A Journal of Zarjaz Things - Reprint This! 9. The Inferior Five
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hipsterdad
hipsterdad
The Hipster Dad
Mon, Aug. 27th, 2007 06:04 am
Reprint This! 9. The Inferior Five



Reprint This! is a periodic feature where I talk about some out-of-print comic book gems that are not available in collected form for readers to enjoy. This is hoping to let rights owners know that, yes, readers are out here, and we'd like to buy the things we can't get at this time!

Despite such an enormous variety of books available these days, and genuine efforts to present the material in reasonably-priced, archival volumes, there are still countless fabulous series from the US, Britain and Japan which are overdue for new editions. I've selected two dozen titles which should be on bookshelves, but at this time are not.

One title that's been missing in action for years is a 1960s DC comedy book called INFERIOR FIVE, created by E. Nelson Bridwell and the late Joe Orlando, with additional art by Mike Esposito. It may be a little dated, and the more humorless members of the continuity crowd may not appreciate it, but it's a clever and very witty title that deserves to be seen again.



Inferior Five is basically a superhero parody strip, one of the first that DC tried. This came as the publisher was getting its market share hammered by the upstarts at Marvel Comics, who quickly labelled DC as "Brand Echh Comics," stuck in the past and writing books for little kids, as opposed to their own "Pop Art Productions" ostensibly geared towards teens. True enough, DC really did look like a bloated dinosaur. Lots of books were selling well, but it was apparent that some new blood was needed.

Bridwell and Orlando came to DC from Mad magazine and were among several new creators put to work on developing new ideas and a fresher, more contemporary style. As would be the case for years to come, the concept of "a fresh outlook" would crash into "protect viability of trademarks," and so Bridwell and Orlando, along with many other fresh faces like Bob Oskner or Nick Cardy or the recently-poached-from-Marvel Steve Ditko, weren't given assignments on the top-selling superhero trademark books, but they still created some fun and dynamic comics in the late 1960s.

The Inferior Five are ostensibly the bungling children of some mighty superheroes who were active in the 1940s, and who are so inept that they must work as a team as none of them can effectively fight crime on their own. I think you've heard that joke before, but that's just the setup. The parodies of DC's competitors are really silly, and done with the same sort of flair you'd expect from MAD veterans. Inferior Five was very well-received by the fan press of its day, and beat out the regular "best humor title" winner Herbie the Fat Fury at the old Alter-Ego Alley Awards in 1966.

So, how to handle a reprint? Since Inferior Five only lasted for three years, there is not a great deal of material to restore. It debuted in the anthology Showcase in 1966 and ran for three issues before earning its own title. That ran for ten bi-monthly issues before DC cancelled the book. That's maybe about 220 pages. A little color restoration and a short introduction by somebody familiar with the material, and I think you've got an excellent package spotlighting something many readers might enjoy. So how about it, DC?



(To read more suggestions on comics that need collecting, click the "reprint this!" link below.)

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drhoz
drhoz
Drhoz!
Mon, Aug. 27th, 2007 11:17 am (UTC)

THey appeared in Phil Foglio's version of Angel And The Ape, too, didn't they?

http://community.livejournal.com/scans_daily/tag/inferior+five


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jbacardi
jbacardi
johnnybacardi
Mon, Aug. 27th, 2007 11:32 am (UTC)

Yes- they did a little retcon in which Dumb Bunny was Angel O'Day's sister...


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hipsterdad
hipsterdad
The Hipster Dad
Mon, Aug. 27th, 2007 01:00 pm (UTC)

Yeah, I mentioned that when I wrote up Angel & the Ape a few months back. I'm not sure what was with Phil Foglio's odd notion to retcon these things into the mainstream DC Universe. I figure it had to have been some editorial mandate.


ReplyThread Parent
jbacardi
jbacardi
johnnybacardi
Mon, Aug. 27th, 2007 11:31 am (UTC)

Here's a second to this motion! Years ago, I considered trying to get a run of these, but they're damned hard to find.

By the way, the art in the examples is by Mike Sekowsky...


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hipsterdad
hipsterdad
The Hipster Dad
Mon, Aug. 27th, 2007 01:07 pm (UTC)

Oh, I noted it as Esposito. I'll double-check when I get home. Maybe he inked...


ReplyThread Parent
jbacardi
jbacardi
johnnybacardi
Mon, Aug. 27th, 2007 01:54 pm (UTC)

All the awkward anatomy certainly looks like Sekowsky, but I've been known to be wrong before...


ReplyThread Parent
dave_iii
dave_iii
Dave III
Mon, Aug. 27th, 2007 12:55 pm (UTC)

Don't forget to mention their appearance in the later issues of Grant Morrison's Animal Man run. If it wasn't Doom Patrol then it was this run that cement's Morrison's reputation as the most demented man in mainstream comics.


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patrickdean
patrickdean
patrickdean
Mon, Aug. 27th, 2007 02:19 pm (UTC)

I'd buy this in a heartbeat. The past couple of years when I've tried to find copies of this book, these jokers at conventions only bring the very fine/near mint copies that range from $20-40. Seriously. It feels like less folks are just bringing quick-sell cheap reading copies for schmoes like me.


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14icedbear
14icedbear
sneaky feelings
Tue, Aug. 28th, 2007 12:43 am (UTC)

sorry to be off-topic somewhat, but i just have to say, "i throw the fish, and they come back to me!"


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