Monday, December 19, 2016

Superman & Captain Marvel Power Hour Ep 009 - More Christmas & Justice League Action


Welcome to the 9th episode of the Superman & Captain Marvel Power Hour, this time out I take a look at Christmas themed stories from 1973’s Shazam #11 and 1989’s Adventures of Superman #462, as well a look at the premiere of the new Justice League Action series.

As always, you can subscribe to the podcast via the King-Size Comics Giant-Size Fun Podcast feed on iTunes, or download it directly here: Superman & Captain Marvel Power Hour Ep 009 - More Christmas & Justice League Action

Thank you so much for listening, feedback for the Podcast can be left at the either one of the 2 show headquarters for this podcast and blog, which are located at Superman & Captain Marvel Blog, or at King-Size Comics Giant-Size Fun, or you can email me directly at metropoliskid41@gmail.com  leave a comment on either the Superman & Captain Marvel or King-Size Comics Giant-Size Fun Facebook page, or tweet me at Twitter Handle @KryptonsWizard.
This Podcast is made for Entertainment purposes only, all songs, sound clips, Superman, Captain Marvel, and Shazam are copyright of their respective holders, used under fair use, and no infringement is intended. Merry Christmas & have a safe holiday season.

Thursday, December 15, 2016

The Superman & Captain Marvel Power Hour Ep 008 - CMA #19 & Adventure Comics #113

Welcome to the 8th Episode of the Superman & Captain Marvel Power Hour Podcast, the podcast devoted to exploring the publishing history and adventures of my two favorite DC Comics Characters, Superman, the Last Son of Krypton & the Original Captain Marvel, the World’s Mightiest Mortal. This time out it’s a special Christmas themed episode, which marks Day 3 of my 12 Days of Christmas coverage here on the King-Size Comics Giant-Size Fun Podcast Feed.
In this episode of The Superman & Captain Marvel Power Hour, I return to the Golden Age of both characters, taking a look at the Captain Marvel story "The Phantom of the Department Store," from 1942's Captain Marvel Adventures #19 & the 1946 Superboy story "The 33rd Christmas" from Adventure Comics #113.

As always, you can subscribe to the podcast via the King-Size Comics Giant-Size Fun Podcast feed on iTunes, or download the episode directly here:Superman & Captain Marvel Power Hour 008 - CMA #19 & Adventure #113


Thank you so much for listening, feedback for the Podcast can be left at the either one of the 2 show headquarters for this podcast and blog, which are located at Superman & Captain Marvel, or at King-Size Comics Giant-Size Fun, or you can email me directly at metropoliskid41@gmail.com  leave a comment on either the Superman & Captain Marvel or King-Size Comics Giant-Size Fun Facebook page, or tweet me at Twitter Handle @KryptonsWizard.
This Podcast is made for Entertainment purposes only, all songs, sound clips, Superman, Captain Marvel, and Shazam are copyright of their respective holders, used under fair use, and no infringement is intended. Merry Christmas & have a safe holiday

Monday, November 28, 2016

Episodes 001-007 Updated Links

As mentioned in the big announcement HERE, the show has moved to the King-Size Comics Giant-Size Fun Podcast Feed. So I've gone back and updated all of the direct download links for the new show location on the King-Size Comics Giant-Size Fun Podcast Feed, but for your convenience, I'm also including them here as well in comprehensive post location.

So if you're new to the show, or an old listener wanting to revisit past episodes, you can do so with ease below!


The Superman & Captain Marvel Power Hour Ep 001 - The Return of Black Adam







The Superman & Captain Marvel Power Hour Ep 006 - Jerry Ordway


The Superman & Captain Marvel Power Hour Ep 007 - Minneapolis Marvel & Rebirth Discussion


New episodes for the show, along with additional blog posts related to the Man of Steel and World's Mightiest Mortal, will continue to appear here at the homepage for the podcast, in addition to episode postings also appearing over at the King-Size Comics Giant-Size Fun HQ.
 
 

Important Announcement

Faster than a speeding bullet!
More Powerful than a Locomotive!
Able to Leap Tall Buildings in a Single Bound!
The Last Son of Krypton is now the Man of Steel….SUPERMAN!!!

