This is a skin for another version of Prize Comics' Frankenstein as Blooperman. I guess if it was funny once, it would be funny twice.

To Recap: Victor Frankenstein was obsessed with the idea of creating life. To that end, he created a man from pieces gathered from the graveyard and the gibbet, and (in some undetailed process) gave it the spark of life. Seeing what he had done, he was filled with horror, and rejected his creation, and that started the whole mess in the novel by Mary W. Shelley (There was no Abby Normal brain or anything). At the end of the novel, discovering that Dr. Frankenstein is dead, the monster says that he is going to build a funeral pyre and throw himself in.

We never really see this event in the novel, and for almost 200 years, comics, movies, and other stories have decided that the monster survived.

Prize comics #7 (1940) introduced another version of The Undying Monster. In the introduction, it was explained that, since the name of the creator had been transferred to the nameless creature (the confusion starting with "The Bride of Frankenstein"), it would be referred that way in the series as a convenience. Set in "the present", that is later retconned (which term hadn't been invented yet) to take place in the early 1930s.

His appearance influenced by the universal Pictures version, this monster can talk, and is basically a super-villain. He bosses crooks, and makes plans to destroy the present Dr. Frankenstein. After ten years combating the monster, (Prize #11) Dr. Frankenstein has to retire, and one of the monster's victims, (Bulldog) Denny Dunson takes over the fight. In the course of his adventures, the monster is "cured" of his evil, then brainwashed by the Nazis into working for them. Then, perhaps because the comic book monster can't hold a candle to the real monsters in the real world, the Frankenstein strip becomes a humor strip (like The Addams Family or The Munsters). When he gets his own book, the monster continues in a humorous vein (as do his vampire buddies), until cancelled with issue #17 (January-February 1949). 

Then, in March 1952, Frankenstein is back, his return prompted by the recent surge of horror comics. This time, however, he is more like the version in the last few of Universal's motion pictures: he can no longer talk, just grunt and roar. He wanders through a succession of morality plays (not unlike Marvel's own version of The Monster), sometimes playing the protagonist, sometimes the antagonist.

In prize comics #49 (1945) we find The Merry Monster reading an issue of Zowie comics, starring Blooperman. He wishes he could fly like Blooperman, ties a towel around his neck, and jumps off a cliff. Well, he is well nigh indestructible, so he bounces a couple of times and... but you can read the whole story here:

http://heroheroinehistory.blogspot.com/2012/10/reading-room-prize-comics-frankenstein.html

... and groove on the Wally Wood heading art. You can read the original story of the other suit (from Frankenstein #8, 1947) here:

http://cartoonsnap.blogspot.com/2010/10/funny-frankenstein-its-alive.html

This version of Blooperman could fly and had all his super senses, but was no stronger nor any more durable than a normal man... who was 8' tall. No, actually he was stuck with normal strength and was as resistant to damage as any normal man would be.

This skin goes on my Golden Age Frankenstein scope in the Skins and Meshes section for Alex's Freedom Fortress:

http://www.alexff.com/index.php

C6 supplied the base skin. No infringement of copyright is intended; this is merely fan art.

Da Glob
