Planet Comics

Planet Comics

Cover to Planet Comics #53 (March 1948). Art by Joe Doolin.
Publication information
Publisher Fiction House
Format Anthology
Genre
    Publication date January 1940 – Winter 1953
    Number of issues 73
    Main character(s) Flint Baker and the Space Rangers
    Gale Allen
    Mysta of the Moon
    Spurt Hammond
    et al.

    Planet Comics was a science fiction comic book title produced by Fiction House and ran for 73 issues from January 1940 to Winter 1953. Like many of Fiction House's early comics titles, Planet Comics was a spinoff of a pulp magazine, in this case Planet Stories, which featured space operatic tales of muscular, heroic space adventurers who were quick with their "ray pistols" and always running into gorgeous females who needed rescuing from bug-eyed space aliens or fiendish interstellar bad guys.

    Overview

    Planet Comics was considered by noted fan Raymond Miller to be "perhaps the best of the Fiction House group," as well as "most collected and most valued."[1] In Miller's opinion, it "wasn't really featuring good art or stories... in the first dozen or so issues," not gaining most of "its better known characters" until "about the 10th issue." "Only 3 of [its] long running strips started with the first issue... Flint Baker, Auro - Lord of Jupiter, and the Red Comet."[1]

    Release schedule

    Planet Comics #1 was released with a cover-date of January 1940, and ran for 73 issues until Winter 1953.[2] Initially produced on a monthly schedule, issue #8 (Sept. 1940) saw it slip to a bimonthly title, which it held until the end of 1949. From issue #26 (Sept. 1943), "Planet Comics was cut to 60 pages," resulting in the merging of two strips: Flint Baker and Reef Ryan.[1] Issue #63 (Winter 1949) began a quarterly release schedule, but #64, #65, and #66 were ultimately released annually, dated Spring 1950, 1951, and 1952, respectively. Issue #67 (Summer 1952) got the comic back on its quarterly release schedule, but the title only lasted a further seven issues, with its last (#73) again delayed for over a year, following issue #72 (Fall 1953).[2]

    Style

    As a comic book, Planet Comics was the foremost purveyor of good girl art in the comics, and is considered highly collectible by modern fans of comics' Golden Age. Each page of each story featured at least one large image of a very lovely female, attired in very little in the way of costume, and in particular displaying long, bare legs.

    However, as with many other Fiction House comics, a number of the series developed by Planet Comics upped the ante by providing heroines who handily defeated the space aliens and interplanetary bad guys, while needing no or little assistance from males (the comic was also seen as a fantasy title). Cynics might have noted that this sex-equality strategy in effect simply multiplied the number of lovely girls shown per panel, and insured that each and every panel featured at least one smashing spacegirl.

    Writers

    The Flint Baker/Space Ranger stories, according to Raymond Miller, "featured such writers as Al Schmidt and Huxley Haldane."[1] Jerry Bails and Hames Ware's Who's Who of American Comic Books mentions Herman Bolstein and Dick Briefer.[3]

    Bails and Ware also list writers including Walter B. Gibson[4] (The Shadow) and Frank Belknap Long,[5] as working on "various features" for Planet Comics throughout the 1940s.

    Artists

    The strong female heroines of Planet Comics were complemented by Fiction House's employing several female artists to work on such tales, particularly Lily Renée, Marcia Snyder, Ruth Atkinson, and Fran(ces) Hopper (née Dietrick), whose art for "Mysta of the Moon" was often stunning. In addition, many artists who would become well-known names worked on Planet Comics stories over its 13-year history. These included the likes of Murphy Anderson, Matt Baker, Nick Cardy, Joe Doolin, Graham Ingels, George Evans, Ruben Moreira, John Cullen Murphy, George Tuska, and Maurice Whitman. The early covers were drawn by industry legend Will Eisner.[6]

    Covers

    The eye-catching Planet Comics covers were predominantly the work of two men — Dan Zolnerowich (later Dan Zolne) and Joe Doolin. Zolne is believed to have produced covers for issues #10-25 (Jan. 1941 – July 1943), and Doolin is thought to have illustrated all-bar-three of #26-65 (Sept. 1943 – Spring 1951).[2]

    Character listing

    Other extra features included "Spurt Hammond", human defender of the Planet Venus, who appeared c. issues #1-12[2] (or #8-13[1]), created and drawn by Henry Kiefer.[2] "Captain Nelson Cole", later an officer in the Space Patrol, appeared in solo adventures c. issues #1-14[2] (or #8-14[1]) and was originated by Alex Blum. "Crash Barker" (also "P"arker) was one of several space heroes, drawn — and possibly written — by Charles Quinlan for issue #6[2] (or #8[1]), running until #16 by other artists.[2] Another space hero, "Buzz Crandall", also had adventures around this time, drawn by artists including Gene Fawcette.[2] "Cosmo Corrigan" and "Don Granval" also appeared in three to four issues around #8/9-11.[1]

    Other less notable short-lived strips included "Quorak, Super Pirate", "Amazona the Mighty Woman", "Tiger Hart" (whose one adventure was drawn by Fletcher Hanks), "Space Admiral Curry", and "Planet Payson".[2]

    See also

    Wikimedia Commons has media related to Planet Comics.

    References

    1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 Miller, Raymond (c. 1970/1971). Love, G.B, ed. "Planet Comics". The Fandom Annual (SFCA) (2): 118–121. Check date values in: |date= (help)
    2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 Steele, Henry (1978). Fiction House - A Golden Age Index. Al Dellinges.
    3. 1 2 Bails, Jerry; Ware, Hames. Who's Who of American Comic Books. Retrieved 2009-05-16.
    4. Bails, Jerry; Ware, Hames. "Walter Gibson". Who's Who of American Comic Books. Retrieved 2009-05-16.
    5. Bails, Jerry; Ware, Hames. "Frank Belknap Long". Who's Who of American Comic Books. Retrieved 2009-05-16.
    6. Planet Comics at the Grand Comics Database. Retrieved 2009-05-16.
    7. Bails, Jerry; Ware, Hames. "Rafael Astarita". Who's Who of American Comic Books. Retrieved 2009-05-16.

    External links

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