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

Wednesday, July 31, 2019

A Beautiful Bevy Of Jungle Queens!


It was not a scheme when the month began but I sure have focused on a lot of jungle adventures this month, especially those featuring femme fatales of the flora and fauna. Sheena was and is the most well known of these distaff Greystokes, but there were many many others. Below I've captured some comics covers featuring some of the ones which crossed my noggin. 




























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Sunday, July 21, 2019

Girls, Girls, Heike!


I've been on a jungle girls kick of late and while sorting some vintage Nyoka the Jungle Girl covers I was once again struck by this beauty as rendered by Mark Heike. I'll be attending to a bevy of jungle girl movies as the week progresses, but for today let's enjoy some finely rendered Indy artwork by a talent who currently runs AC Comics if I have my facts up to date.


I first ran across Mark Heike's name on the old Charlton Bullseye, the one from the 80's which was used to showcase amateur and new talent as the company wheezed its final few breaths before staggering out of existence. Then Heike's name showed up on the aforementioned AC Comics, material I really liked and Heike's talent for drawing a damsel was amazing. His earliest stuff has such a delicate sweet feel to it. Here are some of his early highly tasty covers for Bill Black's Florida-based outfit.









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Wednesday, January 3, 2018

E-Man's Last Adventure!


E-Man was what remained of a larger proposal by Nicola Cuti to his bosses at Charlton Comics to revive the superhero genre. But the bosses were still stung by the collapse of Dick Giordano's "Action Hero" line and didn't give Cuti's proposal the green light...exactly. They did okay a single superhero title and Cuti enlisted Joe Staton, a talented artistic newcomer to comics who was learning with every job. Together they gave the world E-Man, who is actually an alien bundle of energy come to Earth and bewildered by what he found seeks guidance, which he finds in the lovely form of Nova Kane, a college student and sometime exotic dancer. The two find comfort in one another's company and romance to boot. The world has never been the same as they confronted all manner of baddies often aided by pint-size gumshoe Mike Mauser.


Now the E-Man saga, which has kindled here and there at different comic book publishers for four decades is apparently coming to an end. Joe Staton, who bought the rights to the character from First Comics has, along with his partner Nick Cuti, presented new E-Man stories when such things could be arranged. Now Staton says the story currently running in Charlton Arrow, put together by the folks at Charlton Neo and distributed by AC Comics  could well be the final bow. (The third part of the story is scheduled to hit the stands this month.) But like that famous detective whose author tried to kill off so long ago, I hold out hope that maybe, just maybe there will be more. For now, I'll take what I have and treasure the rest. It's an ideal time to dig out the vintage appearances from the 70's, the 80's, the 90's, and beyond and give them all a loving re-reading.




So you don't want to be left out. Catch the last E-train for what might well be the final E-run. You know Nova would want you to do it.

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Wednesday, November 29, 2017

The Golden Derby - November 1967 & Beyond!




The "Action Hero" line from Charlton ended in 1967 and 1968 with a whimper and not even remotely a bang. With the kind of resolute editorial changes the small publisher was capable of, the titles Captain Atom, Judomaster, and Thunderbolt were cancelled. Soon thereafter Peacemaker joined them when its fifth and final issue hit the stands fifty years ago this month. In another distinctively drawn issue by creator Pat Boyette, the somewhat redesigned Peacemaker attempts to qell an uprising in a volcano of all places and in the back pages the Fightin' Five end their long and venerable run with some vintage spy fighting. And that was the end...almost. A few months later  in a month which proved to be quite the significant transition for Charlton as it moved away from heroes into the more and more ghosts and such, we get a highly strange but attractive one-shot tale in Charlton Premiere by artist Henry Scarpelli in which the wannabe villain Sinistro Boy Fiend battles Peacemaker, Blue Beetle and some heroes not seen before nor seen since. Many months later  in the shank of 1968 we get a final issue of Blue Beetle, the most pure expression by Steve Ditko in this particular comic of his political philosophy of "Objectivism". This issue had the feel less of a new issue of Blue Beetle and more a sense of a new installment of Mr.A. But with this comic, the Action Heroes closed up shop at Charlton for good.


Charlton would produce some of the best horror comics ever in the coming years and they would bring fascinating spins on myth (Hercules) and westerns (Wander, Man Called Loco). Eventually the superhero would return, but by then Nicola Cuti and Joe Staton wrought something fresh and fun in the shape of E-Man.




The Action Heroes themselves would pop up at Charlton in the middle 70's only in the pages of the Charlton Bullseye, a fan-created zine making use of unused pages from Charlton's vaults. This kept the fires lit briefly but even that  faded.



Several years later as the 80's hit, the heroes would be revived a final time by Charlton in a different Charlton Bullseye, one published by the company itself, but that was it. AC Comics had the contract for a year and brought out a few comics dedicated to the fondly remembered Action Heroes.



But the real sea change came when as a present for editor Dick Giordano, DC Comics picked up the Action Hero line-up and incorporated them into the DC Universe during the famous Crisis on Infinite Earths.





That proved to be a new beginning for the heroes with new series kicked off for Captain Atom, Blue Beetle, Peacemaker and Thunderbolt for time. Only Judomaster didn't get the nod, but he did join those others in a 1999 book by "Action Hero" editor Giordano and CPL Gang alumnus Bob Layton called L.A.W. (Living Assault Weapons)







The Action Heroes continue to be part of the DCU, with new iterations appearing from time to time, but for this fan, the "Action Heroes" will always be part of a golden time when a little company called Charlton tried to do super heroes in a different way. While the heroes  failed to find lasting sales success, they did find the kind of lasting power that lingers in the imagination. Thanks to those creators  (Frank McLauglin, Pete Morisi, Steve Ditko, Joe Gill, Jim Aparo, Pat Boyette, and many others) who made it possible. And finally thanks to Dick Giordano, the editor who kicked it all off.


This feature will suspend at this point -- after several years of tracking the monthly doings of the Action Heroes, this is the final tip of the Golden Derby. What will  come is still open to speculation, but it's been a hoot folks. Thanks for riding along.

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