To best be in a position to use his amazing powers in the never-ending battle for Truth& Justice, Superman has assumed the disguise of Clark Kent, a mild mannered reporter for a great Metropolitan Newspaper.


Solomon’s Wisdom
Hercules’ Strength
Atlas’ Stamina
Zeus’ Power
Achilles’ Courage
Mercury's Speed


Orphaned as child, the young boy Billy Batson, possessing bravery and a pureness of heart unparalleled, is transformed to the World’s Mightiest Mortal, CAPTAIN MARVEL simply by exclaiming the name of the great and powerful Wizard, SHAZAM!

THIS IS THE SUPERMAN & CAPTAIN MARVEL POWER HOUR


Important Announcement time folks, this morning I sat down to upload the latest episode of my Superman & Captain Marvel Power Hour podcast, which has been on its own feed, and discovered there was an issue with the feed (had I been checking my email lately I would have discovered this 6 weeks ago when pointed out by a listener, sorry Paul Wieckowski).

So after trying to sort through the mess for over an hour, I said screw this, I already have another feed that works just swell as is, so I'm going to cancel this messed up feed and add the Superman & Captain Marvel Power Podcast to my King-Size Comics Giant-Size Fun feed. So you'll still get the same mediocre podcast with irregular show releases that you are used to from me, your host Kyle Benning, and you'll still get to listen to me ramble on and on about my love of Superman and the original Captain Marvel, my two favorite DC Characters. But now the show will be a part of the King-Size Comics Giant-Size Fun Podcast feed. The show is available on iTunes, or you can download directly be visiting either www.kingsizecomicsgiantsizefun.blogspot.com or www.SupermanCaptainMarvel.blogspot.com
All of the past episodes have now been uploaded on the King-Size Comics Giant-Size Fun Podcast feed, and all of the old episode postings on the Superman & Captain Marvel Power Hour Blog have been updated with the new show links as well.


If you'd like to listen to this announcement in audio form, or help spread the message in your fine podcast via this pseudo-podcast trailer, please refer to the audio link below! SHAZAM!


Superman & Captain Marvel Power Hour Podcast Promo

Thursday, September 1, 2016

Superman & Captain Marvel Power Hour Ep 007 Minneapolis Mystery & Rebirth Talk

Welcome to the 7th episode of the Superman & Captain Marvel Power Hour Podcast, the podcast devoted to exploring the publishing history & adventures of both the Last Son of Krypton and the World’s Mightiest Mortal. This time out I take a look at the Golden Age Captain Marvel story "The Minneapolis Mystery" from 1943's Captain Marvel Adventures #24 as well as discuss my thoughts on Superman's treatment thus far in the post-Rebirth era of DC Comics. It's a little something old and a little something new, but coverage on both characters nonetheless!

As always, you can subscribe to the show via iTunes, or download the episode directly here:Superman & Captain Marvel Power Hour Ep 007 Minneapolis Mystery & Rebirth


Thank you very much for listening. Be sure to check out the show headquarters & blog at www.SupermanCaptainMarvel.blogspot.com. There you’ll find extra content such as the show notes, extra posts spotlighting Superman & Captain Marvel art, the characters’ publishing history, and collected editions. You can leave feedback for the podcast there at the blog, as well as by emailing me directly at metropoliskid41@gmail.com, by leaving an iTunes review, or by visiting the facebook page at facebook.com/SupermanCaptainMarvel. You can also follow the show on twitter under the Twitter Handle @KryptonsWizard.


This podcast is made for entertainment purposes only. Superman, Captain Marvel & Shazam are copyright of DC Comics, a part of Warner Bros entertainment. These characters are discussed under fair use, and no infringement is intended.



Wednesday, August 31, 2016

Superman & Captain Marvel Art by Jerry Ordway

I don't know about you folks out there in reader & listener land, but this has been THEE art post I've been looking forward to tackling the most since I decided to showcase commission pieces and original art as a regular feature here on the blog.

The EXTRAORDINARY Jerry Ordway, a comic creator in my opinion that is one of the all-time greatest writers and artists to ever tackle Superman and ever tackle Captain Marvel, so the fact that he had lengthy, critically acclaimed and legendary runs on both characters, makes this post extra special.

