Better get in my two cents' worth before it's too late!
First, regarding Kilroy. I knew the guy with the hanging nose and the phrase "Kilroy Was Here" from my cradle days but I was surprised some years ago by an entry in a British book showing the character with the slogan "Wot, No Char?" written above it. The book said the character was a well-known British invention. It didn't mention Kilroy. Thanks to the Internet I learned that in fact there were two strains of Kilroy, one American and one British, which became intermixed. In Britain the character was originally called "Chad." Wikipedia says he
might have been invented in Britain in the late 1930s, spread by British troops during WWII, and eventually conflated with Kilroy. Here's the entry, which has much interesting background:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kilroy_was_hereNow, on to
Whiz Comics #39Captain Marvel is an interesting story. Everyone has already commented on its (il)logic. I like that the Italians are are allowed genuinely to reform. Rob makes some good points about the politics of the thing. The story relies on comfortable old stereotypes that would have been familiar to everyone. Utopia is a Romanesque paradise run by wise men in togas speaking stilted English. (Did anyone notice that there are no women in Utopia?) Italians are weak-willed, somewhat comical shoemakers.
I don't want to get too deep into the Fred MacMurray controversy, but in my opinion Captain Marvel was inspired by MacMurray in much the same way Bugs Bunny was inspired by Clark Gable in
It Happened One Night. Beck was after the "feeling" of MacMurray's screen persona rather than producing a caricature or a likeness. Tall, solid, good-looking without being
too good-looking, tough when necessary but usually just a decent sort of guy. I grant that some of Capt M's features resemble MacMurray's, particularly the chin. Personally, I think Alex Ross' rendition of CM with Fred MacMurray's face looks kind of silly.
While on the subject of Fred MacMurray, I grew up with
My Three Sons and
The Absent-Minded Professor. When I began to learn more about Golden Age Hollywood during my college years I was surprised to see that he wasn't fit just for comedy roles.
Double Indemnity was an eye-opener.
And speaking of likenesses, does anyone remember the
Green Lantern episode in which Gil Kane drew one of the villains as President Lyndon B Johnson? I seem to remember it was a story featuring Sonny & Cher clones.
I never paid much attention to
Golden Arrow except when George Tuska did the art. Incidentally, the GCD credits Louis Cazaneuve with the art even though it bears Warren King's signature. I think they're wrong. It wouldn't be the first time (see Lance O'Casey below).
The story is typical western hero stuff. Old West folk were awfully eager to hang people. I guess when you only have 8 or 9 pages to work with the public has to jump to conclusions or else you'll run out of space. The main catch here has already been spotted: Golden Arrow tells everybody where he's hidden the suspect. That's a lousy job of hiding. King's figures are rather approximate but his layouts are lively and he does good horses. I was brought up short by the panel of GA standing on his horse. I didn't remember ever seeing that. Then two days later I saw another western in which the hero stood on his horse. Can some equine expert tell me if this was a real thing? Did movie cowboys ever stand on their horses?
I didn't understand
Colonel Porterhouse at first because everyone in the story refers to him as "young" Amby Porterhouse who is "just a boy." I eventually realized this is a gimmick. The Colonel is spinning a yarn about his imaginary adventures so we see him as he is today. It's a clever artifice, really. I suspect though that I wasn't the only confused reader.
Despite my well-known preference for realistic-style drawing, there's something about George Storm that has always appealed to me. I like his adventure-story style better than his outright cartoon style. This strip seems a bit rushed. It's funny how the villains all have those oval Segar-style mouths. The story reads like a regular Golden Arrow story with jokes. Porterhouse uses his version GA's trademark "Hi-Yo Silver" stand-in, "Scratch gravel, White Wind!" For some reason GA himself doesn't use it in this issue.
The Mad Artist is an oddball idea for a War Bond ad.
Spy Smasher had a great name and a great costume but his stories were always blah. I haven't seen the serial--maybe he's more interesting on the screen. This story is as rudimentary as you can get. Attending a party with secret plans taped to your chest rather than locking them in a vault? Gimme a break! And how did America Smasher (not a great name) know the General's code was in his office? Anyway, thank goodness for the sharp-eared drunk.
The artist does a nice job, sometimes with a bit of help (panel 4 of our page 44 is a well-worn Alex Raymond swipe).
I like the
Lance O'Casey character because he was drawn mostly by Harry Anderson. Which brings me to the GCD credit. Sometimes I wonder who the heck fact-checks their credits. Anyone who knows Clem Weisbecker's art knows this ain't him, and anyone who knows Harry Anderson knows this
is him. This may not be Anderson's inks, but many of his signature traits are on display here, including his sexy ladies.
The story is nothing special. I nominate one line of dialogue as the Understatement of the Year: "Pardon, please...I do not feel well," spoken by a guy with a huge knife buried in his back.
Ibis the Invincible gave me the best laugh of the book when the guy who looks like a Dick Tracy villain first sees the genie and exclaims, "Well, hush my mouth!" The rest of the story displays the same faults as every other Ibis story. The Ibistick can do anything
except if doing something would solve the problem early. Most of the time Ibis uses it for small jobs like "Make me small!" instead of just saying something like "Ibistick, shrink the genie and put him back in the lamp!" I wonder how many thousands, if not millions, of souls perished when the giant Ibis and giant genie stepped on them.
Thanks, QQ, for recommending this book because it's one I'd likely not have read otherwise.