Thursday 2 June 2022

June 2nd 1982 - Marvel UK, 40 years ago this week.

Thanks to Charlie Horse 47 and Killdumpster for their sponsorship of this post, via the magic of Patreon
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How much do you like jangly guitars, miserable lyrics and gladioli?

If you love them plenty, you'd have been delighted, this week in 1982 because that was the precise moment at which The Smiths came into being.

Personally, I always preferred Suede but we'd have to wait several more years for them to show up.

Also coming into being, that week, was an enlarged version of NATO, as Spain became its 16th member. I have it on good authority the move wasn't prompted by the formation of The Smiths. However, it did make the Iberians the first people to join the alliance since the West Germans in 1955. Vladimir Putin must have been choking on his Vodka.

Meanwhile, over on the UK album chart, Roxy Music seized the Number One spot by dethroning Complete Madness, with their brand new LP Avalon.

Over on the associated singles chart, however, the nutty boys were still supreme, thanks to their ever-bouncy House of Fun.

Marvel Superheroes #386, Avengers vs the Grey Gargoyle

I'm sure this is the fourth issue in a row the Avengers have been fighting the Grey Gargoyle.

Seriously, how hard can it be for the world's mightiest super-team to defeat him? The Vision on his own could flatten him. How's a touch-based villain going to fight a foe who can become ethereal?

In other matters, Captain Britain's thrilled to discover Jackdaw's still alive. However, that's when the world warps into complete madness.

And I don't mean the LP.

Elsewhere, we all celebrate as we get a Weirdworld tale entitled An Ugly Mirror on Weirdworld.

Also, Night-Raven investigates The Night Watchman's Killing.

And we close with the yarn Beauty's Vengeance, sourced from Monsters Unleashed #10. I know nothing of it but it seems to involve a mermaid.

Doctor Who Magazine #65, The Visitation

I do believe I spot a Terileptil on that cover.

It can only mean Doctor Who Monthly's taking a look at the brand new serial The Visitation which is one of my favourite stories from the Davison era.

But that's not all. It's also reviewing the show's last-ever straight historical Black Orchid.

On top of that, there's a report on the two Doctor Who exhibitions currently wowing the crowds. I'm assuming they're the ones in Blackpool and Longleat.

And, for lovers of picture strips, there's a story called The Tides of Time as well as the latest adventure from The Daleks.

Blake's 7 #9

Blake's 7 magazine keeps rolling along.

To be honest, that's all I can say about this issue.

Super Spider-Man TV Comic #482, Thor and the Valkyrie

Here's an intriguing one, as Spider-Man finds himself allied with Thor and the Valkyrie.

And, judging by that cover, he's having some difficulty with a sword. It's a tale I've never read but I do know it's drawn by Herb Trimpe.

That should be enough to satisfy any spider-fan but, if it isn't, we also get a free poster and the chance to win a great board game of an unspecified nature!

Chiller Pocket Book #27, Man-Thing

Manny's still up against the Mad Viking.

And it would appear book burning's in some way involved!

Elsewhere, Dracula and Rachel must work together to survive a blizzard in the Transylvanian mountains.

And even more elsewhere, a man tries to convince people that he saw a statue move. When he doesn't succeed, he's happy. For, he himself is an alien and now knows the primitive Earthmen will never suspect his planet's army of being disguised as statues.

Fantastic Four Pocket Book #27, the Maggia

It's one of my least-favourite Lee/Kirby Fantastic Four offerings, as the Maggia, of all people, defeat our resident super-team, seize control of the Baxter Building and come within a hair's breadth of killing them.

Marvel Madhouse #13, Howard the Duck, Master of Quack Fu

Gasp, as the art of quack fu makes its senses-searing debut - thanks to the deadly fists of Howard the Duck!

Not to mention shuddering at the exploits of Knock Furious.

The Savage Sword of Conan #56

I know little of what occurs in this one but it would appear Thoth-Amon's involved - and that he's currently a king!

The Empire Strikes Back Monthly #157, Marvel UK, Han Solo

It's the return of the man who's always in solo action.

Han Solo.

I don't know much about the tale but I do know it's from the minds of Steve Parkhouse and John Stokes and features a character with the unlikely name of Zoltan Starkid.

I assume Killraven's also in this issue, but cannot shed light upon what he's up to. I'm sure, though, that there are plenty of words in it.

And, for those who demand even more than that, the good news is we also have a chance to win a Palitoy Tauntaun!

