This is it! After weeks of anticipation, the most momentous moment in the history of human history has happened. We've finally reached the week, forty years ago, when, thanks to Marvel UK, it happened.
But what is it? And will it kill us?
Read on to find out.
But first, let's see what was happening on the pop charts at the time.
The big news on the singles front was that the Buggles' Video Killed the Radio Star hit the Number One spot in Britain by dethroning the Police's Message in a Bottle.
If that was bad news for the reggae-tinged trio, things were going far better for them on the album chart, where their brand new album Regatta De Blanc smashed straight in at Number One and knocked Blondie flying from that perch, in the process.
Over on TV, this afternoon of that week, Birmingham's greatest cultural gift to mankind - Pebble Mill at One - gave us the spectacle of Are You Being Served's Mollie Sugden preparing her favourite dish, in the foyer. There's something about that combination of words which sounds plain bizarre.
Meanwhile, that evening, BBC One was showing the Star Trek episode The Apple which I'm fairly certain is the one in which David Soul and his people are living in happiness, contentment and harmony until Captain Kirk comes along and blows up their god, leaving them with no food, water, social structure, means of governance or even basic survival skills, and then flies off, abandoning them to sort out the total mess he's made of their world, while congratulating himself on another job well done.
I don't have a clue what's happening in the main strip or why everyone's looking so startled but I do know, "Sister Domina," sounds a bit saucy. Has kinkiness finally entered the world of George Lucas?
In The Guardians of the Galaxy strip, the Silver Surfer finds himself tackling the Badoon as they try to conquer modern day New York.
You guessed, it's the story which, confronted by the Dreaded Deadline Doom, recycles an old Surfer tale, with a few panels of the Guardians tacked on at the beginning and end of it.
I have no news of either Star-Lord or the Watcher.
Ant-Man's still trapped at ant size.
But it's not all disaster because, while he's running around with his dog, achieving very little, Spider-Man's sorting out the bad guys, elsewhere and then provides Hank with a cure for his current rabies problem.
However, that doesn't solve his problem of being ant-sized.
The Eternals are still fighting the Hulkbot.
We get more of Captain Britain's origin.
The real Hulk is being reunited with Egghead's niece Trish Starr.
And we get the epic Nick Fury moment where the Hate-Monger accidentally steps out of an airlock and into space.
Well, they do say hate is blind.
Hold on to your TARDIS, time and space lovers because we've finally reached it - this week's big announcement, as Doctor Who Weekly hits the racks for the first time and a whole planet celebrates!
I say that but I don't remember ever seeing a single issue of it for sale anywhere. But it's still going strong, as Doctor Who Magazine, forty years later, so someone must have been able to buy it.
As for the contents, we get all the stuff you'd expect from such a comic, including Doctor Who strips, photos and features but we also get a Chris Claremont written adaptation of War of the Worlds.
War of the Worlds? If this had been the mid 1970s, Marvel UK would have redrawn the Martians as Daleks, the human villains as Sea-Devils, the tripods as Drashigs and renamed the protagonist, "Monstermurderer."
Personally, I would have paid good money to read the adventures of Derek Monstermurderer.
Among the Doctor Who stuff is a Dave Gibbons drawn tale of what seem to be robots from space, in Roman armour, invading modern day Britain.
I do believe that's the resuscitated John Jameson who's kidnapping Jonah, thanks to the machinations of some evil scientist or other.
And when John Jameson's around, we all know that can only lead to trouble of the furry kind.
What else happens in this book?
I have no idea.
Thursday, 17 October 2019
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37 comments:
The Buggles knocking out Sting & his bunch is excellent. I rather listen to a Throbbing Gristle box set than one Police song.
The Badoon was my least favorite villain alien race.
In the Hulk book, was that Ant-Man story the one originally printed in Marvel Feature? That was my favorite Hank Pym story.
Spraking of Hulk, I really need to dig up my silver-age/bronze books. Hope I still have the Eternals vs Hulk-bot run.
