Sunday 31 January 2010

The Leopard from Lime Street

It's an interesting mix of Stan Lee and Charles Dickens: "Lorks oh lordy, bless 'ee young hero me lad. With great power, comes great responsibility. Cor blimey..." Or something along those lines...
I was never much of a fan of Buster, but I do like Mike Western's work. This is from Buster dated 27th March 1976.




4 comments:

  1. I loved this particular comic, couldn't get enough of it as a kid!! pity they were always so short and appeared only in every other issue.

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  2. It's quite interesting to note that when people talk of what they'd like to see reprinted, Leopard is nearly always mentioned. I guess it's kind of unusual-most UK originated superheroes tended to be adult. I can only think of Billy the Cat being school-age. Maybe that's why people are so fond of him-as kids they could identify with him and wanted to be that character?

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  3. I love the bit about him having the super vision of a cat: every cat I've ever had - and I've had loads over five plus decades - has been as blind as a bat; even the one we've got now, you place its food in front of it and it not only can't SEE it - it can't even SMELL it!

    The other bit I love is by becoming a cat-boy hybrid, he suddenly develops the fashion designing skills of Jean Paul Gaultier and in mere moments rejigs a baggy pantomime costume into a skin tight fashion statement!

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  4. I really loved the “Leopard of Lime St”,I still do.Today I see it through an other angle:That there wasn’t any mystery concerning the death of Billy Farmer’s parents!
    And that the “Leopard” never had a significant event, a turning point throughout the series,like a girlfriend.And neither was a human ally to The Leopard.
    How about the fact that Billy’s aunt never noticed/suspected her nepheu being the Leopard ?
    Take a good look at Marvel’s X-Men and DC’s Teen Titans as well.They all matured,they moved on,and they became three dimentional heroes.But this never occured to The Leopard.

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