

Nice!
- Phil Rushton
Moderator: AndyB



philcom55 wrote:Apart from the Cat's appearances in Bunty, Bunty Annual and Lucky Charm I thought people might be interested in this edition of the Bunty Picture Library which I just picked up. Does anyone know if the feline freedom fighter starred in any other issues from that series?
- Phil R.

The later issue 430, is not a reprint of the 161 issue, but is about an Asian girl who has a cat, that helps her when some bad people are out to get her (I can't actually remember the plot exactly, its been a while since I read it.) I don't think, The Cat (Marie) had any other picture story books about her.Digifiend wrote:There were definitely some reprints - issue 396, Sam, is a reprint of issue 265, The Sailor Doll. However, the list has this one listed as just The Cat, which is the name of the character rather than the story (for the same reason, The Four Marys and The Comp are listed more than once). 161 should've been listed as The Cat on the Trail of a German Flying Bomb.


As long as Fonzie and co don't turn up!DavidKW wrote:That particular Sue Day bus story appears in the 1975 Princess Tina annual, alongside 2 excellent Patty's World.
Is a great story - a TV series based on The Happy Days could be good.
Yes, I mentioned Mark of the Cat earlier. It may be the same writer; June and Bunty had different publishers, so it is unlikely Bunty was even aware of the existence of this strip. What I find odd is that this Cat - unlike her Bunty counterpart - does not hide her face yet nobody knows her true identity. But who's willing to take bets that the schoolteacher Mamselle Blanche is The Cat? I am!philcom55 wrote:Looking through some old copies of June I just came across yet another female 'Cat' character from April 1972. What's more this one seems to bear an astonishing similarity to her DC Thomson namesake. As can be seen in the episode of 'Mark of the Cat' shown below she also wears a tight-fitting black costume and fights Nazis in occupied France during WW2 - the only significant difference being the fact that she appears to be an adult (though the story is seen through the eyes of a young French girl).
Anybody care to speculate on whether this is a case of 'great minds thinking alike'...or downright plagiarism?![]()
- Phil Rushton