Monday, May 12, 2008

Dell Movie Comic Triple Feature Re-Post

Hey, I been busy doin' stuff... here's a few of our greatest hits during the meanwhile.

"Lost World" has art by Gil Kane (among others), and "The F.B.I. Story" has excellent art by Alex Toth.

Back soonest with more old junk.


The Lost World


The FBI Story


The Raven

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Monday, April 28, 2008

4) Movie and TV adaptions!



Back before we had DVDs (or VHS tapes even), movie and TV adaptions in comics or novel form were the only way to relive a particularily choice story. The movie and TV adaption comic book is now a pale shadow of itself (now usually referred to as a "franchise property", as though we were gonna open a KFC outlet fer heavens' sakes), but back in the day.....*sigh*.....
Anyhow, here's a little number i'm sure we all remember....CAPTAIN SINDBAD with Guy Williams. Man, the Russ Manning art in this book just blew me away!
CAPTAIN SINDBAD

Now that I think of Russ Manning, here's another cool adaption by him, this time the TV show "77 Sunset Strip".

Kookie, Kookie.... LEND ME YOUR COMB!
77 Sunset Strip #2

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Friday, March 30, 2007

End of The Moon, A Phoney Meteor and The Man From Planet X!


Vanishing Point - "Meteor" by John Benyon (AKA John Wyndham)




"Visions of world cataclysm constitute one of the most powerful and most mysterious of all categories of SF, and in their classic form predate modern Sf by 1000s of years. In many ways, i believe that SF is itself no more than a minor offshoot of the cataclysmic tale. From the deluge in the Babylonian zodiac myth of Gilgamesh to the contemporary fantasies of 20th century super-science, there has clearly been no limit to man's need to devise new means of destroying the world he inhabits. I would guess that from man's first inkling of this planet as a single entity existing independantly of himself came the determination to bring about its destruction, part of the same impulse we see in a placid infant who wakes alone in his cot and suddenly sets about wrecking his entire nursery.
Psychiatric studies of the fantasies and dream life of the insane show that ideas of world destruction are latent in the unconscious mind. The marvels of 20th century science & technology provide an anthology of destructive techniques unrivalled by even the most bizarre religions.
But are these deluges & droughts, whirlwinds & glaciations no more than overextended metaphors of some kind of suicidal self-hate, the expressions of deep internal conflicts resolvable only in a series of spasmic collisions with an ever yielding external reality?
On the contrary, I believe the catastrophe story, whoever may tell it, represents a constructive & positive act by the imagination rather than a negative one, an attempt to confront the patently meaningless universe by challenging it at its own game, to remake zero by provoking it in every concievable way." - J. G. Ballard

To that end, here is the most excellent article "The End Of The Moon" from the Hugo Gernsback publication SF plus, August 1953, illustrated by Frank R. Paul.

The End Of The Moon! Yow!

As an added bonus - The End of the World - 1920's style: From Hugo Gernsbacks' Science and Invention, October 1928.




Great art on this Fawcett Movie Comic ....and the script (by Otto Binder?) actually makes WAY MORE sense than the movie does - which I watched when I was scanning this book! This pdf comes from many and diverse materials, so you have my apologies for any "funkiness" with it... OK?
Man from Planet X!

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