Joe Gill was born on this date in 1919. Gill was a workhorse writer in comics right from the get-go for a host of publishers such Novelty and others. He was a life-long friend of Mickey Spillane. He found a good fit for himself at Charlton Comics. The editorial control was minimal, and Gill was skilled and happy to be left alone. He co-created countless characters, including the focus of today's Dojo one-day celebration -- Captain Atom.
After this debut, Captain Atom balances between sci-fi and fantasy, offering stories with a hint of Cold War edge and at the same time flights of fancy about young boys riding space birds in their dreams. He battles alien threats, staving off an invasion or two and himself traveling to Venus to confront some very lovely space ladies. Captain Atom's powers fluctuate somewhat as the series progresses, with his top speed between 22, 000 miles per hour and the speed of light. He has complete control over his atomic structure and can pass through steel walls. His most visually arresting power is how he ignites part of his mass to generate thrust.
Two men in addition to President Eisenhower know Atom's secrets. Sgt. Gunner Goslin and General Eining. These two are important cast members in the earliest stories, but they fade out of the stories as they roll along. Captain Atom reports to the President throughout the initial run, first Eisenhower, then a non-descript fill-in fellow and finally Kennedy.
Steve Ditko is the artist on most of the stories, but Rocke Mastroserio does pinch-hit on several. There is a distinct drop-off in quality when others than Gill and Ditko do the work, the series loses its distinctiveness, becoming a rather bland superhero outing. The series offered up a single Captain Atom story per issue, then two and finally three before it was cancelled after nine issues of Space Adventures.
Here are the covers for Space Adventures featuring Captain Atom. To read each individual issue in its entirety just check out the links beneath each juicy cover.
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I first read Captain Atom when the stories were reprinted in various UK Alan Class titles and always en.joyed them. Ditkos art at this time for Charlton was as strong as his work at Marvel and Atlas . Joe Gill was a great fit for these type of stories a much underrated writer
ReplyDeleteBoth Joe Gill and Steve Ditko embody the sense of industry that was so critical to the development of comics as they shifted from trash to literature.
DeleteJoe Gill -- the number of his script pages would probably circle the Earth! What a great comic book writer. No words needed for Ditko!
ReplyDeleteDitto.
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