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The Unexpected : ウィキペディア英語版
The Unexpected

''The Unexpected'' was a fantasy-horror comic book series, a continuation of ''Tales of the Unexpected'', published by American company DC Comics. It ran 118 issues, #105 (February-March 1968) to #222 (May 1982).

==Publication history==
Unlike the predecessor, it was a fantasy anthology at first, then turned into a weird/horror anthology in the style of ''House of Secrets'' and ''House of Mystery''. Its first "host" was The Mad Mod Witch. Nick Cardy was the cover artist for ''The Unexpected'' for issues #111, 116-117, 119-120, 123, 125-139, 141-162. The series was published in the 100 Page Super Spectacular format from #157 (May-June 1974) to #162 (March-April 1975).〔 ''The Unexpected Special'' was published in 1977 as an issue of ''DC Special Series''.〔(''DC Special Series'' #4 ) at the Grand Comics Database〕 With issue #189 (January-February 1979), ''The Unexpected'' converted to the Dollar Comics format and incorporated ''House of Secrets'' and ''The Witching Hour''. Each "Unexpected" story would always include the word in its last panel. After the merge, this was only true of the ''Unexpected'' section; there would then be complete, ad-free issues of ''The Witching Hour'', hosted by its witches, and ''The House of Secrets'', hosted by Abel. ''The Witching Hour'' feature was alternated with ''Doorway to Nightmare'' (starring Madame Xanadu), which appeared in issues #190, 192, 194, and 195. With issue #196 (March 1980), the series was restored to standard size, and rather than three complete issues in one, there was one story each per issue. ''The House of Secrets'' continued through issue #208; ''The Witching Hour'' continued to appear until issue #209 (April 1981), which incorporated the science fiction series, ''Time Warp''. The final issue of the series was #222 (May 1982) which included early artwork by Marc Silvestri.
The only continuing series was "Johnny Peril" which ran from issues #106-117. For issues #111-on, the titular protagonist was billed as an "adventurer of the weird". Johnny Peril would again appear in issues #200 and 205-213. Johnny Peril's roots, prior to his first appearance, came in the one-off story "Just a Story" in All-American Comics' ''Comic Cavalcade'' #15 (July 1946), by writer-artist Howard Purcell. With issue #22 (Sept. 1947), the anthological "Just a Story" series gained newspaper-reporter character Johnny Peril, who often acted as witness or narrator rather than as an integral part of the narrative. With this issue, the series title became "Johnny Peril Tells Just a Story", eventually changed to "Johnny Peril's Surprise Story" as Johnny became the series' two-fisted hero until the series ended with issue #29 (Nov. 1948). By then the character was appearing in his own backup feature in ''All-Star Comics'', beginning #42 (Sept. 1948). Purcell remained for the first few ''All-Star'' stories, with artists Joe Kubert, Gil Kane, Carmine Infantino and others later working on on the feature through #57 (March 1951). Johnny went on to star in the fifth and final issue of ''Danger Trail'' (April, 1951). His last appearances before his Silver Age return in 1968 came in ''Sensation Comics'' #107-116 (Feb. 1952 - Aug. 1953; retitled ''Sensation Mystery'' f#110-116) where artists included Alex Toth and Frank Giacoia.〔(Johnny Peril ) at Don Markstein's Toonopedia. (Archived ) from the original on March 22, 2015.〕
The comic features "The Mad Mod Witch" (later known as "Fashion Thing" in Neil Gaiman's ''The Sandman'') as a story narrator in #108-112, 114-116, 140, and 162, and "Judge Gallows" in #113, 118, 121, 125 and 133. Judge Gallows would later appear in the final story arc of ''The Dreaming''.

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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