- Holo-Man
read-along record, the comic was one in the company's line of such bundled comic-and-record sets for young children.
Publication history
"The Amazing Adventures of Holo-Man" was advertised in late 1976 in
Marvel Comics . [These include "Black Panther" #2, cover-dated March 1977 and, as typical for comic books, on sale two to three months earlier.] The advertisement copyright reads "1976 ... Worldwide/Wavelength Holographics Inc.", and a mail-order coupon gave the company and addressAtomic Comics , P.O. Box 5210, Newark, N.J. 07105".The advertisement offered the comic book; "The Holodisc", described as "a real
laser -produced, 3-dimensionalpendant " of 1 3/4-inch diameter; and the 45 rpm "Holo-Man Action Record", all for $5, with, atypically for such mail-order offers, no additional shipping and handling charge.Whether the comic of this ad was published in 1977 is uncertain. The
Grand Comics Database and comics historian/columnistScott Shaw reference a 1978Peter Pan Records release, "The Amazing Adventures of Holo-Man" #1, alternately numbered PR36. As the GCD explains, "Numbering continues from "Wonder Woman: "The Secret of the Magic Tiara" [Book and Record Set] (Peter Pan, 1978 series); numbering continues in "Adventures of Robin Hood, The" [Book and Record Set] (Peter Pan, 1981 series)."The 14-page comic's credits list it as "conceived and created by" Vincent A. Fusco and Donald M. Kasen and edited by Barry Van Name, and the feature story, "Birth Of A Hero", as written by those three plus Jason V. Fusco, Donald White, Joseph Giella and Audrey Hirschfeld, and illustrated by Giella. The cover art is credited to Giella and
Bob Larkin .The story ends on an unresolved
cliffhanger . It is followed by an uncredited two-page text feature, with Giella illustrations, about holograms; a Giella pin-up page of a super-team, the Holosquad — Laserman, Laserwoman, Wavelength and Utopia — who are all otherwise unseen except for Laserman.A second character who appears on the comics cover does not appear in the comic's interior.
Character biography
Holo-Man is Dr. James Robinson, a leading scientist whose work on a laser cannon has brought a visit from
United States President Jimmy Carter . In a sabotage by two agents who refer to one another as "comrade", the cannon explodes. The president and his aide escape to safety with the unseen help ofLaserman , who explains to Robinson — caught in the explosion when he leaped to shield the president — the accident has turned the scientist into "the world's first living hologram", with the power to blend into his surrounding through "holographic molecular alteration". Laserman also presents Robinson with a "holodisc" from a "future time dimension". Robinson must use the disc to recharge his "holo-energy" every 12 hours in order to keep his powers from fading.Robinson learns the sabotage was assisted by his associate Dr. Hugo Petrovich, who was coerced by countrymen from his homeland of Surria, who held his family hostage. Petrovich dies in Robinson's arms, and Robinson, in a rainbow-hued uniform as Holoman, warns the president of the Surrian attack.
Footnotes
References
*gcdb series|id=26636|title=Holo-Man
* [http://www.oddballcomics.com/article.php?story=archive2005-12-12&query=holo-man Oddball Comics (December 11, 2005): "The Amazing Adventures Of Holo-Man", by Scott Shaw]
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