Tuesday, February 26, 2013

V24-20-1987 Vetaal Kunj Ke Lutere

Hindi Indrajaal Comic No.V24N20 Published in 1987 by Times of India Publication, a unit of Bennett & Coleman Co. Ltd.
Download Comic :- http://www.mediafire.com/?1mm5525ht7rsis0

Thursday, February 21, 2013

V24-22-1987 Heeron Ki Nagri - 2

Hindi Indrajaal Comic No. V24N22 Published in 1987 by Times of India Publication, a unit of Bennett & Coleman Co. Ltd.
Download File :- http://www.mediafire.com/?cyc0q68sr0epodu

V24-21-1987 Heeron Ki Nagri - 1

Hindi Indrajaal Comic No. V24N21 Published in 1987 by Times of India Publication, a unit of Bennett & Coleman Co. Ltd.
Download Comic :- http://www.mediafire.com/?df7ni5xhw8tbtmn

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

The Research Uncredited

Dear Community
I consider myself as INDRAJAL COMIC LOVER. Well that I think I am, but after reading the following article TODAY - after 14 Years, I find that I have to still learn a lot. By most humbly reserving this space to Mr. KAI FRIESE, this is my dedication to him and Late Mr. LEE FALK. The following article is adapted in original from :- http://www.outlookindia.com/article.aspx?207314


FOR those who came in late...Lee Falk, creator of The Phantom a.k.a. Kit Walker, the Ghost Who Walks...the man who cannot die—well, he died last month.
Some 35 years ago, Bennett & Coleman began to publish the Indrajal Phantom comic books that dominated the misspent afternoons of my childhood. It was a quieter, gentler time. Mrs G had not yet become She Who Must Be Obeyed, a car was still an Amby, TV was Chitrahaar at a neighbour's house, and Coke was it.
And my friends and I were a cargo cult. The products of phoren that washed up on these shores were marooned here without their global marketing strategies or moulded plastic packaging. So we hoarded, borrowed and rented Superman, Batman, and even Aquaman when we could. But The Phantom had come in on an earlier tide. He was a castaway on our side of the pond. The production values had a familiar local crappiness. Phantoms had matte covers and no ads for Amazing Incredible Sea Monkeys or the Inflatable Raquel Welch Doll.
But the currents of international commercial and cultural transmission have since been charted. Surfing the Internet last week I was rewarded with this jetsam: the original Phantom recap from 1936:
For those who came in late: Four hundred years ago, a man was washed up on a remote Bengal shore. He'd seen his father killed and his ship scuttled by Singh pirates. He swore an oath on the skull of his father's murderer "to devote my life to the destruction of all forms of Piracy, Greed and Cruelty." He was the first Phantom, and the eldest male of each succeeding generation of his family carried on... As the unbroken line continued through the cen -turies the Orient believed it was always the same man!
Bengal Shore! Singh Pirates! I could hardly believe my Oriental eyes! And there was more. In 1944 Phantom even fought the Imperial Japanese Army when they "invaded his jungle lair in Bengali". But the Phantom of my boyhood lived in the Denkali Woods in the Republic of Bangalla (cap: Mawitaan) which as everyone knows is in Africa. Now it can be told: his imaginary domain was really Darkest India .
In fact, the Phantom began life in 1936 as an urban American playboy who stalked criminals by night—a precursor of Bruce Wayne. But then something happened. As Lee Falk tells it: "In the middle of the first story I suddenly got the other idea. I moved the Phantom into the jungle and decided to keep him there."
The "other idea" probably cost the Phantom his place as an icon of the American century. Before long, Superman, Batman and other costumed crusaders would step into his chaddis as the international policemen of Truth, Justice and the American Way. But the Ghost Who Walks had chosen the old road, perhaps it was because Falk was a literature student with a thing for Kipling. At any rate it wasn't a deadend, the Empire still lived, and the Phantom soon found a regular slot as an émigré crimefighter in the colonies. He acquired a following in Australia, New Zealand and of course in India where The Illustrated Weekly began to publish the strip as early as the 1940s. He had moved to the Jungle and he stayed there.
But the Jungle had been stirring, the natives, as always, were restless. And back at Phantom Inc's corporate HQ, otherwise known as King Features Syndicate, the editors had made certain changes over the years to accommodate the sensibilities of their Indian readers: Bengal had become first Bengali...oops, and then Denkali/Bangalla. The villain Rama (slayer of Phantom's father) had become Ramalu. The Pirate Singh Brotherhood, the Singa Pirates. Until only one diminutive trace of our hero's original landfall remained—the Phantom's pygmy friends, whose tribal name 'Bandar' Falk had lifted from The Jungle Book. They're still the Bandar log. After all there are no pygmies in India.
Let's face it, the Phantom would have died a long time ago if Indian boys hadn't inherited their colonial khaki knickers. But they did. And reading The Phan -tom was our initiation to the colonial fantasies that had shaped our forefathers. As the unbroken line continued through the centuries the Orient believed it... Falk's genius was to encapsulate so much of the colonial canon in his terse frames. The Phantom starts out as Robinson Crusoe but he's also Kim and Mowgli. He's Leo, the immortal he of She. He's Tarzan of the Bandar and the Embodiment of Kipling's If. Falk himself once said that the Phantom was Tarzan with a college degree.
Finally—though it may take a college degree to see this—The Phantom was also Mr Kurtz of Conrad's Heart of Darkness. I just reread it in the wake of Falk's death, and the parallels with the Phantom are, just... spooky. Kit Walker has his skull cave, Kurtz has a hut surrounded with skulls. Kit has his oath "to destroy Piracy, Greed and Cruelty", Kurtz has his own: "Exterminate the brutes!" They are, of course, mirror images, one just and balanced, the other insanely cruel, but both reflections of the feral white man among the savages with a mission civilisatrix.
One of these days some Comp. Lit type, born right here and educated in America, is going to write a dissertation on all this. I can see it now. Phantoms, Pygmies and Others. Or White Skin, Black Mask. Or if s/he's really with it, Purple Prose: the Jungle Chronotope from the Heart of Darkness to Denkali. As for the Ghost Who Walks, he'll have to find a ghost who writes. Because Mistah Falk — he dead.

