Well, I'm curious to know which one came first.
That would be '
Mitzi in Hollywood' which is from 1947, while Cowgirl Romances is 1952.
Also find myself wondering if
Matt Baker was paid for both. Somehow I doubt it very much.
Also tells me that
Fiction House kept their art - apparently with blank balloons. Not sure every publisher did that.
No credit for the writer on 'Mitzi'.
Mitzi rhymes with Ditsy, and that's how she's written.
Page 2: In both versions we never see the Camera again after it falls. In real life that would be a greater calamity than an accident to the male lead.
The Male lead comes off as an effete snob. Totally unlikeable.
'Fate's commentaries are on each page, moving the story along.
Page 3. Meet the Villains. But we don't know why they want to kidnap the star or what they want to do with him.
From last panel page 3 to first panel page 4:- How does he get behind her? I'm Pedantic, I know!
Both writers toss in a few jokes.
Here, ' Yoo Hoo, Me, Too?'
and 'A horse of a different colour'
and, 'Don't! Neigh! Neigh!'
as much as I enjoy puns, it's annoying to have all the characters speak or think with the same Spider-Man wisecracks.
Makes me think that the writer wasn't happy about the assignment and wasn't taking it seriously.
Which also makes me think Matt Baker supplied the art, but not the words.
Stars fell on Arizona It seems to me that the second writer treated the Narrative with more respect and tried to make it more coherent.
I liked the re-make better than the original. The storyline was clearer, and more plausible. More information was provided for the villains' motivation.
Exactly!
He uses the dialogue in the last panel on Page 1 to tie the episode with the arc light in with the rest of the villainry.
Next page explains why she had to tackle him after she had yelled at him to no avail.
He's annoyed, but not arrogant,
[A few minutes later, behind a 'Wild' wall] The writer knows his [or her] way around a film set.
'Hartley's contract must be broken ....' This time we get an explanation for the kidnapping.
This writer uses the dialogue to clarify elements of the story and make it more unified.
The Horse now is, 'Daddy's favourite stallion'
The 'Male lead' is grateful and shows it, but this is a movie set after all, nothing is permanent.
For mine, the second attempt is the better script. The writer makes clear their opinion of the original script with lines like,
'I hope he likes this silly costume'
I'll go out on a limb here and say that I believe that the original was done
'Marvel' style. [Don't imagine Marvel invented the technique] Baker conceived and drew it and it was left to another to add the words. They didn't care very much and it shows. The second writer used the words to add to the art-work and make the story stronger.
In any case, we are reading the story for Matt Baker's art work. Who cares about the words!
Cheers!