Showing posts with label Marvel Comics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Marvel Comics. Show all posts

Friday, January 23, 2015

Sci Fi History: The Incredible Hulk (1977)

A live action Hulk came to TV in the late 70s. Bill Bixby played Dr. David Banner who suffered an accidental overdose of gamma radiation. The OD led to his transformations into the Hulk when he became angry or injured. Banner fled to avoid notice, but always managed to get beat up every week under assumed names. Banner was chased by reporter Jack McGee. The show ended in 1982, but returned for three TV movies in the late 80s.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LqZuhrDM5vE

Saturday, September 20, 2014

Sci Fi History: The Night Gwen Stacy Died (1973)

 
Norman Osborn suffers a mental breakdown when his son has to detox due to a drug addiction. He relapses as the Green Goblin, kidnaps Peter Parker's girlfriend Gwen Stacy, and obscons with her to a bridge. Spiderman and the Goblin brawl and Osborn tosses Stacy off the bridge. Spiderman uses his webshooters to break her fall, but snaps her neck. An enraged Spidey chases the Goblin to a warehouse where the Goblin tries to impale the hero with his glider. Spiderman dodges the glider, which kills Osborn. The story arc shocked comic fans and changed the game. Major characters could now die. No doubt this is the #1 moment in comic history. The Amazing Spiderman #121 and #122 are considered classics.

As seen in Amazing Spiderman 2 (2014):

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SaU9-QWslVI


As seen in Spiderman (2002):

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4DMkC6qMgWQ
 
 

Wednesday, May 14, 2014

Sci-Fi History: Harry Osborn's drug problem (1971)

Stan Lee decided to include social commentary into Marvel Comic storylines. In 1971, Peter Parker's best friend, Harry Osborn, developed a drug problem. The problem persisted for the rest of the character's life. Harry had to bear the burden of being the Green Goblin's son, the breakup of his relationship with Mary Jane Watson, and eventually becomes the New Goblin. Lee decided to get around the comic code by printing "Not approved by the Comic Code Authority" on the issue. This opened up unlimited potential for comic writers.
http://www.thegreengoblinshideout.com/harry-overdoses

Monday, December 30, 2013

Sci-Fi History: Captain America returns (1964)


Timely Comics introduced Captain America in March 1941. The book was one of the most popular books during World War II, but fell off after the war. Captain America ceased publishing in 1950. Marvel Comics resurrected Cap in March 1964 when the Avengers found the hero frozen in suspended animation. Cap eventually became the leader of the hero squad, starred in his own comic series, and has been featured in the recent Marvel movies

Thursday, November 28, 2013

Sci Fi History: The Brotherhood of Mutants (1964)


Magneto formed the Brotherhood of Mutants in order to promote and permeate mutant superiority over humanity. The group’s goals have morphed from world domination to thugs to terrorism thereby matching the era. They have been continually thwarted by the X-Men. In a sense, they are the evil version of the civil rights movement.

Sunday, November 10, 2013

Sci-Fi History: Iron Man (1963)


Stan Lee wanted to create a quintessential capitalist character in the Cold War universe. He introduced Iron Man in Tales of Suspense #39 in 1963. Iron Man’s alter ego, Tony Stark, was a billionaire playboy that was captured and forced to create a weapon of mass destruction by his kidnappers. Instead, he created an iron suit and escaped. Stark was based on Howard Hughes without the mental issues. However, through the run, Stark suffered his own problems resulting in alcoholism. In 2008, Robert Downey Jr. brought the character to life and Iron Man’s popularity reached new levels.

1960s cartoon:


Downey Jr:

Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Sci-Fi History: The X-Men (1963)


The X-Men arrived in the Marvel Universe at the height of the Civil Rights Movement. They were mutants with a X-gene, hence the name X-Men. This extra gene provides mutants with all sorts of powers. Each mutant possessed a different mutation. As a result, Magneto controlled metal, Wolverine was indestructible, Cyclops shot lasers from his eyes, etc. People feared the mutations leading to bigotry and oppression. At the same time, Stan Lee tied the X-Men to the nuclear age. It is hinted that mutants received radiation exposure that created the x-gene. Lastly, the main villain, Magneto, was a concentration camp survivor adding an interesting twist to his crusade against humanity. As a result, the X-Men tied together the civil rights movement, World War II, the Cold War, nuclear anxieties, and the holocaust.


