Welcome to CBH, today we're talking about interesting Pulp
Precursors to Comic Books. Superhero’s are a lot of
fun, and get a lot of screen time in movie theatres these days. Some fans will check out these old comic
books and have a great time watching these characters being created by people
like Jerry Siegel, Joe Shuster, John Broome, Gil Kane, Gardner Fox, Joe Simon,
Jack Kirby, , Bill Finger, Bob Kane Mort Weisinger, Jerry Robinson, Wally Wood,
Robert Kanigher, Joe Kubert, Carmine Infantino and Stan Lee.
As incredible as these people were, they read their own
entertainment when they were younger, and a lot of that was found in early pulp
magazines, and newspaper comic strips.
This episode focuses as an introduction to some pulp magazine precursors
to some of the golden and silver age comic book characters we know today.
Literary ancestors or antecedents can go back thousands of
years, but for the sake of this video we are going start at 1886, with a penny dreadful of an older british bogeyman
legend of Spring Heeled Jack (who would link into Batman) and Nick Carter, a
Super-Detective (who would link into
Superman).
Read below and/or click on video:
1912 John Carter of Mars premiered in a pulp magazine serial by
Edgar Rice Burroughs.
In this story, gravity was less on Mars which allowed John Carter
who was a human from Earth, to jump great leaps in these old stories. In Action Comics 1, 1938, Superman had the
physique of an alien from his home planet who could jump 1/8th a
mile with the lighter earth gravity, hence he could “leap tall buildings in a
single bound.”
One 1930 Science Fiction novel that deserves mention in the
lineage of Superman is Philip Wylie’s Gladiator, about a scientist that injects
his pregnant wife with an ant formula that gives their soon to be born son, the
proportional strength and resilience of an ant.
Not
only would the later Ant-Men and Spider-Man gain insect strength in the 1960s,
but this superhuman baby would be raised to be supremely humble by his Midwest
parents, and would even lift a car as shown on the cover of Action Comics 1.
Many
of these traits would be used and implemented in a 1933 character, Doc
Savage.
His name is Clark Savage Jr and he premiered in "The Man of Bronze" 1933.
Doc Savage was called a "Superman" in a
1934 pulp magazine ad. He could sidestep bullets and lived in his
"fortress of solitude" in the Arctic.
Many of these traits would go on to be implemented into Superman the Man
of Steel, either at conception or as the character developed. Does this mean that Siegel and Shuster read
Nick Carter? No, but it does show that
one story inspires another and suddenly you have themes all over pulp culture
of the time, and then synthesized into the Superman comics.
Lester Dent wrote most of the Doc Savage pulp stories notably
"The Red Skull" which was an early story in 1933. Joe Simon and
Jack Kirby (notorious pulp fans) depicted a villain called "The Red
Skull" in 3 appearances, 1941. The character creation was credited
to their friend, Ed Herron.
Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster also
mention in an interview, that they watched Douglas Fairbanks in the Black
Pirate to get the heroic facial/body expressions for Superman.
1886, A Penny Dreadful of Spring Heeled Jack was put
together and summarized all the rumors of this british legend into an
entertaining story of a rich young man, whose parents were killed, he then stalks the streets to use trickery as
a vigilante against criminals, and engage in a wee bit of mischief. Yes, these traits sound like Batman.
1905, another British story called the Scarlet
Pimpernel by Emma Orczy about an
Englishmen who used disguise and a red flower as a symbol to save aristocrats
from violent French revolutionaries.
Yes, the red flower symbol is something Zorro would also do similarly,
as well as a couple characters we’ll get to there.
1914, Jimmie Dale, The Grey Seal by Frank L. Packard about a
wealthy playboy who puts on a costume,
sneaks on rooftops, leaves a gray paper seal behind to mark his
conquest, and eventually wages war on criminal organizations.
