Dan Dare torments squid!

For those who were as appalled at yesterday's anatomically bizarre comic book squid as I was, G. Tingey sent me a scan of a palate-cleansing, nicely done image from a Dan Dare comic book.

i-f2e071a2e5866241cf8299f6b2fe467f-dan_dare.jpg

You can click on it to see the whole page (about 200K, though). That's a much better drawn squid. It seems to be another example of the poor beast presumed to be a man-eater, though.

More like this

I am looking at the question: How many words are there in a language? I'd like to know for languages in general, comparatively, and for pedagogical reasons, in some well known western language which may as well be English. What I found quite incidentally is a hornets nest of curmudgeonistic…
Every so often, just for laughs or my own personal edification, periodically I check my referral logs to see who's linking to me and what posts are being linked to. Most of the time, there's not much there worth commenting on. Sometimes, it's bloggers who agree with me; other times, it's bloggers…
Here's an interesting collection of scans from a defunct comic book called Action. It's rather grisly—most of the action seems to involve people being bloodily devoured by marine organisms—so don't look if you'd rather not see people getting pulped in a shark's jaws. This comic book was apparently…
The foreshadowing last week was accurate. This week, we offer a review of Tentacles! Tales of the Giant Squid by Shirley Raye Redmond with illustrations by Bryn Barnard. Younger offspring: We should talk about my new squid book for the Friday Sprog Blog. Dr. Free-Ride: OK. What do you like…

PZ, It is Ever So Obvious that you are an Agent of the Great Kraken, whose true duty is to keep us poor humans deceived about the ignoble role we play in the Food Farms of the Giant Squid of the Deep.

Oh, no, not me.

By the way, did you know that the noblest, most pleasant way to die is in the beak of a squid? They secrete euphorics that make the end extraordinarily ecstatic. Dive in, you won't regret it!

I've heard you get a mind-blowing psychedelic experience by licking their ever so smooth and velvety mantles too!

do it! (you know you want to)

Heat flares? Staring at the reader to show emotion? Bizarre and tacky to boot.

By Torbjörn Larsson (not verified) on 25 Oct 2006 #permalink

It isn't that Archy is going to kill Lex on purpose, he doesn't know his own strength. Archy just wants to give him a little cuddle. He doesn't understand that his toothed suckers and razor sharp beak are bad for us.

Humans are just so squishy on the outside, crunchy on the inside, and squishy on the deep inside.

And Archy isn't about to waste the body of his accidental prey. That wouldn't be right.

As I said to PZ - this was drawn in about 1957.
When very, very little was known at all about Archituethis.

And, at the depth of sea that this is supposed to be happening (a LONG way down) surely an "Archie" would regard anything small and mobile as lunch?

Actually, all this action was incidental to the main plot, as an alien spaceraft had crashed into the deep water, and they were trying to get to it, to attch cables, to get it up before the surviving crew died......

By G. Tingey (not verified) on 25 Oct 2006 #permalink

In a later Dan Dare story Lex was revealed as a character that kept a Bible in his kit-bag.

By John Hughes (not verified) on 26 Oct 2006 #permalink

Lex so totally had it coming, though. You didn't know him.

And llewelly, when you say "you are an Agent of the Great Kraken, whose true duty is to keep us poor humans deceived about the ignoble role we play in the Food Farms of the Giant Squid of the Deep," why do you say that as if it's bad?