Art by Sam Glanzman

Giant Ants in the Comics

Giant ants in the Comics are a given. The gigantic monsters appeared in the Pulps, so they have to be in the comic books as well. All the usual suspects of course, DC, Marvel, horror comics and Science Fiction and superheroes. The Formic race presents a terrible danger not only because they are giant but because they are organized. Since many of these are SF stories, sometimes the ants aren’t giant, the humans are shrunk small (also a classic Pulps scenario.)

Golden Age

In the Golden Age, the Pulps were the inspiration. Several of the later writers got their start in the old SF magazines like Edmond Hamilton and Gardner F. Fox. Most of the authors are unknown.

Art by Bob Powell

“Giant Ants of the Moon” (Speed Comics #44, January-February 1947) features a giant ant on another celestial body.

Art by Bill Wright

“Mickey and Pluto Battle the Giant Ants” (Four Color Comics #279, June 1950) has Mickey, Pluto and Goofy shrunk down.

Art by Bob Oksner and Bernard Sachs

“The World of the Giant Ants” (Strange Adventures #7, April 1951) was written by Gardner F. Fox, the first of three ant comics to appear in Strange Adventures. This comic is a monster film before 1950s B&W drive-in craze.

Art by Ernest Schroeder

“The Giant Ants” (Airboy #93, November 1951)

Art by Alex Kotzky
Artist Unknown

“Giant Ants” (Plastic Man #37, September 1952)

Art by Bob Oksner and John Giunta

“Meet your Masters — the Ants” (Strange Adventures #23, August 1952) was written by Mann Rubin

Art by Murphy Anderson

“The Great Ant Circus” (Strange Adventures #30, March 1953) was written by Gardner F. Fox

Art by Gene Colan

“The Hungry Jaws” (Uncanny Tales #11, August 1953) is a little different. The ants aren’t giant but check out that last frame. It reminds me of “The Zanti Misfits” from The Outer Limits.

Art by the Igor Shop

“Black Death” (Fantastic Fears #4, November 1953) mixes a little “Leiningen Versus the Ants” with H. G. Wells.

Most of these Golden Age comics are available at DCM.

Silver Age

One influence that can’t be denied after 1954 (unlike with the Pulp magazines that preceded it) is the movie, Them! (1954). All those old Amazing Stories and Astounding covers had come to life in glorious black & white.

Art by Jack Kirby and Bill Everett

“Grottu, King of the Insects” (Strange Tales #73, February 1960) was written by Stan Lee and Larry Lieber

Art by Jack Kirby and Steve Ditko

Art by Jack Kirby and Dick Ayers

“I Created Krang!” (Tales to Astonish #14, December 1960) was written by Stan lee and Larry Lieber.

Art by Dick Dillon and Sheldon Moldoff
Art by Ruben Moreira

“We Fought the Giant Ants” (The Greatest Adventure #55, May 1961)

Art by Curt Swan and John Forte
Art by Curt Swan and Stan Kaye

“King of the Giant Ants” (Superman’s Pal, Jimmy Olsen #54, July 1961) was written by Robert Bernstein

Art by Jack Kirby and Dick Ayers

“The Man in the Ant Hill” (Tales to Astonish # 27, January 1962) was written by Stan Lee and Larry Lieber. Despite that horror cover, this is the first adventure of Ant-Man, not Scott Lang but Henry Pym.

Art by Curt Swan and George Klein
Art by Al Plastino

“Invasion of the Super Ants” (Action Comics #296, January 1963) was written by Edmond Hamilton, Pulp superstar. He wrote many invasion stories with spider and beetle-like aliens but not giant ants. His story “Pigmy Island” (Weird Tales, August 1930) has a giant rat.

Art by Vic Prezio
Art by Sam Glanzman

“The Giant Ants” (Kona, Monarch of Monster Island #7, July-September 1963) was written by Don Segall.

Bronze Age

By the 1970s the giant ant thing had been around for at least seventy years. This didn’t stop creative writers from finding a way…

Art by Lee Elias

“Captives of the Ant Kingdom” (The Unexpected #158, July-August 1974) was written by Dave Wood.

Art by Jack Kirby and Joe Sinnott
Art by Jack Kirby and Mike Royer

“Kingdom of the Ants” (Devil Dinosaur #5, August 1978) was written by Jack Kirby.

Art by Kevin O’Neill
Art by Jose Ferrar

“Ant Wars” (2000 A. D. #71-84 , July1-September 30, 1978) was written by Gerry Finley-Day. This series was collected in its own volume.

Art by Carlos Ezquerra

“The Amazing Ant-Man” (2000 A. D. #640, August 19, 1989) was written by Alan Grant. I know it’s a little long-in-the-tooth to be called a Bronze Age comic but what the hell, it’s Judge Dredd!

Others

Art by Alex Toth and Mike Peppe
Art by Ian Kennedy

Conclusion

These are not all the ant comics ever, of course. I have drawn the line in the 1970s. The 1980s had its own Ant thing going on. The coming of Ant-Man to movie screens was a big deal for Marvel fans. I think that will dominate ant comics now in the 21st Century.

 

Like space adventure then check it out!

 

1 Comment Posted

  1. Japan’s Tetsujin 28 (Gigantor, to American anime viewers) also fought giant ants in Shonen Monthly, from late 1961 to March 1962.

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