O.K., in at the deep end. I read the whole comic and I actually think that reading the whole thing rather than just the 1st. story is instructive, just not in the way the publishers seem to have in mind.
A question, does anyone know if this and its companion title were really produced with the aim of cutting crime and discouraging young people from entering into a life of crime, or was it just to make money? The readership figure is misleading as you can usually take a third to quarter of that to get the actual sales figure. And as its a comic, there would have been a lot of returns, giveaways and waste. Still, that's a lot of sales.
So, the contents. The cover is quite exciting, apart from being not very well drawn.
The inside "message" is immediately shown to be nonsense as, on the splash page, we see a slim, attractive female in a tight dress, who is a criminal. in fact, I'd go as far as to say that the
"gun moll" is about the most physically attractive character in the story. Then I note rule #9 which differentiates between female - gun molls - and male criminals, saying they should not be too attractive.
But the main problem are the stories. There is no suspense, as every reader knows what is going to happen, or should, given all the blurbs and the "message". The whole book is as subtle as a brick. The first few times a reader picks up the comic, there will be a possible intrigue and interest but after a few goes, would you really want to keep reading the same message which featured the most unattractive human beings?
There is also the fact that Sloper is really thick. The suggestion being that all criminals are stupid. As we know, and knew then, criminals can be very bright indeed. As there was corruption in public offices, there is no mention of that type of criminality.
As for the art, it's passable at best.
I like the "Crime" narrator guy.
Over to someone else.