So we can't really accuse the Who production team of stealing the idea then can we, Chris? Whether they took elements of Gary Seven for the Pertwee era I'll doubt we'll ever know!
JB
JB
So we can't really accuse the Who production team of stealing the idea then can we, Chris?
Laypeople think it's "obvious" that any similarity is proof of deliberate imitation, but that's bull.
Drake: ".I’ve become more and more convinced that [Stan Lee] knowingly stole The X-Men from The Doom Patrol. Over the years I learned that an awful lot of writers and artists were working surreptitiously between [Marvel and DC]. Therefore from when I first brought the idea into [DC editor] Murray Boltinoff’s office, it would’ve been easy for someone to walk over and hear that [I was] working on a story about a bunch of reluctant superheroes who are led by a man in a wheelchair. So over the years I began to feel that Stan had more lead time than I realized. He may well have had four, five or even six months"
Many fans always thought the imitation or stealing was obvious, and an industry insider--the DP creator--believed it himself. It does not mean every production or creation with a similarity to another is the result of stealing or imitation, but it most certainly happens.
I suppose that, since the sonic screwdriver didn't begin acquiring multiple functions until later seasons, it could conceivably have been influenced by Gary's servo. But it's more likely that they're just both sci-fi riffs on a Swiss Army knife. And aliens having a single tool that can do everything is a pretty common trope, if for no other reason than that it saves money on prop building. (See also the Kelvans' belt devices in "By Any Other Name," Korob's scepter in "Catspaw," the Vians' hand devices in "The Empath," even the tricorder to an extent. There are no doubt a few in Who as well.)
You ask that as if my intent were to accuse them of stealing. On the contrary, what I've been saying all along is that neither production was aware of the other at the time and that the similarities are completely coincidental.
Not to mention Derek Flint's cigarette lighter in OUR MAN FLINT (1966), which had 82 different functions. "Eighty-three if you want to light a cigar."
I hope you're calling me naive. I merely raised the queson question and throughout my posts said I was not trying to connect them. If raising the thought/question is automatic naïveté, then so be it. Not trying to ignite a conspiracy theory at all.
If a mod wishes to close the thread, that would be more than acceptable and even preferred by me.
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Outside of Nomad ("The Changeling") being a robot (Yes, I know the Daleks had a biological life-form inside) but the raspy voice of each Nomad and the Daleks was similar and of course, Nomad saying, he must "Sterilize!" very similar to the Daleks, "Exterminate!"
And you are absolutely wrong to assume that I thought that similarity proves imitation!!! Good post, and thanks for the professional slant on it. While it appears to me as if both Andromeda and Farscape were a bit too influenced by Blake's 7, geez, I don't know anything for certain. There are only so many classic SF shows, anyone pitching a show probably knows them better than the average viewer. The basic situation of B7 is too good not to re-use...
Weelll...among Silver Age comic fans, the idea of similarities, influence or imitation ending and ripping off beginning surrounds the case of DC's The Doom Patrol and Marvel's the X-Men. Doom Patrol creator Arnold Drake believed some sticky fingers were involved in the creation of the X-Men:
Many fans always thought the imitation or stealing was obvious, and an industry insider--the DP creator--believed it himself. It does not mean every production or creation with a similarity to another is the result of stealing or imitation, but it most certainly happens.
As much as I am a fan of Marvel comics it's pretty obvious to me that Stan stole most of his ideas from DC comics! Spiderman's Vulture and Daredevil's Owl are The Penguin while Daredevil's Jester is The Joker! While The Lizard is Killer Croc and Sandman is Clayface! And there are millions of other similarities in Stan Lee's many, many storylines!
JB
As much as I am a fan of Marvel comics it's pretty obvious to me that Stan stole most of his ideas from DC comics! Spiderman's Vulture and Daredevil's Owl are The Penguin while Daredevil's Jester is The Joker! While The Lizard is Killer Croc and Sandman is Clayface! And there are millions of other similarities in Stan Lee's many, many storylines!
The Lizard is not based on Killer Croc; the Lizard first appeared in 1963, Croc in 1983. There have been countless "reptile-man" characters in fantasy fiction and mythology, arising from humans' innate fear of snakes and other reptiles.
I take it you've read Amalgam comics?
Certainly Marvel and DC have both copied the hell out of each other over the decades, but they also drew heavily on precedents that predate comics, particularly characters from '30s pulp literature. Superman was largely based on Doc Savage -- a perfect human specimen whose first name was Clark and who had a Fortress of Solitude in the Arctic. Batman was heavily derived from pulp vigilantes like the Shadow and the Bat, right down to his debut story being outright plagiarized from a The Shadow prose story.
The specific comparisons you make don't work that well. The Vulture is a tech-genius supervillain who can actually fly with his maglev wings, while the Owl is a "mutate" with owl-like superpowers. By contrast, the Penguin is just a long-nosed little crook who wears a tuxedo and has an umbrella fetish (although some of his trick umbrellas in the Silver Age did allow him to fly). The Penguin was actually based on a cartoon-penguin mascot in a cigarette ad, I believe. The Joker is famously based on Conrad Veidt's character in the movie The Man Who Laughs, as well as on the iconography of court jesters going back to the Middle Ages.
The Lizard is not based on Killer Croc; the Lizard first appeared in 1963, Croc in 1983. There have been countless "reptile-man" characters in fantasy fiction and mythology, arising from humans' innate fear of snakes and other reptiles.
You beat me to the punch. And, as I recall, Killer Croc was originally more of a scaly-faced gangster; he only gradually evolved into a full-scale lizard monster.
So was Croc a rip-off of The Lizard instead of the other way around? I doubt it. As noted, reptile-men were a cliche long before Spider-Man first fought the Lizard.
Heck, Flash Gordon was fighting the "Lizard-Men" of Mongo as far back as the 30s and 40s. And Let's not the forget the "classic" 1959 movie, "The Alligator People," which featured a reptile man who could be mistaken for either the Lizard or Croc in a dark alley . . .![]()
True The Vulture and Owl were vastly superior technically wise to The Penguin but I was referring more to the name!
I've always thought that Daredevil's Man-Bull was Marvel's version of Batman's Man-Bat as well, although I'm not too sure when Man-Bat first appeared!
Who came first Aquaman or Prince Namor-The Sub Mariner?
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