Showing posts with label Orville Wells. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Orville Wells. Show all posts

Saturday, August 12, 2023

Space Hero Saturdays FLICK FALCON IN THE FOURTH DIMENSION "Return to Mars"

...now that you're caught up, watch as, unarmed and with Adele by his side, Flick prepares for another journey.
Writer-penciler Don Rico's wild imagination goes full-speed, combining science fiction and fantasy elements with equal aplomb in this never-reprinted tale from Fox's Fantastic Comics #2 (1940).
It's interesting to note the three-armed slavers introduced last time aren't native to Mars, as Flick thought...though no mention is made about whether the giants they control are Martians or not. 
Also, rather odd for a kids' story, is the fact that sexual attraction can be used to break the alien slavers' control!
Inker Claire Moe (who usually scripted, penciled and inked her own material for FoxCentaur, and Novelty), helped out probably due to a tight deadline.
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Saturday, April 15, 2023

Space Hero Saturdays FLICK FALCON IN THE FOURTH DIMENSION "To Mars and Back"

You know the scientist-hero of this strip is stark-raving bonkers...
...when, after seeing a test item come back through his teleporter inside-out, he leaps into the device!
This premiere tale from Fox's Fantastic Comics #1 (1939) ends right there.
No "To Be Continued" caption or anything else.
The next page begins another strip, Sub Saunders.
But fear not, Flick Falcon will return for 20 more issues of Fantastic Comics!
Unlike Brick Bradford or Doctor Who, both of whom used other people's tech to jaunt around the Universe (and eventually the Multiverse), Flick created his own mode of travel, avoiding tedious (and dangerous) interplanetary travel by ship.
BTW, "Orville Wells" was a pen-name, probably inspired by Orson Welles, who had, only a few months before, panicked America with the legendary War of the Worlds radio show.
The artist (and probably writer) was Don Rico, who would become one of the premier creatives working in 1940s-50s comics before turning to writing novels.
(You can read one of his wildest comic tales HERE!)
Unlike contemporary Fletcher Hanks, whose Stardust and Space Smith strips also premiered in this issue, Rico's never received the attention and acclaim his equally-offbeat work deserves.
(That's not to put-down Hanks in any way.
His wild creations are equally as deserving of critical study by aficionados of sci-fi/fantasy.)
BTW, this never-reprinted tale was Rico's very first published comics work.
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Monday, January 9, 2017

Reading Room FLIP FALCON IN THE FOURTH DIMENSION "Marriage on Mercury!"

It's been almost eighty years since this never-reprinted story appeared...
...but it's astonishing what we've learned about the planet Mercury in the interim!
Wow!
This Don Rico-written and illustrated tale from Fox's Fantastic Comics #7 (1940) might well be the first example of inter-species...er...relations with the female as the aggressor!
(The hot-to-trot one in such stories is usually the alien male!)
BTW, what happened to the Queen's father, whom she claimed was an Earthman?
How'd he get there in the early 1900s?
What happened to him?
Another example of the multiple concepts the amazing Rico just tossed off the top of his head, then promptly forgot about while working on these maniacally-paced stories!
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(who turned novelist after leaving comics!)

Tuesday, September 27, 2016

Reading Room FLIP FALCON IN THE FOURTH DIMENSION "The Devil with Lucifer!"

Is there nothing Flip Falcon can't do?
Even battle Satan himself to a standstill?
Wow!
Much attention has been given recently to fellow Fox Comics creator Fletcher Hanks for his way-out work on strips like StarDust and Fantomah.
But writer/artist Don Rico could come up with equally-astounding stories (and was a better draftsman) as this never-reprinted story from Fox's Fantastic Comics #6 (1940) proves!
Please Support Atomic Kommie Comics
Visit Amazon and Order...
(who turned novelist after leaving comics!)

Tuesday, August 2, 2016

Reading Room FLIP FALCON IN THE FOURTH DIMENSION "Doomed World"

Returning from Earth in the year 1,001,939, Flip looks where no man has looked before...
Wow!
Much attention has been given recently to fellow Fox Comics creator Fletcher Hanks for his way-out work on strips like StarDust and Fantomah.
But writer/artist Don Rico could come up with equally-astounding stories (and was a better draftsman) as this never-reprinted story from Fox's Fantastic Comics #5 (1940) proves.

Thursday, July 7, 2016

Reading Room FLIP FALCON IN THE FOURTH DIMENSION "One Million AD (Give or Take a Millennium)"

...hmmm.
Just go with the synopsis above, and we'll fill you in on the name change later...
It's fascinating to see concepts that today's writers would use as the premise for an entire mini-series get tossed aside in only six pages!
But that's exactly what happened in this never-reprinted tale from Fox's Fantastic Comics #4 (1940)!
Writer/artist Don Rico was coming up with such weird ideas that this was, literally, just a distraction from the main plotline!
But on to more important matters...
Why did "Flick Falcon" become "Flip Falcon"?
Remember, comics' lettering for both titles and word balloons/captions was almost always UPPER CASE!
When you look at the word FLICK, if the "L" and "I" are too close together, it looks like...well, you get the idea.
So, more or less, in mid-story, "Flick" became "Flip".
In fact, if you look at the captions and word balloons, there's extra space between "Flip" and the other words because they didn't want to reletter the whole story after altering Falcon's first name!

Thursday, June 23, 2016

Reading Room FLICK FALCON IN THE FOURTH DIMENSION "Power of the Slave Giants' Goddess"

...so, let's go to dinner!
But, is it truly over?
Don't miss the next exciting adventure of Flick Falcon and Adele!
Using the pen-name "Orville Wells" (a variation of "Orson Welles", who a couple of years earlier, frightened America with a dramatic radio adaptation of HG Wells' War of the Worlds performed like a news broadcast), writer-penciler Don Rico's wild imagination goes full-speed, combining science fiction and fantasy elements with equal aplomb in this never-reprinted tale from Fox's Fantastic Comics #3 (1940).