While it's always great seeing talented artists tackle commission pieces featuring the two greatest comic book heroes to ever be published with a DC Logo on their cover, there is always something very special about commission pieces coming from artists that had lengthy runs on the characters. They know the ins and outs of these characters, what makes them tick, and how their face and body react in unison to the trials and tribulations they encounter in each adventure.

Jerry Ordway, like many up and coming artists in the 70's and early 80's first caught the eye of the comic industry getting his artwork published in fanzines. Jerry quickly caught the eye of DC Comics and found work as an inker and penciller in the Earth-2 corner of the DC Multiverse in various Roy Thomas written projects like All-Star Squadron, America vs. the JSA, and Infinity Inc.

Jerry gained even more notoriety when he was tapped to draw a number of entries for the Who's Who in the DC Universe series celebrating DC's rich 50 year history, as well as tackling some of the inking chores on the epic comic crossover event Crisis on Infinite Earths.


After a brief stint at Marvel inking John Byrne on Fantastic Four, Jerry came back to DC, and helped launch a new age of Superman with Byrne and Marv Wolfman. Byrne set the stage for the Post-Crisis origin and direction for the Last Son of Krypton, starting with his 6 issue Man of Steel mini-series. Byrne then tackled writing and art duties on both Action Comics and the new Superman series, with Jerry Ordway tackling art and co-plotting duties on the Adventures of Superman series with co-plotter and scripter Marv Wolfman.

With issue #436 Byrne took over the co-plotter and scripting reigns for Wolfman, with Ordway still co-plotting and penciling. Starting in Adventures of Superman #445, Jerry Ordway took over on full writing duties while still penciling the book. He continued working on the Superman books as either a writer, penciller, or inker for the next six years! He finished his amazing run with the beginning of Superman's return from death at the hands of Doomsday, in Adventures of Superman #500.
 

Following his run on Superman, Ordway published the creator owned, four issue mini-series Wildstar: Sky Zero at Image Comics, before once again returning to DC Comics to work on possibly the defining moment of his incredible comics career, the 93 page Power of Shazam Graphic Novel in January 1994. Whereas previous attempts to update Captain Marvel for the more serious Post-Crisis DC Universe, had failed, Ordway's stunning retelling of Captain Marvel's origin brought to life with his beautifully painted art, revitalized the character.

This brought with it a previously untapped height of popularity and quality for the Captain Marvel character under the DC logo on the cover, at least in my opinion. (DC's close second would be the E. Nelson Bridwell & Don Newton era that ran through the tail end of the 70's Shazam series and continued into the Dollar Comics Era of World's Finest Comics.)

Following the splash hit of Ordway's Power of Shazam Graphic Novel, it was released in softcover format 11 months later, and followed by an ongoing series of the same name. The Power of Shazam monthly comic ran from January 1995 to January 1999, spanning 47 regular issues, as well as an Annual and DC One Million tie-in issue. Ordway was tasked with writing the entire run and providing gorgeous painted covers, while Peter Krause provided pencils on interior art for the bulk of the first 41 issues of the ongoing series. With issue 42 of the series, Ordway took over penciling duties, where he was inked by the late, great Dick Giordano.

Two of the high points of this great run for me personally, were in issues #20 & #46 of the series, where Superman and Captain Marvel crossed paths. Issue #46 was particularly special, as it was great to see not only write, but also pencil two of the most iconic characters of all-time, and two characters he helped re-define and achieve all-time heights in popularity in the modern era of comics. And it had a fantastic cover of Superman & Captain Marvel flying at each other, fists cocked, ready to deliver thunderous blows, in homage to Nick Cardy's 1974 cover to Superman #276.



 


Superman & Captain Marvel Power Hour Ep 006 Jerry Ordway Spotlight


Welcome to the 6th episode of the Superman & Captain Marvel Power Hour Podcast, the podcast devoted to exploring the publishing history & adventures of both the Last Son of Krypton and the World’s Mightiest Mortal. I am your host Kyle Benning, and thank you for joining me on this journey to explore the evolution of my 2 favorite DC Characters, Superman & Captain Marvel.


