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The Fly is a fictional comic book superhero published by Red Circle Comics. He was created by Joe Simon and Jack Kirby as part of Archie's "Archie Adventure Series" and later camped up (as Fly Man) as part of the company's Mighty Comics line. He first appeared in ''The Double Life of Private Strong'' #1, however his origin story and first "full length" appearance were in ''Adventures of the Fly'' #1 (Aug. 1959). ==Publication history== After the first four issues of ''Adventures of the Fly'' (Simon and Kirby left the title after the fourth issue), others took on the character and made him an adult lawyer who fought crime in Capital City. He was later partnered with Fly Girl. ''Adventures of The Fly'' was cancelled with issue #30 (Oct. 1964). The Fly also appeared in short stories in some of Archie's other titles (''The Double Life of Private Strong'' #1, #2 both published in 1959), (''Pep Comics'' #151, 154, 160 and ''Laugh'' #128, 129, 132, 134, 137-139) between October 1961 and January 1963. His own series was restarted as ''Fly-Man'' as part of the "Mighty Comics Group", which ran from issues #31-39 (May 1965 - Sept. 1966). The title changed again to ''Mighty Comics'', which featured various Archie super-heroes in solo adventures for #40-50 before its cancellation in 1967. ''The Fly'' was published again in the 1980s under the Red Circle Comics imprint, running from issue #1 (May 1983) to #9 (October 1984). The stories in this series were more similar to the previous stories in ''Adventures of The Fly'' and co-starred Fly Girl. With issue #5, Steve Ditko both wrote and drew the stories, which portrayed Tommy Troy being framed and discredited. Ditko left the series after issue #8, and another writer wrapped up the storyline in #9, which cleared Troy from any guilt. The Fly was one of the characters used in DC Comics' revamp of the Archie characters in DC's !mpact Comics line. This series, also called ''The Fly'', ran 17 issues (Aug. 1991 - Dec. 1992) and portrayed the Fly as a boy (named Jason Troy) who turned into an adult superhero, similar to the original version of the character. Archie Comics reprinted the first four issues of the 1959 series in a 2004 trade paperback collection under the company's Red Circle imprint.〔''The Adventures of the Fly'' ISBN 978-1879794184〕 In 1999, Joe Simon regained the rights to the character thanks to copyright termination.〔http://cocatalog.loc.gov/cgi-bin/Pwebrecon.cgi?v1=9&ti=1,9&SC=Author&SA=Simon%2C%20Joe&PID=yawJD_MyP7EIe8WOsaRfmyNdf&SEQ=20110825183534&SID=2〕 The termination did not affect Fly-Girl, since she was created after Simon and Kirby left the title. With the post Infinite Crisis reboot of the DC Comics continuity, and the subsequent licensing of the ''Red Circle'' comics characters and mark, a newly revamped version of the Mighty Crusaders were introduced. Since Archie Comics no longer owned the rights to the Fly, DC couldn't use the character. Instead, they used Fly-Girl, his female counterpart in the original '60 stories. Fly Girl has subsequently stood in for The Fly in Archie's 2012 ''New Crusaders'' series. 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「Fly (Archie Comics)」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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