Thor: the Dark World is now in movie theatres...
Friday, November 8, 2013
Thursday, November 7, 2013
Reading Room: TALES OF THE UNEXPECTED "Magic Hammer"
One more pre-Marvel Thor-themed story by co-creator Jack Kirby!
Ironically, published in Tales of the Unexpected #16 (1957), a DC Comic!
AFAIK, Jack Kirby penciled and inked this particular story.(Usually, he just penciled, since he was so freakin' FAST, doing 3-5 pages a day!)
The Thor in this tale is visually-similar to his villainous "Thor impostor" from The Sandman story in Adventure Comics #75
The Mjolnir, however, is a dead ringer for the Marvel Comics' Thor's mallet...
BTW, there's a kool article in the Jack Kirby Collector about the various versions of Thor conceived by the King.
You can find it HERE!
If you want to see the original, non-Marvel Golden Age Thor, his complete adventures can be found in our brother blog, Hero & Heroine Histories™.
Thor: the Dark World opens tonite!
Don't miss it!
Wednesday, November 6, 2013
MIGHTY THOR by Jack Kirby & Friends
Inks by Chic Stone |
Inks by Dick Ayers |
Inks by George Roussos |
Inks by Joe Sinnott |
Inks by Joe Sinnott |
Inks by Dick Ayers |
Inks by Don Heck |
Inks by Joe Sinnott |
Inks by Joe Sinnott |
Inks by Joe Sinnott |
Tuesday, November 5, 2013
Reading Room: WEIRD COMICS "Origin of Thor: God of Thunder!"
He's
muscular, super-strong, has long blonde hair, uses a hammer named
Mjolnir, and can control lightning, but he's NOT Don Blake!
Nor is he the real Thor!
Confused, True Believer!
Well, read on and all will be made clear...probably...
So, while Grant transforms into a Thor, the real Thor (with the mythologically-correct red hair and beard) sits comfortably back in Valhalla and watches the fun.
This version of Thor would run in 1940-41 from Weird Comics #1 (this appearance) to #5, never once making the cover.
Interestingly, issue by issue, he lost elements of Thor's costume (including the helmet, cape, and long hair), until by his final appearance in #5, he just looked like Grant Farrel in a blue swimsuit!
After that, he disappeared until 2008, when he, and an assemblage of forgotten Golden Age heroes, popped up in Savage Dragon #141, in full "Thor" regalia.
Nor is he the real Thor!
Confused, True Believer!
Well, read on and all will be made clear...probably...
So, while Grant transforms into a Thor, the real Thor (with the mythologically-correct red hair and beard) sits comfortably back in Valhalla and watches the fun.
This version of Thor would run in 1940-41 from Weird Comics #1 (this appearance) to #5, never once making the cover.
Interestingly, issue by issue, he lost elements of Thor's costume (including the helmet, cape, and long hair), until by his final appearance in #5, he just looked like Grant Farrel in a blue swimsuit!
After that, he disappeared until 2008, when he, and an assemblage of forgotten Golden Age heroes, popped up in Savage Dragon #141, in full "Thor" regalia.
We'll be posting the other four adventures of the first Thor over the next week since the new movie, Thor: the Dark World is opening this weekend.
Watch for them.
Monday, November 4, 2013
Reading Room: OUT OF THIS WORLD "The Hammer of Thor"
With Thor: the Dark World opening this week,we're looking at the earlier Thors in comics...
In 1959, three years before Mighty Thor's debut in Marvel's Journey into Mystery #83, Charlton's Out of This World #11 ran a tale, drawn by Steve Ditko, about a young man with a hammer named Thor.While he does have a beard, this Thor, like Marvel's Mighty Thor, was blonde, not red-headed as described in the myths.
In 1962, Ditko became the co-creator of Spider-Man and Dr Strange at Marvel, and was considered the #2 artist at the House of Ideas (behind Jack Kirby) during the Silver Age of Comics.
Considering Kirby had drawn a pretty accurate (to the myths) version of Thor, albeit as a villain wearing a disguise...
...why did The King go with a blonde, beardless version when he designed the Marvel character?
Could editor Stan Lee have been influenced by seeing Ditko's version?
Only the gods know...
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