This time out in the 6th Episode of the show, I take brief look at the extraordinary impact Jerry Ordway had as a writer and artist on both Superman and Captain Marvel in the Post-Crisis DC Universe, and culminate my coverage by taking a look at Ordway's Power of Shazam #46 that went on sale December 2, 1998.


As always, you can subscribe to the show on iTunes, or download it directly here:Superman & Captain Marvel Power Hour Ep 006 Jerry Ordway Spotlight


In the episode I reference the post-Crisis revival and reimagining of Captain Marvel's origin in the Power of Shazam Graphic Novel from 1994. I covered this Graphic Novel previously with my pal J David Weter back on an episode of King-Size Comics Giant-Size Fun. You can find the episode here: http://kingsizecomicsgiantsizefun.blogspot.com/2015/07/king-size-comics-giant-size-fun-ep-023.html

Be sure to come back tomorrow for an accompanying blogpost to the episode that showcases some of the fantastic Superman and Captain Marvel commission work of Jerry Ordway.

Thank you very much for listening. Be sure to check out the show headquarters & blog at www.SupermanCaptainMarvel.blogspot.com. There you’ll find extra content such as the show notes, extra posts spotlighting Superman & Captain Marvel art, the characters’ publishing history, and collected editions. You can leave feedback for the podcast there at the blog, as well as by emailing me directly at metropoliskid41@gmail.com, by leaving an iTunes review, or by visiting the facebook page at facebook.com/SupermanCaptainMarvel. You can also follow the show on twitter under the Twitter Handle @KryptonsWizard.

This podcast is made for entertainment purposes only. Superman, Captain Marvel & Shazam are copyright of DC Comics, a part of Warner Bros entertainment. These characters are discussed under fair use, and no infringement is intended.


Thursday, June 30, 2016

The Superman & Captain Marvel Power Hour Ep 005 First Thunder

Welcome to the fifth episode of the Superman & Captain Marvel Power Hour Podcast, the podcast devoted to exploring the publishing history & adventures of both the Last Son of Krypton and the World’s Mightiest Mortal. I am your host Kyle Benning, and thank you for joining me on this journey to explore the evolution of my 2 favorite DC Characters, Superman & Captain Marvel.

After a 3 month hiatus, the show is finally back! This time out I give a brief overview of the 2005 4 issue prestige format series, Superman/Shazam!: First Thunder.

As always, you can subscribe to the podcast via iTunes, or download the episode directly here:The Superman & Captain Marvel Power Hour Ep 005 "First Thunder"

Thank you very much for listening. Be sure to check out the show headquarters & blog at www.SupermanCaptainMarvel.blogspot.com. There you’ll find extra content such as the show notes, extra posts spotlighting Superman & Captain Marvel art, the characters’ publishing history, and collected editions. You can leave feedback for the podcast there at the blog, as well as by emailing me directly at metropoliskid41@gmail.com, by leaving an iTunes review, or by visiting the facebook page at facebook.com/SupermanCaptainMarvel. You can also follow the show on twitter under the Twitter Handle @KryptonsWizard.

Monday, March 21, 2016

Superman & Captain Marvel Power Hour Ep 004

Welcome to the fourth episode of the Superman & Captain Marvel Power Hour Podcast, the podcast devoted to exploring the publishing history & adventures of both the Last Son of Krypton and the World’s Mightiest Mortal. I am your host Kyle Benning, and thank you for joining me on this journey to explore the evolution of my 2 favorite DC Characters, Superman & Captain Marvel.

This time out, I take a brief break from my coverage from the Superman From the 30's to the 70's and SHAZAM! From the 40's to the 70's hardcovers, and instead talk about the short team-up story between Superman & Captain Marvel from The Amazing Adventures of Superman: Magic Monsters and then rant on about my thoughts on DC: REBIRTH and what it means, or what I want it to mean, with regards to Superman & Captain Marvel.

