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Showing posts with label Velvet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Velvet. Show all posts

Midnight vs. Bullets Balow: pt. 2 (Smash Comics #40)

Smash Comics # 40 (February 1943)

Midnight feature (Midnight vs. Bullets Balow)

Last week, we left Midnight having just been knocked loopy by a member of the Land of Flight's non-intimidating royal guard.

Ignoring Velvet's pleas for mercy, two of the oomperials seize our unconscious hero with the intent of lobbing him over the city walls.

Fortunately, when one of them attempts to silence Velvet by declaring, "No one can save him now," the brash claim is overheard by Queen Robustia.

The Queen looks pretty much like what you'd imagine a woman named "Robustia" would. (Also, what's the deal with one unnamed guard having a handgun, while the ruler of the whole city just carries a spiked club?)

We learn that Midnight is not the first man to drop from the sky into the Land of Flight.  (Yep...you know where this is going.)  We learn that Queen Robustia has apparently wed the earlier visitor, and intends to do the same to our hero. (I guess bigamy is not exactly a socio-cultural faux pas in the old Land of Flight.)

Midnight comes to, and the Robustia commences her best school-girl flirtation routine when a shot rings out.  Quite unexpectedly, the large distracted monarch musters up the Spider-Man-like reflexes to anticipate the bullet and shove her newfound boy toy of harm's way!

It comes as little surprise that the mystery shot was fired by the elusive Bullets Balow.   Despite missing, Balow has a good laugh at--one supposes--the indignities he dreams of visiting on our hero.  The royal consort, however, seems not to have cleared this particular plan with Queen Robustia, however.  The o-fficial "Head Mama Jama" purposefully sets out to put Balow in his place.

Apparently, Bullets is the other guy in the Land of Flight allowed to carry a firearm.  I continue to insist that it makes little sense for the woman who's supposedly in-charge to only wield a spiked club, but...then again...maybe that's all she really needs.

Who needs a handgun when you got Mjolnir-lite action like that going on?

After Queen Robustia's rocket-powered club fails to find it's mark, Midnight goes into pursuit of the criminal.  I have no explanation for the next few panels.  It's like the artist and writer: (1) had no idea what Midnight was, or wasn't capable of, and (2) didn't much care to make a gesture towards plausible storytelling.

First, our ostensibly non-superpowered hero--manifests a Cannonball-esque feat of super-speed, then announces that he sees Balow "under the bed."  The only problem, of course, is that Balow is standing behind a curtain. 


I'll give the artist a break on the chair-busting scene.  Maybe he intends to illustrate just how hard-headed Midnight is (i.e., a hard-surfaced chair busts right over his noggin)...but the little marks around his suspiciously undisturbed fedora suggest that we're looking at a chair with a wicker-bottom.  If that's the case, then Balow is simply a moron.

In standard battle banter, we discover that Bullets stumbled across the Land of Flight and sweet talked his way into royal matrimony by calling Robustia beautiful.  Midnight scolds him for leading the woman on.  Cad that he is, Bullets declares that, "Ain't nobody cheatin' me out of my wife's dough!"  (Keep it classy, there, Bullets.)

Midnight announces that he'll be taking the grifter in, at which point Bullets foolish invites him to try.

Because lots of regular boxers can punch a guy and send him flying like a rocket ship...sure.
Any who, Bullets' impending trip into orbit is halted by the proverbial immovable object...in this case, Queen Robustia.

For no particular reason (it seems) the one thing that Queen Robustia apparently can't stand is anyone else being in her bedroom.  It's apparently a big enough deal that she's ready to have both men fried in oil!  (Which, strikes me as a bit of an overreaction.)

Following yet another donnybrook with (presumably) Oompa Loompa guards and the Queen herself,
Midnight and Bullets are bound and headed, it would seem, for the judicial Fry Daddy.

Assuming that what worked once can work again, Bullets begins sweet-talking his homicidal wife, who immediately calls him a "sweet boy" and agrees to untie him.  (Seriously, this lady has some mental health issues.  That's just not normal psychology.)

