Thanks to Charlie Horse 47 and Killdumpster for their sponsorship of this post, via the magic of Patreon.
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The cinemas of the world felt like very grown-up places in October 1971, with the release of such classics as The French Connection, Play Misty for Me and The Last Picture Show.
It was also the month that saw the release of a film called Duck, You Sucker! which sounds like it's going to be the least subtle blaxploitation movie of all time, until you discover it's just an alternative title for Sergio Leone's A Fistful of Dynamite.
I've seen three of those films but don't believe I've ever seen The Last Picture Show. Come to think of it, I'm not even sure what it's about.
I have, however, heard Rod Stewart's Maggie May/Reason to Believe, which is hardly shocking, bearing in mind it spent the whole of that month at Number One on the UK singles chart. Clearly, there was no power in the world that could stop Rod.
Or was there?
Because, over on the British album chart, Rod also looked unassailable, with his LP Every Picture Tells a Story spending the first half of the month at the pinnacle. But, finally, even Rod had to make way for John Lennon's Imagine which smashed straight in at Number One to dominate the month's second half.
But here's a strange turn of events. I mentioned in my last post that several of Marvel's key titles had failed to appear with an October cover date.
And it wasn't just them. Right across the line, the number of Marvel mags published that month was down dramatically, to such an extent the company which was soon to become the United States' largest publisher of comics only brought out fifteen books - the same total as Charlton, and fewer than Archie, Gold Key and Harvey. Truly the readers must have thought the outfit was doomed!
It does, though, mean this post and the previous one, between them, include every Marvel book published in the space of one calendar month. I'm fairly certain this has never happened before in this feature and it almost certainly never will again.
Needless to say, it's one of my favourite Ka-Zar tales, even though it's clearly a rip-off of The Land that Time Forgot.
In a shocking twist, sandwiched between this book's usual features, we get a tale that introduces the Link Brothers, a pair of siblings I can claim to know nothing of.
And we finish off with a legendary adventure that sees Dr Doom fight a creature of Satan's choice, to win back the soul of his mother.
Will Doomsie triumph?
Who can know?
And, in this one, we get eight tales from the likes of Stan Lee, Reed Crandall and Doug Wildey.
Tragically, I can shed no light upon what transpires within those tales, although I'm sure much shooting's involved.
We get two thrillers, one called Some Die Slowly! and the other called Into the Jaws of... Death!
The former is from Al Kurzrok and Herb Trimpe, while the latter's delivered by Roy Thomas and Dick Ayers.
Five tales of horror assail our senses.
They are:
The Sandman Cometh which has nothing to do with the Spider-Man villain but deals with a sand-based alien who seems unstoppable until a child dissolves him in water and traps him in a bucket.
I Dared Enter the Haunted Forest! in which a bigoted billionaire buys cursed woodland but its keeper takes him to another dimension, revealing he's been seeking a man no one would miss, to display in his alien zoo.
It Fell From the Flying Saucer! in which an artist finds an alien pencil that makes whatever he draws become real, until his selfish use of it prompts the aliens to reclaim it.
The Thing From the Hidden Swamp in which a plain girl helps a stranded alien who then makes her beautiful, as a reward.
And In the Shadow of Tragg -- He Who Walks Beneath the Earth! in which a reporter investigates the closure of a New York subway line and encounters a monster that kills every human it meets.
Admittedly, it's only been around for thirteen issues, so it's got a bit of a way to go to catch up with Millie in the success stakes.
I shall pass no comment upon the stories, as I've never read them, but they possess such breathless titles as I Can't Forget You! So Much in Love! Wallflower! Too Many Kisses! Third Finger, Left Hand! and I Dream of Romance!
Once again, they're all reprints.
Thankfully, Namor and her victims put an end to the madwoman’s plans.
But what's this? This tale's randomly part of the Mr Kline saga, as seen in Daredevil, which means two seeming aliens appear, for no noticeable reason, halfway through the issue, spout some baffling dialogue and then vanish.
On the upside, the book still only costs one shilling.
But for how long?
13 comments:
I never knew before now that Western comics had multiple short stories in them rather than one twentyish page long story. Well well well.
Astonishing Tales: I remember seeing a pair of Link brothers. In an Avengers vs Zodiac story that I read in a U.K. Spider-Man comic, Gemini was a guy called Joshua Link. He had a twin brother who was a policeman. In a fight, Joshua could fight with the strength of two men but when he did this his brother, somewhere else in the city, would get all tired and sluggish. Could it be these Link brothers?