As always, you can subscribe to the podcast via iTunes, or download the episode directly here:Superman & Captain Marvel Power Hour Ep 004 Magic Monsters & DC Rebirth

Thank you very much for listening. Be sure to check out the show headquarters & blog at www.SupermanCaptainMarvel.blogspot.com. There you’ll find extra content such as the show notes, extra posts spotlighting Superman & Captain Marvel art, the characters’ publishing history, and collected editions. You can leave feedback for the podcast there at the blog, as well as by emailing me directly at metropoliskid41@gmail.com, by leaving an iTunes review, or by visiting the facebook page at facebook.com/SupermanCaptainMarvel. You can also follow the show on twitter under the Twitter Handle @KryptonsWizard.



Tuesday, March 1, 2016

Superman's Golden Age Publishing History



As mentioned in the third episode of the Superman & Captain Marvel Power Hour Podcast, for ease of aligning Superman's Golden Age publishing history with the 1953 halt of Captain Marvel's publication from Fawcett, I'm just going to settle on covering Superman's publishing history up through books cover dated 1953. Oh course a case could be for Superman's Golden Age era ending at a number of other ear marks, such as 1947's World’s Finest #32, which marks the final story written by Superman co-creator Jerry Siegel before he would return to DC and the Last Son of Krypton over 10 years later. One could also make the argument the end of Superman’s Golden Age with books cover dated January 1945, with the introduction of Superboy, a dramatic and significant change to Superman’s origin? After all, the Superman with a past of being Superboy is an Earth-One take on the character, and NOT part of the Earth-2 character’s history.
So with that in mind, let’s jump into Superman’s comic publishing history starting with Action Comics #1, that went on sale the first week of May 1938 up through the character's final 1953 cover date appearance in Action Comics #187. Action Comics debuted as a 64 page anthology book that also contained  the adventures of 6 other characters, including the magician Zatara. Superman grabbed the cover spot in Action Comics’ debut, something that wouldn’t happen again until Action Comics #7. He also had the cover spot on issues #10, #13, #15, and #17, before finally taking over as the sole control of the Cover with Action Comics #19, which went on sale the last week of October 1939. Superman was in every issue of Action Comics, and since I’m covering his exploits in the Golden Age up through 1953, the final issue cover dated 1953, would have been Action Comics #187, that went on sale October 30th 1953, which featured the Superman story “Superman’s New Super Powers”

When 1939 rolled around, Superman’s popularity had already risen quite a bit, in addition to his monthly adventures in the pages of Action Comics, you could also follow his adventures daily in select Newspaper comic strips across the country. The Superman Daily Newspaper strip began on Monday January 16th 1939. After the success of Action Comics #1 in June of 1938, and the skyrocketing in popularity of the character Superman, just 7 months later Siegel & Shuster were finally able to take their creation Superman into the publishing market they had hoped for all along, the syndicated Newspaper Comics arena!


It's crazy to think about nowadays, but in 1938, when Superman first debuted, comic books were still in their infancy, and considered second tier to the syndicated comic strips in newspapers. The newspaper comic strips had much higher circulation, and in turn shelled out a lot more money. Those comics that weren't deemed popular or good enough for Newspaper syndication, such as Siegel and Shuster's first Superman story, had to settle for repurposing their stories for comic books. Once Superman caught fire in the pages of Action Comics, Siegel and Shuster's dream of a syndicated Superman comic strip became a reality. The daily strip ran continuously from its January 1939 debut all the way until 1966, and it was joined by a full color Sunday strip that began on Sunday November 5th 1939.


That wasn’t the only new publishing avenue for the Last Son of Krypton, in May 1939, just a year after his debut in Action Comics #1, Superman top an unprecedented milestone, his own comic magazine devoted solely to his adventures. Superman #1 went on Sale May 18th 1939, and started as a quarterly book. Starting with the book cover dated 1941, the book moved to bi-monthly,  a publishing schedule it was still on in 1953, meaning the final issue of Superman with a 1953 cover date was Superman #85, which contained 3 different Superman stories.

