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Showing posts with label magazine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label magazine. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 8, 2025

Captain's 50th Anniversary Library: SPACE: 1999 "The Last Moonrise"

Today, we offer the second adaptation, from #1 of Charlton's Space: 1999 b/w magazine.
Written by Nicola Cuti, drawn by Gray Morrow.

It's interesting to see how much is left out of the five-page story, as opposed to the twenty-page Power Records version, which is much more complete.

Artist Gray Morrow was also the magazine's art editor, and painted all eight covers, some of which were reused on merchandise like t-shirts and puzzles.
The cover art for #1, shown above, was also used as advertising key art for first season print ads.
Next Week:
...the Four-Color Comic Adaptation!

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Monday, March 7, 2016

Bruce Lee: the Man Who Was Kato

...Bruce Lee's performance as Kato was, to many, the defining aspect of the Green Hornet TV series.
But who was the "man behind the mask", and how did he end up in the role?
As for who he was, there's a well-done overall bio (with clips) HERE.
As for how he got the Green Hornet gig...
In early 1966, the country went Bat-mad with the mid-season debut of the Adam West-starring tv series...
All three networks jumped on the bandwagon, soliciting ideas for new comic book/strip-themed shows for September 1966.
Batman's producer, William Dozier, came up with several ideas, including...
...whose radio show reruns were getting great ratings with college-age audiences and lp record albums (like the one above) of the old episodes were flying out of stores.
(Note: there was no Green Hornet comic book at that point.)
The character's creator insisted that, unlike Batman, the show be played "straight" rather than "campy", a point Dozier emphasized in his "pitch" to the ABC execs...

Dozier's first (and only) choice for Kato was a guy he had auditioned in 1965 for the role of Number One Son in a Charlie Chan TV pilot that never got off the ground.
Here's a condensed version of how things went after that from Marvel's Deadly Hands of Kung Fu #28 (1976), written by Martin Sands, penciled by Joe Staton and inked by Tony DeZuniga's studio...
The 1993 biopic Dragon: the Bruce Lee Story showed an apocryphal scene demonstrating how Bruce would "add" to the stuntwork in a scene to liven-up the action.
BTW, the Director character in the sequence is played by Van Williams, the TV Green Hornet!
Lee went to Hong Kong, immediately found work, and, from his first film, The Big Boss, onward, became a box-office sensation.
Due to that, The Green Hornet was a hit in reruns on Asian TV networks, which advertised it as The Kato Show.
American producers then cast him as the Asian member of a multi-racial cast of protaganists along with Jim Kelly and John Saxon in the kung-fu/spy mashup Enter the Dragon, which resulted in Bruce Lee becaming the genre's first superstar in America and Europe.
Sadly, Lee died under mysterious circumstances shortly before Dragon hit the theatres.
All his Hong Kong films were dubbed and released to theatres, doing extremely well at the box office.
Desperate for new Lee-based product, producer Laurence Joachim licensed the theatrical rights to the Green Hornet and composited episodes together to make two feature films, The Green Hornet...
First release poster
Second release poster (above) and Japanese release poster (below)
...and Fury of the Dragon. both of which gave Lee top billing!
Here's the trailers for both of them.

...And here's the entire Green Hornet feature film...

Enjoy!
Be here tomorrow, when we take a look at how Bruce Lee's Kato differed from the previous movie and radio incarnations.
The answers will surprise you!
And have a look at the other participants in...
Please check out the rest of the astounding entries by clicking HERE.

Tuesday, March 5, 2013

Captain's Library: BATTLESTAR GALACTICA Conclusion

Art by Bob Larkin
There are those who believe...that life here began out there, far across the Universe...with tribes of humans...who may have been the forefathers of the Egyptians...or the Toltecs...or the Mayans...that they may have been the architects of the Great Pyramids...or the lost civilizations of Lemuria...or Atlantis.
Some believe that there may yet be brothers of man...who even now fight to survive--far, far away amongst the stars...
Betrayed by one of their own to the robotic alien Cylons*, the Twelve Colonies of Man are wiped out in a sneak attack.
The survivors hastily assemble a fleet of ships under the protection of the only remaining Battlestar, and head away from their now-devastated worlds....
This second half of the movie version of Battlestar Galactica was presented by writer Roger McKenzie and artist/colorist/painter Ernie Colon.
Because it was based on an early draft of the script, names (Serina is called Lyra) are different, and some characters who live in both the movie and tv series (including Cassiopeia) die!
(Baltar dies in the feature film, but survives in the TV series.)

This first version of Marvel Super Special #8 (1978) was a full-process color, slick-stock magazine.
However, because the editor didn't get approval from Universal Studios on the final art before it went to press, the vast majority of the copies were ordered pulped!
(This story has been confirmed by both then-Marvel Editor-in-Chief Jim Shooter and the book's artist Ernie Colon.)
Changes in both script and art were made, and the book was reissued as a tabloid-sized Treasury edition, with standard comic book "flat" coloring and a new pen-and-ink cover by Rick Bryant based on the Bob Larkin cover painting!
The story was modified again when it was expanded to fill the first three issues of the ongoing Battlestar Galactica comic book...including keeping both Baltar and Cassie alive!

*Though the Cylons' Imperious Leader appears reptilian, he is as much a robot as the others, though based on the image of the humanoid lizards who created the robots!
While never stated specifically, it's implied the robots overthrew and eliminated their masters, whom they deemed "imperfect".
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Battlestar Galactica: the Definitive Collection
The Original Series
Galactica: 1980
Original Feature Film

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Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Captain's Library: BATTLESTAR GALACTICA Part 1

The Marvel adaptation of the 1970s movie/tv series went thru several versions...
...and this is the first one...the extremely-limited/never-reprinted version, from the magazine-sized Marvel Super-Special #8 (1978).
...and thus we pause to catch our breath...until next week...and the cataclysmic conclusion.
This first half of the movie version of Battlestar Galactica was presented by writer Roger McKenzie and artist/colorist/painter Ernie Colon.
We'll have the story behind the change from magazine to tabloid format next time.
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Battlestar Galactica: the Definitive Collection
The Original Series
Galactica: 1980
Original Feature Film

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