Gadgetman and Gimmick-Kid | |
---|---|
Created by | Jerry Siegel |
Publication information | |
Publisher | Fleetway Publications |
Schedule | Weekly |
Title(s) | Lion 4 May to 26 October 1968 Lion Annual 1970 |
Formats | Original material for the series has been published as a strip in the comics anthology(s) Lion . |
Publication date | 4 May – 26 October 1968 |
Main character(s) | Gadgetman Gimmick-Kid |
Creative team | |
Writer(s) | Jerry Siegel |
Artist(s) | Carvic [lower-alpha 1] |
"Gadgetman and Gimmick-Kid" is a British comic strip published by Fleetway Publications in the boys' comic anthology title Lion between 4 May to 26 October 1968. Written by Superman co-creator Jerry Siegel, it tells the adventures of a pair of American crime-fighting technical geniuses - Gadgetman and his younger sidekick Gimmick Kid - as they battle a variety of outlandish villains.
Despite the ongoing success of Superman in the 1960s, the character's creators Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster received little financial return for the character. The pair made two unsuccessful attempts to sue DC Comics over ownership of the character; after learning of the preparation of the second in 1966, DC stopped giving the pair work. [1] After a time with Archie Comics, Siegel approached various publishers around the world looking for work. [2] [3] [4]
Siegel contacted British publisher Fleetway Publications in 1965, and took over writing the adventures of super-criminal The Spider in the pages of Lion from Ted Cowan in January 1966. "The Spider" was one of the strips commissioned by Lion assistant editor Geoff Kemp in response to imports of American Silver Age superhero comics, particularly the Marvel and DC reprints of rival Odhams Press' Power Comics line. Siegel refashioned the Spider into an anti-hero, battling a succession of larger-than-life villains. [5] [6]
In response to this success, Siegel was asked to create an even more overtly American strip at a time when few such characters were being created for British comics. Gadgetman and Gimmick-Kid was strongly influenced by Batman, particularly the ABC television series (which had started airing in the UK on ITV on 21 May 1966). [6] Art for the weekly strip was provided by Carlos Pino and Vicente Alcazar (who at the time worked jointly under the pseudonym Carvic), who were among the large number of Spanish artists used by Fleetway and its predecessor Amalgamated Press. Among the pair's previous British work were issues of War Picture Library and City Magazines' licensed Star Trek strip in TV Century 21 . [7] [8]
The strip featured on several Lion covers, drawn by Geoff Campion. [9] In line with then-current Fleetway policy - which assigned no ownership or royalties, instead offering sizeable page rates under a work-for-hire model - neither Siegel nor the artists were credited in Lion. [10] The strip would ultimately be short-lived, lasting six months before being dropped after the 26 October 1968 issue of Lion. [11] [12] While no hard information on the strip's popularity is known, the composition of Fleetway's anthologies was dictated by simple audience research - top three lists of reader's favourites were compiled from correspondence, with strips that performed poorly dropped. Siegel would continue to write "The Spider" for Lion until February 1969, while "Gadgetman and Gimmick-Kid" would make one final appearance in the 1970 Lion Annual. [10]
Several Fleetway stories of the time were syndicated for overseas publication. In 1976, Adventures and Voyages reprinted "Gadgetman and Gimmick-Kid" in the first four issues of French anthology Atemi, renamed to simply "Gadgetman". [13] [14] Since 2018, Lion and its contents have been owned by Rebellion Developments. [15]
A genius inventor, Burt Travis uses his skills to build the successful Travis Corporation before putting his skills to fighting crime. He is aided by another brilliant mind, young Travis Corporation scientist Gary Stewart after the youngster helps foil a raid on a laboratory by the Madmen Mob. They hide their true identities they don colourful costumes and become known as Gadgetman and Gimmick-Kid, making a secret hideout in a fake iceberg. Among their arsenal are the heavily-armed flying car known as the Gadgetcraft and ray-guns, both of which project a bewildering array of munitions, as well as robot-servants to build any device the pair can conceive. Their reputation is enough to cause a fleet of alien ships to turn around without even trying to invade Earth.
