Back when I was ten I laid out a quarter for Marvel Super-Heroes
No.12 (Dec.1967). A new character named Captain Marvel was making his
much hyped debut in it. The name "Captain Marvel" was magic to a comic
fan even if this version had nothing to do with the wizard Shazam. In
this origin written by Stan Lee and illustrated by Gene Colon, the reader
was introduced to a science fiction based superhero. In an interesting
twist he was a spy from an alien race called the Kree named Captain
Mar-Vell. Some of his actions however led humanity to believe he was a
hero which of course he would eventually become. And his name pronounced
in English sounded like " Marvel ". The story was continued in the next
issue which I came back for. But I stayed for the other features.
Reprinted stories from the fabulous 50s when Marvel was known as Atlas
Comics featuring Captain America, the Sub-Mariner, and the original
android Human Torch.
I guess I was a retro kind of guy even back then before I had any
idea what retro meant. I thought the art on those stories looked pretty
cool if a little bit archaic. The Captain America stories were signed
Romita. And looked sort of like Milton Caniff's work. Just a touch more
dynamic. But then this was a comic book where the emphasis was on action
and not story. I didn't think the artist was the same one who turned
Peter Parker into a teen idol after Steve Ditko left The Amazing Spider-Man.
The Sub -Mariner stories were drawn by the character's creator Bill
Everett. This was a Prince Namor that I hardly recognized. He was built
along the lines of a light-heavyweight boxing champion. And instead
of speaking like someone out of Shakespeare he spoke a sort of American
slang.
And then there was the Human Torch. Some of the stories were drawn
by Russ Heath. 'Nuff said. The stories mostly revolved around the
heroes smashing some commie plot or another.
Especially the Captain
America stories. Later we would find that this wasn't the real Captain
America*. Just a psychotic wannabe who got his hands on the super-soldier serum.
Over in Marvel Tales, Marvel's other reprint title, beginning with issue 13 and running through to issue 16 they reprinted some stories featuring Marvel Boy a sci-fi superhero from the 50s who had his stories illustrated by first Russ Heath and then Bill Everett. These reprints were my introduction to Marvel Comics of the Atom Age. Really fun stuff.
*Thanks to Roy Thomas to retro-active writing
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I loved Bill Everett's work from this era.Namor,Marvel Boy and Venus.Everything.
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