Le Fantôme (Lee Falk) Edition Dante
- Francois23
- Maître 3e Dan
- Enregistré le : mer. 26 nov. 2008, 12:57
- Localisation : Aubusson
Le Fantôme (Lee Falk) Edition Dante
Annoncé comme prochainement sur le site de Dante http://www.dante-prod.com/index.html (mais je me méfie un peu puisque à une époque un album de Tarzan était annoncé avant qu'il ne disparaisse des tablettes)
Recherche Les Pieds Nickelés Industriels # 21, le Rêve des Pieds Nickelés # 23... à prix abordable ou à l'échange
Comics V.O. : Marvel Heroes (UK Magazine) #22, Superman vs. Terminator : Death to the Future # 2 (Dark Horse)
Comics V.O. : Marvel Heroes (UK Magazine) #22, Superman vs. Terminator : Death to the Future # 2 (Dark Horse)
- Raymond
- V.I.P.
- Enregistré le : mer. 31 déc. 2008, 13:43
- Localisation : Lausanne
- Contact :
Re: Le Fantôme (Lee Falk) Edition Dante
C'est dans le style de l'ancienne collection "Copyright", je pense ? Bel album cartonné, grand format, noir-blanc et assez coûteux.
- Raymond
- V.I.P.
- Enregistré le : mer. 31 déc. 2008, 13:43
- Localisation : Lausanne
- Contact :
Re: Le Fantôme (Lee Falk) Edition Dante
Au fait, le Fantôme est-il le premier des super-héros ?
- arruziel
- Maître 3e Dan
- Enregistré le : ven. 12 mars 2010, 06:54
Re: Le Fantôme (Lee Falk) Edition Dante
Je ne saurais expliquer pourquoi mais je sais qu'aux USA le Fantôme n'est pas considéré comme un super-héros.
- Bob Morane
- Maître Jedi
- Enregistré le : lun. 15 juin 2009, 14:55
- Localisation : Albi (81)
Re: Le Fantôme (Lee Falk) Edition Dante
Peut-être parce qu'il n'a pas de supers-pouvoirs
« J'ai refait tous les calculs, ils confirment l'opinion des spécialistes : notre idée est irréalisable. Il ne nous reste qu'une seule chose à faire : la réaliser ! »
Pierre-Georges Latécoère
Pierre-Georges Latécoère
- arruziel
- Maître 3e Dan
- Enregistré le : ven. 12 mars 2010, 06:54
Re: Le Fantôme (Lee Falk) Edition Dante
Non c'est pas pour ça, car Batman par exemple n'a pas non plus de Supers pouvoirs.
- mario
- Grand Maître
- Enregistré le : dim. 08 août 2010, 15:21
- Localisation : Paris
Re: Le Fantôme (Lee Falk) Edition Dante
Le Fantôme est, en tout cas, le premier héros en collant.
- arruziel
- Maître 3e Dan
- Enregistré le : ven. 12 mars 2010, 06:54
Re: Le Fantôme (Lee Falk) Edition Dante
C'est Superman qui détient le titre de 1er Super Héros.
- mario
- Grand Maître
- Enregistré le : dim. 08 août 2010, 15:21
- Localisation : Paris
Re: Le Fantôme (Lee Falk) Edition Dante
Premier héros en collant.
Et premier héros masqué?
Je me suis toujours demandé à quoi pouvait bien servir le masque du Fantôme? Dans la jungle, il n'a pas d'identité secrète à préserver!
Bon, c'est sûr, ça lui donne un super look.
Et premier héros masqué?
Je me suis toujours demandé à quoi pouvait bien servir le masque du Fantôme? Dans la jungle, il n'a pas d'identité secrète à préserver!
Bon, c'est sûr, ça lui donne un super look.
- jmrazer
- Grand Maître
- Enregistré le : dim. 19 nov. 2006, 21:06
- Localisation : Tarn
Re: Le Fantôme (Lee Falk) Edition Dante
Zorromario a écrit :
Et premier héros masqué?
- mario
- Grand Maître
- Enregistré le : dim. 08 août 2010, 15:21
- Localisation : Paris
Re: Le Fantôme (Lee Falk) Edition Dante
Je pensais surtout aux personnages de BD.jmrazer a écrit :Zorromario a écrit :
Et premier héros masqué?
J'ignore la date de la première adaptation en BD de Zorro.
