Camera Fun and today's mystery photo
Apr. 6th, 2009 10:05 pmI almost always prefer the first few years of a strip. The characters are fresh and more alive, not as restricted by increasingly limited personality traits as they will quickly become. If readers like a character because he's sarcastic or because he's naive, those traits will become exaggerated until the character becomes trapped by them and can't really react in a surprising way. At the beginning, characters are much freer and usually more spontaneous. They're usually not as good-looking too, and have more individual faces and bodies. That may seem like an odd thing to like, but comics (and cartoon) characters tend in general to be become younger-looking and cuter as time goes by (if only that were true for most of us in real life, eh?)Anyway, here are two pages from PEP# 48, May 1948. Archie and his cronies have shoved the super-heroes like the Shield and the Hangman out of the book and taken over MLJ Publications in a bloodless coup by now. This is still before the Comics Code; a few years earlier, MLJ heroes had indulged in remarkably gruesome and violent stories, and although this wasn't Archie's style, there's still a rather risque and rough edge to some of the slapstick.


Our mystery guest
One of the major creative forces in both the Golden and Silver Ages.
Our mystery guest

no subject
Date: 2009-04-06 10:29 pm (UTC)