tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31723906.post8748112439124885986..comments2024-01-28T22:17:29.551-08:00Comments on Pappy's Golden Age Comics Blogzine: Number 1807: Hooray for Halloween Horror: While the Cat’s AwayPappyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01977289662431694607noreply@blogger.comBlogger12125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31723906.post-57717939453507255542015-11-02T07:06:26.076-08:002015-11-02T07:06:26.076-08:00Happy Halloween Pappy!
I wish I could get to read...Happy Halloween Pappy!<br /><br />I wish I could get to reading your blog quicker, I hate to leave comments a couple days after that fact. I don't really think of this one as a shaggy dog story because it's basically a comedy piece. The ending is a punchline, not a grisly comeuppance. Something Al knew well from his days of silly headlight humor comics. It also gave Davis the chance to go through all his monster types!<br /><br />Al didn't do very many of these types of stories during EC's days. This is almost fan-fic-ish.<br /><br />And double what Karswell says!Brian Barneshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15737535617796413548noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31723906.post-20648275057079958302015-11-01T11:33:50.659-08:002015-11-01T11:33:50.659-08:00Ah, shucks, Karswell. I'm blushing. Thanks, pa...Ah, shucks, Karswell. I'm blushing. Thanks, pal, for the compliment. Right back atcha, too.Pappyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01977289662431694607noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31723906.post-79927150771871924502015-10-30T22:12:48.173-07:002015-10-30T22:12:48.173-07:00Pappy, your theory that these are Grimm(er) fairy ...Pappy, your theory that these are Grimm(er) fairy tales is certainly worth pondering. <br /><br /><a href="/profile/13620923188907903146" rel="nofollow">J.D.</a>, I got a brief note of thanks from Bill Hoest after I wrote to the syndicators of <i>Agatha Crumm</i>, hoping that they'd collect those strips into a book. (There was later a mass-market paperback book.)Daniel [oeconomist.com]https://www.blogger.com/profile/06763094285750736837noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31723906.post-39337992094007571942015-10-30T17:06:34.785-07:002015-10-30T17:06:34.785-07:00Thank you, Pap! I have to say, you still have the ...Thank you, Pap! I have to say, you still have the best comic blog on the web-- the rest of us blahhgers only hope to someday archive the awesome amount of excellence that you have! Mr. Karswellhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15889717828895556186noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31723906.post-9469522411772891872015-10-30T15:59:11.971-07:002015-10-30T15:59:11.971-07:00Ryan, I appreciate your note more than you know. K...Ryan, I appreciate your note more than you know. Knowing that someone is getting something out of my blog lets me know I must be doing something right. It is a good feeling.<br /><br />What I would like to do with this blog in presenting what I do is just communicate the sense of fun in the old comics. Even when I am complaining about them I am still having fun reading them. <br /><br />So, good luck on your collecting. You are doing what I did, collecting comics in less-than-perfect shape, just for reading. I see no fun in just collecting and putting the unread comic on a shelf or in a safe deposit box. Might as well collect stamps or coins if that's all you want to do.Pappyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01977289662431694607noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31723906.post-75612520973454206662015-10-30T15:46:49.363-07:002015-10-30T15:46:49.363-07:00J D, I think you should be a science fiction write...J D, I think you should be a science fiction writer. Interdimensional multiverse tunnels, wow. I'm sure on his best day Albert Feldstein, who wrote the story, would not have thought of that. Of course, that wasn't his intention, either...just another jokey story to lighten the sometimes oppressive and grim tone of the EC horror comics. <br /><br />I think the EC artists inspired each other. I know Jack inspired Johnny Craig, who wanted to be able to emulate Davis, or at least his speed. Jack could draw a story in a couple of days, then save it for a few days before turning it in so the editors didn't think he was rushing it. Craig was very slow by comparison. As for Ingels, he certainly influenced later artists like Bernie Wrightson, from my generation.Pappyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01977289662431694607noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31723906.post-51773046050362941592015-10-30T05:49:31.369-07:002015-10-30T05:49:31.369-07:00Thanks for the warning, Pappy, cuz I certainly wou...Thanks for the warning, Pappy, cuz I certainly would've been complaining about the ending of that story. Hell, I'm not sure Feldstein thought through the plot before scripting it; any fool cop would've put 2 and 2 together pretty quickly and collared those two jerks before their 3rd burglary. And the whole thing seemed pretty rushed: here are some zombies, now some vampires, now some mummies...! Felt like a filler piece to me. Nice art from Davis, though, as always. His cartoony style was appropriate for this one.