" THIS ESSAY  EXCLUSIVELY BELONGS TO MR. KAI FRIESE AND OUTLOOK INDIA"


V24-23-1987 Koqania Ke Raktjeevi

Hindi Indrajaal Comic No. V24N23 Published in 1987 by Times of India Publication, a unit of Bennett & Coleman Co. Ltd.
The original story was posted by me on 15th February 2009.
Download Comic :- http://www.mediafire.com/?kcrd1d4cgl2d073

Saturday, February 16, 2013

V24-24-1987 Hatyaron Ka Khel

Hindi Indrajaal Comic No. V24N24 Published 1987 in by Times of India Publication, a unit of Bennett & Coleman Co. Ltd.
The original story was posted by me back on 21st June 2010.
This edition is comparatively colourful.
Download Comic :- http://www.mediafire.com/?clb417twjyu56ss

Friday, February 15, 2013

V24-33-1987 Hatyaron Ka Dweep

Hindi Indrajaal Comic No. V24N33 Published in 1987 by Times of India Publication, a unit of Bennett & Coleman Co. Ltd.
Co-incidently, the original story "Maut Ka Saudagar Part 1 & 2" were also posted by me in the month of February 2009. At that time I was not particular about the quality of upload, hence no enhancement done then.
Story is long and if you compare it with the original story, you'll see that it actually requires 2 parts. Though the publisher has done a fine job, concluding the story in one single volume, but former was better.
Download Comic :- http://www.mediafire.com/?ku4eb62e77fus4b
A VERY IMPORTANT TOPIC, OMITTED FOR NO REASON BY THE INDIAN PUBLISHER
Kind Courtsey : Vishal Bhai

...More elaborated View of Miss Tara (Tagama). Photo Cortsey Vishal Bhai





Sunday, February 10, 2013

V24-35-1987 Apraadhi Ki Bhool

Hindi Indrajaal Comic No. V24N35 Published in 1987 by Times of India Publication, a unit of Bennett & Coleman Co. Ltd.
Fortunately I have the original story " Abhinetri Ka Rahassya" published in 1968 with me too. I shall be posting it eventually. Personal opinion : Original print is more vivid and hence better..
Download Comic :- http://www.mediafire.com/?fwxht7e2lqjad4l

Thursday, February 7, 2013

V25-49-1988 Zehreele Daanav - 3

FIRST THING'S FIRST
This is NOT my post. The entire scans and effort are of Mr. Vishal Sharma, a.k.a "CHALTA PHIRTA PRET". He is kind enough to lend his hard work to my blog just to complete the story. I thank him for his generous gesture for fellow community. I am just posting the link here provided by Vishal bhai.
I have only re-done the cover page for size and looks, with his kind consent.
For the records sake -
Hindi Indrajaal Comic No. V25N49 Published in 1988 by Times of India Publication, a unit of Bennett & Coleman Co. Ltd.
Download Comic, Courtsey CHALTA PHIRTA PRET :- http://www.mediafire.com/?fqbyd54b73ebvlb 

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

V25-48-1988 Zehreele Daanav - 2

Hindi Indrajaal Comic No. V25N48 Published in 1988 by Times of India Publication, a unit of Bennett & Coleman Co. Ltd.
I AM UNABLE TO FIND THE 3rd & CONCLUDING PART OF THIS STORY. IT SHAAL ONLY BE POSTED AS PER THE AVAILABILITY OR HELP FROM FELLOW COMMUNITY. FOR NOW IT IS EXPECTED BY THIS WEEKEND.
Download Comic :- http://www.mediafire.com/?8xpk7q8smhsu8d3 

V25-47-1988 Zehreele Daanav - 1

Hindi Indrajaal Comic No. V25N47 Published in 1988 by Times of India Publication, a unit of Bennett & Coleman Co. Ltd.
First of all I was initially hesitant to post this comic as I couldn't find the 3rd and concluding part of this interesting story, but thanks to VISHAL SHARMA a.k.a. "CHALTA PHIRTA PRET". He has the required part and he was also kind enough to pass me Pages 01, 02, 31, 32 of part 1 for posting.
 So, dear community, Pages 01, 02, 31 & 32 are kind courtesy of  Mr. Vishal Sharma.
A little editing was done by me to the pages to make it look compatible with the comic.
Download Comic :- http://www.mediafire.com/?q40wkgisytrstf8  

V24-36-1987 Khooni Dal

Hindi Indrajaal Comic No. V24N36 Published in 1987 by Times of India Publication, a unit of Bennett & Coleman Co. Ltd.
Download Comic :- http://www.mediafire.com/?pl7u5d7796pvvj1