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Mighty Comics Group, sometimes referred to as "Archie Adventure Series" and "Radio Comics", refer to the attempt(s) by Archie Comics to revamp and publish superhero (and non-Archie) comics in the mid-1960s. There were basically two phases to this attempt, and they would try again in the 1980s under the name of Red Circle Comics.

Phase 1: Archie Adventure Series, 1959-65


In 1959, Archie Comics would hire Joe Simon and Jack Kirby (of Captain America fame) to create new superheroes under their "Archie Adventure Series" line. They would start off with a new Shield, Lancelot Strong. DC Comics viewed the character as too similar to Superman, and it was cancelled after 2 issues. They soon had a new character, the Fly, which they did the first 4 issues, afterwards others did the character. He was soon joined by The Jaguar. By mid-1965, they where all cancelled.

Only one other title was published under the "Archie Adventure Series", and that was the satire title Tales Calculated to Drive you Bats, the last issue of which changed to sf/horror.

Their Shadow comic (published because Belmont Books, connected to Archie, was publishing new Shadow material), was a kind of bridge between the Archie Adventure Series, and the later Radio/Mighty material.

Titles

  • Adventures Of The Fly (August 1959 - October 1964; May 1965) issues 1-31
  • Adventures Of The Jaguar (September 1961 - November 1963) issues 1-15
  • Double Life Of Private Strong (June 1959 - August 1959) issues 1-2
  • Shadow (August 1964 - September 1965) issues 1-8
  • Tales Calculated to Drive you Bats (November 1961 - November 1962) issues 1-7, plus Giant #1 (1966)

(also, backup stories in several Archie titles: Pep, Laugh, etc)

Characters

Phase 2: Radio Comics/Mighty Comics Group 1965-67


With the new popularity of Marvel Comics, Archie hired Superman creator Jerry Siegel to create a new line of over-the-top comics in a bad parody of Marvel stories, which got worse with the camp phase started by the new Batman TV series. In many ways, their Shadow title was the bridge between these 2 phases. It started off as being fairly straight, like the Fly and Jaguar, but after the 2nd issue, Jerry Siegel had turned the Shadow into a silly camp hero, as he would with the rest of the line.

A strange thing about these titles is that the indicia gave the publisher as "Radio Comics" (and references in the comics referred to them as such), but the covers said nothing until January of 1966, when they proclaimed them part of the "Mighty Comics Group" (a possible attempt to capitalize on the popularity of "Marvel Comics Group"?).

Titles

  • Fly-Man (July 1965---September 1966) issues 32-39 Fly
  • Mighty Comics (November 1966---October 1967) issues 40-50 Fly-Man
  • Mighty Crusaders (November 1965---October 1966) issues 1-7
  • Super Heroes vs. Super Villains (July 1966) 1 issue

Characters

Trade Paperback Collections


Recently, Archie Comics has reprinted some of this work in trade paperback collections under the "Red Circle Productions" name.

  • The Fly (reprints first 4 issues of The Fly done by Simon and Kirby)
  • Mighty Crusaders (reprints Fly-Man #31, #32 and #33 and Mighty Crusaders #1)

External links


Archie Comics imprints

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Mighty Comics".

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