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THE CARTOON CRYPT: The Kids in the Shoe (1935)

THE CARTOON CRYPT

Here’s another wonderful and weird Fleischer Color Classics cartoon. This one has a fantastic soundtrack featuring Smiley Burnette’s song Mama Don’t Allow No Music Playing Round Here. I don’t know who performs it in the cartoon… if you do, please let me know in the comments and I’ll update this post. I’ve extracted the song to an mp3, which you can download here.

You can get all but one of the Color Classics on this great DVD set called Somewhere in Dreamland:

Unfortunately, the print of this one is particularly beat up, so it is only included in the “Lost Episodes” documentary on the disc rather than being easily available from the main menu.

Read more about this cartoon on The Big Cartoon Database.

HEY! KIDS! COMICS! : All Hail the King! : August 29th, 2008

STWALLSKULL'S HEY! KIDS! COMICS!

Happy 91st birthday yesterday to the deceased King of Comics, Jack Kirby. Tom Spurgeon at the Comics Reporter has a mind-blowing collection of his imagery posted in his memory. Click the above image I grabbed from there (from the wonderfully bizarre 70’s one-shot The Dingbats of Danger Street… a Kirby attempt to bring the Dead-End Kids into the Seventies).

INTERESTING LINKS: August 29th, 2008

STWALLSKULL'S INTERESTING LINKS

Today’s featured item: The Acme Novelty Warehouse, a online bibliography and photo attempt to archive everything Chris Ware has ever done (including constructed versions of all of his numerous papercraft projects, and many amazing and exceedingly rare items I had never seen or heard of before). Above is an image of a toy Ware made of his seemingly obsessive-compulsive friend Matthew McClintock (whose site should be seen to be believed). Click the image above to go to the Acme Novetly Warehouse.

And while I am mentioning the talented Mr. Ware, I will also note that the Fantagraphics blog, Flog, points us to a one day only McSweeney’s sale on back issues that includes the indispensible Chris Ware edited comics issue (#13). For five bucks. All of their in-print back issues are five bucks today! This is a teeny-tiny fraction of cover price, so cheap for the beauty of what you get it will make you feel guilty for getting it that cheap. Click the image above to go order.

THE PEANUT GALLERY: Long Boxes

STWALLSKULL'S PEANUT GALLERY

I ran across the above photo from of a Minneapolis comic convention from 1982, taken by Comics Buyer’s Guide founder Alan Light. Denis Kitchen is seen digging through comics on the left, and I am pretty damn sure that is a very young Michael Drivas, proprietor of the excellent Big Brain Comics on the right. You can see all of Mr. Light’s photos from the Minneapolis 1982 Comic Con here, a set of photos from the 1982 San Diego Comicon here, a set of old photos of cartoonists here, and the rest of his photo sets here.

When I was a kid (and for that matter, ten years ago) if you wanted to read comics, you had to buy them. They were rarely reprinted and if you didn’t buy them when they came out, they only got more expensive in the back issue bins. When they were reprinted as books, libraries rarely carried them. If you wanted to read old comics, they were rarely reprinted and you to pay out the nose for original copies.

Today comics are frequently reprinted as books to the point where it rarely makes sense to buy comic books in “pamphlet” format (with the notable exception of anthologies, which are rarely reprinted).

If I miss a comic in the store when it comes out, it usually gets less expensive to buy, and then I can frequently buy it in a superior book format. If I use the internet to buy comics (not recommended… support your local comic shop!), it can get ridiculously cheap, particularly if the book isn’t new.

A lot of libraries now do a pretty good job of stocking comics. There are numerous comics I wouldn’t consider buying, but don’t mind reading for free courtesy of the library.

Old comics are currently undergoing a golden age of reprinting projects, and items that were previously seen only by handfuls of people are now seen by thousands. Although the vast majority are still not reprinted, and probably never will be, there is an amazing wealth of old material available in new books in print.

