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If you grew up in India during the 1970s, 80s, or early 90s, the name Indrajal Comics needs no introduction. Published by Bennet, Coleman & Co. (The Times of India Group), this iconic monthly comic book series introduced generations of Indian readers to international heroes like The Phantom , Mandrake the Magician , and Flash Gordon , alongside the homegrown spy Bahadur .
Lee Falk’s original Phantom stories were adapted (often faithfully, sometimes wildly) for the Indian audience. These blogs allow modern comic scholars to compare the American "Daily Strip" versions with the Indian "Indrajal" adaptations, showing how stories were localized for a desi audience. The Legal Grey Area Let’s address the elephant in the room. Is this legal? indrajal blogspot
If you visit these blogs, don't just download and run. Leave a comment thanking the scanner. These people spent hours restoring torn pages, removing dust spots, and aligning crooked scans. They did it for love, not money. If you grew up in India during the
And to the copyright holders: Take note. The millions of views on these blogs prove there is a massive market for a legitimate Indrajal Comics Omnibus . Until that day arrives, Blogspot remains the unofficial guardian of our childhood. Lee Falk’s original Phantom stories were adapted (often
However, as print runs ended in the early 1990s, these precious comic books became lost treasures—rotting in old trunks, sold as raddi (scrap paper), or forgotten entirely. Enter the unlikely hero: . What is Indrajal Blogspot? For the uninitiated, "Indrajal Blogspot" refers to a network of dedicated fan-run blogs (hosted on Google’s Blogger platform) that have taken on the Herculean task of scanning, preserving, and sharing every issue of Indrajal Comics ever published.
Technically, no. The copyright to The Phantom and Mandrake belongs to King Features Syndicate (USA), while Bahadur likely rests with the Times of India group. Since none of these entities have shown interest in reprinting the old Indrajal run digitally, the fan blogs operate in a legal grey zone.