- Francois23
- Maître 3e Dan
- Enregistré le : mer. 26 nov. 2008, 12:57
- Localisation : Aubusson
Re: Le Fantôme (Lee Falk) Edition Dante
The Clock considéré comme le premier héros masqué de l'histoire du comics americain :mario a écrit : Et premier héros masqué?
Recherche Les Pieds Nickelés Industriels # 21, le Rêve des Pieds Nickelés # 23... à prix abordable ou à l'échange
Comics V.O. : Marvel Heroes (UK Magazine) #22, Superman vs. Terminator : Death to the Future # 2 (Dark Horse)
Comics V.O. : Marvel Heroes (UK Magazine) #22, Superman vs. Terminator : Death to the Future # 2 (Dark Horse)
- mario
- Grand Maître
- Enregistré le : dim. 08 août 2010, 15:21
- Localisation : Paris
Re: Le Fantôme (Lee Falk) Edition Dante
Merci François.
The Clock? Je ne connais pas. C'est paru quand et où?
C'est l’ancêtre du Spirit.
The Clock? Je ne connais pas. C'est paru quand et où?
C'est l’ancêtre du Spirit.
- Bob Morane
- Maître Jedi
- Enregistré le : lun. 15 juin 2009, 14:55
- Localisation : Albi (81)
Re: Le Fantôme (Lee Falk) Edition Dante
C'est à lui que j'ai pensé aussimario a écrit :C'est l’ancêtre du Spirit.
« J'ai refait tous les calculs, ils confirment l'opinion des spécialistes : notre idée est irréalisable. Il ne nous reste qu'une seule chose à faire : la réaliser ! »
Pierre-Georges Latécoère
Pierre-Georges Latécoère
- mario
- Grand Maître
- Enregistré le : dim. 08 août 2010, 15:21
- Localisation : Paris
- mario
- Grand Maître
- Enregistré le : dim. 08 août 2010, 15:21
- Localisation : Paris
Re: Le Fantôme (Lee Falk) Edition Dante
Clock (comics)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"The Clock" redirects here. For the film, see The Clock (film).
The Clock
Funny Picture Stories #1 (Nov, 1936). Comic Magazine Company.
Publication information
Publisher Comic Magazine Company
Ultem
Quality Comics
First appearance Funny Pages #6 or Funny Picture Stories #1; November 1936
Created by George Brenner
In-story information
Alter ego Brian O'Brien
Partnerships Pug Brady
Butch
The Clock is a fictional masked crime-fighter published during the Golden Age of Comic Books. According to the Overstreet Comic Book Price Guide, the Clock was the first masked hero to appear in American comic books.
[edit]Publication history
Created by cartoonist George Brenner, the character first appeared in either Funny Pages #6 or Funny Picture Stories #1, each cover-dated November 1936 and published by the Comics Magazine Company, the primary forerunner of Centaur Publications.
The character's initial appearances were two-page features that left little space for character development, but the Clock's secret identity was eventually revealed to be society man and former district attorney Brian O'Brien, whose background in college sports helped prepare him for heroism.
The Clock could be considered the “missing link” between pulp and comic book heroes. His secret identity is that of Brian O'Brien, a wealthy member of high society and a former lawyer. He had a secret, underground and was a hypnotist. His minimalist costume was a three-piece suit and a mask and he was a master of disguise. He had clever gadgets (such as a cane whose head becomes a projectile and a diamond stud that fires teargas) and he usually left behind a calling card bearing the image of a clock-face and the words "The Clock Has Struck."
Quality Comics' Crack Comics #1 (May 1940).
The Clock appeared in Funny Pages #6-11, as well as other titles by the Comics Magazine Company, such as Detective Picture Stories and Keen Detective Funnies. In 1937, the Comics Magazine Company was bought by a company Ultem, which then encountered financial difficulty and sold the Clock and other characters to Quality Comics. Ultem was itself subsequently purchased and renamed Centaur Publications. Despite the sale to Quality, the company continued to reprint old Clock stories.
Under Quality, the Clock continued to be written and drawn in new stories by Brenner in Feature Funnies (later retitled Feature Comics) beginning with #3 (Dec., 1937) and running through #31 (April 1940). It is believed that Quality editor Will Eisner was in part inspired by this run of the Clock to create the Spirit. The Clock's feature was moved to the new Crack Comics #1 (May 1940).