Spider-Man Pocket Book #27, the Vulture and Kraven

Unless I miss my ever-loving guess, the new, fake Vulture's somehow achieved what the real Vulture never could and defeated Spider-Man. Kraven decides this means he must defeat the new fake Vulture, in order to prove himself.

And that can only mean a three-way battle that can only end in defeat for both villains, thanks to Spidey's legendary Sunday Punch.

Incredible Hulk #10, Ka-Zar

I do believe we're getting the tale of the Hulk's first-ever meeting with Ka-Zar, which I'm pretty sure is where I also first met the Jurassic jungle lord.

Needless to say, it all climaxes in a battle with a giant robot from outer space.

It would appear Iron Man's up against the villain known as Force who I recall first turning up in the Sub-Mariner's comic.

As for the question of who's responsible for that villain's return, that would be Justin Hammer who's also abducted Tony Stark's girlfriend Bethany Cabe!

Rampage Monthly #48, the Dazzler

The awesome Dazzler makes her debut, as the Hellfire Club's Machiavellian machinations continue to cause trouble for everyone they meet.

I can't really say anything else about this comic, other than that its cover boasts of a new direction though I don't see how the new direction differs from the old one.

Monster Monthly #3, Peter Cushing

Peter Cushing makes the cover of Marvel's latest mag when it investigates the works of both he and Christopher Lee.

There's also a look at the current film releases and a poster of Christopher menacing Veronica Carlson in Dracula Has Risen from the Grave.

Star Heroes Pocket Book #27, Spider-Man vs the X-Men

I'm going to go out on a limb and guess this one guest-stars the amazing Spider-Man.

But, nay, it doesn't just guest star him. For, he is vital to the entire plot.

It seems the Banshee calls in the X-Men, seeking assistance in battling a mysterious spider creature. But, when the gang encounter Spider-Man, they mistake him for that creature - and the obligatory punch-up ensues.

Worzel Gummidge #9, Marvel UK magazine

Marvel UK's tribute mag to the nation's favourite scarecrow continues along its path to oblivion. This time, with a star profile of Connie Booth who I wasn't aware had ever been in the show.

But, even beyond that, we have the chance to win a talking telephone!

Granted, I'm pretty sure that all telephones talk but I assume this one talks at you even if there's no one on the other end of it.

Starburst Magazine #46, Quest for Fire

Quest for Fire's here! And it's on the front cover, as Britain's greatest sci-fi mag gives us its verdict on every caveman's most-beloved film.

We're also granted reviews of Road Games, Blood Moon and I Spit on Your Grave. To be frank, I've only heard of one of those movies. I think you can guess which one.

There's also a look at Vincent Price's Witchfinder General and an interview with Jamie Lee Curtis of Friday the 13th fame.

Hanna Barbera's Scooby-Doo and His T.V. Friends #15

Scooby-Doo's comic hits its 15th issue and does so by giving us such strips and features as Shake, Rattle and Roll, Puzzle Parade, Scooby-Doo's Creepy Cruise, Scrappy's Tale, Scooby-Doo's Dictionary, The Great Grape Ape, The Flintstones and an instructional page on how to make a periscope from two mirrors and a kitchen roll.

Not only that but there's the chance to win an Aunt Sally doll! I'm not sure what that has to do with either Scooby-Doo or Hanna Barbera but there you go.

I know all this because friend of the blog Onboarder, AKA Mark, has uploaded the entire issue to The Internet Archive for us and it can be accessed via this link.

42 comments:

Anonymous said...

Congrats on your Queen’s anniversary!

Anonymous said...

Xmen is my fav cover. Silver age oozes forth!

Who did the Spidey cover? Ditko-maybe?

dangermash aka The Artistic Actuary said...

Finding myself thinking today about Thomasine Frost (nee Belgrave) 1562-1615, my great great great great great great great great great great great great great grandmother and the queen's great great great great great great great great great grandmother. I'm practically family, which is why I don’t like to talk about sweaty Andrew.

As for ASM #49, Kraven is knocked out by the same Spider-Man punch that once staggered the Hulk (in ASM Annual #3). Spider-Man's Sunday punch doesn't get named until ASM #72 when it sees off the Shocker. And the cover was by John Romita Senior.

Steve W. said...

Thanks for the Sunday Punch clarification, dangermash.

Anonymous, I would say the Conan cover's my favourite because it's nicely painted, even if it is a little static.

Anonymous said...