Not that the pair are without enemies. Against them are the joker known as the Trickster, his huge robot the Taunting Titan and his cranially-enhanced army of Brain-Men; King Zombie; the Mad Mummy; alien invader Zeroc; [16] and Gimmick-Kid's idiot cousin Ramsey Chillingswaithe, who briefly attempted an unsuccessful superhero career as Zoom-Boy before rebranding as villain Doom-Boy and recruiting female sidekick Doom-Girl as part of a convoluted plan to infiltrate The Terror League. [17]
In the January 1969 edition of their journal New University, the Association for Programmed Learning and Educational Technology cited "Gadgetman and Gimmick-Kid" as a prime example of the low literacy quality of British comics, naming it as a prime example of a story which had "almost discarded any plot in favour of continuous violence, with assault and retaliation following each other until the quota of panels has been filled". [18] Conversely, Lew Stringer would describe the strip as "completely daft" but nevertheless felt "there's something very likeable about it". [12]
DC Comics, Inc. is an American comic book publisher and the flagship unit of DC Entertainment, a subsidiary of Warner Bros. Discovery.
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Joseph Shuster, was a Canadian American comic book artist best known for co-creating the DC Comics character Superman, with Jerry Siegel, in Action Comics #1.
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Lion was a weekly British comics periodical published by Amalgamated Press from 23 February 1952 to 18 May 1974. A boys' adventure comic, Lion was originally designed to compete with Eagle, the popular weekly comic published by Hulton Press that had introduced Dan Dare. It debuted numerous memorable characters, including Captain Condor, Robot Archie, Paddy Payne and the Spider. Lion lasted for 1,156 issues before being merged with stablemate Valiant.
Superman is an American fictional character created by Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster and featured pervasively in DC Comic books. The character debuted in Action Comics issue #1 in June 1938 and has since become a paradigm for superhero characters.
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Superman was a daily newspaper comic strip which began on January 16, 1939, and a separate Sunday strip was added on November 5, 1939. These strips ran continuously until May 1966. In 1941, the McClure Syndicate had placed the strip in hundreds of newspapers. At its peak, the strip, featuring Superman, was in over 300 daily newspapers and 90 Sunday papers, with a readership of over 20 million.
TV Century 21, later renamed TV21, TV21 and Tornado, TV21 and Joe 90, and TV21 again, was a weekly British children's comic published by City Magazines during the latter half of the 1960s. Originally produced in partnership with Gerry and Sylvia Anderson's Century 21 Productions, it promoted the company's many science-fiction television series. The comic was published in the style of a newspaper of the future, with the front page usually dedicated to fictional news stories set in the worlds of Fireball XL5, Stingray, Thunderbirds, Captain Scarlet and the Mysterons and other stories. The front covers were also in colour, with photographs from one or more of the Anderson series or occasionally of the stars of the back-page feature.
Smash! was a weekly British comic book, published initially by Odhams Press and subsequently by IPC Magazines, from 5 February 1966 to 3 April 1971. After 257 issues it merged into Valiant.
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Ted Cowan, being the best known familiar name of Edward George Cowan, was a British comic book writer.
The origin of Superman and his superhuman powers have been a central narrative for Superman since his inception, with the story of the destruction of his home planet, his arrival on Earth and emergence as a superhero evolving from Jerry Siegel's original story into a broad narrative architype over the course of Superman's literary history and as the character's scope continues to expand across comics, radio, television and film.
Superhero fiction is a genre of speculative fiction examining the adventures, personalities and ethics of costumed crime fighters known as superheroes, who often possess superhuman powers and battle similarly powered criminals known as supervillains. The genre primarily falls between hard fantasy and soft science fiction in the spectrum of scientific realism. It is most commonly associated with American comic books, though it has expanded into other media through adaptations and original works.
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In the early 1930s, Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster developed the fictional comic book character of Superman. In 1938, they sold the character to Detective Comics, Inc.. After Superman became an unexpected success, the pair attempted to recover the rights to the character. This began a long chain of legal battles over ownership, royalties, and credit that would continue after their deaths.
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