Film Fun was a British comic book that ran from (issues dates) 17 January 1920 to 15 September 1962, when it merged with Buster, a total of 2225 issues. A comic book (often shortened to simply comic and sometimes called a comic paper or comic magazine) is a Magazine or Book of narrative Events 38 BC - Octavian marries Livia Drusilla. 1287 - King Alfonso III of Aragon invades Minorca Year 1920 ( MCMXX) was a Leap year starting on Thursday (link will display 1920 of the Gregorian calendar Events 668 - Eastern Roman Emperor Constans II is assassinated in his bath at Syracuse Italy. Year 1962 ( MCMLXII) was a Common year starting on Monday (the link is to a full 1962 calendar of the Gregorian calendar. Buster was a long-running British comic ( 28 May 1960 - 4 January 2000) which carried a mixture of humour and adventure There were also annuals in the forties and fifties. It had been renamed Film Fun Thrills in 1959. The year 1959 ( MCMLIX) was a Common year starting on Thursday (link will display full calendar of the Gregorian calendar. As the title suggests, the comic mainly featured comic strip versions of people from films from the 1920's to the 1960's, including:
Frederick George Cordwell was better known to Film Fun fans as Eddie the Happy Editor. A comic strip is a sequence of drawings that tells a story Currently in the Western world, most comic strips are written and drawn by a Comics artist Cordwell was at his job till when he died in 1949, aged 62 at Richmond Surrey. Cordwell was a tireless worker who wrote many scripts for the strips as well as the stories in Film Fun and was responsible for the huge plates of Sausages and mash, the giant xmas puddings, pies and such the characters received from grateful beneficiaries of their efforts. Cordwell even made it into the stories himself, meeting Laurel and Hardy a number of times, Joe E Brown, Wheeler and Woolsey, etc.
Picture Fun merged with Film Fun soon after its launch in 1920, followed by Kinema Comic in 1932, Film Picture Stories in 1935, Illustrated Chips in 1953 and Top Spot in 1960. In 1962, sales of Film Fun dropped below 125,000 a week and IPC put what little was worth anything into a new comic called Buster.
Note:Harold Lloyd made it to the cover of the first issue of Film Fun, but not under his own name but a screen name; "Winkle. Harold Clayton Lloyd Sr ( April 20, 1893 &ndash March 8, 1971) was an American Film actor and producer "