Thursday, October 10, 2013

Sci-Fi History: Spiderman and Uncle Ben (1963)


Named after Ben Franklin, Uncle Ben Parker served as Peter Parker's surrogate father. He was killed by a thug almost immediately after being introduced. Peter could have captured the killer before he murdered his uncle, but declined to do so because "it's not my problem." After Uncle Ben died, Peter considered himself responsible and hunted the murderer down. The criminal eventually dies of a heart attack when run down by Spiderman. On a side note, Ben Parker never uttered the phrase "with great power comes great responsibility." This tagline came from Stan Lee in a panel at the end of Amazing Fantasy #15.


Friday, September 13, 2013

Sci-Fi History: The Mighty Thor (1962)


Stan Lee, Larry Lieber, and Jack Kirby played with the Thor myth from Medieval Scandanavia to create a modern comic book hero. He debuted in Journey Into Mystery #83. This version differed from an earlier 1951 comic version. Lee wanted a hero that was stronger than a normal person and wondered how to do it. He toyed with the Grecko-Roman and Norse gods before settling on Thor. Journey Into Mystery was retitled The Mighty Thor in 1966. Since his recreation, Thor has appeared in a number of comic books, cartoons, made a guest appearance on The Incredible Hulk starring Bill Bixby and Lou Ferrigno, and has his own feature film series starring Chris Helmsworth and Anthony Hopkins.
 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=npvJ9FTgZbM

Wednesday, August 21, 2013

Sci-Fi History: The Amazing Spiderman (1962)


Spiderman first appeared in Amazing Fantasy #15 and rapidly became the most popular superhero on the planet. Spiderman’s alter ego, Peter Parker, was just a lonely, nerdy teenager, orphaned at a young age. The comic focused on Peter’s relationships with his family and friends, which added a different dynamic to the book. On top of this, Peter had real life problems to deal with and lost his only true role model, his Uncle Ben, early on in the canon. Peter did not have an older mentor like Robin or Bucky.  Peter’s wisecracking personality, real world problems, and human side made Spiderman one of the most popular comic book heroes.

Monday, July 8, 2013

Sci-Fi History: The Fantastic Four (1961)


The Fantastic Four ushered in “The Marvel Age” of comic books. Stan Lee and Jack Kirby brought a new level of character development and realism to their subjects. The FF were exposed to radiation granting superpowers. Reed Richards became hyper-elastic, Sue Richards could project force fields and become invisible, Johnny Storm became the Human Torch, and Ben Grimm evolved into a rock monster. Unlike other heroes, the quartet squabbled and at times fought. On top of this, they did not keep secret identities like Batman or Superman. Lee and Kirby’s human touch to the FF made Marvel unique in the comic world. Instead of cardboard cutout heroes, the FF, and subsequent Marvel heroes, were identifiable and relatable to readers.

Thursday, October 18, 2012

Sci-Fi History: Captain America punches Hitler (1941)


America enters World War II with Captain America fighting for the Allies. Naturally, he meets Adolf Hitler and punches him out. The recent film paid homage to this moment with Chris Evans decking an actor portraying Hitler for the USO.

