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Showing posts with label Bernard Krigstein. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bernard Krigstein. Show all posts

Monday, May 19, 2014

Number 1579: Two stories, one moral

These two stories, which appeared in the same issue of Hillman’s Western Fighters (Vol. 3 No. 12, 1951), have things in common. They are both drawn by comic book men who went into careers as fine artists, and both stories have a similar moral.

Bernard Krigstein and Gerald McCann were like some other comic book artists of their era; the Depression had made it hard for fine artists, and to pay the rent they had gone into comic books. Not only did comics help buy groceries, but I believe the artists who did them learned something about illustration, composition and story-telling from comic books that helped them later. Krigstein quit comics for good in 1962, and McCann also drew comics into the sixties. If you google their names you should find some examples of their painted works.

The moral I mentioned is about revenge. Each story concerns killings that come by way of revenge, and both of the stories end with the vengeance seeker finding that revenge wasn’t the answer. Pretty simple, I’d say, but not for today’s market in popular entertainment. Hooo-boy, do they do revenge nowadays! A “hero” can double as a psychopathic stone killer. able to mow down dozens of people without remorse or second thoughts. I’m like everyone else; I like to watch the bad guys get their asses kicked. I also like to think that the hero I identify with isn’t just as bad as that bad guy.















Friday, December 18, 2009


Number 651


Krigstein at DC


I'm not sure how many stories Bernard Krigstein drew for DC Comics. During the late 1940s and early 1950s he freelanced quite a bit for a variety of publishers. These two stories from 1953, in Strange Adventures#32 and #33, show he adapted well to the DC house style. I'm not sure why he didn't do more for editor Julius Schwartz.

Both of the stories are written by Sid Gerson. As with a lot of the contents of Strange Adventures, they toss around major science fiction concepts like beanbags. In "The Atomic Invasion" a couple of scientists invent a process by which they can transmute themselves through matter, just in time to meet the threat of gas people from the star Zollic. "The Snows of Mars" has Martians sending us "magnetic snow," which is a curse, only to end the story with a blessing...from the snow comes the cure for all diseases known to mankind! Wow! All that in only six pages!

Neither of these stories show Krigstein at his artistic and creative pinnacle, but they are both good examples of artwork within the Schwartz system.