Tuesday 3 November 2020

The Marvel Lucky Bag - November 1970.

Thanks to Charlie Horse 47 and Killdumpster for their sponsorship of this post, via the magic of Patreon.

***

Dodecahedron.

There's only one reason I know that word.

And that's because it features in the book The Phantom Tollbooth.

But my first introduction to that tale wasn't via the book. It was via the film based on the book.

And that film came out this month in 1970.

However, it wasn't the only cinematic treat that escaped, there and then, because that November also saw the unleashing of Hammer's The Scars of Dracula.

That masterpiece, of course, starred the unlikely duo of singing TV cop Dennis Waterman and children's TV show presenter Jenny Hanley. Somehow, that oddness of casting makes it seem all the more memorable.

Second Doctor Who Patrick Troughton was also in it. Clearly, the film was the gift that kept giving.

I recall that, in it, Drac meets his fate by the same method the werewolf does in the Neal Adams drawn Batman story Moon of the Wolf. Coincidence? Who can know?

When it came to the UK singles chart, November kicked-off with Matthews' Southern Comfort's Woodstock at Number One. However, that was then displaced by Jimi Hendrix's Voodoo Chile, while the month ended with the top spot being held by Dave Edmund's I Hear Your Knocking.

Over on the British album chart, Led Zeppelin III initially held the high ground before being knocked down a peg or two by Bob Dylan's New Morning. But even his Bobness ultimately had to make way, as November ended with Andy Williams' Greatest Hits achieving chart supremacy. 

Amazing Adventures #3, the Inhumans, Mandarin and Black Widow


The Inhumans find themselves up against the power of the Mandarin in what I can't imagine being anything other than a one-sided smackdown, bearing in mind they outnumber him heavily and he's never won a fight against anyone.

The Black Widow's up to something as well, and I don't know what but it seems to involve a man with a bag over his head.


Fear #1, Monstrom

Hooray! We get the launch of yet another Marvel monster mag!

And how better to do so than by giving us the exploits of a fiend who even has a name that's almost, "Monster?"

In the issue's second tale, an alien comes to Earth, to check out whether to invade it. In the end, he decides not to bother and, instead, settles down with a nice Earth girl.

Finally, a criminal discovers a genie and intends to use its powers for his own benefit.


Sgt Fury and his Howling Commandos #81, All-American

I must confess I habitually ignore Sgt Fury's book in this feature but I feel I have to include this issue purely because of that cover.

However, I'm sensing, "The All-American," will turn out to be more trouble than he's worth.


Sub-Mariner #31, Triton, Attuma and Sting Ray

Attuma captures Namor, Triton and Sting-Ray and orders them to fight each other or he'll put the kibosh on Diane Arliss.


Happily, Subby concocts a cunning plan which involves the trio swimming round and round and round in circles.


Where Creatures Roam #3, Thorg

Issue #3 of Where Creatures Roam gives us the tale of Thorg who older readers will remember as Thorr, a villain bearing a noticeable resemblance to the mighty Thor's first foes the Stone Men from Saturn.

In our other tales, we get a man who declares himself to have been the victim of a sorcerer, a man who demands to be saved from the Mole Men and, finally, a man who declares that he lives again.


Where Monsters Dwell #6, Groot

Hooray! Groot's on the loose!

Sadly, there's no sign of any of the other Guardians of the Galaxy and, in this tale, his attempts to abduct an entire town are thwarted by the unleashing of termites.

That's followed by the tale of a scientist, with a time machine, who's unable to distinguish between the past and future, a skill you'd have thought a prerequisite for anyone building a time machine.

Then we have the tale of a sculptor who falls in love with one of his creations and has himself turned into wood.

And, finally, none of a pilot's passengers believe him when he says they've just had a near-miss with a flying saucer.

But what he doesn't know is that one of those passengers is a Martian!

20 comments:

Fantastic Four follower said...

