In this humorous story from FRANKENSTEIN #11 (Prize, January-February 1948), Boris Karload (aka Boris Karloff) meets his alter ego. Amusing, and executed with typical flair from the great Dick Briefer.
Friday, February 28, 2025
Wednesday, February 26, 2025
HEADLESS AND LOVING IT!
It's true that comic books were influenced by their close cousins, the pulp magazines. Even horror comics took a cue from the "shudder pulps" and others titles of the day. One look at the covers below and I'll think you'll agree. Dont'cha just love it?
Monday, February 24, 2025
HORROR COMICS AFTER THE CODE
Designated on the cover as suitable for both adults and children, the text box was surely meant to notify parents that this comic was safe to read after the national scandal over comic books that led to the oversight of the Comics Code Authority.
In the on-line article by Ken Parille in THE COMICS JOURNAL (June 2, 2014) he has this to say about Morisi's work:
"Unlike Sienkiewicz and Steranko, Morisi executes interesting effects without drawing much attention to his art. His peculiar visual approach continually unravels — even deadens — a plot’s tension, working against the excitement that comic-book readers expected and demanded. He’s a subtle and strange artist.Much of his energy lives not in panel-to-panel flow but in the framed confines of the panel, in flat images on lifeless pages. ... His peculiar genius lies in the way he seems to disrupt our desire to glide across a page. While it’s hard to talk about the specific effect that images have on us, many of his panels feel calming, almost a little hypnotic and "sculptural" ... The characters’ faces and the comic's text reveal an odd disconnect: the dialogue and narration convey the situation's drama, yet the facial expressions don't. People stare off somewhere beyond the panel, disengaged from the plot and from each other, counteracting the intensity that the text's many exclamations points are supposed to carry. This disconnect lends Morisi's Charlton work an odd, subdued pathos."This dense and varied line work gives their art and pages an inherent sense of action. But Morisi stayed with his 1950’s George Tuska/Alex Toth-like approach. His accurate, old-fashioned ink line adds to his art’s tranquility, just as it set him apart from contemporary comics, in which peril and panic were omnipresent.Artists who worked in horror and adventure genres often followed in the [Neal] Adams’s tradition. Many whose art appeared in Charlton comics alongside Morisi’s tended toward a wavier, often scratchier ink line, and their drawings typically used far more lines than his."
Canadian cartoonist Seth made an astute observation about the "stillness" of a comic book page, and it relates to Morisi's style:
"There is something very lovely about the stillness of a comic book page. That austere stacked grid of boxes. The little people trapped in time. Its frozen and silent nature acting almost as a counterpoint to the raucous vulgarity of the modern aesthetic. Of course, the drawings aren’t really frozen. When we look at them, we immediately invest them with life. That little ink world pops into life as our eyes move across the drawings. I actually find it very difficult to look at a cartoon and hold on to the stillness. The essence of the cartoon language carries a kind of animation with it. This is true even with a single drawing, but it is especially evident when one panel is placed next to another. That juxtaposition creates a tension that implies motion and time."
NOTE: Third-party ads have been removed from this scan.
Read THE COMICS JOURNAL full article on Pete Morisi HERE.
Friday, February 21, 2025
ARTIST PROFILE: L.B. COLE
Some of the most unique horror comic covers from the Pre-Code years are the result of the stylings of the talented artist L.B. Cole. He was born Leonard "Lenny" Hildebrandt Cohen on August 28, 1918 in the Bronx, New York City. At the age of fifteen, his father changed the family name to the "less Jewish-sounding Cole, something done quite often during the time to both "Americanize" the name, as well as avoid any stigma about being Jewish.
Cole left school and went to work in his grandfather's cigar factory, where he cultivated an interest in commercial art. He landed a job at the company that manufactured his grandfather's cigar box labels and remained in the field of commercial art until 1940, when he began to paint adult paperback book covers for Phoenix Press for Harry Donenfield, future co-owner of DC Comics.
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Paperback book covers by L.B. Cole [Source: Pulpartists.com]. |
In 1949, Cole founded Star Publications after buying the rights to the characters from Novelty Press' BLUE BOLT COMICS. Star remained in business until 1954, when the Comics Code Authority went into effect. Cole continued with his art into the 1990's until his death on December 5, 1995 at the age of 77.
Mainly a cover artist, Cole is known for creating some of the most imaginative and strangest cover images ever. Likely result of his background in commercial art, his covers are works of as much design as they are illustration. His choice of color was always highly-saturated hues, likely to draw more attention on the comic racks. Cole returned often to the theme of the Devil or devilish characters to suggest that malicious or evil intent was in store for readers.
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L.B. Cole cover for 3-D Exotic Beauties (3-D Zone, 1990). |
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L.B. Cole undated art. |
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L.B. Cole undated art. |
See more of L.B. Cole's work HERE.
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