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Airboy is a World War II-era superhero/adventure hero from the comic book series of the same name.

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  • Airboy
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  • Airboy is a World War II-era superhero/adventure hero from the comic book series of the same name.
  • Airboy is a fictional aviator hero of an American comic book series initially published by Hillman Periodicals during the World War II-era time period fans and historians call the Golden Age of comic books. He was created by writers Charles Biro and Dick Wood and artist Al Camy.
  • Airboy was Davey Nelson Jr, a Golden Age comic book character that originally appeared in Air Fighters Comics #1 (Volume 2). He proved to be so popular that Air Fighters Comics was eventually renamed Airboy Comics. The original comic ended in 1953, when Hillman Periodicals left comic publishing business. All the characters that appeared eventually lapsed into public domain, allowing Eclipse Comics to revive them in the early 1980s. Chuck Dixon handled the writing and Tim Truman handled the initial art. The revival is notable for trying to bring some measure of realism into the story while still honoring the original continuity.
  • Airboy was David Nelson II, the son of an expert pilot and an excellent young flyer himself. After becoming an orphan, Davy was raised in a monastery in Capistrano, California. He became friends with a well respected Franciscan monk named Brother Francis Martier. David helped to inspire Martier to to become interested in designing a precision aircraft, hoping it would be his contribution to the world. Martier worked obsessively, and secured a loan in order to create a prototype aircraft that flew by flapping its wings. However, Martier was killed while test-flying it, because its fuel lines had been sabotaged. Davy swore to rebuild the craft, and he did. Dawning a uniform, Davy soon named himself "Airboy" and his new plane "Birdie." He helped the Allies during World War II, and soon earned
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  • Charles Biro, Dick Wood, and Al Camy
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  • David "Davy" Nelson II
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  • Created by
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  • Air Fighters Comics #2
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  • Real Name
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  • First Appearance
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  • Hillman
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  • Original Publisher
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Box Title
  • Airboy
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abstract
  • Airboy was Davey Nelson Jr, a Golden Age comic book character that originally appeared in Air Fighters Comics #1 (Volume 2). He proved to be so popular that Air Fighters Comics was eventually renamed Airboy Comics. The original comic ended in 1953, when Hillman Periodicals left comic publishing business. All the characters that appeared eventually lapsed into public domain, allowing Eclipse Comics to revive them in the early 1980s. Chuck Dixon handled the writing and Tim Truman handled the initial art. The revival is notable for trying to bring some measure of realism into the story while still honoring the original continuity. When Eclipse Comics went out of business, Todd McFarlane wound up getting the company's assets. Although he announced his intention to revive Airboy and other Air Fighters characters, it didn't pen out. Since the original characters were still in public domain, Chuck Dixon decided to try to revive them. He originally intended to publish it through Shooting Star Comics, but when the company folder, he wound up taking his pitch to Moonstone Books. The company published Dixon's original story and proceeded to revive the other characters on the pages of revived Air Fighters title. The original Airboy was a young pilot who flew Birdie - an occasionally plane that flapped it's wings like a bird. He used his plane to fight the Axis forces and various supernatural menaces. When the World War II ended, he shifted to more super-villains and air-related criminals. The Eclipse revival starred David Nelson III, the original Airboy's son. The new series (simply called Airboy) was a continuation of the original Golden Age stories, except it tried to take a more realistic approach to airplanes and flight, even as it kept some of the odder aspects of the original stories. The Eclipse series featured many characters that originally appeared in Air Fighters Comics as supporting characters. Most notably, it featured Valkyrie, the original airboy's memorable but rarely seen love interest, became part of the main cast. The Moonstone revival returned to the World War II era and revamped most of the Air Fighters characters from scratch (while throwing Captain Midnight into the mix). The Moonstone version of Airboy appeared in comics and prose anthologies. At this point, it's hard to say how this version will compare to the preceding versions. * Absolute Cleavage - Valkyrie. This carried through to all her subsequent incarnations. * Amazon Brigade - The Airmaidens. * Awesome but Impractical - Skywolf's semi-planes were a neat-looking visual (one plane splitting into two independent halves), but the actual designs wouldn't work too well in real life (the Eclipse revival lampshades this repeatedly). * But Not Too Foreign - the Bald Eagle was canonically half-Cherokee. * Comic