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Post by Hoosier X on Dec 21, 2017 18:23:25 GMT -5
I got myself a couple of early X-Mas presents and they both came in the mail today! I haven't had a chance to read them yet. I did flip through them to make sure they were all there with no pages missing or coupons cut out but I was very careful not to look at the story content of the Batman stories. If it turns out that IT'S STUPID RANDOM ALIENS, I want to be surprised! I'm trying to figure out the odds that STUPID RANDOM ALIENS are behind it in BOTH stories. Better than 50-50. Much better. Both issues also have Roy Raymond, TV Detective (where it's NEVER aliens) and the Martian Manhunter (where it's aliens a fair amount of time).
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Confessor
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Post by Confessor on Dec 25, 2017 7:51:07 GMT -5
I'd like to buy more Bronze Age Batman comics, especially the Neal Adams stuff, but they're so damn expensive. I mean, Bronze Age Spidey is expensive enough, but the asking price for Batman books just seems way higher.
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Post by MDG on Dec 25, 2017 12:43:44 GMT -5
I'd like to buy more Bronze Age Batman comics, especially the Neal Adams stuff, but they're so damn expensive. I mean, Bronze Age Spidey is expensive enough, but the asking price for Batman books just seems way higher. Yeah, but the stories are readily available in other forms.
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Confessor
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Post by Confessor on Dec 26, 2017 5:52:21 GMT -5
I'd like to buy more Bronze Age Batman comics, especially the Neal Adams stuff, but they're so damn expensive. I mean, Bronze Age Spidey is expensive enough, but the asking price for Batman books just seems way higher. Yeah, but the stories are readily available in other forms. I didn't think that they were readily available? At least, not in versions that are faithful to the originals. I thought that modern reprints of that material had all been recoloured and, worse, redrawn in some cases by Adams himself? I have zero interest in that -- it's the comic book equivalent of having Paul McCartney re-record his vocals and subtly change the lyrics on the Beatles' records. I want to read those Batman comics as they were originally published.
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Post by Hoosier X on Jan 12, 2018 0:00:54 GMT -5
I plan to get back to my Bronze Age Detective Comics Reading Program soon. I was distracted with the holidays and my job and volunteer work and the Rita Farr filmography. If I don't have time to write up a few comments every once in a while, I don't want to just keep reading Detective Comics and get way ahead without saying something. I'm up to the first appearance of the Spook, and he's one of my favorites, so I'll be writing about that in a few days. I read this last night: Detective Comics #276! Bat-Mite and Batwoman! The villain is what I wanted to talk about. He's the Hobby Robber! He specializes in ... hobby-themed crimes. Sometimes he robs stamp and coin conventions. But in one scene he steals some miniature train sets for his own miniature-train collection! OMG! He's hilarious! Gotham City is SO DANG WEIRD!
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Post by chadwilliam on Jan 12, 2018 0:57:16 GMT -5
Yeah, but the stories are readily available in other forms. I didn't think that they were readily available? At least, not in versions that are faithful to the originals. I thought that modern reprints of that material had all been recoloured and, worse, redrawn in some cases by Adams himself? I have zero interest in that -- it's the comic book equivalent of having Paul McCartney re-record his vocals and subtly change the lyrics on the Beatles' records. I want to read those Batman comics as they were originally published. It shouldn't be too difficult to track down the 'Best of the Brave and the Bold' Baxter reprints from 1988 containing about a half dozen Brave and the Bold stories written by Haney, Baxter's 1988's Saga of Ra's al Ghul four issues reprinting all of the early Ra's al Ghul tales (including those not done by Adams), and the 1984 Baxter Man-Bat issue reprinting Tec 400, 402, and 407 all pencilled by Neal Adams. Of course, that isn't everything he did, but it should provide you with about a dozen Neal Adams Batman replicas faithful to the originals.
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Post by foxley on Jan 12, 2018 5:31:09 GMT -5
I plan to get back to my Bronze Age Detective Comics Reading Program soon. I was distracted with the holidays and my job and volunteer work and the Rita Farr filmography. If I don't have time to write up a few comments every once in a while, I don't want to just keep reading Detective Comics and get way ahead without saying something. I'm up to the first appearance of the Spook, and he's one of my favorites, so I'll be writing about that in a few days. I read this last night: Detective Comics #276! Bat-Mite and Batwoman! The villain is what I wanted to talk about. He's the Hobby Robber! He specializes in ... hobby-themed crimes. Sometimes he robs stamp and coin conventions. But in one scene he steals some miniature train sets for his own miniature-train collection! OMG! He's hilarious! Gotham City is SO DANG WEIRD! I miss wacky theme villains. Comics need to bring back the wacky theme villain.
