Monday, June 8, 2026

Blue Beetle #1 - The Giant Mummy Who Was Not Dead!


Blue Beetle #1 featuring a new mystic Blue Beetle debuted in 1964. This is complete revision of the character with Dan Garrett (with a double t) an archeologist who is digging around with a beautiful colleague Dr. Luri Hashid trying to discover a tomb of an ancient Mummy. But things go awry when they find "The Giant Mummy Who Was Not Dead". (Arguably the best title of a comic story ever.)


What Garrett also finds is a blue scarab which grants him wide-ranging superpowers when says the magic words "Kaji Da".  Not only must the Blue Beetle defeat the Mummy, but he must also contend with an evil military leader from the region. 



The basic blue costume worn by the Blue Beetle in these issues is striking in its simplicity. The red gloves and goggles really pop. Written by Joe Gill and drawn by Tony Tallarico and Bill Fraccio, this version of Blue Beetle is one of Charlton's earliest attempts to tap into the burgeoning superhero marketplace of the 60's. That's a memorable Dick Giordano cover though. 

Read the complete comic at this link

More Blue Beetle tomorrow. 

Rip Off

Sunday, June 7, 2026

DC Finest Blue Beetle!


The DC Finest volume Blue Beetle - Blue Beetle Challenges The Red Knight gathers together not only the Steve Ditko Blue Beetle stories, but for the first time by DC presents the vintage Dan Garrett magical Beetle adventures by Joe Gill, Tony Tallarico and Bill Fraccio. Charlton picked up the Blue Beetle a decade earlier, but it was the superhero boom of the 60's which enticed them to finally launch a revised version. The Blue Beetle in these earliest stories is a vastly powerful figure, a mystical equivalent to the radioactively powered Captain Atom. When the first Blue Beetle fell away, it would take Steve Ditko to revive the character yet again, giving us a scientist named Ted Kord who use his technical skills to empower his crimefighting efforts. Ditko was fresh from his Spider-Man tenure and this Blue Beetle moved not unlike his arachnid predecessor. Oddly missing from this collection is the final unpublished Blue Beetle tale by Ditko, but in its place we get the debut issue of the second Charlton Bullseye which published a fanboy team-up between Beetle and The Question. It's an odd choice, but I'm glad it's here for a wider audience. 

Here are the covers of the issues in this volume. 




















The Dojo will be taking a closer look at most all of these issues as the month tumbles along. 

Rip Off

Saturday, June 6, 2026

Thunder Agents Classics Volume One!


The first volume of IDW's THUNDER Agents reprint series (produced in conjunction with yet another attempt to revive the team some years back) contains the first four issues of the original THUNDER Agents run where we get to meet Dynamo, Menthor, Lightning and my favorite Agent NoMan. There is death, destruction, and international intrigue galore, as the team is called upon to defeat the forces of the Subterranean Warlord. 

To be honest the Agents were a flawed masterpiece in the beginning. Wally Wood's stories are slick, and the tone is uptown for sure. But alongside that are stories drawn by veterans Gil Kane and Mike Sekowsky and George Tuska which are much more classic superhero action yarns. Some of the characters are not drawn to model which must've been unclear for the varied assignments at the time. But as the series continues things tighten up nicely. That first issue though almost feels at times like there were two separate Agents projects which just got jammed into the one twenty-five cent comic book. (Note: Steve Ditko did not contribute to the four issues in this volume, but that would change.)


I enjoy Dynamo, he's such a goofball, and they way that Wood presents him time and again as a weapon, a thing to be deployed is fascinating.  I completely adore the whole concept of NoMan, one of the great comic book heroes. But I've never been a big Menthor fan, until this reading gave me a new appreciation of the arc he goes through. I always forget too, that Lightning is a later addition like Raven to the team. And the Iron Maiden is in the running for sleekest and possibly sexiest character Wally Wood ever drew. It was way cool though to read those stories again after all these years. I put together a collection of the original comics many years ago, but these days I love to read trades and this gives me the chance to comfortably read some classic tales. Here are the covers. 





Coming up in the second volume, the most significant story in Tower Comics history and Dynamo gets his own series.  

Rip Off

Friday, June 5, 2026

The Blue Beetle Comes To Charlton!

(Read this comic at this link.)

Charlton was one of those companies that survived the Golden Age of comics by keeping their ears to the ground as trends and sweeping up properties from defunct publishers. They gathered many from Fawcett when it went under and it gobbled up the Fox / Holyoke Blue Beetle when that property became available in 1955. 

(Read this comic at this link.)

The Blue Beetle title took over the numbering of The Thing which had been ironically showcasing the work of Steve Ditko. The first two issues of the Charlton Blue Beetle series reprinted stories from years before. 

(Read this comic at this link.)

Under new covers most likely by Dick Giordano the Blue Beetle is shown flying on the covers. The Beetle's powers had slowly increased during the Golden Age. Now in this series which featured new stories drawn by Ted Galindo and Ray Orsin the Beetle becomes a potent figure, able to fight crime on the streets and fly into space. 

(Read this comic at this link.)

We get two issues of new stories starring the Beetle before the series is cancelled. It would be a decade before Charlton would revive and substantially revise the hero. The Blue Beetle was far from gone, merely hibernating until his next incarnation. 

Rip Off

Thursday, June 4, 2026

Blue Beetle Radio!


Blue Beetle proved to be enough of a hit on the newsstand that radio took notice and the character was developed into a radio program in 1940 and ran for seventy episodes. To enjoy the radio check out the link below to the Internet Archive:


Rip Off



Wednesday, June 3, 2026

Golden Age Blue Beetle!


The Blue Beetle was first born in Mystery Men Comics #1 from Fox Publications in 1939. He proved a popular feature, and the hard-fisted hero got his own title a year later. There is debate about who created Blue Beetle, though some sources list Will Eisner as the first writer with Charles Nicholas Wojtkoski as the first artist. Blue Beetle was a street-level mystery man, a cop who used special vitamins to gain his powers and wore armor to fight crime. 


Here is the Golden Age Blue Beetle's origin story from the pages of the debut issue of Mystery Men Comics. Notice of course that the concept was not fully developed in this first story. 





As the years rolled by, the source of Dan Garret's powers was altered and he became increasingly powerful, more Superman than Spirit. More Golden Age Blue Beetle tomorrow. 

Rip Off

Tuesday, June 2, 2026

The Beetles Are Blue!


The month of June is dedicated to the Blue Beetle. The Blue Beetle is one of comics most enduring heroes, having been published by a lot of brands and successfully finding a place to exist in most eras of comics. The Beetle began in the Golden Age, found reasonable success in comics and even on radio for a short time and a two-fisted crimefighter named Dan Garrett. Later a different Dan Garrett was revived and revised by Charlton Comics as a mystical superhero with vast powers. 


Later at Charlton Steve Ditko took the character and gave him a technological touch under the name Ted Kord. This version hung on at Charlton and later at DC for quite some time, before yet another Blue Beetle in the form of Jaime Reyes took on the role. The focus this month will be on Charlton's versions of the hero. So, grab your hats, it's going to be a zany ride. 

Rip Off