When Centaur sold the Clock to Quality, the powers-that-be decided he needed a sidekick to soften him up. At first he was assisted by Pat "Pug" Brady, a former boxer who looked exactly like Brian O'Brien. They met when they picked each other's pockets in Crack Comics #1. Pug's disguise was even more minimal than that of his boss—a handkerchief worn like a cowboy bandit wears a bandanna. The first time he worked with the Clock, he found out his secret identity and killed somebody else who found it out, so it didn't soften the Clock's image by much.
In Crack Comics #21, Pug disappeared with no explanation, which may be why the Clock got himself all shot up and crawled into a basement to die. Fortunately for him, a young girl named Butch Buchanan was squatting in that same basement and nursed him back to health. She attached herself to him as his "moll" and evidently convinced him to wear a knockoff of the Spirit's costume from issue #22 on.
The Clock alternated appearances on the cover of Crack Comics with the Black Condor until #19, continuing as only a backup feature of that title until his final appearance in Crack Comics #35 (Autumn 1944).
After Quality Comics went out of business in 1956, DC Comics acquired the rights to its characters. However, it didn't renew the copyright for most of the characters in question (including the Clock), allowing them to fall into public domain. The company has never made use of the Clock beyond a few mere mentions. In the DC Universe, the Clock was initially said to have been killed in 1944, the last year his character was actually published. The journal of the character the Shade revealed, in Starman Vol. 2, #19, that "Brian O'Brien told me the reports of his death were greatly exaggerated". Starman #20 then stated O'Brien was active in Chicago, despite the fact that several Golden Age adventures stated that his home city was a seaport. Perhaps these adventures took place on the now-retconned Earth-Two, former home of DC's Golden Age characters.
[edit]Other versions
In 1992, Malibu Comics published 20 issues of The Protectors, a superhero team that included several other characters from the Centaur line. In this universe, Brian O'Brien was the first costumed hero. With the advent of super-powered heroes, he decided to give up crime-fighting, choosing instead to join the army. He rose through the ranks and eventually became President of the United States.
[edit]External links
On-Line Reprint of a Clock Adventure
Eye-n-Apple's Golden Age Gallery page on the Clock
Toonopedia page on the Clock
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"The Clock" redirects here. For the film, see The Clock (film).
The Clock
Funny Picture Stories #1 (Nov, 1936). Comic Magazine Company.
Publication information
Publisher Comic Magazine Company
Ultem
Quality Comics
First appearance Funny Pages #6 or Funny Picture Stories #1; November 1936
Created by George Brenner
In-story information
Alter ego Brian O'Brien
Partnerships Pug Brady
Butch
The Clock is a fictional masked crime-fighter published during the Golden Age of Comic Books. According to the Overstreet Comic Book Price Guide, the Clock was the first masked hero to appear in American comic books.
[edit]Publication history
Created by cartoonist George Brenner, the character first appeared in either Funny Pages #6 or Funny Picture Stories #1, each cover-dated November 1936 and published by the Comics Magazine Company, the primary forerunner of Centaur Publications.
The character's initial appearances were two-page features that left little space for character development, but the Clock's secret identity was eventually revealed to be society man and former district attorney Brian O'Brien, whose background in college sports helped prepare him for heroism.
The Clock could be considered the “missing link” between pulp and comic book heroes. His secret identity is that of Brian O'Brien, a wealthy member of high society and a former lawyer. He had a secret, underground and was a hypnotist. His minimalist costume was a three-piece suit and a mask and he was a master of disguise. He had clever gadgets (such as a cane whose head becomes a projectile and a diamond stud that fires teargas) and he usually left behind a calling card bearing the image of a clock-face and the words "The Clock Has Struck."
Quality Comics' Crack Comics #1 (May 1940).
The Clock appeared in Funny Pages #6-11, as well as other titles by the Comics Magazine Company, such as Detective Picture Stories and Keen Detective Funnies. In 1937, the Comics Magazine Company was bought by a company Ultem, which then encountered financial difficulty and sold the Clock and other characters to Quality Comics. Ultem was itself subsequently purchased and renamed Centaur Publications. Despite the sale to Quality, the company continued to reprint old Clock stories.
Under Quality, the Clock continued to be written and drawn in new stories by Brenner in Feature Funnies (later retitled Feature Comics) beginning with #3 (Dec., 1937) and running through #31 (April 1940). It is believed that Quality editor Will Eisner was in part inspired by this run of the Clock to create the Spirit. The Clock's feature was moved to the new Crack Comics #1 (May 1940).
