Tuesday, February 3, 2026

THE DEADLY EXPERIMENTS OF DR. MORTAL!


This Golden Age mad scientist appeared in Fox's WEIRD COMICS #1-6 (April 1940-July 1941) and THE FLAME #4 (February-March 1941). Dr. Mortal was created, scripted and drawn by self-taught ex-newspaper cartoonist Bert Whitman. His comic strip, DEBBIE DEAN (Mort Drucker was one of his assistants) infamously fell under fire when he used the word "dope" in one of his episodes, which lead to cancellations from many papers, forcing him to cancel the strip.

In each of his stories, Dr. Mortal was attempting all sorts of nefarious experiments to create some kind of monster, usually involving his unwilling niece, Marlene. In this untitled story from WEIRD COMICS #2 (May 1940), he uses human cadavers and lion intestines to create a group of murderous lion-men. Yikes!






Monday, February 2, 2026

DR. HORMONE!



Happy Monday and welcome to Weird Comics Week!

It doesn't get much weirder than this, folks. Of course, back in the 1940s, stories like these were considered a little more serious than we look at them now.

Enter Dr. Hormone! Created by a fellow by the name of Robert "Bob" Bugg and drawn by Bugg and Ralph Carlson, Dr. Hormone was introduced in Dell's POPULAR COMICS #54 (August 1940) and the series ran for seven issues until February 1941.

Bob Bugg at his drawing table. [Image source: Lambiek.net].

Bugg began his career as a writer, magazine illustrator and cartoonist, producing work for slicks such as COSMOPOLITAN and COLLIER'S, as well as various sports magazines. His commercial art included jobs for Camel and Winston cigarettes. He also worked on comics strips and spent a stint as Hank "Dennis the Menace" Ketcham's assistant. He found his way into comics and, along with Dell, wrote and drew for Fiction House, Centaur and Western Publishing.

Ralph Carlson took over the art chores from Bugg later in the series. Carlson worked for Ace Magazines, Fawcett, Western Publishing and Charlton.

The story presented today is from POPULAR COMICS #59 (January 1941) and is the next to the last story in the series.

Dr. Homorne's nemesis was a group called the Nazians. This untitled episode starts off normal enough, but suddenly takes a bizarre turn when he finds out the Nazians are being helped out by the Ku Klux Klan. All manner of craziness ensues. Co-authors Roy Thomas and Kurt Mitchell claim the KKK still exerted their influence in high places, which might explain Dr. Hormone's sudden cancellation after issue #60.

We'll no doubt see a remastered collection of Dr. Hormone by Fantagraphics or another publisher at some point. In the meantime, here's a sample of one of the most bizarre super-heroes that ever wielded a test tube.







Sunday, February 1, 2026

WEIRD COMICS WEEK STARTS TOMORROW!


Hey, kids! Starting tomorrow is another round of some of the strangest, goofiest, weirdest comics you'll ever want to read!

NOTICE! I will be offline for a week or so. In the meantime, feel free to post comments and I'll reply as soon as I can when I'm back online.