Of all the Saturday morning superhero cartoons shown on TV in the 1960s Space Ghost was my favorite.
Yes,
it was corny and the dialogue lacked any real sophistication. But the
characters, action and sheer excitement element kept me coming back for
more.
Master cartoonist and illustrator Alex Toth designed the
characters for the show and Hanna Barbera Studios successfully
translated his designs to the small screen.
Space Ghost and his
teenage sidekicks: Jan and Jace and their pert monkey Blip, patrol the
galaxy to safeguard it from alien criminals.
And what a rogue’s
gallery of bad guys Space Ghost had! Zoraak, Lurker, Metallus and a
score of criminals that kept Space Ghost busy and that’s not including
the other alien threats that came along.
Writer Mark Evanier and co-writer and artist Steve Rude teamed up for a Space Ghost One-Shot published by Comico back in 1987.
In
a thrilling tale where Zoraak is freed from prison by a hooded
benefactor who gives him the ability (along with Space Ghost’s other
adversaries) to take down Space Ghost once and for all.
The ultimate question is-how do you defeat yourself?
Evanier
and Rude really capture the look and feel of the animated series. I
felt as if I was reading a 2D version of the TV show.
How can you
go wrong when ALL of Space Ghost’s enemies team up together to defeat
him? It’s a lot of fun to read and look at. Space Ghost fans are sure
to love it.
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