Tor (comics)

Tor. Art by Joe Kubert.

Tor is an American comics series, created by Joe Kubert and Norman Maurer in the story 1,000,000 Years Ago! (Sept. 1953), published by St. John Publications. The series' protagonist, Tor, is a prehistoric cave man who has fantasy adventures set in a realistically drawn setting. The original series only ran for five issues and ended in 1954. However, "Tor" was revived by DC Comics in June 1975 for six issues. In June 1993 Marvel Comics released new adventures of Tor.[1]

Concept

Tor is a prehistoric warrior. He is a loner whose only true friend is his pet monkey Chee-Chee,[2] whose species can be identified as a Francois' langur. Despite being drawn in a realistic style the stories were full with notable fantasy elements, including humans and dinosaurs living together in the same era and many animals being portrayed as prehistoric monsters, even ones who actually were herbivores.

Publication history

Tor makes his first appearance as he rushes to aid his monkey Chee-Chee from the attack of a Brontosaurus-like carnivorous Dinosaur. From 1,000,000 Years Ago! #1 (1953) published by St. John Comics. Cover art by Joe Kubert

After his debut in 1,000,000 Years Ago (St. John, September 1953), Tor immediately went on to become one of the first comic book characters to star in 3-D comic books. The second issue of that series was renamed 3-D Comics[3] before being renamed Tor with issue #3 in May 1954.[4] At this point the series was once again in the traditional two-dimensional format. This series lasted until issue #5 (October 1954).

In 1959, Kubert and inker Carmine Infantino unsuccessfully attempted to sell Tor as a newspaper comic strip. The samples consisted of 12 daily strips, reprinted in six pages in Alter Ego #10 (1969) and later expanded to 16 pages in DC Comics' Tor #1. DC Comics would publish the Tor series for 6 issues from 1974-1975.[5][6]

Eclipse Comics reprinted the two 3-D Comics featuring Tor, both in 3-D and non-3-D versions in 1986.[7] As well, the magazine Sojourn featured new Tor stories by Kubert, and in 1993, Marvel Comics' Epic imprint published the four-issue miniseries Tor,[8] with new stories by Kubert, who had acquired and maintained rights to the character.

Alter Ego #77 (May 2008) has a long article on St. John comics by noted comic historian Ken Quattro. The cover reprints the cover of Tor #3 from the original artwork and there is a Roy Thomas interview with Joe Kubert about his experiences at St. John.

Between 2001 and 2003, DC Comics published a three volume hardcover reprint series called Tor,[9] while in 2008, they published a new six issue miniseries.[10] In 2009, DC published a hardcover collection called Tor: A Prehistoric Odyssey,[11] while in 2010 they published it in the softcover format.[12]

A two-page story drawn by comics legend Lou Fine in a toy company's custom one-shot, Wham-O Giant Comics (1967), starred a prehistoric man named Tor, but this character is unrelated to the same-name Kubert creation .[13]

Bibliography of the original publication

The first six comic books starring Tor were published under three different titles the second of these in multiple 3-D editions:

Tor in "Dawn", 11 pages + 1 extra page, 11-page reprint in DC's Tor #2; "Danny Dreams", 7 pages, reprinted in DC's Tor #2.
"Tor" 8 pages; "Fire", 6 pages; "Imagine", 3 pages, both reprinted in DC's Tor #6.
"Killer Man", 6 pages, reprinted in DC's Tor #4; "Giant-One", 10 pages + 2 extra pages, reprinted in DC's Tor #5; "The Run-Away".
"Isle of Fire", 11 pages reprinted in DC Tor 3; "Black Valley", 9 pages. reprinted in DC's "Tor" #4 with 1 extra page; "Danny Dreams", by Alex Toth.
"Red Death", 10 pages; "Last Chance", 4 pages; "Great Wolf", 7 pages.
"Falling Fire", 10 pages; "Murder", 4 pages; "Man-Beast", 7 pages.

Collected editions

Three hardback books published as the "DC Comics Joe Kubert Library" reprints the St. John comics from the 1950s, the stories of DC's 1975 Tor #1-6, and the 1993 Marvel/Epic miniseries Tor #1-4.

Other similarly named cavemen

In 1941 Willy Vandersteen already drew a gag-a-day comic about a caveman named Tor.[14] Later Johnny Hart had a caveman named Thor appear in his gag-a-day series B.C. comic, named after a friend whose name was Thornton Kinney.

References

  1. http://www.toonopedia.com/tor.htm
  2. http://www.toonopedia.com/tor.htm
  3. "GCD :: Covers :: 3-D Comics". Comics.org. Retrieved 2012-08-13.
  4. "GCD :: Covers :: Tor". Comics.org. Retrieved 2012-08-13.
  5. "GCD :: Covers :: Tor". Comics.org. Retrieved 2012-08-13.
  6. McAvennie, Michael; Dolan, Hannah, ed. (2010). "1970s". DC Comics Year By Year A Visual Chronicle. Dorling Kindersley. p. 163. ISBN 978-0-7566-6742-9. In conjunction with DC's launch of fantasy/adventure titles, writer and artist Joe Kubert revived Tor, the caveman whose legend began in the early 1950s...Kubert's revival of Tor lasted six issues.
  7. "GCD :: Covers :: Tor 3-D". Comics.org. 1986-07-01. Retrieved 2012-08-13.
  8. "GCD :: Covers :: Tor". Comics.org. Retrieved 2012-08-13.
  9. "GCD :: Covers :: Tor". Comics.org. Retrieved 2012-08-13.
  10. "GCD :: Covers :: Tor". Comics.org. Retrieved 2012-08-13.
  11. "GCD :: Issue :: Tor: A Prehistoric Odyssey #[nn]". Comics.org. Retrieved 2012-08-13.
  12. "GCD :: Series :: Tor: A Prehistoric Odyssey". Comics.org. Retrieved 2012-08-13.
  13. "GCD :: Issue :: Wham-O Giant Comics #1". Comics.org. Retrieved 2012-08-13.
  14. http://www.flanderstoday.eu/living/comic-relief
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.