Friday, May 28, 2021

Asians in Combat JOHN WAYNE ADVENTURE COMICS "Bridgehead"

Ten-HUT!
You know John Wayne did a Vietnam War movie (Green Berets)...

...but he never did a Korean War flick!
(Jet Pilot is a Cold War movie involving Russians.
No Koreans or scenes set in Korea.)
Comic books were a different matter...

Trivia: Besides not doing a Korean War movie, Wayne never did a film set in World War II Germany!
This never-reprinted tale is from Toby's John Wayne Adventures #15 (1952), penciled by Mel Keefer.
(The other credits are unknown)
You'll note that Wayne is referred to as "John Wayne", not "John Wayne as Sgt Stryker" or some other character he played in movies or a totally-new character!
One of the conceits of this 31-issue series, John Wayne Adventure Comics, was that Wayne was always himself in the stories, no matter where or when they were set!
Stories ran the gamut from Wayne in the French Foreign Legion to putting out oil-rig fires to big-game hunting in Africa to tracking spies in Hong Kong, with at least one Western-themed story every issue.
Oddly enough, though there are numerous comic adaptations of Wayne's Western movies, and even a comic based on The Conqueror (where he portrayed Genghis Khan), there are no comic adapting any of his war movies!
Until next time...

Dis-Missed!

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John Wayne
Four Fim Favorites

Saturday, December 5, 2020

Christmas Combat Comics G.I. JOE "Weepy's Christmas"

Ten-Hut!
Christmas is a helluva time to be fighting a war...
 ...as the ORIGINAL G.I. Joe and his buddies discover during the Korean War!
This never-reprinted story from Ziff-Davis' G.I Joe #10 (1952), illustrated by penciler Irv Novick and inker Frank Giacoia, was published long before Hasbro unleashed their 12" action figures upon the kids of America, the phrase "G.I. Joe" was slang for American soldiers.
It was popularized in 1945 by the release of the movie Story of G.I. Joe, starring Burgess Meredith as real-life war correspondent Ernie Pyle as he traveled with American troops during the invasions of Tunisia and Italy.
Ziff-Davis used the phrase as the title for a new war comic beginning in 1950.
Set in the (then) present-day Korean War, the series detailed the saga of Private Joe Burch, and the rest of his unit.
Running an impressive 55 issues, the series ended in 1957 with Joe Burch and his unit reassigned stateside to Camp Humbolt.
We'll be presenting the highlights of the original G.I. Joe's comics career next year.
Until next time...
Dis-missed!

Friday, October 30, 2020

Halloween Horror AIR FIGHTERS COMICS "Meets Misery!" Conclusion

Ten-Hut!
When we last saw World War II's popular teen aviator hero...

...A shadowy figure calling himself "Misery" threatens to shoot down any British aircraft he encounters...and does so with frightening efficiency!
AirBoy responds to the challenge, but is knocked unconscious by Misery's otherworldly "Air Tomb" which zaps him with an electric charge...
Misery did, indeed, return...several times...in both AirBoy's Golden Age and Bronze Age adventures!
Note: the Bronze Age (1980s) series from Eclipse featured the son of the original AirBoy, but the original (Golden Age) versions of the Heap, Sky Wolf, and Valkyrie, with whom, like his father, he became...intimate!
Until next time...
DIS-MISSED!
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Wednesday, October 28, 2020

Halloween Horror AIR FIGHTERS COMICS "Meets Misery!" Part 1

Ten-Hut!
Aviators have been staples of heroic fiction for a century...
...and both pulps and comics had dozens of them!
This is a tale about one of the most popular ones (in both the 1940s and 1980s)!
To Be Concluded...
TOMORROW!
This never-reprinted story from Hillman's Air Fighters Comics V1N12 (1943) is the first appearance of Misery, one of teen aviator Airboy's ongoing supernatural foes (he had several)!
Apparently Airboy co-creators, writer Harry Stein and artist Fred Kida liked using mystic characters as a counterpoint to the science-based kid flyer!
Among the other foes (and friends) were Zzed, the Rat King, and The Heap!
Until tomorrow...
DIS-MISSED!
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Airboy Archives
Volume 1

Monday, October 19, 2020

Halloween Horror VOODOO "Corpses of the Jury"

 Ten-HUT!
For Halloween, we're combining fictional horror with the real-life horrors of concentration camps!

Warning: NSFW!
Memories of World War II and the Nuremberg Trials were still fresh in peoples' minds when this tale was published in 1953 in Ajax/Farrell's Voodoo #5.
There were stories aplenty of hidden Nazis being tracked down, but most involved them being tried and executed by Allied (American/British/French) law-enforcement, not spectral beings, and certainly not in so gruesome, yet poetic, fashion.
BTW, the identities of any of the Iger Studio creatives associated with this tale are, sadly, unknown!
Until next time...
Dis-missed!
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