But it wasn’t just Action Comics, the Newspaper Comic Strip, and Superman that chronicled Superman’s comic adventures. He would soon be added as an ongoing feature in World’s Best Comics in February 1941, that series was renamed World’s Finest Comics with the 2nd issue of this quarterly series. In 1946 World’s Finest Comics switched to a bi-monthly schedule that it still had in 1953. The last issue of World’s Finest with a 1953 cover date was issue #67, that went on sale in late September. Now World’s Finest is best known as a Superman & Batman team-up book, but even though the Man of Steel and the Caped Crusader appeared together on every comic, they didn’t actually appear together in the same story until 1952’s Superman #76, and they wouldn’t actually team-up together in the World’s Finest title, until 1954’s World’s Finest Comics #71.
And of course, like Captain Marvel, Superman, being the very popular character that he was, starred in a number of other comic specials, including both the 1939 and 1940 New York World’s Fair Comics. On the cover of the 1939 World’s Fair issue Superman is miscolored, and the cover of the 1940 World’s Fair issue marks the first time that Superman & Batman ever appeared on a cover together. If you’d like to hear about the content of these comics, I recommend you go check out the podcast Comics in the Golden Age from Michael Lane and his cousin Chris, they covered those issues in Episode 16 & 17 of that fantastic podcast.

In addition to the 2 issues of New York World’s Fair Comics, Superman also starred in the DC Promo comics Superman’s Christmas Adventure #1, which was a promo comic given out at department stores like Macy’s or Baileys in December 1940, and was then reprinted and re-issued with a touched up cover in 1944. I actually covered that story just a couple months ago in Episode 4 of my Tales from the Golden Age podcast. There was also a 2nd Superman Christmas Adventure, containing a new story, comic published in 1944. But those weren’t the only 2 special promo Superman comics, there was also the 1942 miniature Superman Py-Co-Py Toothpaste comic and the 1948 four page Superman and the Great Cleveland Fire comic.


 

Monday, February 29, 2016

Happy Birthday Superman!

Starting in the Silver Age, DC used February 29th as the birthday for the Last Son of Krypton! The reason behind this was a bit of a tongue-in-cheek poke at Superman having been around for multiple decades but seemingly never aging, so the choice was made to give him a birthday only once every 4 years!

Of course multiple days have been used to celebrate Superman's birthday over the years. There's June 18th, the date celebrated by Clark Kent as his birthday, this is typically the day used for the day the Kent's discovered his rocket. Of course this was not the day used Post-Crisis, as Superman's birthing matrix arrived right before a giant winter blizzard

1950's Action Comics #149 lists October as  the month of Superman's birthday. Let's just explain these discrepancies as representing different Me of Steel throughout the DC Multiverse.


Happy Birthday Superman & many happy returns! May this Monday find you in good health Man of Steel!

Enjoy some of these classic Superman Birthday & Anniversary images from over the years! And if you feel so inclined, go celebrate by picking up the latest issue of Dan Jurgens and Lee Week's fantastic Superman: Lois & Clark series, as well as the debut first issue of Neal Adam's Supermen both of which went on sale last Wednesday.
 
 

And I'd also like to throw-out a big Happy Birthday to friend of the show, and fellow Superman enthusiast, Michael Bailey of the From Crisis to Crisis and Radio KAL Live Superman themed podcasts. Happy Birthday Mike, have a SUPER Day!

Wednesday, February 24, 2016

Captain Marvel's Golden Age Publishing History

Captain Marvel made his first appearance in Fawcett's Whiz Comics #2 (actually Whiz Comics #1, listen to the 2nd Episode of the Superman & Captain Marvel Power Hour Podcast for details), and continued to be a mainstay in Whiz Comics for the duration of its publishing history. The series ran from February 1940 (first issue, Whiz #2* actually went on sale in December 1939) and ended with issue #155 in early 1953. In addition to featuring Captain Marvel every issue, the anthology series also starred other prominent Golden Age Fawcett action heroes like Golden Arrow, Spy Smasher, Ibis the Invincible, and Dan Dare. It wasn't long before Captain Marvel's popularity rose to Superman-like levels, warranting his own solo comic book as well, under the name Captain Marvel Adventures, which debuted in January 1941, just 13 months after the World's Mightiest Mortal broke onto the scene. Like all comics at the time, Captain Marvel Adventures was still an anthology title, meaning that most issues featured 3-4 tales starring the World's Mightiest Mortal. Captain Marvel Adventures ran a whopping 150 issues before ending in August 1953. During that time, the series even eclipsed Superman's sales numbers, becoming the highest circulated comic book magazine of the Golden Age!

