One superhero that has been out of print for many years, and is one of my favorite is the Shadow. He's now back in his own comic book and I'm excited about it! - Rob
The Shadow still knows — as do Flash Gordon, the Lone Ranger, the Green Hornet and other heroes of 1930s and '40s radio shows, pulp magazines and movie serials.
These
good guys are making a comeback, though mainly in comics and
feature-length movies. Next month, The Shadow receives a comics reboot
courtesy of Dynamite Entertainment, which also publishes ongoing series
starring Flash Gordon and Green Hornet plus a new title with pulp hero
The Spider that's due in May.
On the big screen, a masked Seth Rogen stung bad guys in last year's The Green Hornet. And in The Lone Ranger, in production for release in 2013, Armie Hammer rides tall as the title cowboy with Johnny Depp
as his sidekick Tonto. Baby Boomers grew up watching the Clayton Moore
TV series in the '50s, although the saga began as a 1933 radio show in
Detroit. Though these characters may not be as well known as today's comic-book superheroes or the Star Wars and Harry Potter clans, they were the bee's knees for a generation that was decades away from the Internet and iPods.
Before
Batman, there was the alter ego Lamont Cranston donning the shadowy
mask and hat while haunting radio waves as The Shadow, voiced by Orson Welles in the late '30s. And before Superman and Captain America
there was Flash Gordon, an all-American space adventurer who tussled
with planetary tyrant Ming the Merciless in sci-fi comic strips by Alex Raymond and serial films starring Buster Crabbe.
"The
'20s and '30s are seen as a very romantic age, with the criminal
underworld of urban America and high adventure of exotic foreign
locations providing a bit of an edge," says Garth Ennis, who is writing
the new Shadow comic. "The reality, I'm sure, would have been mostly a lot more mundane and occasionally quite grim."
He's
crafting The Shadow as a dangerous champion of law and order with a
flair for the dramatic, and he is embracing one of the vigilante's
oldest and most famous traits: his habit of laughing as he consigns his
enemies to their doom.
"I decided to be fairly
sparing with it," Ennis says. "If he started howling every timehttp://www.usatoday.com/life/comics/story/2012-03-20/Radio-stars-and-pulp-heroes-return-to-pop-culture/53659158/1?csp=Dailybriefing he
threw a punch or fired a shot, it would get old fast. So I decided to
preserve the laugh for moments of deep, dark, extreme humor."
His take on The Shadow
comic is a bloody affair, where the mysterious figure dispatches bad
guys with violent aplomb. More than 70 years ago, though, audiences had
to visualize with their imagination what was going on during the
radio-show exploits. FULL STORY:
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