"Steve!" I hear you cry. "What have you been reading lately and when are you going to review it?"
Well, I've been reading quite a lot lately - and I'm going to be reviewing almost none of it.
This isn't because a strange new wave of apathy has swept across my living room. It's because most of the comics I've read lately, I don't have anything to say about that I've not said about other issues in their respective series.
For instance, much as I love Charlton's Midnight Tales, I can't think of anything to say about issues #5 and #12 that I didn't say in my reviews of issues #8 and #9.
Therefore, in the absence of fresh new opinions, I'm going to give you a quick round-up of what I've been looking at.
It's the second part of the Red Rajah saga, as the girl Defenders take on the boy Defenders and make a better job of it than the boys ever did.
Don McGregor's Panther's Rage kicks off with T'Challa returning to Wakanda, only to find everyone's a bit fed-up of him.
Jack Kirby's short-lived take on the Avenger gives us men turning into monsters, as the Avenger gains a new sidekick and strikes a blow for racial equality in the pulp era.
It's like a cross between The Man Who Fell To Earth and Whistle Down The Wind, as Warlock arrives on Counter-Earth and promptly gains a bunch of disciples.
Gil Kane's art's fabby but Roy Thomas lays on the religious allegory so hard it's like being run over by a copy of the Bible.
It's more winningly quirky pleasantness from easily my favourite Charlton series, as Professor Coffin and Arachne have a Hellbound diversion.
And they're back again.
Reading The Shadow was the first time I ever liked Frank Robbins' artwork.
Here, the scarf-tastic super-doer finds himself mixed up in showbiz shenanigans.
With Frank Robbins still in charge, the Shadow's up against a smuggling operation at Niagara.
It's the Shadow vs the Avenger in the battle to see whose comic's going to be cancelled first. While the strip's still here, there's plenty of lovely E R Cruz artwork to savour.
More E R Cruz on the inside and a classic cover by Mike Kaluta on the outside, as the Shadow finds himself up against a town full of Satanists.
Or does he?
One of my Kung Fu faves, as Shang-Chi finds himself up against his best friend Midnight, from the era when Jim Starlin was still on the art and proving there was more to his repertoire than being Cosmic.
I was reading the whole "Panther's Rage" saga only recently in a Marvel Essentials volume. I'd mostly ignored it when it was in Planet Of The Apes in 1975/76 but I'm not sure why, the striking 'splash' pages were unforgettable though.
ReplyDeletePanther's Rage made a huge impact on me when it was printed in Planet of the Apes. I was most disappointed when it finally came to an end.
ReplyDeleteI recognize a couple of these covers, but my eyeballs perked up right away when I saw that issue of the Defenders! One of my favorite comics of all time! Fantastic art and writing on the inside, and a classic Kirby cover on the outside.
ReplyDeleteThat Shadow cover by Kaluta is a beauty - not that the other ones are bad, but if ever an artist and character were made for each other it was Michael Kaluta and The Shadow. It's just a shame that he wasn't able to draw more of the stories themselves.
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