The Kelly Gang RidesThe first thing I noticed as a reader of some Australian comic books during the 1950s, was that 6d (sixpence) got you comic books woith from 24 to 36 pages. So, getting 50 pages of comics for 6d looks like a great bargain. I think it is interesting that a non-fiction portrayal of an historical account is paired with a clone of the incredibly fictional "Tarzan of The Apes"/meets "Turok Son of Stone".
(1) The Kelly Gang RidesThe artwork is a bit rough and the figures a bit amateurish-looking in places, but it has its own style and charm. I enjoyed reading the basic details of The Kelly Gang's story, and how they were treated as the family of a former deported prisoner, several of whom who themselves became prisoners due to less chances to earn an honest living, and/or brushes with the law due to maltreatment from prejudice. It must have been terrible to be deported from one's homeland to be housed in a penal colony, and then being effectively "forced" to reside there for the rest of one's life, in a non-helpful atmosphere in which his stigma follows him everywhere.
Having lived in North Africa and The Middle East for 15 + years the idea of wearing armour made of iron in Australia, in summer would be my idea of going to Hell. I've often wondered how many of The European Crusaders sweated out ALL of their water, and died of heat stroke from wearing their armour in summer battles for the castles bordering the fringes of The Syrian Desert and the start of the adjoining steppeland, in present day Eastern Jordan and Syria. Before finding out that The Kelly's met their doom in Victoria, I imagined them wearing that armour in The Outback, and dying of heat prostration before the police's bullets hit them. As Victoria can get fairly hot in summer, I wonder what time of year the depicted battle occurred.
The only place in Australia I'd even consider trying iron armour on outside of a refrigerated room would be in Tasmania, or The Australian Alps (and even in those places, not in summer.
I'm shocked to see that The Victoria Police's uniforms look like 19th Century French military uniforms, and 19th and 20th Century French Police Gendarmes' uniforms, and also with the moustaches and beards that went along with them. As I read, I kept looking for the soldiers' dialogue balloons to be filled with the English stereotypes of Frenchmen speaking English with a French accent.
I think that criminals capturing the personnel of a ranch (station), only to "steal" (kidnap) their cook is hilarious!
Don't you all think that the desperate criminals stealing old ploughshares and melting them down to form into battle armour is ironic, in view of The Bible's phrase regarding the beating of weapons of war into ploughshares after World Peace is finally reached?
Like Scrounge, I too, am new to the Australian idiom, "Bail up!". It's clear from context that it means "Raus!", 'Move it!" "Get movin'! "Get a move on!" I wonder if that idiomatic phrase came from tying (bailing) up the filled bags of sheep's wool in the Australian regional sheep shearing events?
I found this balloon of a soldier's speech not very understandable: "You old she,..I'll give you hit me with a shovel!" I know what he means, but it sounds awkward to a 20th Century Canadian ear.
I'd have written, "You old witch (or Crone)! "I'll give YOU the backside of a shovel!"
Dan's retort of "LIKE SMOKE!" to the Sergeant's order for him to come along is also a new one on me. But it is clear that it means "Like HELL I will!" or "Over my dead body!"
The term "Blacktrackers" is clear that it means Aboiriginal trackers, who can use their fantastic skills and knowledge of tracking animals on following the tracks of humans. I can't remember hearing that term except perhaps hearing it in an aussie film, and not thinking twice about it because it explains itself. And I might have reacted to it similarly in reading a book of Australian origin.
I'm glasd that the train full of passengers was saved by the alert schoolteacher, who through his set-up diversion, escaped to warn the driver, and stop the train.
I would have covered my legs with armour, as well, IF I were in the criminals' situation, but I also would have realised that the path would end with most of my family dying, and the few that would have lived would have spent the rest of their lives in prison. So, I doubt if I'd have done what The Kelly's did, even if it meant being mistreated by the police for my father's crimes.
I would guess that this version was reasonably close to what really happened. It was entertaining enough, and held my interest enough, asd I'm always interested in learning more history.
(2) Thunder, King Of The Gorilla EmpireThe artwork inb this story is much better. But it is awfully fanciful, having a 7 foot 6 inch man being just as strong as unnaturally large gorillas that must each weigh over 1,000 pounds, given that we know that normal mountain gorillas of 600 pounds are pound-for-pound several times stronger than humans. A 7 foot 6 man would not be normal, unless he were a Dinka from South Sudan. He'd likely be a victim of growth-hormone imbalance, which,m already in a victim's early 20s, would make his body movements very uncoordinated, and he would already suffer pain in his joints, and need to rest them often from over work. That doesn't sound like he would be able to be "as strong as any of those super-large, super-strong gorillas", and be able to lead them in battle against gigantic pre-historic animals. Again we have the long-time fantasy story of a remote, hidden place on Earth that was able to keep it's ancient climate so that very, very, very ancient animals could remain living there millions of years after they went extinct in all other parts of The Earth. Let's say thgat we accept that explanation for the Jurassic and Cretaceous Period's tropical animals remaining alive....How is it then that the Wooly Mammoths of The Pleistocene Period's Ice Ages were also able to live there? Having grown up with a Husky and a Malamut, who were very comfortable in Manitoba's subarctic winters, but suffered greatly in our short, but hot summers, I somehow doubt that Wooly Mammoths(a seasonally migrating animal), with all that hair, would migrate into a steamy tropical jungle, and just remain there. They are an open tundra animal, as opposed to a thick forest animal in any case. And don't get me started on the Gorilla "Tribe" speaking Australian English (or The King's English). The author should have placed and asterisk on both Thunder's first dialogue ballon, and that of the first Gorilla speaker, and the footnote should have read "Gorilla language" translated for the convenience of thge reader." And even IF Thunder COULD have successfully learned to communicate with The Gorillas, would they REALLy have understood a speech by him with so many words and abstract concepts as he told them on the story's opening splash page? Chimpanzees, who we have found are MORE intelligent (in Mankind's current terms) than Gorillas, but can only understand about 200 concrete concepts; NONE of them being abstract. Thgis is like Science Fantasy, as opposed tob Science Fiction. There are way too many holes for a person with a science background and logical thinking to suspend belief and enjoy the attempt at "entertainment" for what it is.
Not to mention that we have the old European "White Supremacy" ideal of the hero that looks like me becoming the leader of a non-European country or tribe because he or she is wiser and physically or morally stronger, and that came from his underlings, willingly, because they understand he is much more fit to do so than any of them.
A giant Ground Sloth large enough to win a battle with a Diplodicus?
That's almost as silly as a mouse named mickey, talking, walking upright, and weary clothing and fighting Nazis.
(3) Blitzie Bessie The CowThe artwork is decent. The comedy is neither clever, nor funny. It wouldn't even have made it on The Vaudeville stage.
(4) Dicky Lea The FleaWorse than the cow gag! Waste of a page.
Overall AssessmentOne comic book containing a non-fiction account of a true-life past event, paired with a very fanciful combination of "Tarzan" and "The Lost World". This is about the strangest cobination of stories in any comic book I can remember. In any case, it was entertaing and I enjoyed reading the book. The nice artwork saved the second story for me.