Showing posts with label Legion of Super-Heroes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Legion of Super-Heroes. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 1, 2022

POP-A-LOOZA: THE EVERLASTING FIRST! The Legion Of Super-Heroes

Each week, the pop culture website Pop-A-Looza shares some posts from my vast 'n' captivating Boppin' (Like The Hip Folks Do) archives. The latest shared post is my Everlasting First account of how I first learned about DC Comics' 30th century super team the Legion of Super-Heroes.

Was the Legion my introduction to high adventure set in the far future? It's...possible, though lemme think about this for a sec. As the Pop-A-Looza piece details, I first heard of the Legion in passing, in a text page in Superboy # 129 in 1966. That probably doesn't count, so we mark my first real (though still second-hand) exposure to the Legion to at least 1967, and then reading my first actual Legion story in 1968. The above-cited 1967 story that referenced the Legion did make it clear that these heroes were doing their colorful crusading a thousand years from now, making it evident that  '67 is my 30th century entry point. 

So: had I experienced future-set fiction prior to 1967?

I'm writing as I ponder the question, and I'm still not exactly sure. Let's check out some things I did read or see before that:

SUPERMAN 

The Man of Steel was either my first or second superhero, virtually tied with Popeye. I saw the late, great George Reeves in TV reruns of The Adventures Of Superman, and a 1965 Lois Lane 80-Page Giant is the earliest comic book I remember. But I don't recall seeing any stories set in the future. 

My first issue of World's Finest Comics (# 162), starring Superman and Batman, was a 1967 issue preceding my first view of the Legion, and it was a time travel story! But it was travel to the past, to the days of Camelot and the Knights of the Round Table. I don't think Superman provided me with my first fanciful peek at tomorrow.

FLASH GORDON

My first awareness of defender of the universe Flash Gordon was roughly contemporaneous to my indoctrination into Superman and Popeye. Reruns of chapters from the 1930s Flash Gordon movie serials were a fixture on Baron Daemon's weekday afternoon TV show in Syracuse; everyone in my neighborhood watched the Baron, so everyone in my neighborhood knew Flash Gordon. However, although Flash's exploits were certainly futuristic, they were set in the present day. (Flash Gordon's inspiration Buck Rogers was set centuries from now, but I didn't discover Buck Rogers In The 25th Century until the '70s.)

STAR TREK

Star Trek obviously took place in the future. But, although I was aware of Star Trek during is 1966-68 run, and I recall friends making references to phasers, I didn't really watch Star Trek until the '70s. I'm pretty sure I saw an episode or two during its network run, but probably after I'd read about the Legion of Super-Heroes.

TOM SWIFT

Nope. I started to read one Tom Swift novel--Tom Swift And His Outpost In Space--in the '60s, but didn't find it as interesting as my Nancy Drew books and put it aside. I guess the titular lead was Tom Swift, Jr., following in his pappy's spacebootprints, and they were probably set in the present day. My truncated Tom Swift experience occurred in the late '60s, after I was already reading about the Legion of Super-Heroes in Adventure Comics.

LOST IN SPACE

Bingo! Or at least a view of tomorrow that preceded my introduction to the Legion. At the time I was watching Lost In Space circa 1965-68, I don't think I quite grasped the concept that it took place in the far-future world of the late 1990s. I was a fan, though, and I resisted the idea of switching the channel from our local CBS affiliate Channel 5 to the ABC affiliate Channel 9 when the new Batman series became the Big Buzz show across the country. Batman aired twice a week, and its Wednesday installment was scheduled directly opposite Lost In Space. In fact, I recall wailing in protest when my brother insisted we were going to watch Batman instead of Lost In Space.

I, um, got over it. And adjusted. And then some...!

ASTRO BOY

Baron Daemon also showed Astro Boy cartoons, a Japanese import that I just adored. More than I liked Flash Gordon, and I liked Flash Gordon just fine. I don't remember whether or not these cartoons were supposed to take place in the future; I'll Google that in a moment. If so, Astro Boy was likely my doorway to the world to come; if not, it was riveting and futuristic nonetheless. Now! Let's go the Google....

ANSWER: The original Astro Boy series was set in 2013, which is now the past, but was off in the future when Baron Daemon showed me those cartoons. We have a winner!

THE JETSONS

Wait, except for The Jetsons. Duh. Completely forgot about George Jetson, his boy Elroy, daughter Judy, Jane his wife, robot domestic Rosie, crusty skinflint boss Mr. Spacely, and trusty canine companion Astro (née Tralfaz). But yeah, before the Legion, Lost In Space, or even Astro Boy, the future started with The Jetsons. For me, anyway.

There were more views of the future awaiting me, of course, from Magnus: Robot Fighter to some episodes of This Is Us. That's the very nature of the future: more to come! One of my favorite futures involved a group of super-powered teens battling evil in the 30th century. My introduction to the Legion of Super-Heroes is the latest Boppin' Pop-A-Looza.

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This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & Carl airs Sunday nights from 9 to Midnight Eastern, on the air in Syracuse at SPARK! WSPJ 103.3 and 93.7 FM, and on the web at http://sparksyracuse.org/ You can read about our history here.

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Saturday, March 7, 2020

POP-A-LOOZA: Superboy # 129



Every Friday, the pop culture website Pop-A-Looza runs a post from my vast 'n' captivating Boppin' (Like The Hip Folks Do) archives. This week's shared post is a Comic Book Retroview look back at 1966, coverless or stripped-cover comic books, my discovery of The Legion Of Super-Heroes, and my cherished copy of a DC Comics 80-Page Giant, Superboy # 129.That comic book meant an awful lot to me when I was six, and you can read my Pop-A-Looza recollection of it here.

