Thanks to Charlie Horse 47 and Killdumpster for their sponsorship of this post, via the magic of Patreon.
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Wait!
What's that?
It's the sound of someone knocking!
And I'm not the only one who can hear it - because Dave Edmunds can too!
And it's lucky he can because, thanks to that sound, in December 1970, he grabbed the Number One spot on the UK singles chart, and he heard it so clearly that his was the only record that topped the hit parade that month.
That record was, of course, I Hear You Knocking, in case I was being a bit vague there.
Over on the UK album chart, Led Zeppelin started the month at Number One with Led Zeppelin III but then had to make way for the power and majesty of Andy Williams and his Greatest Hits package.
Led Zeppelin and Andy Williams. It's a rivalry as old as time itself.
The cinemas, that month, saw the release of a whole slew of movies, possibly the best-known being Little Big Man, Love Story and The Aristocats. I must confess I've only seen two of those movies and neither of them is Love Story.
Thanks to Gerry Conway and Barry Smith, Ka-Zar and Garokk the petrified man return to the Savage Land to discover Zaladane's making a bid to take the place over.
Not only has she destroyed Tongah's village but, now, she's attacking the domain of the Lizard-Men!
And Ka-Zar's not the only one with a battle on his hands because Dr Doom has to defeat not one but two threats to his throne, in the Faceless One and the Doomsman.
I remember the Faceless One being the villain with a multi-legged goldfish bowl where his head should be. The Doomsman is, of course, just a man wearing bandages.
Also reprinted from that annual is a whole mountainload of pin-ups of the FF's deadliest foes.
Sadly, Jack Kirby's retelling of Spider-Man's first encounter with the FF, which was in that first annual, is not also replicated here.
This one sees a reprint of Daredevil's first visit to the Savage Land, a visit which leaves him blind and at the mercy of a caveman, as the Plunderer makes his not-totally-overwhelming debut.
On top of that, we get the Angel in solo action. I don't know what happens in the story but it does appear to be an all-new adventure for the pinioned powerhouse.
Then we get the wallcrawler's first meeting with the Vulture when the winged wrongdoer keeps helping himself to other people's money.
There's then a limited villain's gallery before A Guy Named Joe shows up for Steve Ditko's final Spider-Man tale.
Can Namor defeat the azure aggravationist? And just what is the stunning secret she shares with her air-breathing twin sister?
In it, the mutants blunder into the Avengers, in their attempts to stop Lucifer who's got his hands on an atom bomb that's wired to explode if his heartbeat doesn't do whatever it is his heartbeat's supposed to do.
The book's second half is dedicated to the Stranger's first arrival on Earth and his subsequent abduction of Magneto and the Toad.
Anyone tried listening to Andy Williams Greatest hits backwards? I wonder if there were any messages from Satan...
ReplyDeleteIt doesn't look much like late 1970 here Steve, but then you seem to have gone for mostly reprints this time.
Of the new stuff, only Ka-Zar going a bit sword and sorcery with Forest Gate's finest, Barry Smith in Astonishing Tales looks like being interesting. And even if its not exactly one of Marvel's best, the Dr Doom story is at least drawn by Wally Wood.
Btw, the Faceless One returned in that Hero For Hire story when Luke Cage had to go to Latveria to get paid.
-sean
Ok... this is rocking Charlie's world. The House of Ideas released annuals in the winter? Charlie thought it was strictly a summer love affair.
ReplyDeleteCharlie fondly remembers reading the X-Men #1 in the middle of summer at the age of 9 or 10.
ReplyDeleteCharlie was with his grandfather at some German guy's house, hunkered down reading how Cyclops exhibited supreme control over his eye beam to disarm a bomb, while grandpa toiled outside building Alfred's swimming pool.
MP - Charlie can't believe you used the "r" word in the last blog. Some SJWs are going to kick your butafuco into next week buddy! Charlie thinks you should take refuge in some god-forsaken place like North Dakota... or Idaho even.
ReplyDeleteThe Barry Smith Ka-Zar story from Astonishing Tales was later printed in my first ever Marvel comic, Planet Of The Apes #5 dated November 23rd 1974.
ReplyDeleteAbout 10 years ago I was reading the Radio Times and they featured an interview with Andy Williams in which he was ranting about Obama being a socialist who was destroying America.
If only Williams could have lived long enough to see how great America is again now, after four years of the next fella Colin.
ReplyDeleteAlthough perhaps he'd be disappointed, as its starting to look like Hugo Chavez' plot from beyond the grave to steal the 2020 election for the radical Marxist SJWs may be working...
-sean
Quick question... b/c Charlie's memory meds ain't working...
ReplyDeleteCharlie thought Joe, in "another guy named Joe" from the Spidey annual was the Joe Chill who shot Uncle Ben?
But Charlie sees he is in a super-duper outfit. Did he go "full-villain" at some point or is this a Doom-bot or a dream or... is Charlie in need of better meds?
Steve, et al... I am awaiting y'alls comments on USA New Wave at Back in the Bronze Age. Surely you got something to say!!!
ReplyDeleteSteve - if you are going to review war comics, I recommend, from OK to best, as follows.
ReplyDeleteMarvel - actually more like swashbuckling, not war
DC - the last round in the pistol takes out a Tiger Tank every time
Charlton - to the point, more realistic, irony
EC - Two Fisted War Tales - lots of irony, great art, realistic-ish
Sad Sack - Thought not set in wartime, MP, I (others?) can attest that the Sack's non-stop cluster f#cks are quite realistic of the Army.
Charlie, I'm formulating my thoughts on American New Wave, even as I type. I shall post them on BitBA, later this very evening.
ReplyDeleteThe Joe in A Guy Named Joe is not the character who killed Uncle Ben.
Sean and Colin, I think I always get Andy Williams mixed-up with Val Doonican.
A guy named Joe was a really good story with some great Ditko art. The character was a failed boxer that had a chemical accident that gave him super powers but sent him a bit loopy. I think he re appeared years later in a couple of tales the last one as a villian in a Captain America comic I used to have but can remember very little about ( was just surprised the character was still being used when I saw it) .
ReplyDeleteAndy Williams... he may have been one of the singing dudes with a TV show like Dinah Shore and Don Ho and Sunny and Cher and Tony Orlando and... it's kind of funny there are no singers hosting shows anymore like that?
ReplyDeleteBut Charlie only knows him b/c there was an annual Xmas record of hits by famous folks by Goodyear and Columbia and old Andy seemed to be on them.
As long as we are talking about TV - Charlie is digging the "decades" channel with its Dick Cavett reruns. Not so long ago it was John Lennon, then the cool cats who found Dracula's castle, and last night Muhammed Ali. It wasn't until Charlie aged that he thought of how courageous it was for Ali to tell Uncle Sam to blow it out his backside and not be drafted. What an inspiration. (This is also tangential to Steve's burning desire to read and review a war comic, LOL.)
No, Val Doonican was completely different Steve - he was an early prototype in the ongoing Irish plot to get our own back on the Brits by inflicting terrible music on you.
ReplyDeleteIts going to be difficult to do worse than U2, but I expect someone is working on it...
-sean
Like Charlie, I'm amazed those Annuals were released in Winter! I'm stunned. I'd have sworn they were a summer tradition by statute.
ReplyDeleteRegarding Andy Williams- my folks had his records and faithfully watched his variety show (I mainly recall the Cookie Bear). And those variety shows are pretty much extinct. Although there are some that still pop up during the holidays...