Now as Captain Marvel's popularity grew, so did the demand for his supporting characters like Mary Marvel and Captain Marvel Jr. Both characters were featured in anthology books starring other characters like Wow Comics (Mary Marvel) and Master Comics (Captain Marvel Jr.) as well as their own solo series. But even that wasn't enough, a third ongoing comic book starring all 3 wielders of the Power of Shazam was launched in 1945 titled Marvel Family. This series ran 89 issues and followed the adventures of Captain Marvel, Mary Marvel, Captain Marvel Jr., and the man they affectionately referred to as Uncle Dudley. This series like Whiz Comics and Captain Marvel Adventures, also ceased publication in 1953, when Fawcett had decided that the ongoing "Likeness Suit" with DC was no longer worth continuing from a financial standpoint.
In addition to the Whiz Comics, Captain Marvel Adventures, and Marvel Family ongoing series starring Billy Batson and his super-powered other self Captain Marvel, Captain Marvel also headlined a number of special anthology series comics and promotion comics.


There was the 8 issue series America's Greatest Comics, that ran 100 pages and featured Captain Marvel alongside other fascist smashing patriotic heroes like Bulletman (another one of my favorites), Minute Man, Spy Smasher, Captain Midnight, Golden Arrow, and Mr. Scarlet. This quarterly title debuted in the fourth quarter of 1941 and ran until the summer of 1943.


Those 100 pagers paled in size to the enormous 300+ page counts of the Gift Comics and X-MAS Comics. The series Gift Comics ran 4 issues, released irregularly from 1942 to late 1949, the first 3 issues boasted a whopping 324 page counts, with the 4th issue much smaller in size but still containing 144 pages. X-MAS Comics is just like it sounds, another huge anthology series, released fairly regularly around the Christmas season every year. Like Gift Comics, the initial issues of X-MAS Comics boasted over 300 pages of content. The series debuted in November 1941, and then saw issue #2 released in December of 1942. After that, the series took a 5 year hiatus before returning in 1947, and then having an annual released starting with issue #4 in November 1949, through issue #7 in November of 1952. I would suspect that the hiatus of the title after the second issue in 1942 was perhaps due to paper shortage during World War II. Obviously that would make it a little more difficult to pump out a 300+ page publication in high print runs.



The X-MAS Comics series weren't the only Christmas-themed comics to star the Big Red Cheese, in addition to the giant X-MAS Comics issues and the holiday themed stories from his Captain Marvel Adventures ongoing title like CMA #19 & #42, there was also the 196 page one-shot Holiday Comics #1 from 1942. Unfortunately very few of these giant anthology comics seemed to survive to present day, so the exact contents of each issue are not known. There are rumors that the exact contents, or order they appeared in, may have varied slightly from copy to copy, that's bound to happen when you're talking about a 300 page comic book decades before the idea of a trade paperback or hardcover collection was even dreamed about for comic material. Given the nature of a lot of holiday themed comics, even into the mid 1970's, it's reasonable to assume that in addition to comic stories, these collections also probably had games and activities inside for children. Other one-shots include 1940's Special Edition Comics #1 and the 1950 one-shot Captain Marvel and the Good Humor Man.

Between these three monthly titles and numerous specials published over a 14 year span, Billy Batson had upwards of 500 hundred adventures as the World's Mightiest Mortal. Think about that, HUNDREDS of stories. I'd have to go back and count, and perhaps some day I will, but I would estimate it's somewhere in the ballpark of 700 stories from his Whiz Comics debut in December 1939 to when Fawcett ceased publication of Captain Marvel with Marvel Family #89 in September of 1953. This would make Captain Marvel both the most prominently published and highest selling comic book character during the Golden Age!

Monday, February 22, 2016

The Superman & Captain Marvel Power Hour Ep 003

Welcome to the third episode of the Superman & Captain Marvel Power Hour Podcast, the podcast devoted to exploring the publishing history & adventures of both the Last Son of Krypton and the World’s Mightiest Mortal. I am your host Kyle Benning, and thank you for joining me on this journey to explore the evolution of my 2 favorite DC Characters, Superman & Captain Marvel.

