| The Silver Age |
It all started with Showcase #4, starring The Flash. This Flash was a revamped version of the Golden Age Flash, he was created by Julius Schwartz and Carmine Infantino. After a few appearances in Showcase comics, The Flash received his own title. The success of The Flash caused other golden-age heroes to come back, although revamped like The Flash. In short, The Flash became a hero on two fronts, first in the comic book, and second in the comic industry. Bringing back The Flash brought superheroes back into the mainstream, and changed the comic industry to this day. This includes other superhero comic books, their T.V. shows, movies, and anything else they might have inspired. It should also be mentioned that in 1955 a small story in the back of Detective Comics #225, starred an alien known as J'onn J'onzz. This alien would later become known as the Martian Manhunter, a major hero in the DC universe. In 1958, a very important thing happened to Marvel Comics in Strange Worlds #1. This comic book was the first book put out by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby. These two individuals, along with several other artists, started doing superheroes for Marvel Comics and created what is known as the "Marvel Age". The Marvel Age
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| The Fantastic Four comics were
labled "The Worlds Greatest Comic Magazine". It's a brave title, but
one they lived up to. The Fantastic Four comic made many changes to the
comic industry. Much of them was with their outerspace stories, but some of
them were right at home on earth. One of them was allowing heroes to get
married. In the Fantastic Four Annual #3 (1965), two of the main characters,
Reed Richards and Susan Storm got married. This was a big change from the
times when the hero wouldn't even kiss the girl. But they went further than
that. 3 years later Reed and Sue had a baby. In Fantastic Four Annual #6
(1968) Franklin Richards was born. Through out the comic, and even today, we
see this Superhero team have to go through the unique troubles of raising a
superpowered child while living a life of adventure. |
In Flash #123, put out in 1962, both
the Golden Age and the Silver Age Flash appeared in the same comic.
It would be the first time a Golden and a Silver Age version of the same
hero would meet. It would also be very confusing. In the early Silver Age
Flash comics, they would show a young Barry Allen reading comic books that
were our Golden Age comic books. The Golden Age Flash was a fictional
character in the Silver Age. So how did they meet? This is when DC came up
with the idea of parallel worlds. They explained that the Golden Age
Flash was a real person on Earth-2, and by crossing over, the two could
appear at the same time. This Earth-2 where Golden Age superheroes really
existed was soon used to bring back other Golden Age superheroes like the
Green Lantern and many others. At the same time DC brought in other
heroes that existed in other "Earths" where there were no other heroes. Over
time this all got very confusing, and DC tried to fix it in 1985 with a
Crisis of the Infinite Earths mini series. You'll learn more about that
later. |
The most well-known superhero that Marvel
would produce would first appear in Amazing Fantasy #15. This was
Spider-Man. Like Captain Marvel before him, Spider-Man was
a youth who kids could relate too. Peter Parker was considered a geek
at school, he had a hard time getting dates, and bullies picked on him.
Peter remained someone readers could easily relate to as he grew older.
He had a crabby boss named James Jonah Jameson, and sometimes had
troubles with landlords when it came to paying rent. |
Stan Lee and Jack Kirby created over 90% of
the superheroes in the Marvel Comics Universe. Most of them are still around
today. They also created superhero teams like The Avengers and their
current most successful team are The X-men. It would take forever to
list all the heroes that they created. Another dramatic change they made to
comics was giving their villains superpowers, too. Before this time, heroes
usually fought aliens, mad scientists, robots, thieves, gangsters, and
people from the future. But it was rare when a villian had superpowers like
the heroes. Now they did on a regular basis, and in doing so comic books
became more interesting and fun to read. |
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| It should be said that Marvel's
X-Men is not the first comic book to do this. A DC hero named
Aquaman also gave a message against racism, by showing how he was
treated badly as a baby for having yellow hair. It was believed by the
Atlantians (an underwater race of people) that those with yellow hair were
sons of the devil. |
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During the Marvel Age, Marvel Comics
revived some of their Golden Age heroes, others they revamped. In
Fantastic Four #4 we saw the return of Namor the Sub-Mariner. In
Avengers #4 we saw the return of the original Captain America
and in X-Men #10 we saw Ka-Zar again. |
In 1966, The first main black superhero that
Marvel put out was the Black Panther in Fantastic Four #52.
Although he did not have a long time running series, he did start a wave of
black superheroes. Some of the others to come out after him would be The
Falcon, Power Man (Luke Cage, hero for hire), DC's Black Lightning,
and Image's Spawn. (You will learn about the Image company later).
The Black Panther did have his own title from 1977 to 1979. He has
also been a member of the superhero team The Avengers. In 1969 the very first solo Dr. Doom
(reportedly the inspiration for Darth Vader) story came out in Marvel
Super-Heroes Presents #20. Although this book is not considered very
important (or worth very much) it was followed six years later with the
first comic book series that focused on a supervillain (or two in this
case). In 1975 villains would get their own comics. Marvel's Super
Villain Team-Up, starred Dr. Doom and had him team up with
another villain in every issue. The villain focus was also done by DC with
Batman's famous villain called The Joker. Neither of these
would last very long, but they started a villain focus trend that is still
happening today. Sometimes the supervillain comics are just a limited
series, sometimes an ongoing series. |
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by Jamie Coville |