Showing posts with label Madam Fatal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Madam Fatal. Show all posts

Saturday, January 14, 2012

Spoiler Saturday--Shade #4!!

A fair warning: I'm about to spoil the living hell out of Shade #4. And it's really a nice comic, quite good in fact, and so you shouldn't have the nice surprise spoiled. So if you haven't read it yet, go away, come back after you've read it. The post will still be here...

SPOILERIFIC DISCUSSION to commence after 3 unrelated pictures of The Shade:

3...

2...

1...

Spoilers ahoy!

Anyway, long-time readers know that one of the regular features at Slay Monstrobot is Golden Age Idol, wherein we look at some long-forgotten and (presumably) public domain super-heroes, and try to determine who is worthy of modern-day revival (and potentially immense profits!). Despite my best efforts, though, no one has really taken up the challenge of actually resurrecting these lost heroes...until now.

One of my favorite Golden Age Idols was the infamous Madam Fatal. You can go here to read my full write-up on her. Long story short? Back in Crack Comics #1 (1940), Actor Richard Stanton had his daughter kidnapped by a gangster (and his wife died of a broken heart!). In his quest to find her, he realized that the only chance for success was...to dress up as a elderly grandmother and beat up goons:


He never found his daughter, but he continued to beat up crooks (and show off those great gams) while in drag. And then, like so many Golden Agers, he/she was never heard of again...

Until this week. In a flashback to 1944, The Shade recalls an industrialist whose life was being threatened by Nazi agents. And the industrialist had an...interesting...employee:


And when the Nazis finally strike?






OMG!! James Robinson (with Darwyn Cooke & J. Bone) brought back Madam Fatal!! All those thousands of Golden Age Idol posts have finally paid off!! Now I just have to sit back and watch the dough roll in!!

What...? That's not how it works...? Not even a finder's fee?

Crap.

Anyway, I've got to say, that was a nice grace note, to give some closure to Stanton's story, some 70 years later. This is the James Robinson I love, not the Justice League: Cry For Unnecessary Death And Mutilation guy.

And that's why I'm excited to see him helming the forthcoming Earth-2 series. Think who else he can revive: Airmale & Stampy!! Lady Fairplay!! Red Rube?!? The Marksman?!? Swing Sisson?!?!?!? The Bouncer!!!!! Soon, I'll be rich beyond my wildest dreams!!

Oh, yeah, right. Still, revive 'em all, James Robinson...revive 'em all!

Oh, yeah, this issue of Shade ALSO has Shade teaming up with Vigilante (the cowboy one) against Nazis and a dame. So read it.

Friday, July 15, 2011

Quality 1941 Week--Crack Comics #14 (Part 1)!!

These are your Golden Age comics on crack:

Yes, it's still Quality 1941 Week, and today belongs to Crack Comics #14!!

We begin with over cover boy:

Let me just say flat out: The Black Condor's origin is simultaneously so crazy and so brilliant that it may make your head explode.

Part one is pure Tarzan, but more insane. Infant Richard Grey Jr's family is on a scientific study in Mongolia when they're wiped out by bandits. Only young Richard survives, and he is rescued and raised by--wait for it--a super-intelligent species of condors. Yes, really.

Hang on, we're not even halfway there yet. He grows up with them, and by studying them, he actually learns to fly!! Just straight up fly--no jetpacks, no mutant powers. He meets a hermit, Father Pierre, who civilizes him. So he tracks down the bandits who killed his family, gets his vengeance, and heads to America.

But wait!! There's more!! Upon arrival in the USA, he stumbles upon a plot to assassinate a US Senator, Thomas Wright. Wright is killed before he can make a crucial vote, but guess what--he and Richard Grey look EXACTLY alike. So Condor assumes Wright's identity as a Senator, takes up with Wright's fiance (who can't tell the difference!), and fights crime from Washington DC when not filibustering on the Senate floor. (This, of course, could explain the behavior of certain Senators...)

Brilliant, or what? Of course, when DC revived him for Earth-X stories in the 70s, they retconned his origin to the very boring "he was exposed to radiation from a meteor." Boooo!!!!

The main villain during Black Condor's run was the vilest capitalist of his day, Jaspar Crow:

Surprise, surprise, there's going to be an industrial action over his slave wages:


Black Condor shows up, and of course he'll break up the violence:

What??

PRO-TIP: If you're going to hire a goon to pose as Black Condor, at least have him wear the right colors!

Well, now that Condor is on the outs with the workers, the real Black Condor glides in:

Crow is preparing to pull an Enron:

Well, after much identity confusion and random punching, Black Condor solves the problem...


...which makes you wonder just how much currency one capitalist can carry in his pockets!

And this leads to a more just situation for our workers--really!

Given that he was held upside down 200 feet in the air, I'm wondering how enforceable this particular contract might be...who's the racketeer now, Condor?!?

Next up is Tor The Magic Master. I already discussed him yesterday, so let's just remind everyone that he's a magician who has stolen Zatara's shtick...


