Sunday, September 18, 2022

Gruesome Graphic Invitations for Halloween!

If you're going to do a party on October 31st (It's on Monday this year!) or the weekend before, you'll want to create the right mood by sending out an appropriate invitation to your ghoulish get-together!
That's where we at Atomic Kommie Comics™ can help you set the right macabre mood!
Using classic comic book covers and movie posters, we've given you a plethora of perverse pictures to choose from with a dozen different, demonic, invitations as 8-packs of postcards and/or 10-packs of note cards and greeting cards ranging from G-rated to PG-13 to suit every need! (The one above is PG).

So have a look and order NOW!
The later you place your order, the greater the chance that your treat could turn into a missed-deadline trick!

Saturday, September 17, 2022

Space Heroine Saturdays TARA "Outlaw of the Universe!"

An origin story, or as we say in comics "Who She Is and How She Came to Be"!

And it hasn't been reprinted since initial publication in Nedor's Wonder Comics #15 (1947)
Yes, I said #15, even though the cover by Alex Schomberg (aka "Xela") is from #16!
I'll explain later...
Tara continued in Wonder Comics until the book was cancelled, then popped over to fellow Nedor title Thrilling Comics for her final appearance!
You'll be seeing another chapter of her saga once a month as part of Space Heroine Saturdays!
As to why the cover for the next issue is used here:
1) the cover for #15 featured a different character.
2) The cover used on #16 actually shows a situation from this issue (#15)!

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Tara: Queen of the Space Pirates

Friday, September 16, 2022

Friday Fun GROOVY: The Marvel Comic You NEVER Saw!

Until the 1970s, Marvel Comics was owned by Martin Goodman, who also published lots of non-comics magazines!

In 1968, Marvel switched newsstand distributors and could finally expand the number of titles it had on the racks and spinners from only 11 per month to...whatever the market could bear!
Publisher Martin Goodman decided to do "corporate synergy" decades before it became a buzzword!
He would take comic panels from his b/w magazines, color them, and package them in a comic book-sized anthology!
Note that, despite being distributed with Marvel's comics, none of the Marvel creative crew worked on this project!
What could go wrong?
A lot!
Groovy was racked with the comics, since it was comic book-sized!
But the adult audience (who bought the material in magazines) rarely (if ever) even looked at comics racks and spinners!
Even adding a Marvel logo to the cover didn't help sales.
#3 was the final issue!
Next Friday, we'll provide some examples of the material that appeared inside.

Thursday, September 15, 2022

Reading Room WORLDS UNKNOWN "Farewell to the Master" Conclusion

We Have Already Seen...
Reporter Cliff Sutherland and photographer Ann O'Hara may be on to the scoop of the century.

An alien robot, which went inert after Klaatu (the alien humanoid it accompanied) was shot and killed (without provocation) when he tried to initiate contact with people of Earth isn't as unmoving as the government believes!
The duo conceal themselves nearby, hoping to catch the automaton in motion...which they do!
They witness the robot enter the alien vessel...which sealed up and apparently deactivated after Klaatu was killed.
And now things get really weird...
Cue the Twilight Zone theme...
The original story by Harry Bates appeared in Street and Smith's Astounding Science Fiction V26N2 (1940) with the following illustrations by Frank Kramer...all of which feature Gnut!
"Farewell to the Master" has been reprinted numerous times, usually in anthologies about Astounding Science-Fiction magazine, or compilations of stories which were adapted into films or TV shows.
But the graphic adaptation from Marvel's Worlds Unknown #3 (1973) has never been reprinted, and no other comic book/comic strip version has ever been done!
However, there was another prose adaptation of the short story...
This book, written by Arthur Tofte, published by Scholastic Books in 1976, combined "Farewell to the Master" with the screenplay for the 1951 movie into a new novel which presents Klaatu and a rather verbose Gnut (not "Gort") as a pair of equal partners, representing their respective civilizations within a galactic organization calling themselves "The Watchers"!
Finally, Lux Radio Theatre produced a one-hour radio adaptation in 1954, narrated by Paul Frees and starring Michael Rennie as Klaatu!
Regrettably, it doesn't use Bernard Herrmann's magnificent soundtrack but it's still worth listening to.
You can link to it HERE!

Wednesday, September 14, 2022

Wednesday Worlds of Wonder BOMBA THE JUNGLE BOY "Nightmare!" Part 1

Previously; Bomba's best friend was killed by the insidious Krag...

...when the duo stopped him from trying to conquer the Earth as he did millennia ago!
But Krag is not the only enemy the Jungle Boy will face...
Thus, this never-reprinted conflict from DC's Bomba the Jungle Boy #7 (1969) is joined!
Be here next Wednesday as Bomba fights his final (in more ways than one) battle!