Showing posts with label comics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label comics. Show all posts

Sunday, August 28, 2022

Tuesday, March 30, 2021

Captain's Library & Theatre KING KONG "Kong meets P T Bunkum"

With a new King Kong movie featuring him and some other big guy hitting screens tomorrow...
...we're going to have a look at the only comic book story based on the first King Kong animated series from 1966...

...which was an indirect sequel to the first match-up of the two kaiju titans!

The animated series then led to another (Godzilla-less) Kong feature film...

...using elements from the animated series including the villain, Doctor Who!
the animated version
the live action version
No, not the BBC's Time Lord...
...but a decidedly-hammy human villain!
Two interesting American-Japanese links to the tv series and movie.
1) The series, though produced by Rankin-Bass was animated by Toei Animation, making it the first anime specifically-produced for America!
2) The movie was a co-production of Rankin-Bass and Toho Studios., using characters and plot elements from the cartoon series including Doctor Who and MechaniKong!
Though it uses King Kong, it is not a sequel to King Kong vs Godzilla, and no reference is made to events of the earlier film.
Now, back to the comic...
While the writer is unknown (and the story may be adapted from one of the episodes), the art is believed to be penciled by Sol Brodsky and John Verpoorten and inked by Frank Giacoia.
If those names seem familiar, it's because the one-shot comic this tale appeared in, America's Best TV Comics (1967), was packaged by Marvel for ABC!
Besides abridged reprints of Fantastic FourSpider-Man, and Casper tales, the 68-page comic featured the first (and only) strips based on the animated Journey to the Center of the EarthKing Kong, as well as George of the Jungle's first comic book appearance!
Please support Secret Sanctum of Captain Video
Visit Amazon and Order...
and
King Kong
Vol 2
Your Kaiju Film Collection Isn't Complete Without Them!

Thursday, July 2, 2020

Captain's Library MAD MAGAZINE Carl Reiner's "A Saw Screams at Midnight"

Behind the cover of MAD #30 (1956) which is as appropriate today as it was then...
...lurks the only known comic book work by the late, great Carl Reiner (1922-2020)!
The book this never-reprinted two-page piece excerpts is A Saw Screams at Midnight (1956)...
...attributed to "G A Mills".
Oddly, "Mills" never wrote anything else, so it's likely this was a joint project by some (or all) the Hail Caesar writing staff (which Reiner was a member of) or Reiner himself.
Trivia: this is one of a half-dozen features that are not included in the Totally MAD cd-roms that otherwise have everything else in every issue of MAD Magazine (not the earlier color comic) up to when it was released in early 1999, so when we say "never-reprinted", we mean it!
BTW, Carl was a patriot to the end...as THIS VIDEO will attest!
Don't let Carl be forgotten...
Please Support
Secret Sanctum of Captain Video
Visit Amazon and Order...

Tuesday, October 10, 2017

Happy 60th Anniversary, Zorro!

Sixty years ago today...
...Walt Disney unleashed his version of the already-legendary Zorro on America, creating a phenomenon equal to Davy Crockett-mania several years earlier!
Check out his premiere in both comics and tv HERE!
Please Support Secret Sanctum of Captain Video!
Visit Amazon and Order...
&

Thursday, March 9, 2017

Captain's Library & Theatre KING KONG "meets P T Bunkum"

With a new King Kong movie hitting screens tomorrow...
...we're going to have a look at the only comic based on the first King Kong animated series from 1966...

An animated series that also lead to another King Kong film...

...using elements from the animated series including the villain, Doctor Who!
the animated version
the live action version
No, not the BBC's Time Lord...
...but a decidedly-hammy human villain!
Two interesting American-Japanese links to the tv series and movie.
1) The series, though produced by Rankin-Bass was animated by Toei Animation, making it the first anime specifically-produced for America!
2) The movie was a co-production of Rankin-Bass and Toho Studios., using characters and plot elements from the cartoon series including Doctor Who and MechaniKong!
Though it uses King Kong, it is not a sequel to King Kong vs Godzilla, and no reference is made to events of the earlier film.
Now, back to the comic...
While the writer is unknown (and the story may be adapted from one of the episodes), the art is believed to be penciled by Sol Brodsky and John Verpoorten and inked by Frank Giacoia.
If those names seem familiar, it's because the one-shot comic this tale appeared in, America's Best TV Comics (1967), was packaged by Marvel for ABC!
Besides abridged reprints of Fantastic Four, Spider-Man, and Casper tales, the 68-page comic featured the first (and only) strips based on the animated Journey to the Center of the Earth, King Kong, as well as George of the Jungle's first comic book appearance!
Please support Secret Sanctum of Captain Video
Visit Amazon and Order...
King Kong
Vol 1
and
King Kong
Vol 2

