Mighty Crusaders

Mighty Crusaders
The Mighty Crusaders
The Mighty Crusaders no 1.png
Cover to Mighty Crusaders #1 (November 1965). Art by Paul Reinman.
Publication information
Publisher Archie Comics
Schedule Monthly
Format Ongoing series
Genre Superhero
Publication date November 1965- November 1966
Number of issues 7
Creative team
Writer(s) Jerry Siegel
Penciller(s) Paul Reinman
Mike Sekowsky
Inker(s) Joe Giella
Paul Reinman
Letterer(s) Sam Rosen
Colorist(s) Victor Gorelick
Collected editions
Origin of a Super Team ISBN 1879794144

The Mighty Crusaders is a fictional superhero team published by Archie Comics. The team originally appeared in Fly-Man #31, #32 and #33 before being launched in its own title, Mighty Crusaders.[1] Written by Superman co-creator Jerry Siegel, the series lasted seven issues before being cancelled. The team was revived under Archie's Red Circle Comics line in 1983. In 1992 DC Comics licensed the characters and relaunched the team as The Crusaders, aiming the comic at younger readers as part of its !mpact line. This series lasted eight issues, published from May to December, 1992.

Contents

Background

The success of DC's and Marvel's Silver Age titles led Archie Comics to launch their own superhero comics.[2] The Archie Adventure line (soon retitled Mighty Comics) included titles centered on The Fly, The Jaguar, and The Shield, a revamped Golden Age character.[2] The success of The Avengers and the Justice League of America prompted Archie Comics to create their own team title, The Mighty Crusaders, where The Comet and Flygirl joined three characters with their own comics.[2] The first issue was published in 1965, and the series was published on a bimonthly schedule.[3] The Archie series mixed typical superhero fare with high camp.[2] Don Markstein writes that they touched on "all the genre's cliches of the time", with Siegel's writing on the book being a "hokey rendition of Stan Lee".[4]

In 1983 the team and the series were relaunched, with Rich Buckler as writer and penciller on the first issue. A contractual dispute between Buckler and DC Comics saw the publication of the first issue delayed.[5] The series ran until the middle of 1985, being cancelled with issue 13, cover dated September 1985.

In 1992 DC Comics acquired a license to publish the characters, and launched a team book as part of the line. This series, titled only The Crusaders, launched in early 1992. The first issue saw scriptwriting by Mark Waid and Brian Augustyn. The series and the line itself, Impact Comics, were aimed at younger readers. DC Comics attempted to sell Impact Comics titles through news-stands in an attempt to expand the potential market. However, due to internal conflicts, this distribution never happened and the imprint eventually collapsed due to poor sales. The last issue of the DC series was issue 8, cover dated December 1992.

The team also served as a partial inspiration for Alan Moore's Watchmen series. Moore had initially imagined the story as being based around second string heroes; "I wanted more average super-heroes, like the Mighty Crusaders line ... [the] original idea had started off with the dead body of the Shield being pulled out of a river somewhere." Moore used this idea when asked to submit a pitch for a treatment of DC Comics' then-newly-acquired Charlton Comics properties. Although the treatment was rejected for those characters, DC Comics commissioned Moore to base the story on all new heroes, and the project became Watchmen.[6]

Team membership

First series

The first Mighty Crusaders group was created by Archie under their Mighty Comics line in the 1960s. At that time, members of the team consisted of:

  • Black Hood - first appeared in Top-Notch Comics #9, October 1940.
  • The Comet - first appeared in Pep Comics #1 in January, 1940.
  • The Fly - created by Joe Simon and Jack Kirby, first appeared in The Double Life of Private Strong #1.
  • Flygirl - first appeared in issue #13 of The Adventures of the Fly.
  • Shield - first appeared in Fly-Man #31.

Second series

The second Mighty Crusaders group was created by Archie Comics under their Red Circle Comics line of the 1980s. At this time, members of the team consisted of:

This title kicked off the Red Circle comics and lasted thirteen issues.

Impact Comics series

When DC Comics licensed the Archie superheroes for their !mpact line in the 1990s, the team was simply called the Crusaders. The DC series The Crusaders lasted eight issues, from May to December, 1992.

DC Comics series

A new Mighty Crusaders series has recently been announced by DC Comics, which assimilated the Red Circle heroes into its continuity following Final Crisis. In addition to the established Red Circle characters, an original heroine by the name of War Eagle will be introduced as well.[7] The new team will consist of:

Collected editions

Recently, Archie Comics has reprinted some of the Mighty Crusaders adventures in a trade paperback collection under the "Red Circle Productions" name.

  • Mighty Crusaders: Origin of a Super Team (reprints Fly-Man #31, #32 and #33 and Mighty Crusaders #1, 96 pages, November 2003, ISBN 1879794144)

Other media

Toys

Carded Action Figures were produced in 1984 for some of the Mighty Crusaders by the Remco Toy Company. Each figure came with a Secret Sonic Signaling shield. There were 4 heroes and 4 villains in the line. Included were:

  • The Comet
  • The Fox
  • The Shield
  • The Web
  • The Brain Emperor
  • The Buzzard
  • The Eraser
  • The Sting

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Mighty Crusaders: Origin of a Super Team (November 2003), Archie Comic Publications
  2. ^ a b c d Weiland, Jonah (July 15, 2003). "'The Mighty Crusaders: Origin of a Super-Team' ships November". Comic Book Resources. http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page=article&id=2390. Retrieved 2009-02-02. 
  3. ^ Siegel, Jerry (w), Paul Reinman (p), Joe Giella (i), Richard Goldwater (ed). Mighty Crusaders 1 (November 1963), Archie
  4. ^ Markstein, Don. "The Mighty Crusaders". Toonopedia. http://www.toonopedia.com/mightycr.htm. Retrieved 9 March 2009.  Archived 09 March 2009.
  5. ^ Thompson, Kim; Steve Ringgenberg (November 1982). "Red Circle Debut Delayed". The Comics Journal (77): 23. ISSN 0194-7869. 
  6. ^ Khoury, George (December 2008). The Extraordinary Works of Alan Moore (Indispensable ed.). TwoMorrows. p. 109. 
  7. ^ "DC Comics' FULL JULY 2010 SOLICITATIONS". Newsarama.com. http://www.newsarama.com/comics/dc-july-2010-solicitations-100419.html. Retrieved 2010-12-27. 

References

External links


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