![]() ![]() (I did say I’m a pedant when it comes to these things, remember?)Ĭonventions, Duffy Vohland, Len Wein, Marty Greim, Marvel Comics, Michelle Brand, Samuel Maronie I’m not 100% sure the Kid Colt comic would have survived two years in a trailer with that ginormous pit bull - or that Cliff Booth would have hung onto a comic book that long even if it had. ![]() Probably not possible - but this pedant declares it a good attempt. Fury #66 is dated May 1969, and went on-sale May 4, 1969, about 3-1/2 weeks after the scene. Kid Colt Outlaw #134 is dated May 1967, and went on sale February 2, 1967, two years earlier. Fury and his Howling Commandoes #66 and Kid Colt Outlaw #134. By freezing the frame, I was able to identify them as Sgt. Later that same day, we get a quick upside down glimpse of a couple of comic books in the trailer of stuntman Cliff Booth (that’s Brad Pitt’s character). The comics appear in a scene taking place February 8, 1969, which we know because we’re told that earlier in the day when we see Brad Pitt and Leonardo DiCaprio’s characters in Musso & Frank. ![]() ![]() That happened again tonight with Quentin Tarantino’s Once Upon a Time … in Hollywood. If you’ve followed me for any length of time, you know that whenever a comic book appears on screen in a movie or TV show set in the past, I’m immediately thrown out of the plot as I attempt to calculate whether the set decorator managed to get chronologically accurate comics. ![]()
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