No comment on the jubilee - or The Smiths, or NATO - from me Steve.

I'm not even going to moan about Marvel Super-Heroes, and Captain Brexit's return to suppres... uh, keeping the peace in the north of Ireland after last month's fill-in episode. Because the important thing about that story is the arrival of Affable Al Moore as new writer for the adventures of Britain's favourite costumed propaganda tool.

He only scripted the final page, and isn't credited, but the change in style is very noticeable, and its obviously him from the first caption -
"There is a fusillade of champagne corks... not far away a crooked man smiles a crooked smile".
Purple prose to give Dauntless Don McGegor some stiff competition, a new direction, and a cliffhanger ending, all in a single page. Classic.

-sean

Anonymous said...

*Er, that should read "Dauntless Don McGregor". Obviously. Duh.

-sean

Colin Jones said...

Marvel UK must have liked that Conan cover because it had previously been the cover of Conan #16 dated February 1979, the month of my 13th birthday. But on that occasion the cover had been forced into a box with only Conan visible and the obligatory helpless, half-naked wench had been obscured by the text running down the left-hand side.

The villain in that Conan issue is Thoth-Amon who by coincidence is also the villain in Marvel's current King Conan series - #5 was published just yesterday (June 1st). Thoth-Amon was a regular villain in Marvel's version of Conan but in Robert E. Howard's original stories Thoth-Amon appears just twice and never even meets Conan!

Colin Jones said...

The cover of Monster Monthly features Peter Cushing and an article inside looks at all the films of Cushing and Christopher Lee - by coincidence 'Horror Express' is currently available on BBC iplayer and I intend to watch it later tonight with a glass of gin and a tube of cheese & onion Pringles :)

'This Is Spinal Tap' is also on iplayer and I'll be watching that too over this coming weekend as I've never seen it before!

Colin Jones said...

Anyone going to a Jubilee street party? I'm not aware of any street parties near where I live and I haven't seen much Union Jack bunting either. There's some outside the local Wetherspoons and some along the aisles in Tesco but that's about it. And I haven't seen any Union Jacks displayed in the windows of houses, unlike the 1977 Silver Jubilee when every house seemed to display a Union Jack (including mine I must admit). Maybe the public are much less interested in the Jubilee than the media would have us believe.

dangermash aka The Artistic Actuary said...

Oh, we have a street party in my tiny (<1000 people) village in Kent on Sunday, Colin. You'll find me either at the cake stand or in the pimms tent.

And tonight (Thursday) there was a beacon lighting ceremony complete with bagpiper.

Matthew McKinnon said...

Slightly odd composition on that Star Wars cover. Bit too much headroom.

I see Starburst still has a few months to go before the avalanche of 1982 fantasy movies really hits the U.K. (and they go for a bold design revamp that screams ‘1980s!’).

I didn’t know Moore did a random page before he took over CB properly!
You’ve gone and stirred up my completist OCD now.

Matthew McKinnon said...

Colin -
I’m in North North London (Labour district but quite small-c conservative). There’s one house on my street has put little Union Jack flags out, and there’s some red white and blue balloons on the village green. So I’m guessing there might be a bit of street party/fete type action there over the weekend. Hopefully not.

I was at a gig in Brockley Park yesterday (Madness, Supergrass, Squeeze - none of them bands I’m into but a mate had a free ticket and it was sunny) and there was very little jubilee tat. I saw maybe three people in Union Jack t-shirts. The bands made a gratifyingly big point of slagging off the government and their ‘work-related gatherings’, which was good.

Anonymous said...

I didn't become aware of The Smiths until early 1984 but now wish I had as I quite like their cover of 'I want a boy for my birthday' which they appear to have only played twice.

Sean beat me to the punch with regard to that extra page of Captain Britain by Moore. What a contrast from previous scripts. With hindsight David Thorpe introduced some good ideas (multiverse, Saturnyne, Jaspers and the crazy gang) but it was a bit silly ( in know, it was a kid's comic). Moore tweaking the horror dial and adding some nice language really changed the feel, as demonstrated by Sean's extract.

Another Steve Dillon cover but he's inexplicably given Hulk and Kazar (?) the same face. Not a classic. This is also my final FF pocket book as (as previously mentioned) I managed to miss the fact that there was a final issue.

No real Jubilee fuss down under, but we've just had our third case of monkeypox and brush turkey's have been filmed turning carnivorous in the suburbs. This has apocalypse written all over it.

