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From the Scoop Archive - 10/26/2002


Space Opera in the Comics (and Beyond)


.html Did you know that science-fiction novels and pulp magazines with science-fiction themes, such as Amazing Stories (see right), started to spring up in the early days of the 20th Century? And by the early '30s, science fiction came to the comic strips, in the form of Buck Rogers, in both the daily papers and in the Sunday sections. The Buck Rogers full-page Sundays, which were large, 22"x15" pages, were true riots of color.

Then, in 1934, Flash Gordon blasted off in the Sunday comics for a run of about eleven years - by Alex Raymond, whose style seemed to change almost completely every few years. Raymond's color Flash pages from 1934-1944 are all worth looking at, and the period from 1935 through 1939 is considered to be when he did his best work.

The first comic books with science fiction themes were titles like Planet Comics and Science Comics, which were basically cops and robbers stories played out on a science fiction backdrop. It was Space Opera.

The first comic books to go beyond Space Opera were the EC titles Weird Science and Weird Fantasy, published in 1950-54. They presented stories that made you think. Stories about issues. Stories with messages.

And although the Atlas comics and the ACG comics of the same period (1950-54) had occasional sparkles of brilliance, no other comic books have approached the stature of Weird Science and Weird Fantasy in the eyes of sci-fi fans.





 
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