Monday, September 5, 2016

Secrets of the TV Green Hornet and Kato

On January 12, 1966, Batman debuted on ABC to absolutely astounding ratings!
The whole country went "Bat-Mad"!
Anything and everything comics-oriented sold like crazy!
Radio syndicator Charles Michelson quickly put together a package of old superhero radio shows including The Shadow, Superman (which featured Batman as a guest-star), The Lone Ranger, and The Green Hornet and marketed them to local radio stations (where, in some cases, ratings doubled) as well as issuing them on LP record albums (which sold well).
Cover to one of the 1960s LP albums re-presenting classic radio adventures
Meanwhile, ABC told Batman producer William Dozier they wanted MORE comic/super-hero shows.
Dozier had been listening to the re-issued radio shows and decided The Green Hornet would make a good follow-up to Batman, despite the fact that the last new radio show aired in 1952, and the last new comic (which we presented HERE) was published in 1953!
(Batman had been continually-published since 1939.)
But audience response to the radio show re-runs, especially among adults (who remembered the show) and college students (who were discovering it) was good, so Dozier felt it was worth a try...
Art by Gil Kane
Both Dozier and original Hornet creator George Trendle felt the "camp" approach used on Batman would be inappropriate.
Trendle pointed out that doing a "straight" version of his other character, The Lone Ranger, resulted in a long-running TV show and two successful feature films!
So ABC agreed to do it their way...but with some "updating".
Art by Dan Spiegle
The Hornet's mode of transport, Black Beauty, was upgraded from just being a really fast car to a really fast bulletproof car with, among other things, a flying TV camera, knockout gas projectors, and lethal rocket launchers.
The Hornet retained his knockout-gas gun, but added an ultrasonic "Hornet Sting", which quickly became his primary weapon.
The Hornet's costume, as described in the radio show and shown in Golden Age comics included a full-face mask that would've required expensive and time-consuming redubbing whenever the character spoke, so it was modified to be a standard domino mask covering just the upper half of the face (see pic at top of page).
Since Batman worked with a police commissioner, The Hornet's police commissioner liaison became District Attorney Frank Scanlon (who, unlike Batman's Commissioner Gordon, knew The Hornet's secret identity and that he wasn't the criminal he pretended to be.)
In a compromise, there were no costumed super-villains, but the gangsters could use cutting-edge technology and unique weapons, like a radio-controlled leopard or a laser gun.
Art by Gil Kane
Dozier himself promoted the differences between the two shows in a promo shown only to TV station owners (note the two different Hornet logos that weren't used in the final version)...

(Note: near the end of the show's run, there was an attempt to introduce more flamboyant enemies including a cloaked assassin and a mad scientist pretending to be an alien invader.)

ABC also insisted that "Flight of the Bumblebee" was too dated to be used as the show's theme. Dozier brought in jazz musician Billy May, who had previously done music for TV shows like Naked City, to compose an updated version.
With trumpeter Al Hirt performing, the new theme became the show's signature element, recognizable almost 50 years later...


The Green Hornet debuted on September 9th, 1966 to solid (but not Batman-level) ratings.
On-set photo from the Batman episode "Batman's Satisfaction"
Despite several promotional stunts, including an appearance on Batman as a "visiting hero" (even though everyone, including Batman, thought the Hornet was a villain), the show was cancelled after only one year.
It found a new home in reruns, which are must-see viewing, since the series is not available on VHS/DVD/BluRay!
Though Encore Action Channel, SyFy, and MeTV all re-ran the show over the past decade, none is currently airing it!
Why?

Ironically, since there wasn't a Green Hornet comic book at the time, a new series (based on the TV show) from Gold Key (the premier publisher of Silver Age movie/TV tie-in comics) hit newsstands in late 1966.
Our "brother" RetroBlog, Hero Histories, will be presenting remastered versions of all three issues over the next three weeks beginning Wednesday.
But be HERE this Friday, as we begin a complete re-presentation of The Green Hornet, with each episode presented exactly 50 years after it aired on ABC!
Special Bonus: Want to see what a Green Hornet tv show might have looked like if it had been done in the late 1940s-early 1950s, while the radio show was on?
Click HERE to find out!