Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Dick Tracy: Colorful Cases of the 1930s, Sunday Press Books, hardcover, 2016. ISBN 978-0-98355-043-3; Dick Tracy: The Collins Casefiles, v1,2,3, Checker Books, 2003–2004. Other editions: [31] The first Big Little Book was a Dick Tracy title and many subsequent ones in the series followed. Some were reprintings of newspaper strips and some ...
Mink tried to extort $11,000 from Mac while Dick Tracy was present; because Mink was a "wanted" man for over a year he tried to kill Tracy at point blank range with a Luger pistol; Tracy an expert in hand to hand and unarmed combat managed to strike Mink which resulted in Minks shot going wild and also allowed Tracy to activate an automatic ...
Dick Tracy is a 1990 American action crime film based on the 1930s comic strip created by Chester Gould. Warren Beatty produced, directed and starred in the film, whose supporting cast includes Al Pacino, Madonna, Glenne Headly and Charlie Korsmo, with appearances by Dustin Hoffman, James Keane, Charles Durning, William Forsythe, Seymour Cassel, Mandy Patinkin, Catherine O'Hara, Ed O'Ross ...
"Dick Tracy was wonderful," Pacino wrote in Sonny Boy. Working on the film enabled the Dog Day Afternoon actor to feel "a renewed appetite to engage my imagination and create a character that had ...
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
Dick Tracy is a fictional police detective in the American comic strip Dick Tracy created by Chester Gould in 1931. [1] Tracy is a tough and intelligent detective who uses forensic science, advanced gadgetry, and wits in his relentless pursuit of criminals. The Dick Tracy comic strip made its premiere on October 4, 1931, in the Detroit Mirror. [2]
Mike Curtis (born 1953) [1] is an American writer who scripts the Dick Tracy comic strip, with Joe Staton as artist. He has been working professionally in comic books as a writer since the mid-1980s. He has been working professionally in comic books as a writer since the mid-1980s.
Copies of this episode, complete with the mistaken news flash—Hitler had committed suicide the day before, not died of a stroke—still exist today. (See: Death of Adolf Hitler.) On July 8, 1945, during a New York newspaper deliverers' strike, New York mayor Fiorello H. La Guardia read a complete Dick Tracy strip over the radio.