I have often said that Sheena perils are too redundant and predictable, clearly a lack of imagination on the part of the story teller. (note: I have never complained about the art. She always looks great, even if she is rendered differently in the first 20 issues or so.) Despite the lack of creativity in inventing per...
Sheena is arguably the number one reason good girl art came on the scene so powerfully in the Golden Age of comics. She was the first sexy, "super-heroine", preceding Wonder Woman by 2 to 3 years (Her first appearance was in 1938). While possessing no super-powers, she commanded jungle animals by the dozen, could kil...
One of my favorite scenes from the Spiderman Animated Series, Turning Point. Where the Green Goblin sleepgasses Mary Jane and kidnaps her.
I love that peaceful and helpless look on her face.
Source: screencap
Zatanna is attacked by a guy who controls zombies. The zombies cover her mouth and the guy forces her to drink some kind of potion but Zatanna turns it into water. The guy then uses the thorns of the rose to drug her anyway which knocks her out.
This page features a little known superheroine from the golden age. Tomboy is her name and she's about 11 years old with a body only developed to about a 9 year old. She's perhaps a female version of a younger Robin without any Batman to rely on. She's totally flat chested and not even as sexy looking as Mary Marvel...
Yankee Girl may well have the distinction of being the most short lived superheroine ever to appear. To the best of my knowledge, she appeared in only two issues of Dynamic Comics, and two other times in a couple of little known titles. She was the creation of one of the all time comic book publishing greats, Harry "...