Coming to the end of another fortnight, so here's my wrapup.
Robb_K, thank you for the info on Cambridge House. I was hoping for that.
A police chief of a US city back in 1945 (or any period) does and did not have the legal authority to deny or remove a license to operate as a private detective in that city.
That quite surprises me. I read a lot of Private Eye fiction and that constitutes a threat held over the private eye in a significant number of stories.
I'm going to limit my comments to Star Studded comics, since that was the book I was primarily interested in.
This is a book with a lot of one-off stories of characters [I think] most of which are interesting enough that they could have led into regular series. Which makes me curious as to why there are only a sum total of first issues of 4 titles.
Can't help feeling that there is a story there somewhere.
So..... With what we've got.....
Ghost Woman.I like the splash. Not often you see a splash of a woman facing down 3 horrible monsters. Makes me want to read more straightaway.
Page 2. Obviously she was alive until the car went over and is now a spirit, but you have to stop and look again to make it clear, because you never see here before she dies.
I like a story that is minimal and gets straight into the action and doesn't spell everything out verbally and tediously. The art is primitive but the artist is a great visual story-teller. On the other hand the dialogue is so sparse that some story elements are unclear.
I also liked the colouring.
Red Rogue. As Crash wrote, 'boasts another appealing Charles Voight art job.'
The first page doesn't make a lot of sense.
the second page panel 4 is another example of Voight's tendency to draw characters well out of proportion with the environment. I think that details like this and the fact that Red Rogue's costume is ridiculous are indications that Charles Voight was signaling that, even tho his work is good, he just can't take this stuff seriously. And that element of irony is what I like about his work.
This is a straight-forward mystery, so why did he need to put on a costume to solve it?
It also makes no sense that he dives off the roof into a swimming pool when all he had to do was stand on the roof and untangle the bolas. Despite all this, I enjoyed it.
Captain Combat "Just who are you supposed to be?"
"One of those comic heroes the kids are so crazy about. I'm supposed to be Captain Combat."
And then he overhears guys plotting a crime and plays Captain Combat for real.
Must be a few character creators thinking, 'Why didn't I think of that?' It's PD guys. Go for it.
The big surprise for me, is that he stands the girl up, but never gets back to her at all.
Commandette [credited to Nina Albright.]
This is pretty much a female version of Captain Combat - Actress plays 'Commandette' but does all her own stunts, gets involved in Murder plot, stays in costume, solves it and exposes the villain.
I believe all these stories are from the same writer.
In all three cases, he jumps straight into the action, uses so little dialogue and is so abrupt, you almost have to fill in the missing bits in your head.
And we get two female, no nonsense heroines.
It was fun, made me have to think a little, Could quibble and criticise, but I liked it.
And now,
As
Lee Falk used to say,
Tomorrow - New Adventure!