Thanks to Charlie Horse 47 and Killdumpster for their sponsorship of this post, via the magic of Patreon.
***
Many are the times a man must let bygones be bygones and put the past behind him.
But, right now, I'm going to put the past in front of me.
In fact, I'm putting it slap-bang in front of everyone.
A mystery - and a fight - breaks out when a zillion-and-one Marvel heroes are summoned to the Avengers Mansion to try out for the team but no one seems to know who sent for them all.
Then it turns out it's Moondragon who's to blame, as she's decided to interfere in who should and shouldn't be in the gang.
Anyway, somehow, at the end of it all, the Vision, Scarlet Witch and Jocasta have left the team and, in their place, Tigra's joined, even though none of the Avengers have a clue who she is.
Strangely, at no point does Tigra point out to them that their previous member Hellcat "borrowed" her old costume.
Needless to say, it's barely five minutes before Shellhead's teamed up with Arthur, and Doomy's allied himself with Morgan Le Fey.
That conflict over, the armour-clad clobberers then have to join forces, in order to get themselves back to the present.
Greg Salinger also puts in his first appearance.
I know! Greg Salinger! Who'd have thought it?
I now have to Google to find out who Greg Salinger is.
I have now checked. It would appear he becomes the 2nd Foolkiller.
And it would be true to say he's not pleased with them.
Meanwhile, on an island in the middle of nowhere, Cyclops bumps into Magneto himself!
Who can this mystery man be?
And what does he have to do with a giant homicidal version of Cap?
When I say, "confronting," I'm not sure if they ever actually meet him.
However, thanks to our hero neglecting his doctoring activities, in order to concentrate on his Thor activities, the boy dies, which doesn't do Don's reputation a lot of good.
Admittedly, it doesn't do the boy's life a lot of good, either.
Well, no, he hasn't. It's all a ruse cooked up by Spidey and Knighty to help the latter infiltrate the criminal underworld and bring down its leadership.
As does the airport where it's all happening.
Just how is anyone going to get out this alive?
22 comments:
In ASM, the Moon a Knight story is only 17 pages long and has the feel of a missed deadline filler story, with a change in writer and artist and more of Moon Knight's supporting cast than Spider-Man's.
But there's also a five page bonus story: Aunt May and the Nursing Home Caper. At some point Aunt May confuses the bad guy by pretending to have a heart attack. Yes, you read that correctly.
ASM is pretty awful around this time.
Steve -
I read your entire review, per normal. Excellent as always.
Some questions:
1) Does the Overmind appear in any of these? I mean if he is living on a mote of dust he could be anywhere?
2) I bought that Iron Man for like $.25 a few years ago at our library which was selling books for donations. The old (really old) lady running the sale said, "Thank god someone bought those comics. Get them out of here." I promptly put a curse on her, something like "May the fleas of a thousand camels infest your..."
3) My senses were shattered to read that Thor was reverting to Don Blake as recent as 40 years ago? When did he finally stop that.
4) Poor Spidey. They've run out of animal and plant names for villains and are resorting to hula hoops and other kids toys it seems. What's next? Matchbox-car-thrower man? Pogo Stick Man? Big Wheel Man?
Charlie - Spidey did have a villain called 'The Big Wheel' !
Phillip
Phillip - Thanks for the tip! Who'd a thunk it? Spidey fought "The Big Wheel."
I remember when they rolled out that Spidey Mobile around issue 130? I thought it was targeted towards kids and christmas gifts. I was too mature, being around 12, for that malarkey!
I didn't read Thor for a while after all that Eternals/Celestials/Wagner nonsense put me off so I could be forgetting something, but wasn't the awesome #337 the last time he reverted to Don Blake, when Walt Simonson introduced Beta Ray Bill?
Steve, despite featuring an airport being trashed in a superhero fight, the Hulk #263 was not written by Chris Claremont. A note at the start of the story actually says that. Really.
Its the most memorable thing about the comic.
Although unfortunately Rick Jones isn't as forgettable as I'd like. But at least theres no Teen Brigade, which is something (although iirc the threatened mk2 one turns up in the next issue).
The obvious highlight this month is Daredevil, which I daresay is a comment that'll be applicable regularly in this feature for some time to come.
-sean
Dangermash, I like to think that Aunt May story was a try-out for a planned Aunt May Investigates comic.
Admittedly, it's a safe bet that it wasn't but I still like to think it was.
Charlie, to my knowledge, the Over-Mind doesn't appear in any of this month's comics.
Charlie and Sean, I'm afraid I can shed no light upon when Don Blake put in his last-ever appearance.
dangermash, that Peter Parker issue was ok though, wasn't it?
I guess the Ringer might not be serious enough for young Charlie, but if you're as juvenile as me it seemed like one of the better Marvel comics at that time (and I wasn't even into Spidey much).
-sean
OK - Charlie is showing his ignorance. First he askes about Eternals, Gigantors, and (potentially) Overminds.
Next up - Nomad.
I thought once upon a time (maybe even Frank Robbins was the artist?) Cap gave up being Cap and became Nomad. Maybe like around 45 years ago today?
