June 1938: A Superman for the Underdog

On the newsstands in May 1938, browsers had their choice of Tarzan in Comics on Parade, Popeye in King Comics, daredevil aviator Captai...

Thursday, May 5, 2005

May 1965: Mann and God

Charlton Comics had their own knockoff of Mighty Mouse (Atomic Mouse), their own Lone Ranger (the Masked Raider), their own Dennis the Menace (L’il Genius) and even their own Casper the Friendly Ghost (Timmy the Timid Ghost).

So why not their own knockoff of Thor? 

In Mysteries of Unexplored Worlds 46 (May 1965), almost two years after the debut of Marvel’s Thor, Charlton introduced Son of Vulcan, a disabled man empowered to become a flying champion. This time the Greek gods did the trick, instead of the Norse ones.

“The hero started out as Johnny Mann, a reporter for the Worldwide News Syndicate,” noted comics historian Don Markstein. “He got involved with Olympian gods while covering a civil war in Cyprete, an island in the Aegean or eastern Mediterranean that doesn’t seem to appear on real-world maps. He incurred the particular wrath of Mars because he disliked that deity’s work, war.”

Clad in indestructible Roman armor, the Son of Vulcan could summon fire and magical weapons from his foster father’s forge. Granted superhuman strength by Venus, he could also fly. But Jupiter had decreed that Mann’s powers could be cancelled any time the gods deemed him unworthy of them, so Mars frequently plotted to make him look bad and thereby render him helpless.

“After three issues with him as the biggest thing in it, the title Mysteries of Unexplored Worlds was changed to Son of Vulcan,” Markstein noted. “But two issues after that, it was changed again, taken over by a new superhero, Thunderbolt, and Son of Vulcan was gone.”

The character’s footnote in comics history came in his last issue, Son of Vulcan 50 (Jan. 1966), which marked the first professional sale of famed comics writer/editor Roy Thomas.

Another ancient-themed superhero with magical armor and weaponry, the Glowing Gladiator, made two appearances around the same time in Harvey Comics’ short-lived Double-Dare Adventures. This one was empowered not by Vulcan, but by the ghost of Hannibal.



5 comments:

  1. Edward Lee Love wrote:
    I like the basic look and concept of Son of Vulcan, but the execution leaves a bit to be decided. I am a bit surprised that DC has not seriously tried to do something with the character. Cameos in Crisis and DC Challenge, brought back just long enough in the War of Gods crossover to be killed off and then some completely unrelated takes to maintain trademark of the name.

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  2. Philip Rushton wrote:
    Way back in 1949 British comics publisher AP launched their own superhero Thunderbolt Jaxon who gained his powers from discovering the belt of Thor. He originally appeared in a comic book prepared for Australia but was subsequently spun off into various UK titles.

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  3. Bob Doncaster wrote:
    Here I thought Son Of Vulcan was Mr. Spock.

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  4. Travis Langley wrote:
    Just seeing some art from old Charlton makes me smell the pages.

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  5. Ed Erkes wrote:
    One very big reason for the failure of the strip: Tony Tallarico art.

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