The pulps & news strips contributed to comic books in the
1930s. One hybrid strip was the 1936 Phantom by Lee Falk which was
originally to be named "The Gray Ghost." The name, Phantom was
used in pulps as far back as 1914 "The Grey Seal" who fought a
villain Phantom.
A small tangent on the Phantom, Lee Falk has mentioned that his
1936 Phantom had some of his origin inspired by the 1926 Douglas Fairbanks
film, The Black Pirate where a son's father is killed before his eyes by
pirates and the young nobleman survives and swears an oath of vengeance on
them. Both characters wear rings that are unique to the hero's
identity. Yes, Batman gets a similar
origin story.
1930, The Shadow was created by Walter B. Gibson for Street
& Smith, a man who uses trickery to give a sense of mysticism to criminals,
he uses disguises to infiltrate criminal organizations, and disguises himself
as a wealthy billionaire playboy Lamont Cranston.
The first Batman Comic
written by Bob Kane with Bill Finger was a rewrite from the 1936 Pulp Shadow
story, “Partners in Peril.”
The 1938 The Shadow in Face of Doom appears to be a direct
inspiration to the appearance of Two Face in Detective Comics 66, 1942. In 1939, the Black Bat is a pulp character that used guns much like
the Golden Age Batman and originated in a Detective magazine. This character came out around the same time
as Batman and is thought to be an example of parallel thinking, so Editor
Whitney Ellsworth brokered a deal where both companies continued to use their
characters.
He really is a wholly separate character however, because he is
a district attorney/lawyer who was blinded by a criminal throwing acid in his
face, scarring it, and this origin was used for Two-Face in 1942.
Despondent, he went to many doctors eventually finding one who
would graft pieces of a cadaver eye.
The Black Bat developed superhuman sight from this incident and
still pretended to be blind. This power
set was then used in the original for Daredevil when he was created in
1964. So although there are some
superficial similarities to Batman, the Black Bat appears to be more a creative
ancestor to Two-Face and Daredevil.
So, does this mean that Bob Kane “with” Bill Finger read Spring
Heeled Jack? Probably not, but it does
mean that likely one story inspires others, and suddenly you have a lot of
pulps repeating the same themes, and many of these themes were likely read here
or there by one or both of these guys, and used on Batman. This among many examples show that many of
the early comic books, especially Detective Comics, were in many ways
cartoonized pulp stories. So now that we
have pulp roots to Superman and Batman done, let’s examine pulp roots to other
genre/characters of comic books.
Edgar Rice Burroughs published Tarzan 1912 about an orphan white
boy raised by apes in the African jungle. ERB wrote The Land that Time
Forgot 1918, volcanic activity preserved the dinosaurs in an island off the
coast of Antarctica.
In 1936, Ka-Zar was created in its own pulp magazine.
The company later known as Marvel made their first Golden Age
Ka-Zar comic in Africa 1939.
More than 20 years later, Kirby & Lee revamp him into a new
Silver Age version and then combining him with the Antarctic Savage Land in
Uncanny X-Men 10, 1965 titled "The World that Time Forgot" , they
fused the two ERB novels into an ongoing grand Marvel adventure.
1927. Buck Rogers
premiered as Anthony Rogers in a pulp magazine, and he had a flying jet
pack. I've always enjoyed the hero who
can use ingenuity, engineering and jet packs to fly. A fantastic metaphor
for self-discipline, bravery and luck with a modern day Icarus having to stay
careful not to fly too close to the ground or the sun. Buck Rogers Newspaper
strip 1929, King of the Rocket Men film 1949, Mystery in Space 90, 1964 and
Rocketeer Adventure Magazine 1988. Buck
Rogers would go on to have King Features Syndicate create their own character
with similar properties, which would be Flash Gordon who would go on to inspire
many comic book characters which is in CBH episode 4, the Newspaper Strips
episode.
1931 Night Hawk, an English pulp about a wealthy man Thurston
Kyle who fought crime in a mechanized winged suit. He was referred to as
"The Winged Avenger" in 1932. Most possibly the first flying
armor suited super hero.
