in house dollar bill thumbnail
 Total: 42,775 books
 New: 213 books




Index Card
« prev

Jon Juan 1

next »
Title
One Shots
Date | Number: 1 | Lang: English (en)
Uploaded  by Henry Peters
Filesize 30.18mb consisting of 37 pages | Format: EBook
File nameJon_Juan_1__Spring__50__Toby__all_Schomburg__36pg_c2c______HPeters.cbr
Downloads
574 and 13187 views
    To download files please Log in or Register
Rating
 9/10 (5 votes)
CommentsYou must be logged on to make a comment!
NotesThis is a real oddball one-shot book from Toby. Written by Superman legend Jerry Siegel and ALL artwork by Timely legend Alex Schomburg! After his success with Superman Siegel tried several other creations while moving from company to company. This one is easily forgotten but it's fun to see these two greats working together. Scans by the Henry Peters found on usenet.
There is more information about this book at the bottom of the page
Large Thumbnail For Jon Juan 1
You are WELCOME to enjoy our site & read ALL our books online. But to download & join our forum please create a FREE account or login
Prev  (4 of 9) Next
Comic Book Cover For Jon Juan 1
Prev
Jon Juan 1 (4 of 9)
Next
Comic Book Plus In-House Image
Comments
 
   By octal
Good scan. 36 pages.
   By Thiago - O Rato
Jon Juan is a sad inevitability that dark era of 'Seduction of the Innocent'. A flirtatious adventurer made by the hands of Siegel. incredible Perhaps at the time the comic was well naughty today gets to be silly. Have had so characters in literature, but few times in the comics, perhaps in the days that character was seen as sexist - but only if it were written by hand a bad writer, I know many girls who like men, say Jon Juan. But it is interesting to think that one of the biggest, and recent successes of 2000A.D. out Nikolai Dante, a character with many similarities to our Jon Juan, or even Casanova Fraction, Ba and Moon. Finally, I thank the Comic Book Plus, to keep alive the memory of comics and prevent jewels like this fall in eternal limbo.
   By crashryan
This fascinating flop feelis like an unsold newspaper strip, though there's no sign of cut and paste. Unfortunately Siegel paints himself into a corner from the start. Classic "great lovers" like Casanova and Don Juan spent their time getting into the pants of as many women as possible. Obviously this wouldn't work in a comic book. In fact, Siegel and Schomburg go out of their way to avoid prurience--the book could have passed the Comics Code with only minor changes. All Jon Juan can aspire to is a rhapsodic kiss or two. His attempts to woo and win a damsel might provide story interest, but JJ doesn't need to woo. Most women love him at first sight--which helps explain his monumental arrogance ("Smile, Jon, she can't tear her eyes off you!"). All that remains are artificial barriers preventing Jon from reaching his woman of choice ("Brothers! Every tempting beauty is engulfed by them!") Interesting, too, that there are two versions of Jon Juan in this one book. In the first story (not counting the tacked-on teaser in the last panel) JJ seems permanently established in Hollywood Araby, complete with a comical sidekick. In the second story he's suddenly an immortal being who sits around reminiscing over three thousand years of hot babes. The immortality angle might offer drama and pathos--Jon Juan watches a procession of lovers and sidekicks wither and die while he remains forever young--but Siegel doesn't take that path. Rather he uses immortality as a convenient way to set stories anytime and anywhere, at the expense of Jon Juan having a defined personality. Alex Schomburg seems to have been proud of this strip; he initialed almost every page.
   By Frank Randle
What was Siegel thinking? Surely Jon Juan, with or without the Code, was never likely to become a lasting strip. Nice artwork though.
   By positronic1
Incredible! A 32-page comic drawn in its entirety by the legendary Schomburg... AND of all the things he could have chosen to devote his time to lavish his attention on, he picked THIS. Not some science-fantasy or jungle girl adventure, but THIS...! Jerry... had some strange ideas. His work at times is so phantasmagorical and has this strange, dreamlike hallucinatory quality to it ... an "anything can happen" quality (I'm thinking of some of his mid-60s post-Superman work here). One thing you can say at least, is that he realized that a true creator (as opposed to an imitator of trends) absolutely needed to "think outside the box" -- after all, it was exactly that kind of thinking that allowed him to come up with Superman. Sometimes though, as with JON JUAN and FUNNYMAN, it just didn't work.
   By Black Owl
Hmmm....in the origin story, Jon Juan has a blue outfit, a yellow belt, a red 'cape' and red boots. Where have I seen that before?
  
Additional Information
 
PublicationSpring 1950 | Price: 0.10 USD | Pages: 1
 
FeaturingJon Juan
CreditsPencils: Al Reid | Inks: Al Reid
 
Foreword/AfterwordIntroducing Jon Juan (1 page)
CreditsScript: Jerry Siegel [as The Editors] | Pencils: Al Reid | Inks: Al Reid | Letters: typeset
Notesillustration: small head shot reprinted from cover
 
Comic StoryJon Juan and the Sleeping Beauty (16 pages)
FeaturingJon Juan
CreditsScript: Jerry Siegel | Pencils: Alex Schomburg | Inks: Alex Schomburg
 
Comic StoryJon Juan the World's Greatest Lover (6 pages)
FeaturingJon Juan
CreditsScript: Jerry Siegel | Pencils: Alex Schomburg | Inks: Alex Schomburg
ContentGenre: Superhero; Romance
Notesorigin: survivor of Atlantis, now immortal
 
Comic Storyand the Lady in the Dark (10 pages)
FeaturingJon Juan
CreditsScript: Jerry Siegel | Pencils: Alex Schomburg | Inks: Alex Schomburg
ContentGenre: Superhero; Romance
 
The data in the additional content section is courtesy of the Grand Comics Database under a Creative Commons Attribution License. More details about this comic may be available in their page here
Comic Book Plus In-House Image
Mission and Disclaimer: The mission of Comic Book Plus is to present completely free of charge, and to the widest possible audience, popular cultural works of the past. These records are offered as a contribution to education and lifelong learning. They are historical documents reflecting the attitudes, perspectives, and beliefs of different times. We at Comic Book Plus do not endorse the views expressed in these, which may contain content offensive to modern users.

We aim to house only content in the Public Domain. If you suspect that any of our material may be infringing copyright, then please use our contact page to let us know. So we can investigate further.