Charlton VS Mighty MLJ
Showing posts with label Prankster. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Prankster. Show all posts

Saturday, December 25, 2010

Crossover Month: Pranksters Unite!

From a "B" class Superman villain to a "C" class Charlton hero, the name Prankster doesn't exactly inspire mythos nor legends. Still, the premise is the same, a regular guy who through the use of gag gimmicks is able to level the playing field between himself and his opposition.
Oswald Loomis, the original Prankster, went toe-to-toe with the Man of Tomorrow several times throughout the decades... with his punchlines always ending up flat. In the late 60's, another Prankster literally was a man of tomorrow, of a future era where arts and entertainment are quashed for conformity and order... with this unnamed man tried to shake things up.

Monday, May 3, 2010

Gamester Good-Guys: Blackjack and Prankster

Since pictures are, after all, worth a thousand words, we introduce our two champions of cheese-ball crime fighting, one whom debuted alongside Steel Sterling in Zip Comics #20 in 1941 (lasting  until issue #35). He returned in Mighty Crusaders #4 and then waited until 2001 before joining that team in Archie's Weird Mysteries #3 as they battled a legion of villains in a parallel universe.







The Prankster was introduced in Peter Cannon...Thunderbolt's #60 in 1967.  Prankster's second scheduled appearance was never to be as he and his Ultrapolis faded away. One was a product of a classic past era, the other of a potential future era. Both fought the establishment that they lived within and did so with a reckless abandon. Note their differing styles, with Blackjack's panels on the left and Prankster's on the right.

Blackjack the scourge of the underworld, aka police detective Jack Jones. Prankster the social anarchist against the police, alias unknown. The men that threw caution to the wind, donned gaudy red and black spandex, and exercised their right to practicing vigilante justice like a game of chance and humor. In the end, they each were forgotten by the general comic book reading public in general, but here we remember them as mirthful myths of bthe golden and silver age of comics!

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Last letters of dying publishers

Of interest are these notes from the last issues of Mighty Crusaders #7 and Thunderbolt #60. Both hint at future plans and greater aspirations for both Charlton and Mighty Comics, that we now know ended abruptly.

 

An actual critical letter posted in a Mighty Comics letter column? Please pinch us, collectively! Dusty's one sole appearance without explanation on his silver age solitude from superheroing was definitely mysterious, and along with Bob Phantom "and Blackjack were sadly neglected in the 60's comics run. THE UNEMPLOYED GUYS" indeed. Looks like all Hangman's "cancelite" worked best on their very own titles.



There is an excellent write up on the Prankster posted elsewhere. Both he and Thunderbolt had tremendous potential (and love their color schemes and style...long lost cousins several times removed, perhaps?),. "The Sentinels didn't click with us, either"...interesting admission. Actually the former Protesters folk singing band could've clicked with better artwork and story pacing, But alas it t'wasn't to be and the big "C" went in a different direction focusing on lisensed characters and mystery. Sigh.