This type of Winged Hero would be used again with Red Raven in
1940, Nighthawk in Marvel who premiered in 1969 and his name was Kyle Richmond,
then Falcon who debuted in 1969, but wouldn’t get mechanized wings until
1974. Its an odd coincidence that both
Nighthawks were named Kyle.
1933. G-8 and his Battle Aces is a world war 1 era pulp series by ex-flying military man, Robert Hogan. He injected much of his own experience into this pulp magazine series which would later inspire many war time flying comics.
One of the most memorable runs was Joe Kubert and Robert
Kanigher’s Enemy Ace created in 1965.
Enemy Ace is one of DC’s Silver Age great runs, with amazing stories and
art, but when read with G-8 in mind, its similarly set stories in WW1 take on a
whole different life.
1934. The Lensman pulp series by Edward Smith, Ph.D & took
science fiction to a whole other level. The Galactic Patrol, with each
member worthy of a Lens attached to their hand, capable of transmitting energy
and translating interstellar languages. Their mission is to defend
civilization. Sounds like the Green Lantern Corp which first appeared in
Showcase 22, 1959 by John Broome and Gil Kane.
1936. Suicide Squad, a pulp series written by Emile Tepperman of
an FBI task force that combats domestic threats to the USA. 1959, the
Squad were 4 non powered adventurers who went up against powered beings.
1987, the Squad was a covert group of prisoners on forced missions against
world threats.
One more fun one is the science fiction story, Odd John from 1935. Odd John is about an Odd Superhuman, who explores the concept of the Superman as a genetic next step in human evolution.
Much like Professor X who builds a haven for his fellow mutants, the main character John has telepathic powers, and finds a colony of other Superhumans whom he protects from humans with his psionic abilities. This telepath coins the term homo superior, much like Magneto does in the first issue of X-Men, 1963 by Jack Kirby and Stan Lee.
This is another episode of CBH, the important thing about understanding the pulp history of comic books is to better understand the creators of the original golden age of comics as well as what plot or story lines were on the pulse of the readers back then. The notion that one story likely inspires others, and suddenly you have a lot of pulps repeating the same themes, with many of these themes likely being read by a comic book creater here and there, and then used to create our favorite characters.
join us for more discussion at our Facebook group
Much like Professor X who builds a haven for his fellow mutants, the main character John has telepathic powers, and finds a colony of other Superhumans whom he protects from humans with his psionic abilities. This telepath coins the term homo superior, much like Magneto does in the first issue of X-Men, 1963 by Jack Kirby and Stan Lee.
This is another episode of CBH, the important thing about understanding the pulp history of comic books is to better understand the creators of the original golden age of comics as well as what plot or story lines were on the pulse of the readers back then. The notion that one story likely inspires others, and suddenly you have a lot of pulps repeating the same themes, with many of these themes likely being read by a comic book creater here and there, and then used to create our favorite characters.
join us for more discussion at our Facebook group
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Use of images are not intended to infringe on copyright, but merely used for academic purpose.
Action Comics ©DC, Detective Comics ©DC, A Princess of Mars ©ERB, Doc Savage ©Conde Nast, The Red Skull Doc Savage ©Conde Nast, Captain America Comics ©Marvel, Batman Animated Series ©DC, The Phantom © King Features Syndicate, The Shadow ©Conde Nast, Daredevil ©Marvel, The All-Story ©ERB, The Land that Time Forgot ©ERB, Ka-Zar ©Marvel, Buck Rogers © The Dille Family Trust, Mystery In Space ©DC, The Rocketeer ©Stevens, Red Raven Comics ©Marvel, The Avengers ©Marvel, Captain America and the Falcon ©Marvel, The Green Lantern ©DC, Suicide Squad ©DC, Showcase ©DC, Star Spangled War Stories ©DC, Odd John Cover © Methuen Publishing
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