A mere fortnight ago, all talk on this blog turned towards that legendary film Carry On Screaming.
And now it must turn towards Carry On Spying because, on this night of exactly forty years ago, BBC One was showing that very movie.
To be honest, although I recall liking it, I'm struggling to remember what actually happens in it. I seem to remember Barbara Windsor having a photographic memory, Hattie Jacques being an hermaphroditic arch-villain and Lance Percival basically playing the role Kenneth Williams normally did. But what was the actual story? Was a fez involved? Was a conveyor belt covered in dinner plates involved?
I know not.
What else don't I know?
What Marvel UK was up to in the seven day period that led up to that very night.
But, you know what?
I'm about to find out...
Captain Britain there, in danger of being the first super-hero ever to be killed by a three foot fall.
But the main claim to fame of this issue is that it features the Nick Fury story whose Jim Steranko cover features him floating around in a space suit. Surely it has to be Fury's most iconic cover ever.
Is that cover also reproduced in this issue?
Sadly, I cannot answer that but I certainly hope so.
In other news, the FF are still fighting the Mole Man, Tyrannus and Kala, while Spider-Man's teaming up with Captain America against the Grey Gargoyle.
At last! Because I demanded it! The origin of the Hulk!
In all honesty, I can't actually remember demanding it. Plus I'm not sure in what way it qualifies as, "At last!" I could have sworn his origin had been tackled already before this point. But I must have imagined that, as no comic book blurb would ever lie to me.
Regardless, this would appear to the story in which Herb Trimpe returns and Jade Jaws tackles Kronus: Master of Time.
Meanwhile, Gene Colan's Daredevil is up against the Scorpion, and Captain Marvel's doing something on the Moon. Could this be part of the story that features the Lunatic Legion? Then again, could it be the start of the saga of the trial of the Watcher?
It's the start of two brave new eras in one comic.
First of all, the book reverts to the portrait format it started off with and, secondly, we get the start of the era in which the main strip alternates between Amazing Spider-Man and Spectacular Spider-Man stories. And what better way to celebrate such a move than by giving us the return of the epic menace of The Tarantula?
I'm trying to recall which other strips survived the comic's format change. I'm pretty sure one of them was Thor. Were Captain America and the Avengers likewise spared the axe?
I'm willing to go out on a limb and bet good money that they don't succeed in capturing Hitler.
Stargirl Reviews: Season 3, Episode 8
4 hours ago