Wednesday, August 08, 2012

Number 1206: Captain Science and the Flower of Death!

I showed “The Flower of Death,” a few years ago. I’m re-presenting it with new scans. What I said about it then was that it was a story I chased for years without knowing what it was. I’d seen it when I was very young, maybe six-years-old, at a friend’s house. Despite being surrounded by two very cool Wood and Orlando Captain Science stories, what I remembered about the comic book was the transition of flower to ape. People write me sometimes and ask if I can help them identify a story they remember, and without fail I can't. I can't even help myself. This was a story stuck in my memory for many years that I couldn't find, and then one day opened up Captain Science #5 and there it was. Eureka!

Except...it's not much of a story. Artwork is serviceable, credited by the Grand Comics Database in their question mark fashion as being by Bill Fraccio? and Vince Napoli? So they're not sure. I wondered about the clumsy transition panels (which look like photostats), flower to ape and ape to flower, and then I found the origin of it in a gasoline ad from a 1950 issue of Life. This is another of my discoveries in Life that later turned up in comic books.


I've also included a Captain Science story from the issue because I love this Joe Orlando-Wally Wood science fiction and so do you. These are my scans from the original comic, but the story is also included in the book Wally Wood: Strange Worlds of Science Fiction, edited by J. David Spurlock. It's a trade paperback available from Amazon.com, among other bookselling sites, and if you're fortunate, at your favorite local comic book shop.

From Captain Science #5, 1951:















4 comments:

  1. I suspect there's a different version of the Flower of Death story that has some other goofy monster in place of the saber-toothed apes.

    It was either re-purposed or the editor didn't like the original monster. Each ape is either an overlay or some bizarre pitch black inking over the original panel. I wonder why? Was the original monster way to silly? Guy saw the ad and decided on the change?

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  2. Brian, interesting observation. It does look like panels were pasted over, and clumsily so. As to who, what, why, when, where and how, I dunno. One of those little mysteries, and an oddball story.

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  3. Wow... those Life gas ad drawings being lifted sooooo shamelessly...eep. That Captain Science/Wood stuff though....lovely!

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  4. Jeffy, I read on your blog that you just had a birthday, so happy birthday, buddy!

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