Difference between revisions of "Best of DC 44"
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{{issue | {{issue | ||
− | | | + | |era=precrisis |
− | | | + | |reprint=yes |
− | |image=[[ | + | |series=The Best of DC|issue_no=44 |
+ | |image=[[File:BestOfDC44.jpg|250px]] | ||
|caption=Cover by [[Gil Kane]] | |caption=Cover by [[Gil Kane]] | ||
− | + | |story_title= | |
− | |story_title= | ||
|previous=[[Adventure Comics 503|''Adventure Comics'' #503]] (previous chronological reprints) | |previous=[[Adventure Comics 503|''Adventure Comics'' #503]] (previous chronological reprints) | ||
|next=[[Best of DC 57|''The Best of DC'' #57]] (next chronological reprints) | |next=[[Best of DC 57|''The Best of DC'' #57]] (next chronological reprints) | ||
− | |publication_date=[[October 6]], [[Legion Publication History/ | + | |publication_date=[[October 6]], [[Legion Publication History/1983-1986#1983|1983]] |
|cover_date=January 1984 | |cover_date=January 1984 | ||
− | | | + | |editor=[[Nicola Cuti]] |
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
|cover_artists=[[Gil Kane]] | |cover_artists=[[Gil Kane]] | ||
− | }} | + | }} __TOC__ |
− | __TOC__ | ||
− | |||
==Background== | ==Background== | ||
Although the ''Adventure Comics'' series had been discontinued in mid-1983, the Legion's own series was gaining in popularity at that time, and there still remained a demand for the chronological Legion reprints that had been the highlight of ''Adventure'' during its last year of publication. The ''Best of DC'' series, also reprints in digest format, picked up the Legion tales where ''Adventure'' had left off. Rather than just two Legion stories, entire digest issues were devoted to the Legion every few months or so. | Although the ''Adventure Comics'' series had been discontinued in mid-1983, the Legion's own series was gaining in popularity at that time, and there still remained a demand for the chronological Legion reprints that had been the highlight of ''Adventure'' during its last year of publication. The ''Best of DC'' series, also reprints in digest format, picked up the Legion tales where ''Adventure'' had left off. Rather than just two Legion stories, entire digest issues were devoted to the Legion every few months or so. | ||
− | |||
==Reprinted material== | ==Reprinted material== | ||
Line 34: | Line 25: | ||
*"The Super-Tests of the Super-Pets!" – [[Adventure Comics 322|''Adventure Comics'' #322]] (publshed [[May 28]], 1964) | *"The Super-Tests of the Super-Pets!" – [[Adventure Comics 322|''Adventure Comics'' #322]] (publshed [[May 28]], 1964) | ||
*"The Eight Impossible Missions!" – [[Adventure Comics 323|''Adventure Comics'' #323]] (published [[June 25]], 1964) | *"The Eight Impossible Missions!" – [[Adventure Comics 323|''Adventure Comics'' #323]] (published [[June 25]], 1964) | ||
− | |||
==The Story Behind the Stories== | ==The Story Behind the Stories== | ||
Also continued from the ''Adventure'' reprints of the classic Legion stories was its companion commentary by [[Paul Levitz]], who was the writer of the Legion's current series while these digests were being produced. Years later, these commentaries are the primary point of interest (other than the reprinted stories themselves), so the full text is provided below: | Also continued from the ''Adventure'' reprints of the classic Legion stories was its companion commentary by [[Paul Levitz]], who was the writer of the Legion's current series while these digests were being produced. Years later, these commentaries are the primary point of interest (other than the reprinted stories themselves), so the full text is provided below: | ||
− | |||
:''Fans who followed the Legion's chronological reprinting in the late lamented ADVENTURE COMICS DIGEST know that editor Nicola Cuti has had me do commentary on the stories, and he's asked me to continue that here. If you didn't read the ADVENTURE issues, take note that you're coming in on the middle of the first magic period in the Legion's own series - the hi-tech, plot-oriented stories of [[Edmond Hamilton|Ed Hamilton]] and [[Jerry Siegel]].'' | :''Fans who followed the Legion's chronological reprinting in the late lamented ADVENTURE COMICS DIGEST know that editor Nicola Cuti has had me do commentary on the stories, and he's asked me to continue that here. If you didn't read the ADVENTURE issues, take note that you're coming in on the middle of the first magic period in the Legion's own series - the hi-tech, plot-oriented stories of [[Edmond Hamilton|Ed Hamilton]] and [[Jerry Siegel]].'' | ||
