no16 warrior of Mars

série: Creatures on the loose
dessinateur / scénariste: Collectif
éditeur: Marvel USA
genre: Horreur
classement: carton131
date: 1972
format: broché
état: TBE/N
valeur: 8 €
critère: *
remarques: Creatures on the loose no 16, serie 2480, March 1972
with the adventures of Gullivar Jones from no 16 to 21

1/ Gullivar Jones, warrior of Mars
freely adapted from the novel by Edwin L. Arnold
script by Roy Thomas, art by Gil Kane

2/ the impossible tunnel

3/ frightened man

Information
lieut. Gullivar Jones: his vacation is the last novel by Edwin Lester Arnold,
combining elements of both fantasy and science fiction, first published in 1905,
its lukewarm reception led him to stop writing fiction,
it has since become his best known work, and is considered important
in the development of 20th century science fiction
in that it is a precursor and likely inspiration
to Edgar Rice Burroughs's classic a Princess of Mars (1917),
which spawned the sword and planet genre,
Ace Books reprinted Arnold's novel in paperback in 1964,
retitling it Gulliver of Mars,
a more recent Bison Books edition (2003) was issued as Gullivar of Mars,
adapting the Ace title to Arnold's spelling.

the concept of a military man going to Mars,
exploring strange civilizations and falling in love with a princess
had been explored as far back as across the Zodiac (1880),
but the connections between Gullivar and John Carter,
the protagonist of Burroughs' Barsoom novels,
are more numerous and stronger,
Burroughs' novels bear a number of striking similarities to Arnold's,
both Carter and Gullivar are military men:
Carter serving in the Confederate Army;
Jones in the US Navy who arrive on Mars by apparently magical means
(astral projection in the case of the former, magic carpet in the case of the latter)
and have numerous adventures there,
including falling in love with Martian princesses,
Gullivar is a more hapless character, however,
paling beside the heroic and accomplished Carter;
he stumbles in and out of trouble and never quite succeeds in mastering it,
the fact that Gullivar does not quite defeat his enemies or get the girl in the end
helps explain why Arnold's Martian saga was not as popular as Burroughs'
which eventually extended to eleven volumes.

Richard A. Lupoff, the first critic to argue for the connection of the two works,
has suggested that while Burroughs' Mars was inspired by Arnold's,
his hero may harken back to an earlier Arnold creation,
the ancient warrior Phra from his first novel,
the wonderful adventures of Phra the Phoenician (1890)

Marvel Comics adapted the character for the comic book
featuring "Gullivar Jones, Warrior of Mars"
in Creatures on the Loose #16–21 (March 1972 – January 1973),
initially by writer Roy Thomas and the art team of Gil Kane and Bill Everett,
and later written by Gerry Conway,
followed by science fiction novelist George Alec Effinger,
the serie moved to Marvel's black and white magazine,
Monsters Unleashed No. 4 and No. 8 (1974),
written by Tony Isabella with art by David Cockrum and George Pérez,
Marvel's version modernized the setting,
recasting Gullivar as a Vietnam War veteran,
though this official adaptation used many of Arnold's characters and concepts,
it was not a strict adaptation of the original book.

both Gullivar and John Carter make an appearance at the beginning
of Volume II in Alan Moore's the League of Extraordinary Gentlemen comic book serie
couvertures:
Copyright 2008 - 2024 G. Rudolf