DW

Steve W. said...

Little sign of any Jubilee Fever round my way. Certainly no street parties or bunting. I can see one Union Flag hanging from a balcony but that's the limit.

Anonymous said...

I hear they prefer to be called Turkiyes these days, DW.
You should all have known voting in Albo was a harbinger of the apocalypse. Obviously something is up, now even you're slagging this month's Steve Dillon cover (and quite right too).

Steve, you've wondered what the new direction is for Rampage before. Its had that blurb on the cover since the May '81 issue, and before that it was the 'new look' Rampage, going back to when it first dropped those Hulk stories and the X-Men became the lead feature.

-sean

Anonymous said...

In a scant few days SDC will herald Luke Cage Hero for Hire #1 “50 years ago!” In preparation please reflect on that mind-blowing event and be prepared to share your thoughts! Love, Charlie

Anonymous said...

Never mind Luke Cage #1, Charlie, do you not have any thoughts on drinking Pimms at the jubilee?
It seemed like dangermash was setting you up there earlier...

-sean

Anonymous said...

John Lyndon is apparently up for some Jubilee celebrating. He’s been making the rounds, saying he digs the pageantry, that he totally respects the Queen and at one point even said he’s ‘really proud of her for surviving and doing so well’. Lest anyone think he’s lost all his punk creed, he does still hate the monarchy, calling them ‘a bunch of German tourists with a Greek thrown in’.

Pretty rum lot of covers this week, IMO. I do like that Boris SAVAGE SWORD cover, tho I agree with Steve that it’s pretty static. I tend to like Early Boris , when his Frazetta-isms were still pretty blatant, more than his later ‘Slave To His Photo Reference’ style. That Avengers / Grey Gargoyle cover by Perez looked better in the original US printing — the cover copy is making it way too crowded and chaotic and the color isn’t doing it any favors neither.

The colors on the Pocket Book covers are consistently awful. This week’s CHILLER especially — bland pastels hardly evoke chills and thrills. It’s like someone’s grandmother colored that one.

It’s funny — The Mad Viking, with his book burning and raging about sissy men replacing manly men, and that wild get-up complete with horned hat, seemed cartoonishly over the top back in the day….

b.t.

Anonymous said...

Oh, and Charlie : I’m right there with ya on digging Luke Cage. The first two issues are especially great. The whole 16-issue HERO FOR HIRE run is pretty badass, but the series definitely lost some if its unique edgy flavor when it was re-branded as LUKE CAGE, POWER MAN.

b.t.

McSCOTTY said...

Colin, my town is festooned with Union Jack's but it is a known unionist town in a nationalist (as in SNP) area. Its also madly pro Glasgow Rangers so you'll understandings you are aware of the west of Scotland . Most of the surrounding towns and Glasgow City don't have much UK stuff on display. My local towns main pub has the Union Jack, Scottish, Northern Irish and Welsh flags outside so I asked the owner why no England flag he replied " that's taking unionism too far" just goes to show how messed up the UK is.

Charlie Horse 47 said...

You UK guys have ALL THE FUN! You just don't know it!

While we are celebrating our 70th mass shooting this year in the USA, you are celebrating 70 years of the Queen. I'd gladly trade and throw in Texas, Mississippi, and Alabama to boot!

Well enough on politics!

SEAN, DANGERMASH, So at first I was having a bit of a chuckle at what DM wrote, and thought he was tossing me a softball, lol, but then thought... well what the hell do I know? Maybe there is such a tent?

Charlie Horse 47 said...

B.T. -

HERO FOR HIRE was indeed top notch!

For this 11 year old, growing up in Gary, Indiana (home of Michael Jackson and the 2 first Nobel prizes for Economics by Americans) seeing Luke on the cover and reading those stories was waaaaaay more gripping than, say, watching the Falcon save Captain America from a guy in a wheel chair with a 10 foot scarf on a Caribbean Island (Cap 117 or so)

That's why the Charlie Horse is soooo excited for this coming week's SDC!

Charlie Horse 47 said...

Funny joke?

The economy is so bad here that the NRA had to lay of 10 US Congressmen!

Charlie Horse 47 said...

If GREY GARGOYLE got his mitts on WORZEL GRUMMIDGE what would happen? Anything?

Charlie Horse 47 said...

Any fans of KATE BUSH out there?

Her song (and indeed the only one I know) RUNNING UP THE HILL is #1 on itunes due to STRANGER THINGS season 4 on Netflix. It features at a key moment of the season.