I haven't been able to do any extended reading since my injury. I experienced something called "convergence insufficiency". My eyes weren't working in unison. Basically, I was mutating into Marty Feldman.
Meant "Speaking of Hulk". Don't know where that came from.
Anyone else have trouble connecting the music of this period with these comics? I would have placed Doctor Who comic way later than the Buggles single.
You couldn't find Dr Who Weekly in Sheffield Steve? I recall it being easy to find, but I suppose distribution was often variable.
Considering this is a blog (mainly) about Marvel Comics and you used to do a blog about Dr Who it is something of a mystery why you've haven't blogged about a Marvel Dr Who comic before.
I was hoping for a review, if not of the first issue then something more general... Have you never read DWW at all?
-sean
Sean, apart from one page reprinted in a book about how to draw comics, I've never read a single page of Doctor Who Weekly.
Tim, I am surprised Video Killed the Radio Star was a hit so late in the year. I always remember it as having been out in the spring.
Killdumpster, the Ant-Man tale was indeed from Marvel Feature #4.
Doctor Who weekly was reasonably visible in newsagents around Leigh-on-sea. I passed as the Dez revolution (and likely starting senior school) had turned me off comics for a while. With hindsight, and given that Star Wars had, reputedly, saved Marvel it was one of Dez's better initiatives. Everyone likes a TV tie in.
DW
Was it Silver Surfer #2 in which he fights Badoons?
I can't dig it out of my long boxes to confirm and every time I do open up my formerly near-mint SS#2 it just gets even more dinged up.
The purple cover just seems to bruise in front of your eyes. And being a bigger $.25 issue, the spine just wants to crack.
It was indeed in issue #2 that the Surfer fought the Badoon.
Full marks this week Steve
- you're right about The Apple. A quite criminal example of breaking the prime directive that should have resulted in a call martial.
- and it's John Jameson under the bandages. When they come off at the end of the issue he's the Man Wolf but I don't know when he changed and whether he was a wolf all along.
I do remember Video Killed The Radio Star as an autumn hit. I went with some school mates to a midweek Arsenal vs Magdeburg match in one of the European competitions. I remember Willie Young scoring a screamer but, more relevantly, I remember it being cold and dark (autumn) and having some annoying kids behind us singing that song all through the match.
By the way, Steve, this week is the 5th anniversary of "Marvel UK 40 Years Ago This Week". In 2014 you began this feature with the week in October 1974 when Dracula Lives and Planet Of The Apes were launched.
Colin-
One of the reasons there wouldn't be an American sci-fi series on the BBC could be that most shows that have come out over the last few years are garbage.
Star Trek Discovery, a current series, is absolute drek.
I'm so put-off from today's TV programs I've been rewatching older stuff, like The Invaders & LEXX.
Dont know if you UK folks ever experienced LEXX. Excellent show. Kinda like Farscape meets Monty Python vs Lost In Space.
As I've mentioned before, that Ant-Man storyline was a favorite of mine. Considered myself fortunate to be able to get all the issues on that story arc.
Then again, I was probably the only kid in my area that would follow ANT-MAN! Lol!
Decent set of villains, especially the mutated Wasp. Jan did a kick-ass job torturing & brutalizing Hank. Definite pay-back for the infamous bitchslap he gave her.
I don't recall if that was brought up in the story, though. I can imagine it might have at least been in her subconscious while she was in killer-wasp mode.
"Woman scorned" on overdrive.
It's weird, Colin. I've always assumed I started the feature with Mighty World of Marvel #1, but it turns out you're correct.
KD, I think LEXX got shown on British TV but I think it may have been tucked away on Channel 5, back in the days when no one could actually watch Channel 5 because of its infamously weak signal.
Dangermash, thanks for the Star Trek, Man-Wolf and Buggles info.
DW, it was definitely a shrewd move on Dez's part to snap up the Doctor Who rights.
Steve-
I know you are a busy boy, but if you've never seen LEXX, it's a BIG recommend. The first season was technically 4 made-for-tv movies. If you watch the first one, you might get the bug for it.