− | :''[[Adventure Comics 319|#319's]] "The Legion's Suicide Squad" is a fair case of Hamilton's building of the mythos - the first case where the [[Legion of Substitute Heroes|Substitute Heroes]] work with the Legionnaires and gain recognition, the [[Science Police]], and such technological gimmicks as the "[[Planetary Chance Machine]]". At the same time we see a male chauvanist attitude creep into [[Brainiac | + | :''[[Adventure Comics 319|#319's]] "The Legion's Suicide Squad" is a fair case of Hamilton's building of the mythos - the first case where the [[Legion of Substitute Heroes|Substitute Heroes]] work with the Legionnaires and gain recognition, the [[Science Police]], and such technological gimmicks as the "[[Planetary Chance Machine]]". At the same time we see a male chauvanist attitude creep into [[Brainiac 5/Preboot#Pre-Crisis|Brainiac Five]] telling [[Saturn Girl/Preboot#Pre-Crisis|Saturn Girl]] a mission's "too dangerous for a girl" - a note Hamilton hit before in LSH tales.'' |
− | :''Siegel's style, on the other hand, is well represented by [[Adventure Comics 320|#320's]] "Revenge of the Knave From Krypton". Here we link back carefully to a SUPERBOY story (from [[Adventure Comics 287|ADVENTURE #287]]-[[Adventure Comics 288|288]]), and to the [[Superboy/Kal-El/Pre-Crisis|Superman]] mythos... logical territory for Siegel to cover, as Superman's creator. Stylistically it also goes back to the first few LSH tales in ADVENTURE, when Siegel was the regular writer for the series, and the LSH was viewed as a spin-off series. This story's also worth noting for the debut of [[Radiation Roy]], who would return [[Adventure Comics 372|four years later]] as a member of the [[Legion of Super-Villains/Pre-Crisis|Legion of Super-Villains]] (like [[Spider Girl]] who debuted in the next issue), [[Dev-Em|Dev-Em's]] rejection of Legion membership, and the first appearance of the title "[[Legion Outpost/Letter column|The Legion Outpost]]" for the letters page.'' | + | :''Siegel's style, on the other hand, is well represented by [[Adventure Comics 320|#320's]] "Revenge of the Knave From Krypton". Here we link back carefully to a SUPERBOY story (from [[Adventure Comics 287|ADVENTURE #287]]-[[Adventure Comics 288|288]]), and to the [[Superboy/Kal-El/Preboot#Pre-Crisis|Superman]] mythos... logical territory for Siegel to cover, as Superman's creator. Stylistically it also goes back to the first few LSH tales in ADVENTURE, when Siegel was the regular writer for the series, and the LSH was viewed as a spin-off series. This story's also worth noting for the debut of [[Radiation Roy]], who would return [[Adventure Comics 372|four years later]] as a member of the [[Legion of Super-Villains/Preboot#Pre-Crisis|Legion of Super-Villains]] (like [[Spider Girl]] who debuted in the next issue), [[Dev-Em|Dev-Em's]] rejection of Legion membership, and the first appearance of the title "[[Legion Outpost/Letter column|The Legion Outpost]]" for the letters page.'' |
− | :''Hamilton returns for [[Adventure Comics 321|#321's]] "The Code of the Legion" with his first major contribution to the LSH Rogue's Gallery, The [[Time Trapper]], battling the team for the first time. Also note the first of several "retirements" for [[Bouncing Boy/Pre-Crisis|Bouncing Boy]]... who will, of course, always bounce back.'' | + | :''Hamilton returns for [[Adventure Comics 321|#321's]] "The Code of the Legion" with his first major contribution to the LSH Rogue's Gallery, The [[Time Trapper]], battling the team for the first time. Also note the first of several "retirements" for [[Bouncing Boy/Preboot#Pre-Crisis|Bouncing Boy]]... who will, of course, always bounce back.'' |
