翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Captain Carrot
・ Captain Carrot and His Amazing Zoo Crew!
・ Captain Carvallo
・ Captain Caution
・ Captain Caveman and the Teen Angels
・ Captain Chaos
・ Captain Charles Johnson
・ Captain Chesapeake
・ Captain China
・ Captain Christy
・ Captain class
・ Captain Clawbeak
・ Captain Clegg
・ Captain Clegg (film)
・ Captain Cold
Captain Comet
・ Captain Comic
・ Captain Commando
・ Captain Compass
・ Captain Confederacy
・ Captain Cook (1826 ship)
・ Captain Cook (Blackadder)
・ Captain Cook (disambiguation)
・ Captain Cook Birthplace Museum
・ Captain Cook Bridge
・ Captain Cook Bridge, Brisbane
・ Captain Cook Bridge, New South Wales
・ Captain Cook Cruises
・ Captain Cook Cruises Western Australia
・ Captain Cook Cruises, Australia


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Captain Comet : ウィキペディア英語版
Captain Comet

Captain Comet (real name Adam Blake) is a DC Comics superhero created by DC Comics Editor Julius Schwartz, writer John Broome, and artist Carmine Infantino.
Once a minor character in the DC Comics canon, he occupies an almost unique position in DC Comics history as a superhero who was created between the two great superhero comics periods--the Golden Age and the Silver Age. His early stories fall into a no-man's land, sometimes referred to as 'The Atomic Age' because of the recurrent science-fiction themes of most comics of the period, when very few superheroes comics were published and less than a dozen short-lived, superhero characters were introduced.
Along with Marvel Comics' Namor the Sub-Mariner and Toro (sidekick of the original Human Torch), he is among the first mutant metahuman superheroes (meaning he was born with his powers), predating X-Men by 12 years. He is one of the few DC Comics characters not to have had their earlier history significantly changed by various DC Comics major continuity changing events over the years such as ''Crisis on Infinite Earths'' and ''Zero Hour''.
==Publication history==
The character of Captain Comet first appeared in a 10-page tale, "The Origin Of Captain Comet", in the flagship science-fiction title ''Strange Adventures'' #9 (June 1951) published by National Comics (now known as DC Comics). He was created by ''Strange Adventures'' editor Julius Schwartz,〔"In an interview, Paul Kupperberg has explained that the inspiration for Captain Comet was Edmond Hamilton's Captain Future (a slight error - the Captain Future pulp stories were mainly written by Hamilton but the character was created by Mort Weisinger). At that time Hamilton was represented by Julius Schwartz, then a literary agent, later a DC Comics Editor - including editor of ''Strange Adventures''." Interview with Paul Kupperberg by Michael Eury, p200 of ''The Krypton Companion'' ed. Eury, Michael (TwoMorrows Publications 2006) ISBN 1-893905-61-6.〕 John Broome, and artist Carmine Infantino, and the story was written by John Broome (under the alias Edgar Ray Merritt), drawn by Carmine Infantino and inked by Bernard Sachs. The character was based on the pulp fiction character Captain Future.〔''The Life and Art Of Murphy Anderson'' p49 by Anderson, Murphy and Harvey, R.C. (TwoMorrows Publishing, 2003) ISBN 1-893905-21-7〕〔Interview with Paul Kupperberg by Michael Eury, p200 of ''The Krypton Companion'' (TwoMorrows Publications 2006), ed Eury, Michael, ISBN 1-893905-61-6.〕 His first appearance was actually a two-part story, continued in "The Air Bandits From Space" in ''Strange Adventures'' #10 (July 1951). From issue #12 (September 1951) Murphy Anderson took over as artist, and he drew all Captain Comet's further appearances in ''Strange Adventures'' until #46 (July 1954); Sy Barry and Gil Kane drew the last two stories. John Broome wrote every issue.
Captain Comet appeared in 38 issues of ''Strange Adventures'', (missing only issues #45, #47, and #48); the series ending in ''Strange Adventures'' #49 (October, 1954). From the beginning, Captain Comet appeared on most of the covers, mainly drawn by Murphy Anderson or Gil Kane. Stories ranged in length from six to ten pages, dropping from ten pages in 1951 to eight pages in 1952 and finally six pages from May 1953. He next appeared in 1976, when writer Gerry Conway and co-writer David Anthony Kraft reintroduced him as a supporting character in ''Secret Society of Super Villains'' starting with "No Man Shall Call Me Master" (''Secret Society of Super Villains'' #2, July/August 1976). He appeared in most issues of that title, together with associated ''Secret Society of Super Villains Special'' #1 (October 1977), until it was canceled with issue #15 (June/July 1978). During this run he also appeared in ''Super-Team Family Giant'' #13 (September 1977), a story directly linked to the ''Secret Society of Super Villains'' series, and as lead character for the first time since 1954 in an extended story, "Danger: Dinosaurs at Large!" in ''DC Special'' #27, April/May 1977, by Gerry Conway and artist Arvell Jones. ''Secret Society of Super Villains'' was canceled as part of the DC Implosion. Captain Comet was a popular character at the time - he came second in a poll for potential Justice League membership, and writer Bob Rozakis presented DC Comics with a proposal for Captain Comet's first self-titled series.〔"Here comes Captain Comet pt 1" - Bob Rozakis ''Answer Man'' website - http://www.comicsbulletin.com/bobro/99588498838532.htm〕〔'Here comes Captain Comet pt 2' - Bob Rozakis 'Answer Man' website - http://www.comicsbulletin.com/bobro/99649653780073.htm〕
After the cancellation of ''Secret Society of Super Villains'', Captain Comet entered another hiatus, his appearances limited to guest spots in other DC titles during the 1980s. Four of these were cameo appearances - ''Crisis on Infinite Earths'' #5 (August 1985), #10 (January 1986) and #12 (March 1986), and ''All-Star Squadron'' #53 (January 1986). Two were team-ups with Superman - ''DC Comics Presents'' #22 (June 1980) and #91 (March 1986); the fourth was a retelling of his origin by Roy Thomas in ''Secret Origins Annual'' vol 2 #1 (1987). He also appeared in the non-canonical series ''DC Challenge'' (1986).
He then became a supporting character in the ''L.E.G.I.O.N.'' series from issue #16 (June 1990). Captain Comet was actually a late replacement for fellow 1950s space traveler Adam Strange who was due to become a regular character, as otherwise it would have clashed with the ''Adam Strange'' Prestige Format limited series published around the same time.〔Editorial on letters page in ''L.E.G.I.O.N.'' 90 #16 (June 1990)〕 He was then part of the ''R.E.B.E.L.S.'' series which continued from ''L.E.G.I.O.N.'' That series was canceled with ''R.E.B.E.L.S.96'' #17 (March 1996), and had a solo story in ''Showcase '96'' #10 (November 1996), after which another hiatus followed.
Since 2005, under the writer Jim Starlin, Captain Comet has had his highest profile in DC Comics publications since the 1950s, featuring in the ''Rann-Thanagar War'' miniseries (2005), starring in the 8-issue miniseries ''Mystery in Space (vol 2)'' (2006), and co-starring in ''Rann-Thanagar Holy War'' (2008) and ''Strange Adventures'' (vol 3)(2009), as well as appearing briefly in the ''52'' (2006) and ''Final Crisis'' (2008) events. Most recently he has become a regular character in the ongoing new ''R.E.B.E.L.S.'' series (2009).

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Captain Comet」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.