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!

Tuesday, July 5, 2016

Noel Neill (1920-2016)

She was a newspaperman's daughter in real life...
Kirk Alyn (Clark Kent/Superman) and Noel Neill (Lois Lane) in Superman (1948)
...and she ended up playing the most famous newspaperwoman in fiction on both the movie and TV screens!
Noel Neill (Lois Lane) and George Reeeves (Clark Kent/Superman) in The Adventures of Superman (1950s)
I had the pleasure of meeting Ms Neill in Cleveland, at the 1988 International Superman Expo (celebrating Superman's 50th Anniversary), and she was absolutely delightful and gracious, the very model of what we used to call, in the pre-PC days, a "classy lady".
Trivia: Noel and Phyllis Coates (who was the first TV Lois Lane, both appeared in in the B-movie Rocket Attack U.S.A. (1952), but had no scenes together.

Monday, July 4, 2016

Safety Tip from the Fighting Yank on the 4th of July...

Here's the word, kids, from the Fighting Yank himself...
Art by Mort Meskin
...from the final issue of his 1940s series, Standard's Fighting Yank #29 (1949)
Art by Alex Schomburg
And here's the patriotic cover from that issue!

Sunday, July 3, 2016

Design of the Week Redux: LOVE ON THE BEACH

Each week, we post a limited-edition design, to be sold for exactly 7 days, then replaced with another, unless it's both timely and selling really well, like this one.
It's romance on the sands and under the Moon in this vintage 1970s romance comic book cover by Nick Cardy.
Available on all sorts of kool kollectibles from t-shirts and pajamas to mugs and beach blankets HERE.