Showing posts with label photonovel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label photonovel. Show all posts

Sunday, October 14, 2012

Captain's Library: SON OF FRANKENSTEIN!

Most aficionados are familiar with the 1960s Dell comics that adapted the Universal Monsters...
...but many don't know that only one comic adaptation was produced during the first run of the films in the 1940s!
This fumetti/photonovel version of Son of Frankenstein (1939) appeared in DC Comics' Movie Comics #1 (1939).
(Another adaptation from this comic series, The Phantom Creeps, appeared on this blog HERE.)

Using photographs was certainly one way around the problem of getting an exact likeness of the actors!
The design/compositing/additional art was done by Jack Adler, a production artist/illustrator who rose thru the ranks and eventually became DC Comics' Production Manager/Vice President of Production, innovating a number of printing techniques that became standard comics practices.
The writer of the adaptation is unknown.

We hope you're enjoying our contribution to the Countdown to Halloween Blogathon!
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Tuesday, July 31, 2012

Captain's Library & Theatre: STAGECOACH

Nobody personified Western movies like John Wayne.
Stagecoach (1939) was his breakout film, after a series of roles in b-movies and serials.
This landmark flick was immortalized in print with a unique fumetti-style adaptation in DC Comics' Movie Comics #2 (1939).
Stagecoach was even the cover feature with a picture of star...
 ...Andy Devine???
 (Who also got top billing in the adaptation)
Movie Comics ran for six issues, adapting everything from Westerns to romances to science fiction.
Using photographs was certainly one way around the problem of getting an exact likeness of the actors (as we showed you HERE with Movie Comics' adaptation of Phantom Creeps which used the same fumetti-format)!
The design/compositing/additional art was done by Jack Adler, a production artist/illustrator who rose thru the ranks and eventually became DC Comics' Production Manager/Vice President of Production, innovating a number of techniques that became standard comics practices.
The writer of the adaptation is unknown.

Here's a fascinating piece called Screen Scoops featuring tidbits about the actors from the various movies adapted in that issue of Movie Comics...
Art and script by Walter Galli
Remember, there was no Internet, DVDs, VCRs, or even TV, so the only way to see these movies was in the theater, and once they finished their runs, they were gone! until they were re-released, usually every 4-5 years after their premiere showings.
Adaptations in other media, including radio and comic books were used to promote the movies and were released either just before the movie opened for its' initial run, or when it was re-issued to second-run theaters.
Besides this comic, there was a radio adaptation done for the Screen Directors Playhouse in 1949, during the movie's re-release.
Reprising their roles on radio were John Wayne (Ringo Kid) and Claire Trevor (Dallas), along with Ward Bond (Doc Boone, played in the movie by Thomas Mitchell)
You can play that radio show by clicking HERE!
Plus, you can compare the adaptations with the film itself...

Catch the flick on TCM, August 1st at 9:15 am (ET)!

There's lots more John Wayne (and other stars) stuff during the  
2012 TCM Summer Under the Stars Blogathon!
For a plethora of posts (and info on how you can participate) check out ScribeHard on Film and/or Sitting on a Backyard Fence for details!

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Tuesday, August 2, 2011

50's Monster Mash Blogathon: PHANTOM CREEPS

Graphic by Rachel Hood. Adapted from ROBOT MONSTER.
In the 1950s, Universal Pictures took a number of its movie serials and re-edited them into 75-80 minute features for television.
For example
  • Buck Rogers serial was condensed into Planet Outlaws
  • Flash Gordon became two features: RocketShip and SpaceShip Into the Unknown.
  • Flash Gordon's Trip to Mars was edited into Mars Attacks the World.
  • Flash Gordon Conquers the Universe became Purple Death from Outer Space.
Some serials like Green Hornet retained their title for the feature film version.
So did The Phantom Creeps.
It was this version I first saw in the early 1960s on Saturday afternoons on WNEW in New York.

BTW, the title refers to the giant robot, The Phantom, not a group of phantom people or beings called "Creeps" or a villain called "The Phantom"!
Phantom Creeps stars Bela Lugosi in his final serial appearance, once more as a villain.
(His previous serial role was as the heroic Chandu the Magician in The Return of Chandu, which was also released as two features in the 1950s.  Universal Pictures sure knew the meaning of "repurposing"!)
Here, he plays Dr Alec Zorka, a genius who has developed numerous super-science devices including a near-invulnerable giant robot, an invisibility device, and a suspended-animation raygun!
With both the US government and various "foreign powers" attempting to acquire his weaponry, it's literally "Zorka Against the World", with the mad scientist holding the advantage since the Americans both want to capture him alive and prevent both the scientist and his devices from ending up in enemy hands!
You'll note that some pics from this film have Lugosi clean-shaven, and others (left) show him with a beard.
There are two reasons for this..
1) Lugosi's character shaves his beard midway through the film.
2) It was done in order to match stock footage taken from Universal's feature The Invisible Ray, where Lugosi played another scientist, but with a beard.
Along with stock footage, the serial borrowed props, sets, costumes, and music from earlier genre features (A common practice to keep costs down).
Interestingly, when a comic adaptation of the serial was done, the artists (who were using a weird combination of photos and illustrations in a semi-fumetti,) kept the beard on him for the entire story!
C'mon, admit it, that was kool, although it is a severe abridgement of the serial script (and pretty close to the feature film version)!
The design for The Phantom was so unique that, unlike most other robots of the era, he never appeared in another live-action movie, either in new or stock footage!
However, Rob Zombie loved the robot so much he built a duplicate, which has appeared on-stage during his concerts and in the video for his single, "Dragula"
Zombie also "recast" The Phantom as Murray the Robot, transformable cybernetic aide to Susi-X in his animated feature Haunted World of El Superbeasto!
He didn't have that gun in Phantom Creeps!
Both the original Phantom Creeps serial and feature are available on inexpensive DVD, or free at YouTube, and the Internet Archive.
Since it's PD, the source prints are pretty battered, but still watchable and very entertaining.

I hope you enjoyed my contribution to the Blogathon.
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