Post on 28-Mar-2016
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Planet Comics #60 (May 1949) brings the eighteenth chapter of Futura. With only four more issues to go until the end of the Futura Saga this issue continues the final story arc that began in issue #59. In this installment Futura is still stranded on the planet Oceania and is once again briefly considered to be the play toy of a hoodlum. Her character is much more haughty and Futura initially acts as if she expects to be treated with a certain deference and respect.
This trait may or may not be a bluff on the part of Futura, who, finding herself the captive of a tyrannical hoodlum, begins to act more like her nemesis Yrina the Space Pirate. This real or effected persona meets with negative results and the former office secretary is forced to revert back to her tried and true method of beating the living crap out of everyone around her.
Futura's sometimes unintentional collateral damage to civilians aside for the most part she is trying to survive as a lawful person in an area of lawless space. Constantly attacked or targeted Futura nonetheless tries not to give back in kind. The universe, however, doesn't particularly care about the best of intentions. Through no real fault of her own Futura has been enslaved, hailed as a rebel leader and worshiped as the savior of an oppressed people. It is her fight to be free, regardless of the path the creators have taken, that is most interesting.
Planet Comics #60 (May 1949)
Planet Comics #60 (May 1949)
Futura's creative team never really addressed
her motivations because in the disposable
format of comic books of the era action was
preferred over lengthy characterization.
Particularly with Futura since the story features
a strong, capable though dubiously ethical,
female character who usually does not rely on
Space-Rangers or love interests to save her.
One of the real pleasures in reading Futura is
gleaning the deeper story from the sometimes
admittedly wandering storyline. What I've taken
away from reading Futura is that what has been
expressed earlier; it is a fact that often
messiahs are hazardous to the health. Yet even
more dangerous are those in the process of
empire building.
Planet Comics
was a science fiction comic-book title
produced by Fiction House and issued
from Jan. 1940 (issue 1) to Winter 1953
(issue 73). Like many of Fiction House's
early comics titles, Planet Comics was a
spinoff of a pulp magazine, in this case
Planet Stories, which featured space
operatic tales of muscular, heroic space
adventurers who were quick with their 'ray
pistols' and always running into gorgeous
females who needed rescue from bug-
eyed space aliens or fiendish interstellar
bad guys.
Planet Comics #1 (January 1940)
Planet Comics was considered by noted fan Raymond Miller to be "perhaps the best of the
Fiction House group," as well as "most collected and most valued." In Miller's opinion, it
"wasn't really featuring good art or stories... in the first dozen or so issues," not gaining most
of "its better known characters" until "about the 10th issue." "Only 3 of its long running strips
started with the first issue... Flint Baker, Auro - Lord of Jupiter, and the Red Comet."