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Deadly Hands of Kung Fu

The Deadly Hands of Kung Fu
Deadly hands of kung fu 1975.jpg
Cover of DHOKF Vol. 1 Issue #17
Editor Various
Categories Martial Arts
Frequency Monthly
Year founded 1974
Final issue
— Number
1977
33
Company Magazine Management Company
Country United States
Website N/A

Deadly Hands of Kung Fu is a martial arts comic book magazine published by Magazine Management Company, a corporate sibling of Marvel Comics. There were a total of 33 issues published, plus one "Special Album Edition," before the series was cancelled.

This magazine was published in the mid-to-late 1970s amidst the "Kung Fu" or "Chopsocky" movie craze. The Deadly Hands of Kung-Fu magazine was launched in 1974 and ended 33 issues later in 1977. Some of the core recurring characters of the magazine were:

Each issue had various comic stories featuring these characters, both single issues stories and multi-issue arcs. Most of the issues had a review of a recently released martial arts film. Other issues had interviews with authentic martial arts instructors, while others had interviews with movie or television celebrities related to martial arts.

The early issues had a martial arts instructional section which described some elementary fighting techniques. These were provided by comics illustrator/martial artist Frank McLaughlin. The magazine was in black-and-white except for the cover. The cost of the magazine was 75 cents for issues #1–14. Issue #15 was a "Super Annual" (all reprints) issue and cost $1.25. Issues #16–33 were $1.00, as well as the "Special Album Edition" (June) 1974. Issue #28, September 1976, was an all Bruce Lee special, including a 35-page comic-format biography, written by Martin Sands, and drawn by Joe Staton and Tony DeZuniga. Many issues are rare, especially in higher quality condition.

The editors experimented by setting some of the comic stories in feudal Japan and starring samurai-type characters, including a four-part story arc called "Sword Quest", illustrated by Sanho Kim and Tony DeZuniga. The Sons of the Tiger/White Tiger feature ran until the penultimate issue.

Below is a list of the magazine's editors and the issues each oversaw:


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