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Confessor
CCF Mod Squad
Not Bucky O'Hare!
Posts: 10,156
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Post by Confessor on Jan 12, 2018 7:20:18 GMT -5
I didn't think that they were readily available? At least, not in versions that are faithful to the originals. I thought that modern reprints of that material had all been recoloured and, worse, redrawn in some cases by Adams himself? I have zero interest in that -- it's the comic book equivalent of having Paul McCartney re-record his vocals and subtly change the lyrics on the Beatles' records. I want to read those Batman comics as they were originally published. It shouldn't be too difficult to track down the 'Best of the Brave and the Bold' Baxter reprints from 1988 containing about a half dozen Brave and the Bold stories written by Haney, Baxter's 1988's Saga of Ra's al Ghul four issues reprinting all of the early Ra's al Ghul tales (including those not done by Adams), and the 1984 Baxter Man-Bat issue reprinting Tec 400, 402, and 407 all pencilled by Neal Adams. Of course, that isn't everything he did, but it should provide you with about a dozen Neal Adams Batman replicas faithful to the originals. That's great and very useful information. Thanks!
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Post by Hoosier X on Jan 17, 2018 2:20:10 GMT -5
I got a beat-up copy of Batman Annual #7 for a dollar! The back cover is loose, but this book is more than worth it in any condition because it has so many great stories. Ive read most of these stories before but a lot of the key stories I've read in collection that I got from the library and its very nice to have them in my own collection where I read them whenever I want. It's got the first Bat-Mite story! And the first appearance of Bat-Girl (Betty Kane, not Barbara Gordon)! And "Batwoman's Publicity Agent!" And the first of the imaginary stories where Alfred writes weird fan fiction about what will happen in the future when Bruce Wayne and Kathy Kane get married and eventually retire and Robin will become Batman II and the son of Bruce and Kathy will become Robin II. This one I've never read before. There's a few other stories but only other one that I'd never read is "The Secret of Batman's Butler" which flashes back to Alfred's first days as Bruce Wayne's butler when he didn't know about Batman. In the present day, he starts to think that he may have said something (accidentally, of course) when he didn't know Wayne's secret that might have given away the secret. And now he's worried and retracing his steps and trying to remember everything he said and did back then. Calm down, Alfred! You'll get an ulcer!
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Post by Deleted on Jan 17, 2018 2:24:25 GMT -5
My favorite Batman Annual #7 ... the reason for it ... first story of Bat-Mite!
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Post by Prince Hal on Jan 18, 2018 10:42:04 GMT -5
Hoosier X, check out the splash page thread. You inspired me...
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Post by chadwilliam on Jan 18, 2018 11:59:04 GMT -5
There's a few other stories but only other one that I'd never read is "The Secret of Batman's Butler" which flashes back to Alfred's first days as Bruce Wayne's butler when he didn't know about Batman. In the present day, he starts to think that he may have said something (accidentally, of course) when he didn't know Wayne's secret that might have given away the secret. And now he's worried and retracing his steps and trying to remember everything he said and did back then. Calm down, Alfred! You'll get an ulcer! I remember reading Untold Legend of the Batman and recognizing all sorts of flashbacks to historic events - death of the Waynes, the origin of the Joker/Two-Face/Batgirl/etc - but being perplexed by the origin provided for Alfred. I knew from my copy of Batman: From the 30's to the 70's that he stumbled up his Master's secret identity by accident, but here they provided a completely different sequence of events leading to that revelation (A badly injured Batman is helped back to the Bat-Cave by Robin, who calls to Alfred for help, and Alfred follows the yelling to a secret door behind the Grandfather clock leading to the Cave). I figured that Len Wein just came up with something new when he wrote Untold but no, he got it from The Secret of Batman's Butler which was one of those obscure stories you'd expect to have been ignored by the time 1980 rolled around.
