Well,
the Christmas shopping season is more-or-less underway (Remember when
it didn't begin until after Thanksgiving?), so we at Atomic Kommie Comics™
are going to offer you a daily guide to reasonably-priced pop culture
collectibles that would make great gifts for the hard-to-please person
in your life!
First off is a kool, retro, 1950s comic cover image from our Seducton of the Innocent™ section.
Quick side note: Seduction of the Innocent
was a book written in the 1950s by Dr. Fredric Wertham, a psychiatrist
who postulated that, because juvenile delinquents read comic books,
comics caused juvenile
delinquency!
(Psychiatrists today claim the same thing about video
games, in the '80s and '90s about horror movies, in the '60s and '70s about tv shows, etc.)
So our collection's title is
tongue-in-cheek and somewhat snarky, not prurient!
As we put
it..."Proudly show the stuff your grandparents didn't want your parents
to see!"
This particular image is a cutting commentary on
the belief that New York City is a den of sin, a modern Sodom (if not
Gomorrah), and that only MidWestern small-town values are the RIGHT
values!
It's available on a variety of items including mugs, messenger bags, t-shirts, tops, and other goodies along with eleven other comics covers and almost TWO DOZEN naughty movie posters!
So, let's put the "X" back in Xmas! ;-)
Shop now!
Avoid the Christmas rush!
It's good to be BAD at Christmastime!
Friday, December 5, 2014
Thursday, December 4, 2014
Holiday Reading Room: SNOW QUEEN "What Happened at the Snow Queen's Palace and What Happened Afterwards"
...the reunion of Gerda and Kay, the boy spirited away by the Snow Queen and taken to her icy palace in the Arctic!
Now, the conclusion...
THE END
Written by Gaylord Du Bois and illustrated by Lea Bing, this never-reprinted tale from Dell's Fairy Tale Parade #9 (1943) is the only comic book adaptation of the Hans Christian Andersen fairy tale that serves as the (very loose) basis of the wildly-popular Disney movie Frozen!
Adaptation writer Gaylord DuBois was one of the most prolfic (yet unknown) scribes in comics history with over 3,000 tales to his credit.
Artist Lea Bing was one of the few women working as a creative (instead of an editorial or production staffer) during the Golden Age.
From 1940 to 1954, she rendered several stories a year, usually adaptations of classic novels or fairy tales, with an occasional funny animal story.
Regrettably, nothing is known of her pre or post-comics career.
Labels:
1940s,
Dell Comics,
disney,
fairy tale,
Fairy Tale Parade,
Frozen,
Gaylord DuBois,
Hans Christian Andersen,
Holiday Reading Room,
Lea Bing,
movie,
retro,
Snow Queen,
vintage
Wednesday, December 3, 2014
Holiday Reading Room: SNOW QUEEN "Lapp Woman and the Finn Woman"
Kay, an innocent little boy, was affected by tiny shards of an evil mirror accidentally imbedded in his skin.
Now cruel and mean, the lad tormened his playmates, including his best friend Gerda, who, though confused by his actions, still loved Kay.
While involved in a snowball fight, Kay was swept away by the immortal Snow Queen, who took him to her ice palace.
Gerda,
worried and despondent, decided to go in search of Kay, and, after various perils, nears her destination...
Written by Gaylord Du Bois and illustrated by Lea Bing, this never-reprinted tale from Dell's Fairy Tale Parade #9 (1943) is the only comic book adaptation of the Hand Christian Andersen fairy tale that serves as the (very loose) basis of the current Disney movie Frozen!
In December 2011, following the success of Tangled, Disney announced a revival of the Snow Queen project with both a new title, Frozen, and new creative team.
The film would be computer-animated in stereoscopic 3D, with Chris Buck (Tarzan) directing and John Lasseter (Toy Story and Monsters, Inc) producing.
The main problem confronting the creatives was the character of the Snow Queen, which in the earlier version of the film, was an out-and-out villain.
The team decided to reconceive the film's protagonist, Anna (based on Gerda), as the younger sibling of the now-misunderstood Elsa (based on the Snow Queen), effectively establishing a family dynamic.
In December 2011, following the success of Tangled, Disney announced a revival of the Snow Queen project with both a new title, Frozen, and new creative team.
The film would be computer-animated in stereoscopic 3D, with Chris Buck (Tarzan) directing and John Lasseter (Toy Story and Monsters, Inc) producing.
The main problem confronting the creatives was the character of the Snow Queen, which in the earlier version of the film, was an out-and-out villain.