When Centaur sold the Clock to Quality, the powers-that-be decided he needed a sidekick to soften him up. At first he was assisted by Pat "Pug" Brady, a former boxer who looked exactly like Brian O'Brien. They met when they picked each other's pockets in Crack Comics #1. Pug's disguise was even more minimal than that of his boss—a handkerchief worn like a cowboy bandit wears a bandanna. The first time he worked with the Clock, he found out his secret identity and killed somebody else who found it out, so it didn't soften the Clock's image by much.
In Crack Comics #21, Pug disappeared with no explanation, which may be why the Clock got himself all shot up and crawled into a basement to die. Fortunately for him, a young girl named Butch Buchanan was squatting in that same basement and nursed him back to health. She attached herself to him as his "moll" and evidently convinced him to wear a knockoff of the Spirit's costume from issue #22 on.
The Clock alternated appearances on the cover of Crack Comics with the Black Condor until #19, continuing as only a backup feature of that title until his final appearance in Crack Comics #35 (Autumn 1944).
After Quality Comics went out of business in 1956, DC Comics acquired the rights to its characters. However, it didn't renew the copyright for most of the characters in question (including the Clock), allowing them to fall into public domain. The company has never made use of the Clock beyond a few mere mentions. In the DC Universe, the Clock was initially said to have been killed in 1944, the last year his character was actually published. The journal of the character the Shade revealed, in Starman Vol. 2, #19, that "Brian O'Brien told me the reports of his death were greatly exaggerated". Starman #20 then stated O'Brien was active in Chicago, despite the fact that several Golden Age adventures stated that his home city was a seaport. Perhaps these adventures took place on the now-retconned Earth-Two, former home of DC's Golden Age characters.
[edit]Other versions
In 1992, Malibu Comics published 20 issues of The Protectors, a superhero team that included several other characters from the Centaur line. In this universe, Brian O'Brien was the first costumed hero. With the advent of super-powered heroes, he decided to give up crime-fighting, choosing instead to join the army. He rose through the ranks and eventually became President of the United States.
[edit]External links
On-Line Reprint of a Clock Adventure
Eye-n-Apple's Golden Age Gallery page on the Clock
Toonopedia page on the Clock
- jmf²
- Maître 1er Dan
- Enregistré le : jeu. 13 nov. 2008, 09:15
Re: Le Fantôme (Lee Falk) Edition Dante
D'un certaine manière. Pour plus d'info French Collection #17mario a écrit :Merci François.
The Clock? Je ne connais pas. C'est paru quand et où?
C'est l’ancêtre du Spirit.
L'orthographe est plus qu'une mauvaise habitude, c'est une vanité.
Raymond Queneau
Raymond Queneau
- mario
- Grand Maître
- Enregistré le : dim. 08 août 2010, 15:21
- Localisation : Paris
Re: Le Fantôme (Lee Falk) Edition Dante
Merci jmf!
Ta rubrique est une mine.
Tu devrais écrire une encyclopédie des comics et de leurs traductions françaises.
Ta rubrique est une mine.
Tu devrais écrire une encyclopédie des comics et de leurs traductions françaises.
- jmf²
- Maître 1er Dan
- Enregistré le : jeu. 13 nov. 2008, 09:15
Re: Le Fantôme (Lee Falk) Edition Dante
C'est en cours. Pour l'instant le livre fait 180 pages et il me manque encore quelques sujets à développer.mario a écrit :Merci jmf!
Ta rubrique est une mine.
Tu devrais écrire une encyclopédie des comics et de leurs traductions françaises.
L'orthographe est plus qu'une mauvaise habitude, c'est une vanité.
Raymond Queneau
Raymond Queneau
- Francois23
- Maître 3e Dan
- Enregistré le : mer. 26 nov. 2008, 12:57
- Localisation : Aubusson
Re: Le Fantôme (Lee Falk) Edition Dante
Quelqu'un a t'il vu cette adaptation modernisée du Phantom pour la TV (2009) :
Recherche Les Pieds Nickelés Industriels # 21, le Rêve des Pieds Nickelés # 23... à prix abordable ou à l'échange
Comics V.O. : Marvel Heroes (UK Magazine) #22, Superman vs. Terminator : Death to the Future # 2 (Dark Horse)
Comics V.O. : Marvel Heroes (UK Magazine) #22, Superman vs. Terminator : Death to the Future # 2 (Dark Horse)