From "The Return of the Pied Piper of Himmler" by Otto Binder and Al Carreno, Captain Marvel Jr. #3 (January 1943)
Eager to get to 1943 because you have the "New Year" on your minds? Let me oblige. Just three Fawcett comics to go anyway. We start on Junior his very distinctive ballet moves designed by Mac Raboy. No, but really, what other comics artist ever made heroes do steps like this? Carreno does a good job of emulating Raboy's "house" style here as the Pied Piper of Himmler (gosh) gets slammed in a rare Golden Age mid-story splash page.
From Captain Marvel, Jr.: "The Case of the Jolly Roger" by Otto Binder and Mac Raboy, Master Comics #35 (February 1943)
For Panel #800, I wanted to use Raboy himself. No ballet, though. Instead, the funniest part of Junior's fight with the world's "youngest super-criminal", Jolly Roger. Master Comics indeed!
From Captain Marvel: "Captain Marvel Finds Utopia" by Otto Binder and Marc Swayze, Whiz Comics #39 (January 1943)
And back to Whiz and the "adult" Captain Marvel, who finds out Utopia may not be all that it's cracked up to be. But, I mean, if all they're doing is shouting "Bang! Bang!" at each other, maybe the "victim" is being hyperbolic.
Eager to get to 1943 because you have the "New Year" on your minds? Let me oblige. Just three Fawcett comics to go anyway. We start on Junior his very distinctive ballet moves designed by Mac Raboy. No, but really, what other comics artist ever made heroes do steps like this? Carreno does a good job of emulating Raboy's "house" style here as the Pied Piper of Himmler (gosh) gets slammed in a rare Golden Age mid-story splash page.
From Captain Marvel, Jr.: "The Case of the Jolly Roger" by Otto Binder and Mac Raboy, Master Comics #35 (February 1943)
For Panel #800, I wanted to use Raboy himself. No ballet, though. Instead, the funniest part of Junior's fight with the world's "youngest super-criminal", Jolly Roger. Master Comics indeed!
From Captain Marvel: "Captain Marvel Finds Utopia" by Otto Binder and Marc Swayze, Whiz Comics #39 (January 1943)
And back to Whiz and the "adult" Captain Marvel, who finds out Utopia may not be all that it's cracked up to be. But, I mean, if all they're doing is shouting "Bang! Bang!" at each other, maybe the "victim" is being hyperbolic.
Comments
And all because Diana had to go and take things a little too far with the bondage...