And I need to get hold of that issue of Our Love Story. When I see a story called Third Finger! Left hand! all I can think of is that episode of Friends where Monica shouts out a series of numbers while trying to teach one of the guys about foreplay,
dangermash - In Zodiac, 'Whitey' Link was the good twin.
Phillip
Seems odd to see a Trimpe cover on Sgt Fury, no?
Usually it was Darling Dick Ayers doing the cover work. (I couldn't tell from looking at the image on the screen, had to look it up.)
But Darling Dick was also doing the innards of the Hulk 144 we just saw.
Not sure what's with the duette of Ayers and Trimpe trading places? Anyone know?
Check out the writeup on Monsters on the Prowl 13 and Marvel Fandom, for the first story!
"An ex-marine takes his pansy son and wife out to Mexico to toughen the boy up. They explore a cave..."
Holy moley... what's with Marvel and caves and pansy boys and extra terrestrials?!
Funnily enough Steve, Sub-Mariner #41 appeared in this feature last month and you used a shilling cover for that too. Its a bit odd because decimalisation happened at the start of the year - the switch over was in February '71 - and yet months later his comic is still 1/-.
What is it with Namor and old money?
I like that Ka-Zar "New Britannia" story too, but its the second part drawn by Barry Smith - which for some reason didn't appear til Astonishing Tales #10 - thats really memorable (as per your review a while back).
But AS #8 is still worthwhile for the Dr Doom story. Its a classic - a definite improvement on previous issues - showing us a side to Vic that we didn't usually get to see, and with some excellent artwork by Gene Colan and Tom Palmer.
-sean
Btw, in English Duck You Sucker/A Fistful Of Dynamite has also been known as Once Upon A Time In The Revolution.
Its a fantastic film - so good it has three titles!
-sean
Dave's Cover of the Month: Outlaw Kid, because based on covers alone, it's the one I'd have been most likely to buy (although with 8 stories in it, I'd guess none of them are particularly deep or complex).
I do also like the Buscema cover on Our Love Story though.
It wasn’t just the Westerns, pretty much ALL of Marvel’s titles in the 1950s featured three or four or even five shorts per issue instead of just one long story. OUTLAW KID, VENUS, LORNA THE JUNGLE GIRL, YELLOW CLAW, even the short-lived revivals of CAPTAIN AMERICA and SUB-MARINER, all featured the lead characters in multiple stories that were between 5 and 8 pages long. And Dave is right, the stories weren’t very deep or complex — but the stories tended to be fairly entertaining, more often than not.
b.t.
Dave, I shall nominate Astonishing Tales as my cover of the month, due to its dynamism.
Sean, I must confess my choice of the shilling covers hasn't been an accident. I can sensationally reveal that this is the final month for Old Money, when it comes to the front of Marvel Comics. From now on, it's going to be those new-fangled decimal prices.
Charlie, I can shed no light upon the Trimpe/Ayers switcheroo.
Dangermash and Phillip, now that you've gone into who the Link Brothers were, I too remember them. I think my first exposure to them was when Gemini fought Ka-Zar on the SHIELD heli-carrier and it all, somehow, ended up with a fight on a jump jet and the return of Gog.
Steve, that is a sensational revelation.
-sean
Steve, I remember watching The Last Picture Show on BBC2 many moons ago and I remembered that Cybill Shepard (of Moonlighting fame) was in it but my memory is failing me as I thought Don Johnson (of Miami Vice fame) was in it too but he wasn't - I was mixing him up with Jeff Bridges.
Steve:
I remember that particular Ka-Zar story well. ASTONISHING 18 (second half of the Gemini / Plunderer / story) was my first first ever experience with Ka-Zar as a comics hero, and I instantly loved the whole set-up : Blonde Tarzan with a pet Sabertooth hanging out in modern Manhattan, having a complicated fling with bespectacled blonde bombshell Bobbi Morse, wearing street clothes, constantly moaning about filthy old Civilization with its incessant noise and foul air etc — I thought it was all dynamic and utterly FASCINATING. So much so that when he eventually moved back to Pellucid-I MEAN The Savage Land a few issues later, and reverted to his loincloth-wearing, tree-swinging Lord of the Jungle-y ways, I kinda lost interest. I still bought it every month, but it wasn’t one of my favorites, seemed just like warmed-over Tarzan. Alas.
b.t.
Dangermash - Strangely, here the other Link brother is named Damian - not Whitey - unless 'Whitey' was a nickname!
https://marvel.fandom.com/wiki/Astonishing_Tales_Vol_1_19
Phillip
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