http://images.search.yahoo.com/images/view?back=http%3A%2F%2Fsearch.yahoo.com%2Fsearch%3Fei%3DUTF-8%26p%3Dcaptain%2Bamerica%2Bpunches%2Bhitler&w=160&h=106&imgurl=www.bing.com%2Fimages%2Fsearch%3Fq%3Dcaptain%2Bamerica%2Bpunches%2Bhitler%26id%3DBF584255D0D456BD57F6E4EDB302D139D75ECFF8%23focal%3Dbb2f42234a70bc98ff32c10d855b988c%26amp%3Bfurl%3Dhttp%253a%252f%252fthreatqualitypress.files.wordpress.com%252f2009%252f12%252fcaptain-america-hitler.jpg&size=&name=search&rcurl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.bing.com%2Fimages%2Fsearch%3Fq%3Dcaptain%2Bamerica%2Bpunches%2Bhitler%26id%3DBF584255D0D456BD57F6E4EDB302D139D75ECFF8%23focal%3Dbb2f42234a70bc98ff32c10d855b988c%26amp%3Bfurl%3Dhttp%253a%252f%252fthreatqualitypress.files.wordpress.com%252f2009%252f12%252fcaptain-america-hitler.jpg&rurl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.bing.com%2Fimages%2Fsearch%3Fq%3Dcaptain%2Bamerica%2Bpunches%2Bhitler%26id%3DBF584255D0D456BD57F6E4EDB302D139D75ECFF8%23focal%3Dbb2f42234a70bc98ff32c10d855b988c%26amp%3Bfurl%3Dhttp%253a%252f%252fthreatqualitypress.files.wordpress.com%252f2009%252f12%252fcaptain-america-hitler.jpg&p=captain+america+punches+hitler&type=&no=2&tt=115&oid=http%3A%2F%2Fts2.mm.bing.net%2Fth%3Fid%3DH.4897088108692585%26pid%3D15.1&tit=captain+america+hitler&sigr=17r4c1mh7&sigi=17kspi33o&sigb=1282dn5r7&fr=yfp-t-701

Saturday, November 5, 2011

Captain America: Tales of Suspense #72-81

Continuing the Adventures of Captain America in the 1960s...

Tales of Suspense #72-74: Cap battles the Sleepers. In 1945, the Red Skull programmed three robots to return in 1965 to destroy the world. Cap defeats them. One of the sleepers was a flying wing...kudos to Stan Lee for predicting the stealth bomber.

#75-76: Cap teams with the mercenary Batroc to stop the city from exploding. The pair are caught in an espionage battle between SHIELD and THEM. Cap saves the city in the end and Batroc runs away. Meanwhile, Cap meets a girl reminding him of someone in his past.

#77: Cap backstory about a lost love

#78: Cap and Nick Fury battle THEM

#79-81: The Red Skull emerges from 20 years of hiding and captures the Cosmic Cube. He had allied himself with THEM and bided his time. After capturing the cube, he became invincible (think Emperor Joker-lite). Cap uses the Skull's own vanity against him and manages to negate the cube. The Skull falls into the ocean and supposedly drowns...

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Captain America:Tales of Suspense #63-71

The next nine issues of Tales of Suspense starring Cap featured some of his WWII adventures and the first appearances of the Red Skull.

Tales of Suspense #63: The Origin story and first appearance of Bucky. During the 1940s, and Cap's original run, Bucky was another in a long line of teen sidekicks. Perhaps comic writers hoped to introduce a young hero for fans to identify with. Also, we see Steve Rogers as a bumbling private (think Christopher Reeves' Clark Kent). Bucky is the camp "mascot."

#64: Steve Rogers does KP while Captain America busts up a sabotage ring.

#65: The Red Skull's first appearance and he has a hit list.

#66: The Red Skull captures Cap, drugs him, and turns him into a Nazi operative. Also, his origin is revealed!

#67: Cap helps the Nazis break into Allied HQ to assassinate a high level general. Bucky escapes the firing squad.

#68: Cap escapes the effects of the drug and saves the general's life. The Nazis get ahold of a particle weapon, but are thwarted.

#69: A British scientist agrees to help the Nazis kill Cap and Bucky. They capture Bucky and lure Cap to Greymore Castle.

#70: Cap arrives, is captured, and the Nazis plan to launch him, Bucky, and the Scientist's sister in a V-2 rocket.

