First rule of Horrorthon is: watch horror movies. Second rule of Horrorthon is: write about it. Warn us. Tempt us. The one who watches the most movies in 31 days wins. There is no prize.
Monday, April 26, 2010
More Bill Elder!
Here are seven more Bill Elder classics from the "older, darker" Mad.
Mole! (December 1952)
Shadow! (April/May 1953)
Shermlock Shomes! (October 1953)
Shermlock Shomes in The Hound of the Basketballs! (October 1954)
Restaurant! (October 1954)
Howdy Dooit! (December 1954)
Mickey Rodent! (January 1955)
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4 comments:
It's weird because I was quite the student of MAD, but only much later. My interest peaked with the Star Wars parodies. The mood of these strips is familiar, and... not.
Ultimately I became disillusioned with MAD because of the pervasive second-person narrative that seemed to be going on about how much everything sucked.
That's interesting. I think we talked about that stuff before at some point.
From my point of view, as a young kid, Mad was perfect, even though on some level I knew I wasn't the target audience -- I was a little too young -- and therefore I wasn't quite getting all their political/countercultural "everything sucks" material. ("Pollution" etc.) However the occasional glimpses I got of the earlier Mad stuff ("Humor in a Jugular Vein" inserts in the Super Specials, stuff in the paperbacks etc.) always flat-out scared me.
When I got older I switched permanently to National Lampoon, which was my introduction to the world of the "straight" parody. At that point I was old enough to be into serious comics etc. and I was now fully appreciating the old-school Mad stuff. The problem is that it's so hard to come across, unless you've got one of the digital collections.
I love the Mickey Rodent bit. Like Octo I only became familiar with Mad after the Star Wars parodies came out. I don't ever recall Mad having full color, comic book stories like those you posted.
As I explained, Mad was only like this during a few years in the 1050s, before it changed.
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