So based on the Cap cover, no one seems surprised that there is both a Cap and a Nomad? Did someone else become Nomad and have a nice little career? I assume so, and thus my next question is "Did Cap Nomad, and Nomad Nomad, play Nomad at the same time?"
Yeah, there was another guy who wore the mantle of Nomad, but I'm too lazy to look it up. I think it was when Mike Zeck was the artist on Captain America.
I enjoyed that issue of the Hulk. I don't wanna start another debate about Sal Buscema here, but it could have benefited from better inking.
The Hulk was doing a lotta smashing in this issue. Even for him. I enjoyed the showdown between ol' Greenskin and Avalanche on an airport tarmac. When I first read it, I didn't know who Avalanche was, but I would later figure out he was some clown from the Brotherhood of Evil Mutants.
I didn't know that because I hate the X-Men. That goddam Claremont.
At least Avalanche was given some interesting dialogue.
"Sweet peak freens?" Is that what a guy yells when the Hulk is throwing a building at him?
Is that, like, code for "@#%&*!?%#*!@&!!" ?
M.P.
Didn't Bucky become Nomad? Not the 40s Bucky - he became the Winter Soldier, right? - but the one who was 50's commie smasher Cap's kick on the side.
Steve, I wasn't trying to suggest Thor #337 was Don Blake's last ever appearance. Its in the nature of superhero comics that regular characters like that are never gone for good - Jane Foster definitely came back for a while - but the issue ended with him not being Thor's alter-ego anymore. At least for a while.
-sean
Don't know about the Peter Parker issue, Sean. I have 500 issues of ASM on DVD but none of the PPSSMs.
I'm not really up on the differences between both dangermash, or what PPSSM (sounds like a medical condition) was like regularly back then, but if you see #58 anywhere it is worth a read - its not their best work, but Roger Stern and John Byrne were a capable team.
-sean
Cover of the Month - no contest, it's Iron Man 150, which I bought one warm Autumn afternoon in the late 80s from a second-hand bookshop in Glasgow.
As for Spidey being ravaged by the Ringer, all I'll say is that he must have had a very uncomfortable web-swing home.
Charlie- I think Sal Buscema drew the issue where Cap became Nomad, although I'm pretty sure there's a fill-in issue around then drawn by Frank Robbins that features Dr Faustus and an aeroplane. I can't remember too much about it, because... well, Frank Robbins-drawn comics have never really been something I would revisit too often...
Mates and Buddies!
Please look at the Iron Man - Doom cover and then next week’s “50 years ago” Hulk - Doom cover for Hulk 144.
While the IM cover is exciting, me thinks Hulk 144 is one of the “greatest of all time.”
Doom looks best when he is going to get his face knocked into next year. Even the upcoming FF 116 cover with Doom leading the FF into combat with Overmind pails to Hulk 144.
That Doom gets around don’t he???
It's kind of ironic that the sum-of-all-Eternals Over Mind gets shrunk by sum-of-all-Gigantors Stranger to a mote of dust and in an FF (sometime around 40 years ago today) Doom gets shrunk / stuck in a miniature city being chased by the residents. (I don't recall the issue # but it was by Byrne.)
The parallels in the Marvel Universe never cease to amaze!
Iron Man and Dr. Doom didn't get trapped in Medieval England!
1) In legend, King Arthur lived in the Dark Ages, circa 6th Century, not the Medieval period.
2) England didn't exist in Arthur's time. He fought against the Angles and Saxons who were invading Britain. Those Anglo-Saxons created England centuries later.
Remember that Byrne Peter Parker #58 and loved it... it caught the original Ditko vibe and rolled back the years. Byrne had just completed/or was about to his run on Captain America and I thought he was about to become the permanent Spiderman artist. Sadly not to be. The Ironman issue is a classic and holds up well all these years later.
What an interesting pick!
Phillip
Colin, I'm not sure if anyone told the creators of that Iron Man comic any of that.
Dave, yes, I'd say the Iron Man and FF covers are the best.
FFf, I agree. There is something of a Ditko vibe about the Ringer.
Also, published this month, Power Man & Iron Fist # 73 is an interesting issue. Iron Fist Judo throws ROM!
Phillip
Dave S.--Ah, the pleasure of picking up a back issue or two at the local comic shop on a warm afternoon. It makes for a pleasant evening.
I've got that issue of Captain America, it is drawn by Robbins, but I'm not sure who drew the cover. It's a cool cover. If Romita didn't draw it, he definitely did the finishes on it.
Yep, Faustus gets sucked outta the plane, yowling all the way. I think it was later revealed he had a hidden parachute. For a...rather heavy-set fellow, he was pretty athletic.
He was a weird character. I know where the name comes from, but was he, like, an expression of Stan Lee's opinion of psychoanalysis?
We will never know. But Marvel did some interesting things with him later on, when he became a cohort of the Red Skull and Arnim Zola.
Geez, doesn't that sound like a fun work environment. Imagine what the cafeteria was like.
M.P.
Post a Comment