Action Comics (1938) #1

Action Comics (1938) Series
Action Comics vol.1 (1938) DC Comics Copyright
Action Comics (1938) #1
Action Comics (1938) #1 
DC Comics Online
DC Comics
Online
Issue: #001

Est. Pub. Date: 06-April-1938

Page Count: 13 + cover

Story Title: "Superman: Champion of the Oppressed"

Review:
I must confess, this will be my first time reading many of the "classics" in my collection. Yet, when I do read them, I am invariably confounded and amused, often in equal measure, and Action Comics #1 was no exception.
Action Comics (1938) #1 Page 1 Panel 3: Infant Superman lifts recliner above his head.
Infant Alien Lifts Recliner. News at 11.

In Superman's first appearance in comics, this alien baby who has crash-landed on earth is not adopted by Jonathan and Martha Kent as I had always believed him to be.

Rather he is "turned in" to an orphanage after his discovery at the crash site by a "passing motorist." (An alien spacecraft with a child therein was apparently not that shocking of an event back in 1938.)

Siegel and Shuster establish Superman's bona fides as a classic hero by having him complete astounding feats as an infant, much like the Greek Hercules who strangles two snakes whilst but a babe in his crib.

Action Comics (1938) #1 Page 2 Panels 1 & 2: Superman deposits a nameless bound woman on the Governor's lawn.
Superman dumps nameless bound & gagged woman on the Governor's lawn, 
tells her to "Make yourself comfortable." WTH?

Action Comics (1938) #1 Page 4 Panel 5: The Governor and his butler read Superman's note explaining who the bound woman on the Governor's lawn is.
The Governor & his Butler
read Superman's note.
What really cracked me up with this issue, though, was the bound and gagged woman at the beginning of the story. Upon my first reading, I could find absolutely no explanation for her state of bondage nor for Superman's unceremonious depositing of her on the lawn at the governor's estate.

It was only on the second reading that I realized the note Superman leaves behind to explain himself contains the secret as to the bound woman's identity: She's the bad guy!

(I clearly breezed by that little detail.)

Action Comics (1938) #1 Page 7 Panel 2: Lois Lane refuses to put up with the boys' sexist bs at a dance.
Lois will brook none of the boys' BS.

The other totally amusing reading error I made was when Clark Kent, as Superman, attempts to rescue Lois Lane from Pushy Guy (who has kidnapped her because she had turned him down when he had tried to cut in on her and Clark on the dance floor).

After catching up to them at super-speed, Superman elects to violently shake the bad guys out of the getaway car -- the same car, alas, in which they are holding Lois hostage. (Poor girl!)
Action Comics (1938) #1 Page 9 Panels 1 & 2: Superman rescues Lois Lane by shaking her (and the bad guys) out of the main bad guy's car.
Bad Guys: "YE-EOW." Lois: "Ouch!"

But, upon closer inspection, I realized that the red I had mistaken for part of Superman's cape was, in fact, Lois' red dress as she falls from the car into Superman's waiting arms (or, more accurately, his waiting left arm as he has to use his right one to shake the car).

Action Comics (1938) #1 Page 9 Panel 3: Superman does some serious property damage to the bad guy's car.
Dang, talk about heroes causing property damage...!

The Cliffhanger:


Action Comics (1938) #1 Page 13 Panel 6: Superman terrorizes corrupt Washington, DC lobbyist by jumping him off the top of the capitol building.
"Missed -- Doggone it!"
In addition to rescuing Lois from her would-be kidnappers, Superman saves the innocent woman on death row (by depositing the real culprit on the Governor's lawn), stops a random wife-beater (after a phone tip to the newspaper where Clark Kent works), and threatens a Washington lobbyist who is trying to corrupt a Senator.

The issue ends on a literal cliffhanger in which Superman is nonchalant about missing his jump between buildings in our nation's capital with the terrified Lobbyist dangling in his arms. "Doggone it!"

Last Notions:

I find it difficult to bring a sophisticated modern reading to material as dated as this. Crafted in a different era to an audience with radically different experiences and expectations, I might as well be a human alien commenting on Martian artistry to the Poet Laureate of Mars.

Instead I intend to read the classic comics in my collection to better understand the legacy that informs the contemporary comics that I love.

Creators:
Words: Jerry Siegel
Words:
Jerry Siegel
Interior Pencils: Joe Shuster
Interior Pencils:
Joe Shuster
Interior Inks: Joe Shuster
Interior Inks:
Joe Shuster
Interior Colors: None Listed
Interior Colors:
None Listed
Executive Editor: Vin Sullivan
Edits:
Vin Sullivan
Cover Pencils: Joe Shuster
Cover Pencils:
Joe Shuster
Cover Inks: Joe Shuster
Cover Inks:
Joe Shuster
Cover Colors: Jack Adler
Cover Colors:
Jack Adler
The Heroes:

Superman from Action Comics (1938) #1
Superman
Hero
Clark Kent from Action Comics (1938) #1
Clark Kent
Alter Ego
Lois Lane from Action Comics (1938) #1
Lois Lane
Intrepid Reporter
The Chief (Perry-White-to-be?) from Action Comics (1938) #1
(Not) Perry White
”The Chief”
The Villains:

The Real Murderess from Action Comics (1938) #1
Unnamed
The Real Murderess
The Wife-Beater from Action Comics (1938) #1
The Wife-Beater
A Real Jerk
Butch Matson from Action Comics (1938) #1
Butch Matson
Sexist Kidnapper
Senator Barrows from Action Comics (1938) #1
Senator Barrows
Warmonger
Alex Greer from Action Comics (1938) #1
Alex Greer
Slick Lobbyist

Resources:
Action Comics (1938) #1 on comiXology
Action Comics (1938) #1
on comiXology
Action Comics (1938) #1 on dc.wikia.com
Action Comics (1938) #1
on dc.wiki.com
Action Comics (1938) #1 on ComicVine
Action Comics (1938) #1
on ComicVine

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