:''"Lois Lane's Luckiest Day", from [[Superman's Girlfriend, Lois Lane 50|LOIS #50]] is a tangential LSH tale at best, harkening back to when they were only cameo stars in stories throughout the Superman family. The writer is unknown, and artist [[Kurt Schaffenberger]] wouldn't draw a Legion story again until this years [[Legion of Super-Heroes v2 300|LSH #300]] celebration.'' | :''"Lois Lane's Luckiest Day", from [[Superman's Girlfriend, Lois Lane 50|LOIS #50]] is a tangential LSH tale at best, harkening back to when they were only cameo stars in stories throughout the Superman family. The writer is unknown, and artist [[Kurt Schaffenberger]] wouldn't draw a Legion story again until this years [[Legion of Super-Heroes v2 300|LSH #300]] celebration.'' | ||
− | :''Hamilton next took a leaf out of Siegel's notebook, and brought back the [[Legion of Super-Pets]], who Siegel had created two years earlier. [[Adventure Comics 322|#322's]] "The Super-Tests of the Super-Pets" brought [[Proty II]] into the group in a story that obviously was a one-note gimmick. Noteworthy trivia is [[Light Lass/Pre-Crisis|Light Lass's]] new symbol, a cloud, which tended to come and go until it was replaced permanently by a feather. '' | + | :''Hamilton next took a leaf out of Siegel's notebook, and brought back the [[Legion of Super-Pets]], who Siegel had created [[Adventure Comics 293|two years earlier]]. [[Adventure Comics 322|#322's]] "The Super-Tests of the Super-Pets" brought [[Proty II]] into the group in a story that obviously was a one-note gimmick. Noteworthy trivia is [[Light Lass/Preboot#Pre-Crisis|Light Lass's]] new symbol, a cloud, which tended to come and go until it was replaced permanently by a feather. '' |
− | :''Finally, the idea of doing stories centering around Legion leadership elections was a firm tradition as of [[Adventure Comics 323|#323's]] "The Eight Impossible Missions". Siegel again tied the storyline very much to his Superman mythos - the [[Phantom Zone]], Superboy's anniversary as the resolution, and most of all, the appearance of [[Jimmy Olsen/Pre-Crisis|Jimmy Olsen]] and [[Pete Ross/Pre-Crisis|Pete Ross]] in active roles in the 30th Century. Although both were honorary members of the Legion virtually from the beginning of the series' existence, this is the only case where either of them came to the Legion's time for anything more than a ceremonial appearance... and that remains true as of today.'' | + | :''Finally, the idea of doing stories centering around Legion leadership elections was a firm tradition as of [[Adventure Comics 323|#323's]] "The Eight Impossible Missions". Siegel again tied the storyline very much to his Superman mythos - the [[Phantom Zone]], Superboy's anniversary as the resolution, and most of all, the appearance of [[Jimmy Olsen/Preboot#Pre-Crisis|Jimmy Olsen]] and [[Pete Ross/Preboot#Pre-Crisis|Pete Ross]] in active roles in the 30th Century. Although both were honorary members of the Legion virtually from the beginning of the series' existence, this is the only case where either of them came to the Legion's time for anything more than a ceremonial appearance... and that remains true as of today.'' |
:''Unmentioned in all this has been artist [[John Forte]], the first regular artist on the LSH series and illustrator of all but the Lois Lane episode. These issues represent Forte at his best, before illness began to affect his work, and show his distinctive style in every corner of the cosmos.'' | :''Unmentioned in all this has been artist [[John Forte]], the first regular artist on the LSH series and illustrator of all but the Lois Lane episode. These issues represent Forte at his best, before illness began to affect his work, and show his distinctive style in every corner of the cosmos.'' | ||
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[[Category:Reprints (Pre-Crisis)]] | [[Category:Reprints (Pre-Crisis)]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Justice Society of America v3 covers]] |
Latest revision as of 14:43, 13 October 2012
|
Background
Although the Adventure Comics series had been discontinued in mid-1983, the Legion's own series was gaining in popularity at that time, and there still remained a demand for the chronological Legion reprints that had been the highlight of Adventure during its last year of publication. The Best of DC series, also reprints in digest format, picked up the Legion tales where Adventure had left off. Rather than just two Legion stories, entire digest issues were devoted to the Legion every few months or so.
