Wednesday, May 1, 2019

THE MAN OF MYSTERY by Dave Goode

THE MAN OF MYSTERY

by Dave Goode

When I first started collecting (saving) comics back in the early 1960s I was lucky enough to live next door for about three years to a kid who read comics. But never saved them. This gave me extra comics that I could trade. And other comics that I never had to buy. One of these comics was FLY MAN No.31 (May 1965). The Fly Man was originally a character called The Fly who was created by Joe Simon and Jack Kirby. This comic book introduced me to several characters that were new to me. In the course of the story the Fly Man teamed up with the Shield, who I immediately pegged as a Captain America imitation. Little did I know at this time in my life the reality. And there was the Comet, a sci-fi superhero in an ugly green and orange costume. And then there was the Black Hood, a  "man of mystery" on a flying robot horse named "Nightmare". To this day I can't put my finger why, but I thought the Black Hood was neat. Maybe it's because the other heroes in this comic were super-powered. And I always liked heroes who didn't have "powers and abilities far beyond those of mortal man".

 
I started trading for back issues of The Fly that featured the Black Hood. I would later find out that the Black Hood character came from the Golden Age of Comics. He debuted in Top Notch Comics No. 9 (October 1940). He was the creation of Harry Shorten and Al Camy who was the original artist on the feature. Shorten was a  pretty interesting character himself. Writer, editor and publisher Shorten played halfback for the NYU football team. He earned a degree in geology there before going on to a brief career in pro football. Aside from creating the Black Hood he co-created that Shield character with Irv Novick. And I would find out that character actually pre-dated Captain America. He also created the long-running single panel comic There Oughta Be A Law with illustrator Al Fagaly. Later Shorten would become the publisher of Midwood Books. A publishing house that produced adult, but not pornographic books.
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
The Black Hood was Police Officer Kip Burland who was framed for a crime he didn't commit by a criminal mastermind known as the Skull. Burland would be trained by a mysterious hermit known as the Hermit (you have to love the Golden Age) and fights crime as the Black Hood as he attempts to clear his name. I've never read the original origin story. But I wonder if part of his training regimen involved judo and jiu jitsu. I'm sure he must have used the seo nage technique at least once in the course of his Golden Age adventures.
 




















During the Silver Age of Comics the Black Hood would be Archie Comics No.2 martial arts hero after Bobby Bell of the Young Shields of America Club. But where Bell gave judo and jiu jitsu lessons in the pages of The Fly. The Black Hood taught karate basics in the pages of The Fly and The Jaguar.

 






















His martial arts skills would serve him well when in Mighty Comics No.42 (January 1966) he faces off against a villain known as the Karate Master in a story written by Jerry Siegel, the co-creator of Superman, and drawn by Paul Reinman. And no Karate Master doesn't have the same ring as Judo Master.





CLICK THE IMAGE BELOW TO GET YOUR COPY OF DR. JUDO!


http://www.indyplanet.us/dr-judo-1/




https://www.teepublic.com/t-shirt/2830210-dr-judo-yin-yang?store_id=140005
CLICK THE PICTURE TO GET YOUR
DR. JUDO T-SHIRT TODAY
 
 

No comments:

Post a Comment