Saturday, April 18, 2026

Solar Reflections - Nuclear Nightmares!


In the third volume of Doctor Solar Man of the Atom from Dark Horse, we are treated to a fully-realized superhero. Gold Key had been reluctant to dive into the superhero pool, clearly showing a disdain for the underwear crowd which commanded so much attention in the field. But eventually they follow the patterns and give us a Doctor Solar who functions in many ways like a hero in the classic modes.

Paul S. Newman, the ubiquitous writer for Gold Key continued to handle the chores on that end and Frank Bolle had successfully taken over the art, if his style was somewhat less dynamic than what had come before. With this team we continue to get stories which are rock solid science fiction such as when Doctor Solar is forced to travel back in time to stop a deadly doomsday device by going to before it began, and later he confronts a sun spun out of control and threatening to destroy the Earth itself.

Then the stories begin to focus more on the machinations of Solar's arch enemy Nuro, an obscure behind-the-scenes villain akin to many masterminds from the Bond films and other such tales. Nuro employs a robot dubbed "Orun", one who'd battled Solar before and makes of him a steady henchman and persistent threat to Doctor Solar. We get a glimpse of Nuro's face after many years of shadows and see that he has a rather porcine countenance. Nothing much is made of this, but it suggests a slight change in the tone of the series.

Those changes continue when Dick Wood takes on the writing and veteran Al McWilliams steps into do some art on the series and we meet Hamilton Mansfield Lamont, who is Gale's nephew. This brilliant young man joins the cast which had long been comprised of love interest Gale and Dr. Solar's longtime boss and confidant Doctor Clarkson and soon becomes a nerdish Snapper Carr/Rick Jones like figure. You can for sure say that the Man of the Atom becomes a bona fide superhero when he gets a teen sidekick.

We also get a new villain, sort of when King Cybernoid is birthed as Nuro's intellect becomes entrapped in the robotic form of his henchman. This new more physical opponent again creates a more pure superhero dynamic for the book and draws it away from its sci-fi roots, though of course those notions still function to supply threats.

Here are the covers of the issues included in this volume.









Next time Doctor Solar really goes through some changes, and we chase the character through the decades of the 70's and the 80's.



Rip Off

6 comments:

  1. Gold Key was obviously known for painted covers, but I don't remember seeing many of them on superhero comics during this period.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Gold Key had very few "superheroes". Only Solar and Magnus leap to mind.

      Delete
  2. The only Gold Key superhero type comic I ever saw in UK was Magnus Robot Fighter. Most of the Gold Key comics in Scotland ( at least) were their mystery type comics and a few cartoon (Jetsons etc) books. Dr Solar looked interesting though.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. These reprints have really given me an appreciation of the character I didn't have back in the day. I loved his revival at Valiant.

      Delete
    2. I'm currently reading Dr Solar: Alpha and Omega, which collects the back-up strips by Jim Shooter and Barry Windsor-Smith which appeared in Valiant's Dr Solar #1-10 and covered the origin story.

      Delete
    3. Love that book. It's one of the relatively few gimmick covers that actually relates to the theme of the book it surrounds.

      Delete