Amazing Adventures was a title I loved,#2 being one of the first comics I ever bought.It is so special to me after all these years.I bought it because the FF were guest stars and I have always believed guest stars in a comic is similar to 50% extra as a marketing ploy!!!!(same amount of pages but I still think it's a bargain!)Issue #3 was a great issue with superb artwork and I always liked the Mandarin.In my opinion Amazing was the better of the 2 split books(Astonishing Tales) but not much in it.The excitement of new comics in 1970 on a spinner rack holding 200 plus new comics remains an incredible memory....Romita Spiderman...Buscema/Romita FF...Trimpe Hulk...Adams DC covers EVERYWHERE...Colan Black Widow,Daredevil...Wally Wood on Dr Doom....Jack Kirby on Inhumans(and to a lesser degree on Ka-zar....plus mysterious ads stating Kirby is coming and not having a clue what to expect...Wondrous times.Please keep up the great work,creating happiness of a simpler time in a world of madness!!!Sounds like a Stan Lee title!!

Steve W. said...

Thanks, FFf. I never had any of those early issues of Amazing Adventures but I read some of the Inhumans stories when they were reprinted in Marvel UK's Titans weekly.

Anonymous said...

The correct title of the Jimi Hendrix record was - is - of course "Voodoo Child (Slight Return)". Not your fault Steve - it was his British record label at the time that got it wrong.

I concur with the estimable Fantastic Four follower about the comics in general (although I do feel obliged to point out that the wider world was pretty mad then too!) and Amazing Adventures specifically. The book seems somehow emblematic of the time, what with Jack Kirby followed by Neal Adams on the Inhumans, and a run of classic Marvel artists on the Black Widow - John Buscema, Gene Colan, and er... Don Heck (ok, two out of three ain't bad).

Iirc, the Widow story in #3 was "relevant", with our commie chick heroine helping out the rebel youth of Spanish Harlem against scumbag landlords. Right on!
Put that together with some Kirby kraziness about ancient civilisations and weapons that can destroy the moon and you can't go wrong.

-sean

Anonymous said...

They did the mash!
They did the monster mash!
Lordy, I love these cornball old Marvel monsters.
How can anybody not like them?
My personal favorite is and will always be Goom.
I first made his acquaintance on a school bus; some kid had a copy of Hulk Annual #5 and generously allowed me to read it with my trembling, sticky fingers.
In that one Goom was busy getting the crap beat out of him by the Hulk, as were Groot, Blip, Diablo, Taboo, and Xemnu the Living Titan.
I felt Goom stood misshapen ugly head and shoulders above others of his ilk, and would indeed be heard from again. He had style, I tell ya.

M.P.




Charlie Horse 47 said...

Is this like the Black Widow's 4-5th appearance? 2x Iron Man TOS, Avengers with Red Guardian, Spidey 86, and now this run?

Man... she gathered up a head of steam and went big time into DD and now she's a movie star?

You don't suppose what did was the proton beam ole Iron Man hit her with when she was teamed up with the faux Crimson Dynamo way back in like TOS 52? Maybe Tony's proton beam had some kind of effect on her?

And though Johnny B did a decent job on her, I still think Gene The Dean and Bill Everett were tops. Check out the sweet pinup Bill did of her in DD 81? Or perhaps Steve can post it?

Anonymous said...

You have to wonder what went through Kirby's head when he got the phone call about the cover for that Hulk annual M.P.
Back at Marvel after DC didn't work out, and some joker gave him Goom, Groot, Xemnu and the rest of 'em to draw a decade and a half or so after he churned out the monster comics...

-sean

Anonymous said...

I dunno, Sean. If it was me, I would be inspired. But I'm a weird person.
He did figure out a way to get all them characters onto one cover. I've seen that approach before.
That comic was great, wasn't it? Particularly the third-person narration.
"Goom is in a lot of trouble."
Indeed he was. The Hulk was about to throw a mountain on him.

M.P.

Charlie Horse 47 said...

MP - it was very common to throw mountains on top of people at Marvel. I mean, Black Widow and (I guess Red Guardian pre- Red Guardian?) in TOS 52 or 53 had a mountain dropped on them. Ole Iron Man rescued them at the last second.

She could not understand why an American would rescue his enemy from certain death.