If you're interested in reading about how my interest in the Legion developed after that introduction, I direct you to my piece The Everlasting First: The Legion Of Super-Heroes. For a longer and deeper dive into my fascination with DC Comics and reprints in the early '70s, you can also read my personal history of DC 100-Page Super Spectaculars



(And on the subject of coverless comic books, look for the debut of Coverless Comics Cavalcade in the very near future. I still have a bunch of 'em.)



But right now, it's Boppin' Pop-A-Looza time, with the Boy of Steel and his older brother, Mon-El: Pop-A-Looza presents Comic Book Retroview: Superboy # 129.



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Friday, May 24, 2019

100-Page FAKES! presents: ADVENTURE COMICS # 452

100-Page FAKES! imagines mid-1970s DC 100-Page Super Spectaculars that never were...but should have been!


This was Aquaman's final appearance in Adventure Comics. And I've always hated it. SPOILERS follow below.

This issue would have hit the racks at Gold Star Pharmacy in North Syracuse in June of 1977. I was 17, soon to graduate from high school. I was still reading and loving my comic books, though my burgeoning interest in rock 'n' roll was beginning to outpace my ongoing 
passion for superheroes. I was about to discover punk rock, and I was about to get a girl (and then another girl, but that's a story for elsewhere). I didn't know it at the time, but I was about a year or so away from giving up on comics entirely. That's also a story for elsewhere.

Adventure Comics # 452 didn't really factor into my eventual estrangement from comics; I hated it on its own merit. This was the issue where Aquaman's infant son Arthur Curry, Jr.--Aquababy--perished at the hands of Aquaman's arch enemy Black Manta.

A baby dying in a freakin' escapist superhero comic book? Sorry. The hell with that.

Jim Aparo's artwork was gorgeous. Jim Aparo's artwork was always gorgeous. But I found the story's result so unpalatable, so wrong, that I could never embrace it on any level. I tried to address this make-believe tragedy in my own years-later sequel The Undersea World Of Mr. Freeze, but I couldn't undo it. I hated this story. I don't remember whether or not I followed Aquaman into his own solo title afterward--perhaps hoping that DC would erase this stupid plot decision--but if I did, I didn't stick around for long. 

Which makes me something of a hypocrite. About a year before this, I'd written an absolutely awful Batman story called "Nightmare Resurrection," which also included the death of a child, and concluded with The Batman standing by in cold observance as the killer met a painful and grisly end. Brrr. Edgy. I beat the mad parade of grim 'n' gritty comics by several years.

I disavow it now.

Because superheroes should be wish fulfillment. Win or lose, one would expect justice to triumph to some degree, one would expect the innocent to be saved, for innocence to be saved. There will be exceptions--Roger Stern's brilliant 1984 story "The Kid Who Collected Spider-Man" springs to mind as a particularly emotional and effective example--but c'mon...! In superhero stories, we're asked to believe a man can fly, that a guy in an orange and green costume can breath and even speak naturally under water, that the fantastic and the impossible are everyday occurrences, but it's a stretch to think these fairy tales could have a happily ever after? Bah. I'm aware of how the origins of many of our favorite heroes were rooted in tragedy--the destruction of Krypton and the subsequent deaths of Ma and Pa Kent, the murders of Thomas and Martha Wayne, et al.--but I still think a super-villain murdering an infant does not fall within my parameters for entertainment.

Yeah. I hated this issue.

Let's rearrange those Titanic deck chairs with the addition of some reprints starring various characters who appeared in Adventure Comics over the years: Supergirl, Bizarro, The Shining Knight (drawn by Frank Frazetta), and Superboy, who reclaims the top spot in Adventure Comics with the next issue. A Super-centric (Krypto-centric?) selection leaves no room for Green Arrow, Starman, Johnny Quick, Manhunter, The Spectre, Sandman and Sandy, The Vigilante, Hourman, Genius Jones, Black Canary, or any of the other stars of Adventure Comics, but I hope you enjoy it nonetheless. Roll credits:

Aquaman and Aqualad in "Dark Destiny, Deadly Dreams," Adventure Comics # 452 (July-August 1977)
Supergirl in "Now...Comes Zond," Adventure Comics # 397 (September 1970)
The Shining Knight in "The Flying Horse Swindle!," Adventure Comics # 161 (February 1951)
Bizarro in "Bizarro's Secret Identity!," Adventure Comics # 288 (September 1961)The Legion Of Super-Heroes in "The Stolen Super-Powers!," Adventure Comics # 304 (January 1963)Superboy in "The End Of The Kent Family," Adventure Comics # 229 (October 1956)

All characters copyright DC Comics Inc., and depicted here only in sample pages. I share the whole book with my subscribers. A tip of the Boppin' lid to Steven Thompson's fab Days Of Adventure blog as a resource for this edition's Supergirl, Shining Knight, Legion Of Super-Heroes stories. And as we leave Aquaman and Adventure Comics behind, 100-Page FAKES! will turn its spotlight back to Detective Comics, and one of the single greatest Batman stories ever published.


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Our new compilation CD This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio, Volume 4 is now available from Kool Kat Musik! 29 tracks of irresistible rockin' pop, starring Pop Co-OpRay PaulCirce Link & Christian NesmithVegas With Randolph Featuring Lannie FlowersThe SlapbacksP. HuxIrene PeñaMichael Oliver & the Sacred Band Featuring Dave MerrittThe RubinoosStepford KnivesThe Grip WeedsPopdudesRonnie DarkThe FlashcubesChris von SneidernThe Bottle Kids1.4.5.The SmithereensPaul Collins' BeatThe Hit SquadThe RulersThe Legal MattersMaura & the Bright LightsLisa Mychols, and Mr. Encrypto & the Cyphers. You gotta have it, so order it here. A digital download version (minus The Smithereens' track) is also available from Futureman Records.
















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