Frederick George Cordwell ("Eddie the Happy Editor")
Film Fun was a British celebrity comicscomic book that ran from (issues dates) 17 January 1920 to 15 September 1962, when it merged with Buster, a total of 2,225 issues. There were also annuals in the forties and fifties. As the title suggests, the comic mainly featured comic strip versions of people from films from the 1920s to the 1960s.
Publication history
Film Fun was launched by Amalgamated Press (they would later release similar titles like Radio Fun, Sports Fun, and TV Fun). Pre-war circulation at its peak was around 800,000 copies per week.[1]
The title was renamed Film Fun and Thrills in 1959 (when Amalgamated Press was bought by the Mirror Group; later known as IPC). In 1962, sales of Film Fun dropped below 125,000 a week, prompting IPC to merge the comic with Buster.
Still for the American film Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves with Ali Baba (George Stone) being asked by his rich brother the secret of the cave, from pages 16 and 17 of the February 1919 Film Fun