Thursday 4 October 2018

October 4th, 1978 - Marvel UK, 40 years ago this week.

This week of 1978 wasn't very noteworthy but I do see that You're the One That I Want  by Hylda Baker and Arthur Mullard was higher on the British singles chart than the Olivia Newton-John and John Travolta original, proving once and for all that it was the definitive and finest version.

And what of the output of Marvel UK in those seven days? Could it match those sky-high standards?

Star Wars Weekly #35

Frankly, despite the cover's demands, I cannot tell you who the space survivor is.

In fact, I can furnish no information at all about the contents of this week's issue but I would assume Star-Lord and Seeker 3000 are still present as the back-up strips.

I do know that the back cover's dominated by a very badly drawn ad for a, "Force Beam," which is clearly a lightsabre rip-off powered by two U2 batteries and available for £2.95.

I do not have a clue what U2 batteries are but £2.95 for a lightsabre sounds like a bargain and a half. Luke Skywalker, eat your heart out.



Savage Sword of Conan #12

This month's lead tale The Abode of the Damned is claimed to be a Robert E Howard tale but I can't claim to have ever heard of it. Does this mean it's a non-Conan story that someone like Rascally Roy Thomas has converted to a Conan story, or am I just displaying an egregious gap in my knowledge?

Mighty World of Marvel #314, the Hulk and Doc Samson

My knowledge of this issue is highly limited but I do know the Hulk's undergoing a good old dose of psycho-therapy at the hands of Doc Samson.

I know, it's amazing how I managed to deduce that just from looking at the cover. I must be some sort of Sherlock Holmes.

Rampage Monthly #4, the Incredible Hulk, crucified, jim starlin cover

Hooray! I have both this and the American original from which the lead strip's reprinted.

If I remember rightly, the Hulk teams up with a wizard to battle an evil witch in a tale drawn by Jim Starlin and Alex Niño, which has to be one of the dreamiest of dream combinations you could ever get in a comic.

Sadly, I can recall nothing of the back-up strips. We may have reached that run of Defenders stories which find the Valkyrie in prison but I cannot guarantee it.

Super Spider-Man #295, Dracula

It's one of the most disappointing comic book tales of my youth. Who wouldn't want to see Spider-Man square up against the lord of all vampires?

Marvel, apparently. From what I can recall, Spider-Man and Dracula never actually meet in the tale and, although drawn by my favourite Spidey artist Ross Andru, it's inked by Dashing Don Heck who I must confess is not my favourite inker of all time.

As for the rest of this issue's contents, I have little to reveal but I do know that, unusually for a Marvel UK weekly, the back cover features the last page of the issue's final strip, which is that week's Thor tale. On that page, Galactus dramatically decides that it is time for him to once more visit the Earth!


25 comments:

dangermash aka The Artistic Actuary said...

That Spider-Man issue was especially disappointing as the Dracula story had already appeared in a hard back U.K. annual dated 1976. Does that mean it came out Christmas 1975 or 1976? I can’t remember.

Steve W. said...

If it was cover-dated 1976, it would have likely come out in autumn 1975.

Anonymous said...

Completely agree with you on the artwork for that Hulk story, Steve - Alex Nino really added something special to Jim Starlin's pencils. Judo Jimbo must have thought so too, because he tried to emulate Nino's approach in his (then) next work Darklon the Mystic.

Pretty sure one of the back-up features in that issue of Super Spider-man was the Avengers, up against Kang in the old west.

-sean

TC said...

"The Abode of the Damned" was adapted from "The Country of the Knife," a non-Conan story by Robert E. Howard that was originally published in a pulp magazine in 1935 or '36. The original story was one of a series about Francis Gordon, aka El Borak, a soldier of fortune from Texas who had adventures in Afghanistan.

The El Borak series was usually straight adventure without a supernatural element, but the Savage Sword version has Conan encountering "beings from beyond."

Steve W. said...

Sean, you're right. The issue before featured the Avengers getting ready to tackle Kang in the Wild West, so, presumably, this one will have featured the next part of that saga.

TC, thanks for the REH info. It's nice to know I hadn't totally missed out on the existence of a Conan story.

Sort Of The Atom said...

I always thought Doc Samson was cool, and I'm pretty sure that issue is the one where he hooks Hulk up to a doohickey that takes them through Barber's childhood. I remember baby Bruce burning his hand, and Hulking out. The same when they go back to his high school days and Bruce gets bawled out by a teacher!

Sort Of The Atom said...

Banner not Barber

Timothy Field said...

That Rampage cover is one of my all-time favourites, the painted covers were a real treat compared to the stuff we were used to on the newsagent shelves.

Timothy Field said...

Also, by a strange quirk of fate, I happened to look at that very same Star Wars issue this very week. I too was struck by Marvel's wildly optimistic faith in my ability to remember the storyline inside.

Killdumpster said...

Damnit, Steve.

You're so quick and I was so busy, I missed the lucky bag.

Killdumpster said...

I don't know if Marvel was apprehensive about introducing Dracula into the universe, but maybe the Spidey tale was an experiment.

I know about feeling gyped. I bought Giant-Sized #1 and was more than P.O'd.

