






Action and adventure
Action and adventure |
|
Page 1 of 42 ![]() 'Dan Dare, Pilot of the Future', from The Eag/e (Hulton Press, 1959). Art/script: Frank Hampson. Dashing Dan was the archetypal British adventure hero, a symbol, perhaps, of the country's already redundant dream of leading the space race. In Britain, adventure only became widely popular after 1950, even though it had been the basis for a long tradition of British story papers; and had been present in newspaper strips since the First World War. Artistically speaking, the genre made new demands on comics. Invariably, the style would have to be 'realistic' in order to carry the story, and this required a new attention to detail. For young readers, meticulous accuracy was a large part of the spell: as many artists have testified, the sin of getting the turret-shape wrong on a tank, or the type of sword wrong for a particular period, could be greeted by complaining letters. Cinematic techniques also now became appropriate in a way that had not been previously considered: panoramas, close-ups, long-shots and exciting 'cuts' increasingly became the action comic's stock in trade. Whether this was a heuristic development or originated as a steal from the movies is still debated. Whatever the case, when the demands of authenticity and cinematic structuring were wed together, the results added up to a new level of sophistication in the medium. ![]() Doomed Division (IPC, 1968), art: Anon |