The team decided to reconceive the film's protagonist, Anna (based on Gerda), as the younger sibling of the now-misunderstood Elsa (based on the Snow Queen), effectively establishing a family dynamic.
The results can currently be seen on tv screens all over the planet...
Labels:
1940s,
Dell Comics,
disney,
fairy tale,
Fairy Tale Parade,
Frozen,
Gaylord DuBois,
Hans Christian Andersen,
Holiday Reading Room,
Lea Bing,
movie,
retro,
Snow Queen,
vintage
Tuesday, December 2, 2014
Holiday Reading Room: SNOW QUEEN "Little Robber Girl"
Kay, an innocent little boy, was affected by tiny shards of an evil mirror accidentally imbedded in his skin.
Now cruel and mean, the lad tormented his playmates, including his best friend Gerda, who, though confused by his actions, still loved Kay.
While involved in a snowball fight, Kay was swept away by the immortal Snow Queen, who took him to her ice palace.
Gerda,
worried and despondent, decided to go in search of Kay, and, after
meeting an old witch and young prince & princess, she encounters
even more danger...
Tomorrow:
Written by Gaylord Du Bois and illustrated by Lea Bing, this never-reprinted tale from Dell's Fairy Tale Parade #9 (1943) is the only comic book adaptation of the Hand Christian Andersen fairy tale that serves as the (very loose) basis of the current Disney movie Frozen!
In the late 1990s, buoyed by the incredible success of their adaptation of Hans Christian Andersen's Little Mermaid, Disney started work on an adaptation of Snow Queen, but the project was scrapped completely in late 2002, despite the fact it was headed by Glen Keane, who had directed Little Mermaid!
In the late 1990s, buoyed by the incredible success of their adaptation of Hans Christian Andersen's Little Mermaid, Disney started work on an adaptation of Snow Queen, but the project was scrapped completely in late 2002, despite the fact it was headed by Glen Keane, who had directed Little Mermaid!
The project was revived again around 2008 under the title of Anna and the Snow Queen, and was planned to be traditional cel animation.
Less
than two years later, the project was abandoned when the writers and
artists failed to find a way to make the story and the Snow Queen character "work" for a modern audience.
More tomorrow...
Labels:
1940s,
Dell Comics,
disney,
fairy tale,
Fairy Tale Parade,
Frozen,
Gaylord DuBois,
Hans Christian Andersen,
Holiday Reading Room,
Lea Bing,
movie,
retro,
Snow Queen,
vintage
Monday, December 1, 2014
Holiday Reading Room: SNOW QUEEN "Prince and the Princess"
Kay, an innocent little boy, is affected by tiny shards of an evil mirror accidentally imbedded in his skin.
Now cruel and mean, the lad torments his playmates, including his best friend Gerda, who, though confused by his actions, still loves Kay.
While involved in a snowball fight, Kay is swept away by the immortal Snow Queen, who takes him to her ice palace.
Gerda,
worried and despondent, decides to go in search of Kay, and encounters a
witch who wants to keep the girl in her enchanted garden, forever.
But,
the resourceful child escapes and encounters a talking crow who knows
of a little boy who sounds like Gerda's missing friend...
Tomorrow:
Written by Gaylord Du Bois and illustrated by Lea Bing, this never-reprinted tale from Dell's Fairy Tale Parade #9 (1943) is the only comic book adaptation of the Hand Christian Andersen fairy tale that serves as the (very loose) basis of the current Disney movie Frozen!
In fact, you may be wondering what the heck is going on since none of this plotline is in Frozen!
In 1943, Walt Disney and Samuel Goldwyn had considered the possibility of collaborating on a film biography of Hans Christian Andersen, wherein Goldwyn's studio would shoot the live-action sequences of Andersen's life and Disney would create the animated sequences.
But, due to creative differences, the project was cancelled.
In fact, you may be wondering what the heck is going on since none of this plotline is in Frozen!
In 1943, Walt Disney and Samuel Goldwyn had considered the possibility of collaborating on a film biography of Hans Christian Andersen, wherein Goldwyn's studio would shoot the live-action sequences of Andersen's life and Disney would create the animated sequences.
But, due to creative differences, the project was cancelled.
Goldwyn went on to produce his own live-action
film version in 1952, entitled Hans Christian Andersen, with Danny Kaye as Andersen.
But, the Disney studio didn't give up on adapting Andersen's stories into animation, as we will see tomorrow...
Labels:
1940s,
Dell Comics,
disney,
fairy tale,
Fairy Tale Parade,
Frozen,
Gaylord DuBois,
Hans Christian Andersen,
Holiday Reading Room,
Lea Bing,
movie,
retro,
Snow Queen,
vintage
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