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L. Miller & Son, Ltd. : ウィキペディア英語版
L. Miller & Son, Ltd.

L. Miller & Son, Ltd. was a British publisher of magazines, comic books, and pulp fiction intended primarily to take advantage of the British ban on importing printed matter. Between 1943 and 1966, the firm published British editions of many American comic books, primarily those of Fawcett Comics. They are best known for the 1954 creation of Marvelman — a blatant imitation of the Golden Age Captain Marvel — after America's Fawcett Publications capitulated to National Periodicals (DC Comics). (The two companies had fought a long legal battle in which National claimed Captain Marvel infringed on Superman's copyright.) L. Miller & Son also published a large line of Western comics, many reprints but also some original titles.
== History ==
The company was founded in 1943 by book publisher Arnold Miller〔Owner of Arnold Book Company〕 and his son Leonard Miller. They started out in 1945 publishing black-and-white reprints of the Fawcett Comics Marvel Family titles, including ''Captain Marvel Adventures'' ''Captain Marvel Jr.'', ''The Marvel Family'', and ''Whiz Comics''.
Between 1950-1952, British writer/artist Mick Anglo produced ''Space Commando Comics'', featuring "Space Commander Kerry," for L. Miller & Son.〔Holland, Steve, "Who's Who in British Comics", ''Comics World'' #43, Aceville Publications Ltd (Sept-Oct 1995).〕
Throughout the 1950s L. Miller & Son also published a large line of Western comics. L. Miller & Son's original Western titles, which they started producing in 1954, included ''Colorado Kid'', ''Davy Crockett'', ''Kid Dynamite Western Comic'', ''Pancho Villa Western Comic'', and ''Rocky Mountain King Western Comic''. Some of the longer-running Western reprint titles included ''Gabby Hayes Western'', ''Hopalong Cassidy Comic'', ''Lash Larue Western'', ''Monte Hale Western'', ''Rocky Lane Western'', ''Six-Gun Heroes'', and ''Western Hero.''
(詳細はNational Comics Publications v. Fawcett Publications decision, L. Miller & Son was forced to cancel their line of "Marvel" titles (though the company continued to published ''Whiz Comics'' minus any Marvel Family stories). Faced with the sudden loss of their star feature, and operating under different copyright laws, the company turned to Mick Anglo to come up with a replacement character that, while ostensibly a new creation, mimicked enough core elements of Captain Marvel to retain the interest of readers who had enjoyed the reprints. Anglo (along with writer Len Miller) created ''Marvelman''. Captain Marvel, Jr., was adapted to create Young Marvelman, and Mary Marvel had her gender changed to create the male Kid Marvelman. The magic word "Shazam!" was replaced with "Kimota" ("Atomik" backwards). Using the "new" characters, the company launched three titles, ''Marvelman'', ''Marvelman Family'', and ''Young Marvelman''.
By the end of the 1950s, L. Miller & Son had cancelled all their Western titles. In 1959, with demand for British-produced comics shrinking, Miller cancelled ''Marvelman Family'' and turned both ''Marvelman'' and ''Young Marvelman'' into reprint books. The titles struggled on, each putting out 346 issues, but were finally cancelled in 1963.
Starting in 1961, the company moved into the horror/suspense genre with two new titles, ''Mystic'' and ''Spellbound'', both of which culled pre-Comics Code material from American publishers like Atlas, Marvel Comics, American Comics Group, Charlton, and E.C. Comics.
L. Miller & Son Ltd. ceased comic book publication in 1966. The physical asbestos printing plates from which Miller had produced their comics, and presumably the rights to the comics as well, were sold to Alan Class, Ltd.. Class, for his part, was interested primarily in horror and science fiction stories and reprinted few of the original Miller creations. (Class was still using some of the Miller printing plates as recently as the late 1990s.)

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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