Pluto TV here in the States has a binge watch mode that features classic DR. WHO. I love cheesy stuff, but it's taking an effort to acquire a taste for it.
I can imagine how Stan Lee came up with the Badoon.
"Big John, in this issue have the Surfer fight some space guys. Whadda they look like? Uh...make em' lizard guys! Nuff said!"
This was known as "The Marvel Method".
M.P.
KD! For real you are watching the Invaders??? Mrs. Charlie and Me are big time "Invasion of the Body Snatchers" fans and I figured that series is similar?
But how are you watching it, my man? I've been to Amazon, ebay, the locat library and can't find the series? It ran for like 2-3 years?
Fascinating!
“Video killed the radio star” is yet another example of something big on one side of the ocean and not on the other (re: The Go Gos).
As usual, SDC inspired my curiosity and I researched VKTRS and learned that, while peaking at #1 in the UK and France and Europe, it only hit 40 in the USA. Given it’s a catchy tune, I knew of the song but never understood why my French wife would happily (Actually Joyously!) start belting it out when we heard it on the radio. NOW I KNOW!!!
Also, it was apparently the first video on MTV USA? Seems appropriate.
So what was # 1 in the USA that week? Near as I can tell, my homey Michael Jackson was #1 with “Don’t Stop Til You Get Enough.”
Gary, Indiana… If only we had had free bus service like Sheffield, UK perhaps we would have made a comeback. Especially if MJ (and Motown) hadn’t bolted for Los Angeles. Part of my heart withered and died with that city.
Is the Invaders that one where the aliens looked exactly like people except they couldn't move their little fingers or something?
Surely not - why would anyone watch that now?
Anyway, its a bit odd Marvel UK went with that Surfer story as part of their Guardians reprint - why re-run a dreaded deadline doom fill-in when theres no dreaded deadline doom to fill?
I suppose its all content, and put off eventually having to find something else to fill pages for a few weeks.
-sean
I liked the '70's "Invasion of the Body Snatchers."
Leonard Nimoy was great in that. First a soulless mass-psychologist (like Dr. Phil) and then a soulless alien. Was there much difference?
And don't forget, the dog with a human head. Yikes!
That gave me nightmares as a kid. I had a paper route, okay?
M.P.
That Doctor Who comic looks like an attempt to drag readers away from Look-In. These are sad times.
I bought that original issue of the GOTG in my local newsagent, circa 1976 and was disappointed that it was largely a reprint of a story I'd read in UK weekly The Super-Heroes. It does seem odd to reprint a fill-in but it would inform more casual readers about the original set-up by Drake and Colan:"Badoon Conquer Earth". Blame them for the lizard-men. They also invaded Arkon's world- blame Chris Claremont for that.
Big Finish released an audio version of the Iron Legion from DWW last summer. Very amusing if you like that Douglas Adams DW era ( and why not?).
I am really enjoying Star Trek Discovery on dvd. It looks all misty and pixelated on my elderly dvd player. I don't like DS9 or much of Next Gen so I'm probably out of step with Trek tastes.
My experience with pop music and comics is the reverse of other posters. I can't believe such old, hokey comics were released at the same time as such memorable singles.
Charlie-
Yeah, I'm binge watching The Invaders. When it came out on dvd, I snatched it up. It was like a new show to me, as I wasn't able to watch it because it was on during a western or detective show that my dad liked.
My father would let me change the channel between shows.
I only ever got to see the end credits, with the still of the flying saucer.
MP-
The remake of The Invasion Of The Snatchers, with Nimoy & Sutherland, is great! The human-faced dog gave my sister nightmares for a week!!
That's going to be on my to-watch pile for tonight!
Think I'll double bill that with The Thing remake, with Kurt Russell.
Geeze Sean - How about a spoiler warning? I been waiting 50 years to see a show I never heard of until a few days ago at the 1960s blog on Dell comics and got aaaallllll excited and then, poof...
Anyone - any idea how I can see decent film quality of the New People, Journey into the Unkown, and the Invaders, all from late 60s? JitU was a UK show.
