Sunday 15 August 2021

2000 AD - July 1983.

Thanks to Charlie Horse 47 and Killdumpster for their sponsorship of this post, via the magic of Patreon
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It's currently a bit parky where I am, despite it being the middle of summer. But even I have to admit the temperature's positively sunsational compared to what they had to put up with at Vostok Station, Antarctica, in July 1983.

That's because it was the month in which the lowest temperature on Earth was recorded, bottoming out at a majestic −89.2 °C, otherwise known as −128.6 °F. There's no doubt about it, that would definitely put a frosting on your popsicle.

Elsewhere, that month gasped as Australian Dick Smith completed what Wikipedia calls, "his solo circumnavigation in a helicopter."

I'm assuming that's a circumnavigation of the world and not just a circumnavigation of the inside of his helicopter, as the latter achievement would be rubbish.

In the field of music, Madonna released her very first album which, by incredible coincidence, was also called Madonna.

She would, of course, go on to make a sort of mark in the field of Cinema but we'd all have to wait for that thrill because, film audiences, right then, were soaking up the brand new releases Staying Alive, Jaws 3-D and Krull

I must confess I've never seen Staying Alive nor Jaws 3-D but I will, from now on, always associate them with each other.

I have seen Krull but can't claim to have been bowled over by it, despite its strong supporting cast.

That month, the British singles chart was topped by just two 45s.

They were; Rod Stewart's Baby Jane and Paul Young's Wherever I lay My Hat (That's My Home). I do massively prefer the Rod track to the Paul Young one.

Over on the UK album chart, the top spot belonged to three LPs, that month. The first was Fantastic by Wham! which was then replaced by Yazoo's You and Me Both before July bowed out with The Very Best of the Beach Boys claiming the pinnacle.

But what of the greatest comic in the galaxy? Was it riding as high as all those records, and Dick Smith's helicopter?

Well, it was a month of zero change, with the only strips appearing in it being Robo-Hunter, Tharg's Time Twisters, Judge Dredd, Skizz and Rogue Trooper. Of those, the one that intrigues me most is the Dredd storyline, as it has werewolves in it.

Prog 325 contains a review of Return of the Jedi, and I do like the speech balloon on the cover of Prog 326; "Is this the death of a GI?" which feels like a very Marvel Comics kind of front cover declaration.

2000 AD Prog 323, Rogue Trooper

2000 AD Prog 324, Robo-Hunter

2000 AD Prog 325, Tharg

2000 AD Prog 325, Rogue Trooper

2000 AD Prog 326, Judge Dredd vs a werewolf

10 comments:

Anonymous said...

Krull has a strong supporting cast?
Really? Who are you thinking of there, Steve - Bernard Bresslaw?

-sean

Anonymous said...

It probably won't come as much surprise that I thought the best thing about this month's progs were the Alan Moore shorts in 324 and 325, well drawn by respectively Jesus Redondo (the best of those Spanish artists who used to work for IPC back in the day) and old school pro Mike White.

Between them they nicely show Moore's range as a writer. "The Time Machine" is a fantastically bleak story about a geezer revisiting past moments of failure in his life while - spoiler alert! - it turns out he's actually drowning, while "Eureka" is a lighter tale about astronauts realizing they've discovered an alien lifeform thats an idea, and its catching on...

Other than that and Skizz, the highlight here is the late Steve Dillon's artwork on that werewolf story, but for me Judge Dredd isn't at his best in extended straight action hero mode.

-sean

Steve W. said...

Sean:

Freddie Jones
Francesca Annis
Alun Armstrong
David Battley
Liam Neeson
Bernard Archard
Robbie Coltrane
Michael Elphick
And, of course, Todd Carty........

Steve W. said...

Apparently, Nosher Powell was also in it.

I don't have a clue who he was but a name like that deserves celebration.

Steve W. said...

It seems he was in Carry On Dick, The Reg Varney Show, Love They Neighbour, On the Buses, Are You Being Served and a whole host of other quality entertainments.

https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0694118/?ref_=ttfc_fc_cl_t27

Anonymous said...

Ok Steve, fair enough - I forgot Nosher Powell was in it.
Surely he was best known for being in Eat The Rich?

www.youtube.com/watch?v=LOGF_6wrczM

-sean

Anonymous said...

Steve, I'm not gonna lie.
I saw Krull, in a theater no less. There isn't much to say about it. I remember there being a giant spider in there somewhere.
I liked the cyclops. Remember him? Big guy, rather terse, one big eyeball in his forehead.
That guy really pulled the film together, in my opinion.

On another note, my suggestion for the title of the third Suicide Squad movie: The Now on a Seroquel Regimen as Proscribed by a Doctor and Feeling Somewhat Better About Things Squad.

M.P.

Anonymous said...

The cyclops was Bernard Bresslaw M.P., so I'm guessing his fame didn't extend to the land of the free, or you wouldn't need to ask.
Presumably Carry On films aren't well known in South Dakota. Lucky you.

-sean

Steve W. said...

MP, I tend to remember the constituent parts of Krull (characters, teleporting castles, giant spiders) without being able to remember anything about the actual story.

Anonymous said...

I suspect there were script problems from day one, Steve.

M.P.