...and leave it at that.

Next up is another blast from the past I've talked about before:

Madam Fatal was really actor Richard Stanton, who retired from the stage to fight crime by...

...dressing up as on old lady!!!

But whatever you might say about her...

...this grandma kicks ass!!
Next up:

"Wizard" Wells was a scientist who loaned out his brilliant mind to help fight crime. This issue, he's helping to take down an arson ring. And now, in a moment of pure Golden Age Science:



Wait...you mean I could have had superpowers all these years, if I had just swallowed a glass full of radio-active salts???? Kids, try this at home!!

Finally for today, we have a newspaper strip!!

We all remember that comic books started off as re-collections of newspaper strips. Well, Quality carried that on a bit longer than many of the other companies. And for quite awhile they ran reprints of the Jane Arden strip from Sunday newspapers:

And, yes, each installment had paper dolls:


And not just for the ladies:

Well, let's cut off there, and resume later this morning, with more of Crack Comics #14!!

Sunday, May 24, 2009

Golden Age Idol--Madam Fatal!!

As we've surfed the lengths and breadths of obscure Golden age heroes to revive (and make a mint on, because a lot of them are public domain now), we've seen foppish artists, ultra-pseudoscience (and FIRE-APES!!), and...well, Airmale and Stampy.

But we've never seen anything quite like...MADAM FATAL!!!

As we discuss Madam Fatal's pros and cons, let's play a little game...can you, dear reader, guess what Madam Fatal's secret powers are?

We first encounter the Madam in Crack Comics #1 (1940), in a story written and drawn by Art Pinajian.

And your little dog, too!She's just a kindly old neighbor...

I brought an apple for Snow White......who wanders into a gangster flick...

I guess you'll have to sell some organs...But when the toughs show up, Madam Fatal steps up!

A limited supply of sound effects...
Ibid.
I loaded up on Red Bulls at lunch, dearieHmmm, now can you guess Madam Fatal's superpowers, readers?

Madam F heads home, but has no time to help Johnny with his homework...

Ironically, Johnny failed algebra, flunked out of school, and became a vile gangsterNo, Madam Fatal must consult with Hamlet, her Shakespeare quoting parrot:

An early attampt at merchandisingAnyhow, Fatal is ready to confront our crime boss, and comes up with the most cockamamie scheme in the world:

Grand Theft Auto ZeroA) Let yourself get hit by the villain's car, and hope you're not seriously injured, and...

This one's an eater!!B) Hope the villain takes you to his home, rather than to the hospital (or just leaving you to die).

OK, so Madame Fatal's superpower isn't a twelfth-level computer mind. But it's your last chance, reader...can YOU guess Madam Fatal's secret superpower???

Once ensconced in the crime boss' home, we get the big reveal:

Yes? Yes..???
She's a MAN, man!!That's right, Madam Fatal's secret power is...CROSS-DRESSING!!!!!!

Famous stage actor and make-up master Richard Stanton is really Madam Fatal!! But how did this come about?

Please continue, ma'am...uhh, sir:

Better dead, than disgraced, that's what I always sayLet's see...you didn't tell the police, the police got nowhere, and your wife died as a result of a broken heart?!? So, since we're discussing responsibility...are you admitting that your own stupid ego killed your wife, Stanton?!?

This would have been a bitchin' Sopranos plot...Geez...nine years undercover as a woman...and the whole time it was your own stubborn pride. Harsh...especially since you don't realize the irony.

Anyway, there's a struggle, and of course the killer dies exactly one syllable before giving up the important information:

Perhaps he was dictatingSo, after all this, we can stop the cross-dressing?

Well, if I quit, I'd have to buy a whole new wardrobe...OF COURSE NOT!!

That's it, folks...Madam Fatal is an old man who dresses up like an old woman to fight crime. And you thought Airmale was a wuss...

Someone must have liked her, though, as she was a feature performer in Crack Comics for over 2 years.

She was assimilated, along most of the rest of the Quality characters, by the DC Borg Collective, but as far as I can tell her only "appearance" in mainstream DC continuity is a brief reference (ie, "joke") in one issue of JSA. She made a one panel cameo in the Elseworlds "The Golden Age." And that's it.

But think of the possibilities...as much publicity as DC got over the lesbian Batwoman, think how much free ink they could generate with a cross-dressing hero?!? In fact, since we don't know who the new Batgirl is yet...well, what if it was just a guy DRESSED as a girl, and Batgirl was really Richard Stanton?!? And then we have the new Dynamic Duo of a lesbian AND a cross-dresser?!?

OK, it was just an idea. What do you think, Randy?!?

...wow...Hmmm...as per usual, I have no idea what in the world you're trying to say. So, we're going to call this a judge's save...and against all odds, Madam Fatal continues to the next round!!!

Any final thoughts?!?

Finish the quote, bird FINISH IT!!Hahahaha, you silly Shakespeare quoting parrot...