Reprinted material
Original publication source is noted for each.
- "The Legion's Suicide Squad!" – Adventure Comics #319 (published February 27, 1964)
- "Revenge of the Knave From Krypton!" – Adventure Comics #320 ( published March 26, 1964)
- "The Code of the Legion!" – Adventure Comics #321 (published April 30, 1964)
- "Lois Lane's Luckiest Day!" – Superman's Girlfriend, Lois Lane #50 (published May 14, 1964)
- "The Super-Tests of the Super-Pets!" – Adventure Comics #322 (publshed May 28, 1964)
- "The Eight Impossible Missions!" – Adventure Comics #323 (published June 25, 1964)
The Story Behind the Stories
Also continued from the Adventure reprints of the classic Legion stories was its companion commentary by Paul Levitz, who was the writer of the Legion's current series while these digests were being produced. Years later, these commentaries are the primary point of interest (other than the reprinted stories themselves), so the full text is provided below:
- Fans who followed the Legion's chronological reprinting in the late lamented ADVENTURE COMICS DIGEST know that editor Nicola Cuti has had me do commentary on the stories, and he's asked me to continue that here. If you didn't read the ADVENTURE issues, take note that you're coming in on the middle of the first magic period in the Legion's own series - the hi-tech, plot-oriented stories of Ed Hamilton and Jerry Siegel.
- #319's "The Legion's Suicide Squad" is a fair case of Hamilton's building of the mythos - the first case where the Substitute Heroes work with the Legionnaires and gain recognition, the Science Police, and such technological gimmicks as the "Planetary Chance Machine". At the same time we see a male chauvanist attitude creep into Brainiac Five telling Saturn Girl a mission's "too dangerous for a girl" - a note Hamilton hit before in LSH tales.
- Siegel's style, on the other hand, is well represented by #320's "Revenge of the Knave From Krypton". Here we link back carefully to a SUPERBOY story (from ADVENTURE #287-288), and to the Superman mythos... logical territory for Siegel to cover, as Superman's creator. Stylistically it also goes back to the first few LSH tales in ADVENTURE, when Siegel was the regular writer for the series, and the LSH was viewed as a spin-off series. This story's also worth noting for the debut of Radiation Roy, who would return four years later as a member of the Legion of Super-Villains (like Spider Girl who debuted in the next issue), Dev-Em's rejection of Legion membership, and the first appearance of the title "The Legion Outpost" for the letters page.
- Hamilton returns for #321's "The Code of the Legion" with his first major contribution to the LSH Rogue's Gallery, The Time Trapper, battling the team for the first time. Also note the first of several "retirements" for Bouncing Boy... who will, of course, always bounce back.
- "Lois Lane's Luckiest Day", from LOIS #50 is a tangential LSH tale at best, harkening back to when they were only cameo stars in stories throughout the Superman family. The writer is unknown, and artist Kurt Schaffenberger wouldn't draw a Legion story again until this years LSH #300 celebration.
- Hamilton next took a leaf out of Siegel's notebook, and brought back the Legion of Super-Pets, who Siegel had created two years earlier. #322's "The Super-Tests of the Super-Pets" brought Proty II into the group in a story that obviously was a one-note gimmick. Noteworthy trivia is Light Lass's new symbol, a cloud, which tended to come and go until it was replaced permanently by a feather.
- Finally, the idea of doing stories centering around Legion leadership elections was a firm tradition as of #323's "The Eight Impossible Missions". Siegel again tied the storyline very much to his Superman mythos - the Phantom Zone, Superboy's anniversary as the resolution, and most of all, the appearance of Jimmy Olsen and Pete Ross in active roles in the 30th Century. Although both were honorary members of the Legion virtually from the beginning of the series' existence, this is the only case where either of them came to the Legion's time for anything more than a ceremonial appearance... and that remains true as of today.
- Unmentioned in all this has been artist John Forte, the first regular artist on the LSH series and illustrator of all but the Lois Lane episode. These issues represent Forte at his best, before illness began to affect his work, and show his distinctive style in every corner of the cosmos.
- If you've enjoyed these stories, may I suggest you join us for the new stories of the Legion in their own magazine? There's no time like the present to get into 30th century excitement.
- – Paul Levitz