Meanwhile, Midnight urges Robustia to come close so he can tell her a secret.  (While this is going on, Velvet--literally the other woman in the Land of Flight) slips up behind the man of mystery and unties his bonds.

Midnight tells the Queen that Bullets had only married her for her money (which we know is true) but goes one extra by claiming her "hubby" had called her fat as well.  Naturally, this sends the questionably sane woman into yet another rage. Robustia proceeds to lay an epic beat-down on Bullets.

Simultaneously, in classic last-minute-holy-poop-we've-got-a-deadline fashion, a plaintively love-struck Velvet causally supplies Midnight with a rocket ship to make his escape (because, of course, a civilization where the majority of the guards carry swords would have rocket ships 👌) and makes out with our (apparently irresistible) hero. 

Eventually, of course, Midnight retrieves Bullets and flies back to Big City with his quarry in tow.  As soon as ship lands on earth, however, both it--and the land from whence it came--disappear.

The story ends with Midnight informing Gab and Wackey that a lot of other stuff happening in the Land of Flight, and that he'd like to return to see Velvet.  The final panel breaks the fourth wall by asking the readers if they'd like to see more adventures set there.


Midnight vs. Bullets Balow: pt. 1 (Smash Comics #40)

Smash Comics # 40 (February 1943)

Midnight feature (Midnight vs. Bullets Balow)

 



This is story left me feeling like the publisher was up against a deadline and just had to crank something out.  Of course, that may not be what happened,but...well, just see for yourself.

The story begins with Wackey, Midnight, and Gabby in their secret lair puzzling over the seeming disappearance of wanted criminal "Bullets" Balow.  Exasperated with his team's failure to find any trace of Balow in eight weeks, Midnight decides to go for a quick five-minute walk.  The reader's attention is hooked, then, when our navy-behued hero returns at the appointed time with a severely-beaten Balow slung over his shoulder!



Midnight tosses the barely-conscious criminal onto an easy chair.  Balow continuously begs his stunned onlookers to, "keep her away from me!"  Meanwhile, Midnight dials the local police department, announces he's captured Balow, and casually invites officers to "come over and pick him up."

Yes, you read that right comics fans.  In the ongoing bi-polar annals of whether Midnight's crime-fighting lair and identity are secret or not (see here, here, and here for background), our daring protagonist has invited the cops to drop by without even giving them so much as a street address!


Meanwhile, Wackey and Gab are simply beside themselves begging for the story of how in the world he found Balow.   

Honestly, I don't like the way Midnight's depicted here.  He comes across as a rather paternalistic jerk.  Meanwhile, his "partners" look more like kids waiting on daddy's story-time. 


Midnight explains that after leaving the lair, he went for a drive.  As he was cruising around the mind-clearing turns of "Killer's Corner," our hero apparently dozed off and shot through a guard rail.


Rather than crashing to a fiery death, Big City's sentinel bursts through a cloud bank and into "The Land of Flight," a place which seems to be populated by men who look like Oomp Loompas, and women who only wear 40's era lingerie.

Get a load of the grin on Midnight's face!  (C'mon, man. At least make the attempt to show a little self-control.)
 Unfortunately for our hero, he doesn't get much opportunity to with the attractive denizen--whom, incidentally, we learn is named "Velvet"--because he's set upon by the Oompa Loompa Fan Boys.

Am I the only one who finds it a little strange that the "security" in the "Land of Flight" are apparently armed with nothing more than over-sized kitchen knives? 

Midnight learns that the reason for his reception is that another outsider had previously come (Guess who) and wound up marrying Robustia, the Queen of Flight.  No sooner is this revealed, however, than our hero is felled by a blow from behind with what appears to be a handgun.

Obvious question:  If the goal was to kill Midnight, why not just shoot him right off the bat?  Is this guy like the Barney Fife of the Land of Flight?  Could he not locate his one bullet?