#71: Cap escapes, stops the Nazis, and uses the rocket to save American troops in Normandy. The scientist's sister is shot and killed by the Nazis and he goes insane. The castle explodes when the now-mad scientist blows it up. Only Bucky and Cap escape.

Saturday, October 22, 2011

Captain America: Tales of Suspense #59-62

Marvel resurrected Captain America in the 1960s. The company rolled out Cap in solo adventures in Tales of Suspense. In those early adventures, he shared the comic with Iron Man. Each character got his own solo story. As a result, the stories were compact and half the size of a normal issue. The following is a recap of his first four appearance.

Tales of Suspense #59: Cap hangs out in the Avengers mansion. Some bad guys decide to break in and challenge the superhero believing he'd be a pushover since he did not have the same powers as his teammates. Cap defeats the gang relatively easily. The issue was clearly meant to introduce Cap and focused on the action. The issue also hinted at Cap's WWII past and sadness he experienced when looking back.

Tales of Suspense #60: Baron Zemo is introduced. The Baron sends a group of underlings to capture Captain America. They fail and Cap taunts Zemo in his South American lair.

Tales of Suspense #61: Cap goes to Vietnam to rescue a downed pilot. The main villain is a communist general/sumo wrestler. I thought Sumos were Japanese and not Vietnamese.

Tales of Suspense #62: A group of prisoners commit a jailbreak and Cap stops them.

Sunday, October 9, 2011

The Incredible Hulk #1-6

The Hulk is another example of culture addressing the nuclear age. The Incredible Hulk is very different in the first few issues from the behemoth readers and audiences grew used to. This is a simple recap of the first six issues of the Incredible Hulk with some commentary on how it relates to the period and changes across the six magazines.

Issue #1: Bruce Banner becomes the Hulk when an accidental overdose of Gamma Radiation alters his genes. Banner is exposed when a Gamma bomb explodes. He had run onto the test range to rescue Rick Jones, a teenager that wandered onto the range on a dare. Why they could not stop the test was not explained, but one would think that there would be safeguards against something like this. Anyway, the issue also introduces Thunderbolt Ross, an army general that chases the Hulk, and plays the J. Jonah Jameson role. Ross’ daughter, Betty plays a potential love interest in her Jackie Kennedy attire. In the beginning, she is a non-entity.

At first, the Hulk is gray to reflect a mood. However, gray did not translate well to the page and Stan Lee changed the color to green. In addition, the Hulk only changes at night. He is a bit like a werewolf as Banner returns at daybreak. This version of the Hulk is not a mindless brute. He is more like an angry Ben Grimm. He is sophisticated, thinks through problems, and can operate machinery.

At the end of #1, the Hulk matches wits with the Gargoyle. The villain is a deformed Soviet agent that eventually befriends the Hulk after kidnapping him. Banner finds a cure for Gargoyle’s deformity and returns to New Mexico. By this point, Ross is determined to capture the Hulk.

Issue #2: The Hulk takes on the Toad Men. This time, he is green. The Toad Men come from outer space and kidnap Betty to force the Hulk to comply with their demands. Eventually, he rescues Betty and Banner uses the Toad Men’s weapons against their invasion force.

Issue #3: The Hulk is lured into a space rocket by Ross and shot into space. Rick Jones sneaks into the launch facility and manages to crash the rocket on Earth. During the flight, Banner is exposed to more radiation making the Hulk susceptible to Jones’ commands. Later, the pair defeat the Ringmaster.

Issue #4: Banner and Jones create a machine that allows the pair to control when the Hulk appears. The machine changes Banner to the Hulk and back. However, the radiation severely weakens Banner and as time passes, the transformations take longer to happen. This is a nod to Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde who transformed via a potion. Afterward, the Soviets pretend to be Martians and are defeated by the Hulk.

Issue #5: 1000 years or more ago, Merlin banished Tyrannus to the underworld. Little did he know, Tyrannus would find allies that built him an empire and the Fountain of Youth. In 1962, he threatens the Earth leading the Hulk into action. Hulk defeats Tyrannus, and in a second adventure, beats the Chinese Communist armies of General Fang.