If you can’t find examples of an old comic in print, it is not unlikely you may be able to find scans of it on the internet… more are out there all the time, usually for free. You can find the new stuff out there too for free too, of course, if you’re inclined to do so and not inhibited by the idea of modern cartoonists needing to make a living.

It has never been easier to have access to so many fantastic comics. Those of you new to reading comics can be thankful you will probably never have to lift a long box of comics.

UPDATE: I emailed Michael Drivas and he denies the young imp in the above photo is him, as he was reading all his comics for free and returning them via the distributor via his old man’s drug store at the time. However, he also said I could start whatever rumors I wanted… so it is Drivas all right.

CRUMBLING PAPER: The Outbursts of Everett True (strip #49)

STWALLSKULL'S CRUMBLING PAPER INDEX

Here is an Everett True strip I scanned from November 6, 1924. Go here to see more Outbursts of Everett True on this site.

If you have a desire to draw your own interpretation of an Everett True strip and send it to me, I’d love to put it up for the internet for all to see with a link to your website or what have you. Send it to me at:

Click here to go to the Barnacle Press collection of Everett True strips by A.D. Condo

Click here to read about the lesser-known works of A.D. Condo at Barnacle Press.

Click here to read some samples of Mr. Skygack, From Mars by A.D. Condo at Barnacle Press.

Click here to read some samples of Diana Dillpickles by A.D. Condo at Barnacle Press.

Click here to read some samples of Duke Murphy by A.D. Condo at Barnacle Press.

Click here to the Toonopedia entry on Everett True

Click here to read about A.D. Condo at lambiek.net.

HEY! KIDS! COMICS! : A.D. Condo’s Diana Dillpickles : August 28th, 2008

STWALLSKULL'S HEY! KIDS! COMICS!

Today I’ll feature more from the great A.D. Condo of Everett True fame courtesy once again of our friends at Barnacle Press. Click the above image to see more examples of Condo’s Diana Dillpickles.

INTERESTING LINKS: August 28th, 2008

STWALLSKULL'S INTERESTING LINKS

Check out Feed the Head, a flash toy I had not seen previously by Vector Park creator/cartoonist/painter Patrick Smith by clicking the above image.

CRUMBLING PAPER: The Outbursts of Everett True (strip #48)

STWALLSKULL'S CRUMBLING PAPER INDEX

Here is an Everett True strip I scanned from November 5, 1924. Go here to see more Outbursts of Everett True on this site.

If you have a desire to draw your own interpretation of an Everett True strip and send it to me, I’d love to put it up for the internet for all to see with a link to your website or what have you. Send it to me at:

Click here to go to the Barnacle Press collection of Everett True strips by A.D. Condo

Click here to read about the lesser-known works of A.D. Condo at Barnacle Press.

Click here to read some samples of Mr. Skygack, From Mars by A.D. Condo at Barnacle Press.

Click here to read some samples of Diana Dillpickles by A.D. Condo at Barnacle Press.

Click here to read some samples of Duke Murphy by A.D. Condo at Barnacle Press.

Click here to the Toonopedia entry on Everett True

Click here to read about A.D. Condo at lambiek.net.

HEY! KIDS! COMICS! : Condo! Wolverton! The Vagabond! : August 22nd, 2008

STWALLSKULL'S HEY! KIDS! COMICS!

So much good stuff…

Our friends at Barnacle Press continue to post amazing stuff… today they posted a bunch of examples of Oscar und Adolf by Everett True cartoonist A.D. Condo, as well as a weird out-of-character (that is to say non-violent) appearance by Mr. True in Alley Oop from 1969! Click the image to go there. Recently they also posted scans of the gorgeous strip Madge the Magician’s Daughter which I forgot to highlight.

The Horrors of It All brings us Basil Wolverton’s classic Gateway to Horror.

And last and certainly least, Pappy’s Golden Age Comics Blogzine brings us The Vagabond