When I first heard of the controversy involving the creation of Spider-Man's costume and Halloween costume designer Ben Cooper I was quite stunned. To be fair there is a superficial resemblance between the Spider Man costume created by Cooper's company in the 1950s and the one familiar to comic book readers.
But I always assumed that Steve Ditko's inspiration was the costume Warren Hull wore in the two Spider serials for Columbia , based on the popular pulp magazine hero. And this costume bore no resemblance to the one the character wore in the pulps. But to me if a character has "spider" any place in his name he (or she) should have some sort of webbing on their costume. If anything Ditko's mask looked like that of Mexican wrestling icon el Santo. Only in red and covered with black webbing. Which makes me wonder if Ditko was a fan of lucha libre. After all the first person Peter Parker takes on after gaining his spider powers in Amazing Fantasy No.15 (August 1962) is pro wrestler Crusher Hogan.
If you've ever seen a Ditko-drawn fight scene you can't help but marvel at how the two protagonists look like acrobatic wrestlers in action. That's why for years I could readily imagine Ditko illustrating comic book adaptations of el Santo's and Blue Demon's movies. Or adaptations of Mil Mascaras movies while working in a tag-team with Wally Wood inking his pencils. Also a number of characters created or co-created by Ditko wore masks that would have done any luchador proud. In fact the villain in Beware The Creeper No.1 (June 1968) not only has a pretty cool mask. But talks about his physical training. The same type a champion luchador may have undergone.
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Hmmm.Trained in judo.
ReplyDeleteAs far as I'm concerned BEWARE THE CREEPER No.1 is one of the great super-hero noir stories ever put on paper.
ReplyDeleteAfter seeing pictures of the Ben Cooper 1950s Spider Man costume, I wondered if maybe Ditko, given the story and name for this new character Spider-Man, might have recalled seeing a kid in a relatable costume years previous and drew upon some of the details he could remember...mainly the webbing pattern, the eyes. Or, if he was like many artists of the time, did he keep clippings from magazines and newspapers to call upon for ideas and references. Since the Cooper ads were pretty prevalent in newspapers, could he have saved an old Halloween ad and used it as a Spider-reference? Or is it just one of those coincidences of two different people confronted with a character name thinking creatively along similar lines?
ReplyDeleteDitko drew Battlemania, a WWE tie-in, for Valiant. The "rasslers" were moving like Ditko's superhero fight scenes. Ditko a wrestling fan? I say "yes". https://ditko.blogspot.com/2009/03/battlemania-5-1992.html
ReplyDeleteI would say Kirby and maybe Stan Lee were 'rassling fans as well.Pro wrestlers turn up in many early Marvel Age comics.Most notably Unus the Untouchable.
DeleteSpider-Man's EYES...
ReplyDeletehttp://4.bp.blogspot.com/-FDUW-pXpwj0/ToSn9Os1FFI/AAAAAAAAAI4/Vfu3iauXGNs/s1600/GR1+09.jpg