DC SALUTES THE BICENTENNIAL
#15
Four Star Spectacular #3
Published bi-monthly, fifty cents, forty-eight pages, August
Cover artist: Ernie Chua
Editor: E. Nelson Bridwell
Four Star Spectacular ran for 6 issues from March 1976 until February 1977. It was a reprint series, although some of the stories were redrawn to appease our modern sensibilities. Superboy and Wonder Woman appeared in each issue. As the title suggested, each issue starred four superheroes: half the issues featured four stories and half had three stories with heroes “teaming up” - Hawkman and Hawkwoman in one, Superboy and Krypto in another (although I think that’s cheating a bit: that’s like the Lone Ranger teaming up with Silver...) and in this Bicentennial issue.
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“Undersea Trap” starring Wonder Woman, reprinted from Wonder Woman #101, October 1958, Robert Kanigher ( w ), Ross Andru & Mike Esposito (a).
Wonder Woman saves Steve Trevor from crashing his airplane into a burning pylon during a race. Steve bets her that if she rescues him three times in the next 24 hours she will have to marry him. The Amazon accepts.
Aha! Steve reveals he is scheduled to test pilot aircraft all the next day. All’s fair ...
Aha! Then Steve is reassigned to desk duty all that next day. All’s fair ...
During lunch, Wonder Woman saves Steve from being crushed by space debris ... one...
During a dance, Wonder Woman foils a robbery and saves Steve from a bullet ... two ...
Steve ferries a general to an aircraft carrier. He crashed into the ocean and is attacked by a shark! Wonder Woman rescues him. Three? Nope! It is 15 minutes after the 24-hour deadline! Doh!
One presumes the plane crashed after the delivery of the general to the carrier; otherwise he would have been left in the plane in the briny deep and left to the mercy of a hungry shark. So long, old chum!
This story is also reprinted in the trade paperback “Showcase Presents: Wonder Woman #1”.
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Superboy’s Workshop. Cut out the provided clown figure, get a little cardboard, a little glue, a pencil and the ability to make a miniature parallel bars and you can make a toy tumbling clown! Destroying the value of the comic (such as it is) is definitely worth this experiment in perpetual motion. Whether this one-page craft is a reprint or new for this series is unknown. Art and writing unknown.
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“Superboy in Argo City” starring Supergirl (her logo is at the top of the first page - proving this was published originally as a Supergirl feature, but in this comic Superboy is touted as the star) reprinted from Action Comics #358, January 1968, Cary Bates ( w ), Jim Mooney (a).
Superboy heads back to earth after a mission in space (this must be the month for missions in space - both Superman and Justice League of America mention various space missions in its issues...) and stops by a crystal asteroid to create a jewel for a necklace for his mother. He is knocked cold by a space probe gathering mineral samples. How is that possible?
The probe takes him and the samples to Argo City. Ah! It was a Kryptonian probe - that’s how it could knock out the Boy of Steel. Argo City was blown into space intact from Krypton when the planet exploded leaving survivors, including Superman’s uncle, aunt and cousin - Kara Zor-el! Tweenie Kara races to her father’s probe to find Superboy unconscious. When revived, Superboy has lost his memory!
Zor-el names him after his deceased nephew Kal-el. Superboy and “Supergirl” fly around Argo City on their jet packs rescuing lost birds and other adventures. A weight ray makes objects weightless: Kal lifts heavy machinery as if he has super-strength!
Zor-el flies Argo City to a system with a habitable planet. But it is protected by an alien who will accept one sacrifice as penalty for their trespassing. That is the law. Zor-el, blaming himself, offers to go as the sacrifice and walks to the pod that will whisk him to his judgment.
But Kal-el beats him to the pod! As he leaves with the transport vessel, the alien wipes all memories from the Argonians as the City leaves the system - memories of their trespass AND of Kal-el!
Somehow, being transported returns Superboy’s memory! He escapes by flying through the sun to avoid the alien. The last thing he remembers is forging a crystal jewel for his mother.
“Presently” Supergirl shows the jewel to Superman - who remembers making the jewel but not what happened to it. How did it end up with Supergirl?
The biggest hole in this story is Superboy’s powers returning. How? If this system had a yellow sun ALL of Argo City would have been imbued with superpowers (this was before Superman became a “solar battery”...), right?
Superboy’s memory returning to the point at which he lost it is likely, though. That happens with real amnesia victims.
And this being a “team-up” with Supergirl is a bigger stretch than Superboy and Krypto... hmmph...
Still, a fun story, which is the point. And it is nice to see Jim Mooney’s art again. His Supergirl was always a cutie!
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“Power Ring Peril” starring Green Lantern, reprinted from Green Lantern #32, October 1964, Gardner Fox ( w ), Gil Kane & Sid Greene (a).
Tyrant Vant Orl conquered the planet Thronn and entombed its united league of heroes - Energiman, Magicko, Golden Blade and Strong Girl, among unnamed others – in a crystal monolith on the planet’s moon.
Energiman’s powers work on the same frequency as Green Lantern’s ring. Every time Hal Jordan recharges, Energiman draws a bit of power. Eventually, he sucks GL through his battery and to Thronn’s moon at the cost of Energiman’s life. With his last bit of ... er ... energy, Energiman tells all to Green Lantern. GL flies to Thronn to confront Vant Orl.
But Vant Orl also can manipulate the power ring’s energy - he is also on that frequency! Green Lantern covers his ring with a yellow leaf (the ring has a “necessary impurity” and does not affect anything colored yellow, remember...) to regain more control over his ring, defeat Vant Orl and release Thronn’s heroes!
This story was also reprinted in “Green Lantern Archives #5”, “Showcase Presents: Green Lantern #2” and “Green Lantern Omnibus #2”.
Four Thought (great title to their letter column for issue #1). Gerald Duit of New Orleans, LA, Arthur Kowalik of Wilmington, DE, David J. Brown of Hammond, IN, and Fred Schnieder of New York, New York all had positive comments and suggestions for reprints. They were especially glad to see solo Superboy since him comic was now a permanent vehicle for the Legion of Superheroes.
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Join me next time for DC’s Bicentennial issue #16: Karate Kid #3.
Original Material copyright 2015 Michael Curry
Images used are copyright their respective holders and reproduced here under the “Fair Use” doctrine of 17 USC 106 & 106a for the purposes of criticism and comment.
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