Anyone - I just had this weird recollection of the Invaders being on a Lunch Box as a kid? I don't know if you UK chaps had the metal lunch boxes for school. (I had Land of the Giants... don't recall my others.)
I believe I saw one of my classmates having an Invaders metal lunchbox, Charlie.
Got to agree with Dougie about hokey old comics and memorable singles. The end of the 70s was a period of change, and old Guardians of the Galaxy comics from even a few years earlier - let alone 60s Ant-Man reprints - seemed pretty old fashioned compared to the latest Throbbing Gristle record.
Or even 2000AD, which was much more in tune with the times. The good thing about Dr Who Weekly - despite the boring cover - was that the main comic strip was by the mighty writing team of Pat Mills and John Wagner, with artwork by Dave Gibbons.
I wasn't so interested in the tv programme as I had been a few years earlier, but it seemed that stories like the Iron Legion weren't entirely in keeping with it; yet what I've seen of 21st century Who - mainly the first couple of seasons - it seemed influenced by the comic, and maybe something of 2000AD's general tone...?
-sean
Yeah, Charlie, The Invaders is a great show. A Guy gets lost taking a shortcut through the wilderness at night and spots a saucer landing.
He spends the show trying to convince folks about the invasion, and fighting the aliens who have taken human form.
You can tell they are aliens because their pinky fingers don't work, lol!
It was a Quinn Martin production (the guy that produced "FBI"). It only lasted about 1 & 1/2 seasons. Heard it was a big show in France.
Oh come on Charlie - that thing about the fingers is the basic premise of the Invaders.
-sean
Sean, Throbbing Gristle is my go-to when I use "music as a weapon" on a pub's jukebox, after suffering for hours through relentless, tired C&W.
I wish they would've had Jan's killer-wasp mutation reaccure from time to time. Especially during human-size.
She would've kicked a lot of butt.
HI Sean... OK, well if it's a basic premise, then it's really not going to be "something to be revealed" at the season finale.
I just wish I could find some viewable copies of those shows.
FWIW - there is a Facebook page (maybe "Silver Age Comics?") and it keeps showing Dell comics of old TV shows from the 50 and 60s as that was a niche Dell had. Seems like there were a lot of cool shows back then that I simple never heard of, being too young, and also are not being rebroadcast on MeTV or such.
IN retrospect, I would think I would have also had a Banana Splits Lunchbox...
Charlie finally came up with an analogy... watching Who was the equivalent of seeing Harpo Marx in a Mission Impossible TV show. It just never really worked over here.
But with Jodie Whittaker it's OK; she's eye candy if nothing else. Charlie never expects to take femmes seriously anyhow, so it all works.
Charlie was in mourning this past week with the passing of Julia. Julia lunch boxes which are fetching $25 on ebay today. Charlie did take her seriously back in the day, as well as Billy Jack.
You're not missing much with the Invaders Charlie. but I suppose you'll have to find that out for yourself at some point.
Btw, as you're mad for a bit of Steranko I came across something about Jaunty Jim which might interest you -
*SPOILER ALERT*
www.bleedingcool.com/2016/11/08/jim-steranko-wants-vote-trump/
Hail Hydra!
-sean
Sean - you rock dude!
All- You will really enjoy this 13 minute Youtube clip of french artist Druillet, Hogarth, and John Buscema all drawing side by side on the same canvas!!!
I am serious! Everyone should check it out! (Sean found it on youtube! Much obliged Sean!!!)
I was gobsmackered at what Buscema's choice...! Why not Conan (or had he not drawn Conan yet at Marvel), since he hated super heroes?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8182YrAbfF4
Best 13 minutes you will spend today!
Sean - Steranko is clearly in the pantheon of the greatest Marvel comic artists, no doubt about it.
One could argue his Hulk Annual #2 is one of the greatest Marvel Covers of all time, as were his Cap America and Nick Fury.
And, his "History of Comics" is must reading, IMHO. Truly. If I had the change I'd buy each of you copies of both volumes off ebay for like $20 each.
Perhaps JS should stick to comics, lol.
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