Killdumpster said...

I don't know if guys ever got to read Archie Vs The Punisher, but that book was more fun than Spider-Man and Dracula.

I know with the "relaxed" Comics Code guidelines Marvel was testing the waters. Luckily that gave us Morbius, Ghost Rider, and Werewolf By Night.

I wish Werewolf would have been more violent, less supervillian heavy. Just straight up horror.

Killdumpster said...

I seem to remember that Dr.Strange might have cleansed the Marvel universe of vampires at one time.

That was another problem I had with the whole vampire thing. Why didn't the heroes (and I'm sure some villains) concentrate some energy to eliminate this scourge?

I could see Dr.Doom trying to exploit it to his own ends. I don't know if that was ever a storyline.

I do know the Silver Surfer fought Dracula. I couldn't wait to go home to read it. The Surfer wimped out, in my opinion. The whole "Drac's preger wife" storyline was annoying.

He's literally DEAD! UNDEAD IS KINDA DEAD! The way they increase they're population is by INFECTION!!

I'd have to take Viagra, just to think about taking Viagra! Lol.

I never thought a vampire would have the juice to spawn a "live" baby. I would think if nothing,Drac would be blasting dead dust.

Anyone agree?

Anonymous said...

Steve

U2 batteries are the big round ones, tradditionally used in torches. Not sure about the influence on the group.

I think the main figure on the cover of Star Wars has a touch of Steranko about it.

DW

Anonymous said...

IIRC, Dracula and Spider-Man did meet, sort of. At the end of the story, Peter Parker accidentally bumped into Drac while he was in his civvies. Drac yelled something like "Watch where you're walking, cretin!" figuring Peter was just Joe Blow (or Joe Bloke).
Pete probably thought, "Wow, that's some far-out old dude in a real bad mood. Bummer."
Apparently his Spider-sense wasn't working that night.
Or maybe he thought, "Geez, they're right. That Batman is a real prick."

M.P.

TC said...

Never heard of U2 batteries before today. I've heard different explanations for the Irish rock band's name. A German submarine, the American spy aircraft, and a sort of rebus for inclusivity: "You, too."

Steve W. said...

KD and DW, thanks for the battery info. I must admit that all the ones of that size that I've ever seen have merely referred to themselves as "D" batteries.

Son of the Atom, it did always depress me the lack of respect Doc Samson got from the writers. He seemed to be an abject failure in everything he did.

Timothy, it is striking just how forgettable Marvel's Star War stories were.

MP, I couldn't help feeling that having Parker and Drac bumping into each other like that was just a cop-out, in order to try and get away with claiming the story was an encounter between Spidey and Dracula. Somehow, it made it all feel more of a swizz.

KD, I'm pretty sure Dracula was meant to not be able to have children but him getting Domini pregnant was depicted as some kind of inverse miracle that Dracula couldn't understand and was vaguely perturbed by.

Anonymous said...

I knew "Abode Of The Damned" couldn't be a Conan tale because it doesn't appear in my "Complete Chronicles Of Conan - Centenary Edition" book.
But Robert E. Howard wrote zillions of stories for magazines featuring characters like El Borak, Bran Mak Morn and Sailor Steve Costigan so there was never a problem finding something that could be adapted into a Conan tale.

Killdumpster said...

MP-

I agree with you. Partner's spider-sense probably should have went into overdrive.

Killdumpster said...

Excuse me, "Parker's". Spellchecker, grumble grumble.

Killdumpster said...

Yeah, Steve.

I would think being turned into a vampire would be the next best thing to getting a vasectomy. Lol

Killdumpster said...

Maybe the out on the Spidey-sense was that Drac wasn't going to attack him.

Still, you'd think that a being like that just EMINATES EVIL would set it off.

Heck, he's the "Prince of Darkness", at least Hammer-wise.

Killdumpster said...

As far as the Avengers in the wild West, storyline, I thought it was cool for an issue or two, with Rawhide Kid & "Phantom or Night Rider" ( I grew up with him being "Ghost Rider" and saw no real problem him being reffered to as such),but Two-Gun was always my least favorite of that genre.

Was that the same plot that Mockingbird let Phantom/Night/Ghost Rider die?

Guys, I really can't remember for certain. Ugh. The glories of senility.

I do remember Hawkeye was stuck with Two-Gun in present day time for awhile. Poor guy. Threw over for a robot, then saddled with an antique.

If I was him, I would've come up with an arrow that could harness the power of Zzax when he fought him w/the Hulk.
Saved it for when I couldn't take it anymore.

Then just fire the thing into Avengers Mansion and scream "HOW DO YOU LIKE ME NOW!!!"

That would make the Ant-Man attack by Ultron seem like a tea & biscuit party.

"I got your west-coast RIGHT HERE!!!"

Remember, he started as a villain. Maybe pushed to far.... Who knows?

Steve W. said...

I don't think that was the storyline in which Mockingbird let Phantom/Night/Ghost Rider die but I read it all a long time ago, so I could be wrong.

Killdumpster said...

Now that I think about it, I don't think Mockingbird was around for that one.

I'm getting my Avengers/cowboys stories confused.