Was there every any subsequent play between Stark and BW after those TOS issues?

Man she got around! Red Guardian, Hawkeye, Stark, DD... anyone else? Or has she been satiated?

Charlie Horse 47 said...

Anyone else think that cover of Fear looks like it's straight out of the 1940s? Is that an original from 50 years ago or a repro of something earlier (like 20 years)?

By comparison, the Creatures and Monsters covers above look very much 1970.

Anonymous said...

What man could dare try to tame the fiery heart of the Black Widow, Charlie?

I know I couldn't get anywhere with those rich female Russian foreign exchange students in college. They wouldn't give me the time of day.
They were all six feet tall!

M.P.

Anonymous said...

Yeah, that Hulk annual was entertaining M.P., even for someone like me unconvinced by Our Pal Sal.
I wasn't knocking it, or those old monster comics. Len Wein probably came up with the story because as a young reader that old stuff made an impression on him - funnily enough Xemnu was called the Living Hulk on the cover of an old (I think) Journey Into Mystery - in much the same way as, say, Gerber with the Headmen, or Roy Thomas with... well, just about everything he did.

But Kirby wasn't much of a one for looking back at the best of times, and that pre-FF period was a low point for him.
I wonder if he even remembered all those old monsters (just looked it up and that annual cover has an added John Romita credit, suggesting it maybe needed a bit of extra work to finish off).

Btw, commiserations about the vote in South Dakota. If I could I'd buy you a beer to cheer you up.

-sean

Anonymous said...

I did vote, Sean. Thanks to the Electoral College, it has no value.
But I submitted it as a protest vote! Aarghh!
Fight the power!

M.P.

Anonymous said...

Topple Mt Rushmore M.P., that'll show 'em.

-sean

Redartz said...

M.P.- did you ever get a look at "Son of Goom? Seems that story was reprinted in a "Giant Size" book back in the 70s. Great family resemblance.

Oh, and I too voted, although my vote vanished in the red state of Indiana. Alas...

Charlie Horse 47 said...

The hell with that election news... I have just heard on the UK's Talk Sport radio that the UK now has a McDonald's in every country effective today! ONe just opened in the town/county of Okum (?) How about that? Now that's news!

Also, it was 50 years ago today that the Concorde broke Mach 2! Smoking!

Also, I live in the very blue state of Illinois. My vote doesn't count beyond 20 electoral votes either. 500+ times this country has tried to fix that system. 50 years ago Nixon made a big push, with like 70% support of the American people. No dice.

Anonymous said...

Sean - Mount Rushmore - or rather 'Presidents Mountain' - features in that most DC-like of Marvel comics, Squadron Supreme:

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/28000018-squadron-supreme-8


Still on a (U.S.) patriotic theme, robot Bucky (whom you discussed recently) could have been the Ameridroid's sidekick!

Charlie - that McDonalds might be the one proposed for Rutland, in the UK (not the Marvel comics Hallowe'en party Rutland in the U.S., with Tom Fagan!) - that story regularly comes up on the news.

On a completely unrelated topic, has anyone watched the Moon Knight trailers? Some are surprisingly good! I hope they don't ruin it, when it goes into production!

Phillip

Anonymous said...

I have actually read Gruenwald's Squadron Supreme Phillip - its not bad.
Mt Rushmore was also in Marvel's very 70s Marvel Planet of the Apes continuation, with the giant brains in fishtanks.

And it was in the Cursed Earth! Which also included Ronald McDonald and the Burger Wars. Its disturbing how much of Judge Dredd has come true over the years.
Somewhat worryingly, the last president Robert "Bad Bob" Booth is looking quite prescient...

-sean

Anonymous said...

Sean - in terms of prescience, Philip K. Dick's creation, President Ferris F. Fremont (from Dick's novel, 'Radio Free Albemuth') also springs to mind!

Phillip

Anonymous said...

Surely Ferris F. Freemont (FFF=666!) was based on Nixon, Phillip? Although of course that would also make him an anticipation of more recent (and future!) "law and order"/silent majority headcases too...

-sean

Anonymous said...

Sean - yes to both!

Phillip