And suddenly: Giant green mutant Nazi gorillas.
Amazing Man #22 by Centaur
The ubiquitous cover girl of the Golden Age of comics!
And suddenly: Giant green mutant Nazi gorillas.
Amazing Man #22 by Centaur
Still unconscious from last week? Apparently recent events have been too exhausting for the Blonde in a Red Dress.
But, in a happy coincidence, at least a conscientious Super Spy is nearby to flag down a passing friendly ambulance for help.
Super Spy #2 by Centaur
Luckily, our heroine’s long experience in fending off the unwanted advances of cads in various Romance Comics left her well prepared for grappling with an octopus.
Who cares if the flying superhero can escape the foreign spies — what about the Blonde In A Red Dress about to be dogpiled by them? And then attacked by a giant drill. That shoots aerosol gas weapons.
If only a giant flying eyeball were there to help, but no, he’s busy projecting the cover title logo! (I bet our heroine wishes she still had her ray gun handy.)
Yup, a hero like a ghost (specifically, a more famous purple-suited Ghost Who Walks) but in an off-brand knockoff sort of way.
The Blonde in Red really needs to talk to her agent. If she has to put up with the captive-jungle-sacrifice Fay Wray homage, it should have at least have been done with “Duke in Gorilla Land” as the featured cover image instead of this Fantoman guy.
Huh. Apparently, the “aliens” referenced on the cover are the foriegn gangster types sneaking across the border with parachutes and tommy guns, NOT the fiery giant flying eyeball shooting magical ray beams.
I’m hoping the Blonde In A Red Dress is filling the role of “Detective” on this cover, because the other title descriptors of “Keen” and “Funny” don’t quite seem accurate to the situation.