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...

Friday, November 11, 2005

November 1965: The Ghost in the Machine

 

Advancing age helps you appreciate the appeal of T.H.U.N.D.E.R. Agent NoMan.

In the first issue of Tower Comics’ T.H.U.N.D.E.R. Agents (Nov. 1965), elderly Dr. Anthony Dunn is confined to a wheelchair, dying, when he perfects a way out of the universal human dilemma.

“He spent the last few years of his normal life working on replaceable androids into which he could transfer his mind, and succeeded just in time — the very moment he died, he entered the body of the first of them,” noted comics historian Don Markstein.

Fawcett’s Captain Marvel had provided children with the wish fulfillment of being instantly transformed into a superhuman adult. NoMan reversed the fantasy, restoring his youth permanently.

“Once free of his human shell, he was able to transfer instantaneously from one android body to another, thus becoming effectively immortal as long as the androids held out — and though the androids were expensive, he worked for a government agency with vast funding,” noted Markstein.

“Having become stronger and more agile than most humans, NoMan (so called because he considered himself no longer a man) was eligible for work as a field operative; and when T.H.U.N.D.E.R. started handing out devices to turn a few of its agents into superheroes, he received a cloak of invisibility. While his android bodies were expendable, the cloak, a unique prototype rescued from the laboratory of a dead scientist, was not, which often put him in the position of having to retrieve it from his own corpse.”

In terms of the team dynamic, this stealthy superhero played Batman to Dynamo’s Superman. But NoMan also shared something of the vibe of the Spectre — an eerie-looking cloaked figure who could become invisible. He was even dead, at least technically.

Marvel and DC would follow up with angst-ridden android superheroes of their own — the Vision and Red Tornado. By the time they debuted in 1968, NoMan was just about to really disappear, along with the rest of Tower Comics.



3 comments:

  1. Vincent Mariani wrote:
    I felt that Tower books were sterile-looking, even when the artwork was excellent. Whatever "brand" was intended, it escaped me. Marvel was fun. DC had tradition. Tower was just there.

    ReplyDelete
  2. George Daniels wrote:
    As a teen, I really liked the THUNDER agents, including Noman. Dynamo, Noman and Menthor were all pretty original and entertaining, Lightning not so much.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Bill Oppenheim wrote:
    Appatently Wally Wood took the idea from Van Vogt's Null A book. Its hero dies, only to be transferred to a new body.

    ReplyDelete