<br /><br />Well, Pap, I think this is my first Halloween as a commenting member of your blogzine, and I just wanted to take a moment to tell you how you've influenced my reading and collecting. You already know I bought that <i>Boody</i> book on your recommendation and that I've opened up to acquiring coverless issues, but I don't think I've mentioned the fact that I'm often on eBay and Amazon now browsing for classic collections and reprints, such as the set of 90s Basil Wolverton <i>Spacehawk</i> reprints I just got (as well as a 3D issue with his apocalyptic art in it), and the two thick books of ME crime comics I just ordered. I've been a golden-age fan for years, but my fandom has intensified since becoming "active" on your blog. I don't read so many new comics anymore--I keep up with the Superman books out of a sense of loyalty, I guess--but I do spend a lot of time and money on the classics, and I'm having a ball doing it. Thanks for really deepening this world for me, Pappy, and increasing my appreciation for some terrific writers and artists.<br /><br />Speaking of Superman, I'm dressing up as him (in a cobbled-together costume, complete with red shoes) and giving out candy Saturday evening. Don't poison the kids, Pap!Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05389353987133860660noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31723906.post-11111240033289935772015-10-30T05:46:23.849-07:002015-10-30T05:46:23.849-07:00Well, if it makes you feel better, you can always ...Well, if it makes you feel better, you can always think that each "tunnel" was in fact a section of an inter-dimensional multiverse connected by "safe" intersections. The creatures can roam in their own tunnels but cannot enter the other tunnels. And as long as those two dolts stay IN the intersections and eat their bats, they're safe and sound. So, Keep Calm and Stay in the Intersections. Or maybe TCK just ordered the creatures to scare them to death, without doing no harm. Creatures are just a sort of spooky anti-theft device. OR it was just a joke, probably because is one of the few stories where the host is involved (Uncle Creepy's origin story was a sort of joke, too).<br />When I was young, there was this comic strip about an old lady tycoon named Agatha Crumm. She was cunning, those two guys wouldn't have fooled her. Maybe Miranda was her dumb sister.<br />When I think about EC horror, I visualize Davis art. That is fun, because I happen to like Ingels much more than Davis.J_D_La_Rue_67https://www.blogger.com/profile/13620923188907903146noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31723906.post-51957714758949405582015-10-30T04:43:31.453-07:002015-10-30T04:43:31.453-07:007f7, good catch on that "rotted road" li...7f7, good catch on that "rotted road" line. I missed that. Could have been the writer's error or the wielder of the Leroy Lettering Set who did the lettering. Either way, it is a funny mistake.Pappyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01977289662431694607noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31723906.post-33330833044681502672015-10-30T04:40:36.533-07:002015-10-30T04:40:36.533-07:00Daniel, changed men indeed! The muttered "eh ...Daniel, changed men indeed! The muttered "eh eh" was something my brother and I used to mimic when we wanted to pretend we were scared. <br /><br />Going way back in literature, many stories, especially those written for children, were full of dire punishments for misbehavior. They were trying to scare the kids straight, I guess. <br /><br />Punishment often didn't fit the crime, especially in horror stories. I am used to that in horror comics, seeing it as an extension of an older form. Pappyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01977289662431694607noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31723906.post-8769032939876626052015-10-30T04:01:50.771-07:002015-10-30T04:01:50.771-07:00So, really, a heart-warming tale of two friends wh...So, really, a heart-warming tale of two friends who stick-out a tough situation together, and eventually emerge from it as changed men. <br /><br />As you've noted, the horror stories from ACG tended to follow a formula of a couple menaced in some supernatural way, with the man usually overcoming the menace, and the couple presumably living happily ever after. The stuff out of the Iger studios seemed to be natural and supernatural forces delivering terrible punishments to people, uncorrelated with justice. <br /><br />EC, whose stuff is most remembered, generally followed a formula in which punishment which would not come otherwise is delivered to bad people by dark, supernatural forces. There are a few exceptions, such as “Chatter-Boxed!” (the tale of the blabbermouth wife who caused her husband to suffocate in a coffin, which tale was surely written to fit its punning title), but usually the EC stories are about the punishment of bad people. However, EC didn't always have the punishment fit the crime. A person who was no more than a jerk might suffer terribly at the denouement. <br /><br />These two guys get off rather easy, by EC standards. I think that this result, too, were because the story were written as a joke. <br /><br />(Some of the EC stories just create the <i>illusion</i> of a terrible fate for the villain, with what actually amounts to some other party degrading him-, her-, or themselves by abusing a corpse, “Taint the Meat” is one example, <a href="http://pappysgoldenage.blogspot.com/2012/08/number-1219-baseball-by-moonlight.html" rel="nofollow">“Foul Play”</a> another.)Daniel [oeconomist.com]https://www.blogger.com/profile/06763094285750736837noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31723906.post-33610249323459314162015-10-30T03:34:50.682-07:002015-10-30T03:34:50.682-07:00All the irony and twice the hoke —what a swell hor...All the irony and twice the hoke —what a swell horror comic. What I want to know: the lane they drove their station wagon down, was it the tree-line that was rotted or the road? Rutted roads, sure, but rotted roads are more rare.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com