This time out, I continue my trek through the Superman From the 30's to the 70's and SHAZAM! From the 40's to the 70's hardcovers, and cover the Superman story "The War in San Monte" originally published in Action Comics #2 from June 1938 and the Captain Marvel story "The Origin of Sivana" from Whiz Comics #15 that went on sale in February 1941.


You can subscribe to the podcast via iTunes, or download the episode directly here: The Superman & Captain Marvel Power Hour Ep 003 - Action #2 & Whiz #15



As I mentioned in the episode, there are some other great blogs and podcasts devoted to Captain Marvel, so be sure to check out Jeff Wright's Captain Marvel podcast & blog, the ShazamCast as well as Jeff Farnham's World's Mightiest Mortal Blog & Bronze Age themed Captain Marvel Adventures Blog.
For more information & content on the Last Son of Krypton, be sure to check out the Superman Homepage.



Thank you very much for listening. Be sure to check out the show headquarters & blog at www.SupermanCaptainMarvel.blogspot.com. There you’ll find extra content such as the show notes, extra posts spotlighting Superman & Captain Marvel art, the characters’ publishing history, and collected editions. You can leave feedback for the podcast there at the blog, as well as by emailing me directly at metropoliskid41@gmail.com, by leaving an iTunes review, or by visiting the facebook page at facebook.com/SupermanCaptainMarvel. You can also follow the show on twitter under the Twitter Handle @KryptonsWizard.

Thanks for listening, the 4th episode of the THE SUPERMAN & CAPTAIN MARVEL POWER HOUR will be available in 2 weeks on Sunday March 7th.  
 

Tuesday, February 16, 2016

Superman & Captain Marvel Art by Steve Rude

Steve "The Dude" Rude is one of the most dynamic, classic artists who works in the medium today. Over the years Steve has really built a reputation for himself as an artist able to capture the classic stylelings of the Golden Age and Silver Age of Superhero comics, in a gorgeous, dynamic style that invokes in you a warm nostalgic feeling. You see elements reminiscent of Jack Kirby, Alex Toth, Bruce Timm, Darwyn Cooke, Alex Ross, and Fleischer Studios shine through in his work, but his style is still uniquely his own, and simply breathe-taking.

So of course seeing "The Dude" tackle my two favorite DC characters, the Last Son of Krypton and the World's Mightiest Mortal, in all of their classic, iconic, nostalgic glory, gives me an even greater warm and fuzzy feeling. Just check out this gorgeous piece featuring both characters together!

Honestly he's done so many breathe-taking commission pieces featuring Superman & Captain Marvel, like the transformation sequence to the right, or the patriotic Superman pieces below, that it was pretty hard to limit my selections for this post, there were a lot of gorgeous pieces to choose from.
 
 

That doesn't even include all of the great Mary Marvel, Supergirl, and Captain Marvel Jr. pieces that "The Dude" has done over the years. Those may warrant their own post in the future here on the blog.
 

Unfortunately Steve has never had a chance to work on a serialized story starring Captain Marvel, so for the time being, we'll just have to salivate over these gorgeous commission pieces that he's done over the years. However, if you're a Superman fan, you're in luck! There is the gorgeous 1990 three issue World's Finest prestige format mini-series starring Superman & Batman, which was written by Dave Gibbons, penciled by Rude, and inked by Karl Kesel. This mini-series has been collected in both a TPB format and Deluxe Hardcover that includes a lot of extras.

In addition to that mini-series, Rude also penciled the gorgeous Legends of the DC Universe #14 written by Mark Evanier, and the Incredible Hulk vs. Superman #1 Marvel-DC Crossover written by Roger Stern, both from 1999.

Rude's most recent time tackling the Man of Steel happened on both the cover and interiors of the final issue of the digital-first, Adventures of Superman series. Issue #17 featured a gorgeous Steve Rude cover, and inside the book he tackled the art duties of the 10 page story "Seed of Destruction" which was written by Jerry Ordway.

If you'd like to see more of Steve Rude's fantastic artwork, and follow his upcoming projects, be sure to check out his website at http://www.steverude.com/