rascal again in 1941.

Sunday, February 4, 2024

MINOR SUPER-VILLAIN 443: THE UGLY QUEEN

(Mystery Men Comics 022-023, 1941)

The Ugly Queen is our first real foray into the heady world of societal beauty standards as motivation for evil (though there's an element of that sort of thing in Setap's first appearance and we've certainly encountered a fair few characters rejected by society for ugliness and deformity). Her status as a royal is called into question by the end of her appearances but she does cut a powerful figure, with an undersea castle full of weird snake-men that she draws Rex Dexter of Mars to.

Two things about the Ugly Queen's appearance:

-the design of her face is amazing

-if what she's looking for is acceptance rather than universal acclaim then the Ugly Queen has absolutely been looking in the wrong places. I'm only moderately Extremely Online and I could name more than a few places where she could, as they say, Get It.

So yes, it's clear that the real villain was societal beauty standards all along. Wait. No, it was the Ugly Queen - she just dropped "thousands of atomic bombs" on a city to kill one beautiful woman.

She also captures handsome men and swaps their heads out for those of animals when they refuse her marriage demands. And while writing all this out I realized just what I liked most about the Ugly Queen: she isn't doing any of this because she feels the sting of societal rejection. She's doing it because it's fun and the social stuff is a flimsy excuse. Like all of the best villains, the Ugly Queen is having a great time.

Her first appearance ends with a cow-headed man flooding her underwater palace and seemingly killing all within, but worry not because in the very next issue:

She's back, baby.

Once again I am struck by how cool the Ugly Queen looks. And she knows it! She clearly wore that superfluous helmet so that she could take it off dramatically in front of... some snake men, I guess.

This time, Rex Dexter brings his fiance Cynde along and the Ugly Queen undercuts my previous point a bit by caring enough about how she looks to set up a mind transfer between the two of them so that she can rock Cynde's conventionally attractive face. Although she does start gloating about it to Rex Dexter the second that she thinks that she has gotten away with it, so maybe it's more of a prank body swap than a desperate attempt to be something else.

All's well that ends well, however, as the Queen's snake-man subjects, who turn out to be slaves, immediately revolt once they see the Ugly Queen tied to a chair, and then once she is stabbed by one of them it turns out that the mind-transfer tech she had used was the kind that switches the minds back when either of them dies. Seems to go against the spirit of the malicious mind switch, but what do I know.

In conclusion, the Ugly Queen rules, long live the Ugly Queen. It's unlikely that someone will ever BRING BACK the character but I know I'd love to see her again.

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 ...