Book Time - surprisingly averted with Airboy. The character started out as a 10-year-old boy and aged visibly over time. By the time the comic was canceled in 1953, he was a young man in his early 20s. According to the artist who co-created him and drew most of his appearances, this was deliberate. Played straight with most other characters, though. * Cool Plane - Airboy's Birdie, Skywolf's "Semi-Planes", Iron Ace's armored plane, Bald Eagle's Flying Coffin, Black Angel's tricked-out plane, the list goes on. * Discontinuity - most fans prefer to pretend that the stories which featured Valkyrie as the Communist agent never happened (because it went against all her prior characterization and history with Airboy). The Eclipse revival established that the Communist Valkyrie was the original's doppelganger. * Fair for Its Day - while the Japanese were usually depicted pretty the way you would expect them to be depicted in 1940s, the Japanese-Americans usually wound up looking less caricatured and were treated as full-fledged human beings rather than racial stereotypes. Heck, one Bald Eagle story actually featured a Japanese-American intelligence agent and his loyalty was never in doubt. * Plucky Comic Relief - "Skinny" McGinty, a 1940s era walking hick stereotype with flying powers. * Heel Face Turn - Valkyrie, a Nazi air ace, turned against her superior when he insisted on executing her teammates for helping Airboy escape (though, honestly, what did she expect). * May-December Romance - When they first met, Airboy was 12 and Valkyrie was at least 18. The age difference became less noticeable in later stories thanks to real time aging. * Spin-Off - the Heap appeared in Sky Wolf stories before moving on to his own feature. * Sexy Discretion Shot - a rare Golden Age example. At the end of an Airboy story in Airboy Comics #6 (Volume 3) Airboy and Valkyrie head off to get some private time and warned their friend that they didn't want to be disturbed. Jeez, I wonder why. * Crossover - with the Prowler, Sgt Strike and Mr Monster (fellow Eclipse Comics characters). * Crisis Crossover - in Total Eclipse, Eclipse Comics' only line-wide crossover, Zzed, a Golden Age Airboy Comics character, set out to destroy the universe in order to end his immortality, setting the events of the crossover into motion. * Identical Son - David Nelson III looked pretty much identical to his father when he was young (to the point where even Valkyrie is fooled. * Legacy Hero - Airboy, Black Angel, Lupina (to Skywolf) * Reed Richards Is Useless - Nelson Aviation scientists devised a complex cybernetic shell to save Iron Ace's life (robotic limbs and metalic casing that contained his surviving organs. For some reason, they never thought the release the technology to the public, or utilize it for further research, like, at all. * Sliding Scale of Idealism Versus Cynicism - varied. While the comic ran with much of the original series' weirdness, it also tried to bring realism into aviation, air combat and firearms. As the result, some of that weirdness was justified or explained away. * Author Filibuster - In Airboy: 1942 – The Best of Enemies one-shot, Chuck Dixon goes out of his way to show that communists are bad. Very bad. So bad that they make Nazis look like honorable and reasonable by comparison. * Ultimate Universe - most of the Airboy characters were revamped from the ground up. * You Fail History Forever - Airboy: 1942 – The Best of Enemies one-shot sees our hero dealing with the Red Army in Poland. In 1942. Yeah.
  • Airboy is a World War II-era superhero/adventure hero from the comic book series of the same name.
  • Airboy is a fictional aviator hero of an American comic book series initially published by Hillman Periodicals during the World War II-era time period fans and historians call the Golden Age of comic books. He was created by writers Charles Biro and Dick Wood and artist Al Camy.
  • Airboy was David Nelson II, the son of an expert pilot and an excellent young flyer himself. After becoming an orphan, Davy was raised in a monastery in Capistrano, California. He became friends with a well respected Franciscan monk named Brother Francis Martier. David helped to inspire Martier to to become interested in designing a precision aircraft, hoping it would be his contribution to the world. Martier worked obsessively, and secured a loan in order to create a prototype aircraft that flew by flapping its wings. However, Martier was killed while test-flying it, because its fuel lines had been sabotaged. Davy swore to rebuild the craft, and he did. Dawning a uniform, Davy soon named himself "Airboy" and his new plane "Birdie." He helped the Allies during World War II, and soon earned the respect of enemy fliers. During and after the war, Airboy had many adventures, confronting such villains as intelligent rats, the mysterious Misery, the immortal Zzed, and his Nazi arch-nemesis Valkyrie, who would later become his ally and sweetheart. Another ally was fellow hero and aviator Skywolf. Airboy also went toe to toe with the monstrous Heap several times. Airboy's plane, Birdie, had wings that actually flapped. It was equiped with dual machine guns, its wheels could grasp other aircraft, and it could be controlled by a voice activated remote control, under Airboy's lapel. It was able to home in on Airboy and may have had some limited degree of artifical intelligence. Airboy himself was an innovative mechanic and an ace fighter pilot. He was also a skilled fighter, able to defeat a Jiu-Jitsu World Champion from Japan in a no holds barred match.
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