Issue #6: The Metal Master travels to Earth and easily defeats the Hulk and the world’s armed forces. Where the Fantastic Four were during the crisis is anyone’s guess. This seems to be more up their alley. Anyway, the Hulk defeats the Metal Master with a cardboard gun. The issue also debuts Rick Jones’ teen brigade. Meanwhile, the damage to Banner’s use of the changing machine appears to be accumulating.

The first six issues of the Incredible Hulk deal with all the themes of the early 1960s. There is the communist threat, nuclear fears, and Kennedy fashion. Meanwhile, the Hulk himself is not yet the brainless monster we all know and love. Instead, he is more of an angry Ben Grimm that despises the “puny humans” that hunt him.

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Amazing Spiderman #6-10

Continuing the look into Spiderman's past...

Amazing Spiderman #6: Peter and Jameson go on a roadtrip to Florida to find the Lizard. Spiderman defeats the Lizard before it/he can create a reptile army.

#7: The Vulture escapes prison and wrecks some havoc inside the Daily Bugle. Spidey webs Jameson's mouth shut and Peter and Betty Brandt get cozy.

#8: Two stories in Issue #8. In the first part, Spidey battles 1960s Articial Intelligence while Pete KO's Flash Thompson in a fight. Thompson had been picking on Pete to no end and paid for it. Interestingly, the school faculty set up the fight in the gym. Nowdays, they'd go to prison for doing such a thing.

In the second story, Spidey crashes the Human Torch's party. It's Marvel's answer to Elvis' Clambake!

#9: Electro debuts, Aunt May has an operation, and Betty Brandt holds a secret!

#10: The Enforcers appear on the scene looking to squash Spiderman and assume control of all of New York's rackets. Meanwhile, Peter is weakened after volunteering some blood to help Aunt May. She recovers and goes on vacation while a weakened Spiderman beats the enforcers. At the end, we find out the J. Jonah Jameson despises Spiderman out of jealousy and envy. 

Thursday, September 15, 2011

The Amazing Spiderman #1-5

I was reading these old Spidey comics from 1963. I thought it might be fun to post the plots for people that have not actually read them....

Amazing Fantasy #15: Spiderman's first appearance and origin. Peter Parker is bitten by a radioactive spider and acquires spider powers. His family needs money and he tries to earn some as a wrestler and is too self absorbed to stop a robbery. The criminal breaks into his house and shoots his Uncle Ben. At the end, he realizes that "with great power comes great responsibility."

Amazing Spiderman #1: J.Jonah Jameson's first appearance. JJJ begins his war on Spiderman, which cripples Peter's attempts to make money in show biz. Then, he tries to join the Fantastic Four, who explain to him that they are a non-profit and can't pay him. Later, Peter saves Jameson's son, John, from crashing his space capsule. This does not endear him to JJJ.  In a second story, the Chameleon makes his first appearance.

#2: The Vulture is introduced in a solid story. In a second story, the Tinkerer is introduced. Peter defeats the Tinkerer and an alien invasion.

#3: Doc Oc is introduced. Peter spends the early part of the story thinking he's the shit. Then, he's humiliated by Doc Oc (who also considers himself the bee's knees). Peter loses his confidence, but later realizes he has to be a hero and defeats Doc Oc.

#4: The Sandman is introduced. By this point, the stories and scripts are dramatically improving. From the beginning, Spiderman has more problems than any other hero ever, making him the most human. In one of my favorite comic book moments of all time, Pete defeats Sandman with a vacuum cleaner.

#5: Dr. Doom tries to enlist Spiderman as his ally, but is rebuffed. Doom decides to destroy Spiderman and captures Flash Thompson, who was in a Spidey costume. Flash wanted to embarrass Peter, but ended up Doom's prisoner. Spiderman and Doom battle it out in a major mismatch. Pete is saved when the Fantastic Four arrive at the last minute.