Nathan Dodge
One Too Many
- Messages
- 1,051
- Location
- Near Miami
Recently I've rediscovered some comic strip clippings of The Phantom that I've had from around 1985-86. I became interested in reading the missing chapters (of which there were many) and in the process I've accumulated nearly sixty complete stories (dailies) of the Phantom comic strip!!! I have most of the 1970s and 1980s strips and was pleasantly surprised at how the high level of storytelling remained into the 1990s. Lee Falk was one prolific mutha! He makes Milton Caniff (another comic strip hero of mine) look like J.D. Salinger!
I hadn't thought about the strip in years--decades even--but it has turned out to be a neglected chapter in my love of pulp/adventure/comic strips. I vividly remember setting the newspaper on the living room floor and reading The Phantom every day during my childhood. The Sundays were great because they had a separate adventure often with more on the history of previous Phantoms. I've always loved the tradition of the Phantom, with 21 generations taking up the mantle. The strip had a mythology all its own: I love the Skull Cave, the ring that leaves its permanent mark on its victims, the layout of the Phantom's Deep Woods locale, often with beautifully-rendered layouts by artist Sy Barry, whose art always had a crisp, clean, easy-to-see quality.
Any fans of the comic strip? Do you have some favorite stories you can recommend? I liked the 1996 film on its own terms (mostly for the art direction and costumes) but I'd like to focus the discussion here on the comic strip.
I hadn't thought about the strip in years--decades even--but it has turned out to be a neglected chapter in my love of pulp/adventure/comic strips. I vividly remember setting the newspaper on the living room floor and reading The Phantom every day during my childhood. The Sundays were great because they had a separate adventure often with more on the history of previous Phantoms. I've always loved the tradition of the Phantom, with 21 generations taking up the mantle. The strip had a mythology all its own: I love the Skull Cave, the ring that leaves its permanent mark on its victims, the layout of the Phantom's Deep Woods locale, often with beautifully-rendered layouts by artist Sy Barry, whose art always had a crisp, clean, easy-to-see quality.
Any fans of the comic strip? Do you have some favorite stories you can recommend? I liked the 1996 film on its own terms (mostly for the art direction and costumes) but I'd like to focus the discussion here on the comic strip.