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Post by Hoosier X on Jan 18, 2018 21:53:44 GMT -5
I got this in the mail today. It's a very nice VG copy. The second "New Look" issue of Detective Comics! Wonderful Moldoff "New Look" style art. This is a sort of a key issue because ... the death of Alfred! And it sets up the later storyline where Alfred became the Outsider somehow for some reason. Also, the first appearance of Aunt Harriet! And in the back-up, the Elongated Man solves the case of the guy who stole a barn door! The best part is Sue getting kind of bent out of shape because Ralph changes their plans to investigate the crime. Instead of staying at the best hotel in Florida Beach, they stay in a bad hotel. Instead of going to a nice restaurant, they go to a diner. Instead of walking around among the exclusive shops, they go to the farmers market. I love Sue! She's the best. Instead of a letters page, there's a two-page text piece written by Bob Kane about how great he is. Bill Finger who? I'd rather have a letters page.
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Post by Hoosier X on Jan 18, 2018 23:41:46 GMT -5
I'm still working on reading every issue of Detective Comics from #390 to the present, but I got kind of busy with the holidays and other things. (And also distracted by Silver Age Doom Patrol! Do you think that Rita Farr filmography wrote itself?) It's actually pretty easy to read one issue of Detective Comics almost every night before going to bed. It's writing about it every so often that I don't always get to. And I'm up to Detective Comics #434 and #435, the first two appearances of the Spook, and I decided to stop until I had a chance to write about the Spook ... and I guess I got kind of busy and didn't write about the Spook for a while, and so much time passed after I read the issues that I forgot what I was going to say. It looks like I haven't posted on my long journey through "Detective Comics, 1970 to NOW" since November, and the last issue I wrote about was #424, the last issue with the Batgirl back-up, when she was elected to Congress. (Barbara Gordon, D-Burnside) Sorry it took so long to get back to it! Anyway, I love the Spook! I have a hard time putting my finger on why. He kind of reminds me of the Phantom Blot, an old Mickey Mouse character (who I know nothing about because I've only seen his image and have never read a story with him in it). The Spook has a very simple design that could easily belong to a Batman character during the first year or two of his run in in Detective Comics. The Spook could easily take his place next to Dr. Death, the Monk, Professor Hugo Strange, Clayface, the Napoleon dirigible guy and the guy with no face. As a matter of fact, the Spook could be a pulp villain, fighting the Shadow, the Spider (Master of Men), the Phantom Detective, Operator #5, the Black Bat and so on. The Spook has mysterious powers that seem to be supernatural. How else could he do what he does? He appears to a gangster named Big T, languishing in Gotham's state-of-the-art penitentiary, and offers him a chance to escape, and the next thing Big T knows, he's safe on the street with a new pair of prescription glasses that have a special button that will alert the Spook when Big T gets into trouble. The Spook has offered his protection to a number of Gotham crooks. When Batman rounds up a couple of thieves, they give up, smiling, confident the Spook will save them. And he does. Batman cuffs them to the steering wheel of the Bat-Mobile and as he's driving them to the cops, he's distracted by a gigantic gaseous version of the Spook. Batman gets out to investigate and it dissipates. But the Bat-Mobile has been stolen! It turns up in the GCPD impound lot and the crooks are gone, replaced by a small Spook doll, his tiny hands cuffed to the steering wheel. It's an amusing image, masterfully rendered (like the whole story) by Irv Novick and Dick Giordano. And these two issues were written by Frank Robbins, supplying that Batman magic he conjures up so well, taking this pulp reject the Spook and crafting a fun little story that always leaves you guessing. So we have two issues's worth of bizarre incidents like this, lots of smoke and lots of befuddlement. How did he DO that?!?! And it turns out that the Spook is sort of like DC's Mysterio. Everything is eventually explained (not always very convincingly if you think about it too hard, just like a Mysterio story) and it's all just special effects and misdirection. Batman, of course, never falters in his belief that there is nothing supernatural about any of this. The Spook returned here and there, and some of these 1970s stories are kind of cool. Grant Morrison brought him back decades later and treated the Spook like a lame, throwaway character. Because Grant Morrison is lazy.
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Post by Hoosier X on Jan 22, 2018 18:10:45 GMT -5
I'm back to reading Detective Comics most every night. I'm up to #438, the first 100-Page Super-Spectacular issue of Detective Comics. It might take me a few days to read the whole thing. And one of the reprinted stories is "Gotham Gang Line-Up!" from Detective Comics #328, which I just read very recently because I got that issue in the mail.
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