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Re: Fulgor series 2 - 3 - Piraten In Het Wereldruim

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topic icon Author Topic: Re: Fulgor series 2 - 3 - Piraten In Het Wereldruim  (Read 912 times)

crashryan

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Re: Fulgor series 2 - 3 - Piraten In Het Wereldruim
« on: September 22, 2024, 10:37:02 PM »

Interesting to see a Dutch comic in color. What is the page size of "Lilliput" comics? This seems larger than the landscape-format comics. I don't recognize the artist. It's interesting to see how he swiped the spaceship, much of his equipment design, and many poses from Mac Raboy's Flash Gordon, circa 1951, after that strip had morphed from a Mongo fantasy adventure into an outer space strip. The artist doesn't use Raboy's signature fabric folds, making the source less obvious. He also mostly uses his own faces, though Raboy shows through in many profile and 3/4 rear shots.

Link to the comment: Fulgor series 2 - 3 - Piraten In Het Wereldruim
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Robb_K

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Re: Fulgor series 2 - 3 - Piraten In Het Wereldruim
« Reply #1 on: September 23, 2024, 02:02:22 AM »


Interesting to see a Dutch comic in color. What is the page size of "Lilliput" comics? This seems larger than the landscape-format comics. I don't recognize the artist.

The publisher, Walter Lehning, lists this book as a "Liliput" mini-comic, butas you surmise, it is larger than the earlier "Liliiput" Fulgor, Akim, Blauwe Pijl, and Jezab single-tier 1 or 2-panel, horizontally-oriented mini-comics that were about 22 cm long and 8.5 cm wide. It is also larger and taller than the Fulgor 1st series, and "Dolf Staal" Spar Supermarkt series. This 2nd Fulgor, vertically-oriented, full-colour series, seems to be about 65% as large as normal vertically-oriented European comic books of that time, which were fairly close to the size of US normal comic books of the 1950s, except a bit narrower, but a littler taller. So, in being that much smaller, they qualified as "mini-comics", but were a fair amount larger than Fulgor's 1st one-tier series. The writer and artist was the well-known German artist, Hansrudi Wäscher, the writer and artist of "Siguurd" (The German clone of "Prince Valient"). I guess The Italian publisher hired Wäscher to draw Fulgor's 2nd Series, as Augusto Pedrazza was no longer available.
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