I haven't seen Season 4 yet, since it just came out and I just canceled my Netflix subscription. Anyone have any thoughts on it? I sounds a bit like a Marvel movie now... crazy, slickly-produced, drawn-out battle scenes?

Anonymous said...

I haven’t seen a single episode of STRANGER THINGS. I’ve been curious about it and tempted to try it, for years now, but never quite enough to actually give it a spin. Early on, people were saying it was like ‘Stephen King And Steven Spielberg Had A Baby’ and I thought, ‘Hmmm, that could be cool’. But then more than one persons in my circle enthusiastically said ‘It reminds me of THE GOONIES!’ and that pretty much took the wood out of my Nerd Boner right then and there.

b.t.

Anonymous said...

Charlie, if you haven’t seen the video for Kate Bush’s single THE SENSUAL WORLD, you should head over to YouTube and do that right now.

b.t.

Charlie Horse 47 said...

B.T.

I would say the only similarity STRANGER THINGS had with the GOONIES was it featured young kids. I encourage you to give it a try!

Actually I don't know anymore... I saw GOONIES 35 years ago or so... I cant remember much except that joke "How do you know a French man has been around your house? All the garbage cans are empty and your dogs are all pregnant." Even my french, former wife of 30 years laughed at that. So did her teenage sister, once it was translated. Then they decided it wasn't funny.

Matthew McKinnon said...

Sean - I managed three episodes of season 1. It’s like an Amblin pastiche but stretched out agonisingly so that things that would be set up and knocked down within 10 minutes in an 80s movie now take hours to develop.

It’s like a kind of retro take on the 80s by people who weren’t there.

It’s really bad.

Anonymous said...

Sorry. Meant for BT, not Sean.

McSCOTTY said...

Charlie. Kate Bush is excellent try her most famous songs I'm sure there on You tube etc. "Wuthering Heights" , "Roll in the ball", The man with the child in his eyes" and "Don't give up"

Anonymous said...

Can't say I'm much of a Kate Bush fan, which puts me very much in the minority round these parts iirc.
Still, she probably won't be too bothered about my approval as she's doing quite well for herself - it appears 'Running Up The Hill' is currently a top 10 hit in the UK. Clearly her faux pas of a few years back - saying how wonderful Theresa May was for Britain - has been forgotten.
Now she just needs to keep her mouth shut about Boris Johnson.

b.t., I know it shouldn't really matter, but John Lydon's enthusiasm for Donald Trump did put me off him (maybe he was just trolling people, but if you can't do that in an interesting way, don't bother imo).
Who cares what he thinks about the monarchy these days?

Personally, I was outraged by English Heritage marking the jubilee by projecting pictures of the British queen onto Stonehenge...

-sean

Colin Jones said...

Charlie, I'm amazed you don't know 'Wuthering Heights' by Kate Bush - it was her first ever single in 1978 and stayed at #1 in the UK for 4 weeks.

By the way, Charlie and Sean, it's 'Running Up THAT Hill' not 'Running Up THE Hill'.

Colin Jones said...

I started reading Steve Does Comics in late 2012 (nearly 10 years ago!!) and I recall that Steve launched a campaign to replace 'God Save The Queen' with a Kate Bush song. Do you remember that, Steve? I admit that my own memory of it is a bit fuzzy.

Those were the days of Steve Does Top Of The Pops, still much missed!

Anonymous said...

Sean-

Lydon praised Trump, eh?
That pretty much confirms my opinion of Johnny Rotten. A bullshit artist to the very end.
Somebody needs to punch that guy in the head. Hard.
On a jaggedly different note, I see you are still reviewing Scooby Doo comics, Steve. I have a pet theory that Scooby and the gang were somehow (loosely) inspired by the Manson family.
I never trusted that Fred.

M.P.

Steve W. said...

That is certainly a unique theory, MP.

Colin, I do remember that campaign. It was to make Oh England, My Lionheart the national anthem, mostly because I wanted to see rugby players try to sing the high bits. The petition got 27 signatures and still the government ignored it. So much for democracy.

To continue the theme of inflicting Kate Bush songs on Charlie, this is my recommended list:

Wuthering Heights.

The Man With the Child in His Eyes.

Wow.

The Kick Inside.

Babooshka.

Oh England, My Lionheart.

Army Dreamers.

Cloudbusting.

Rubberband Girl.

Moments of Pleasure.

King of the Mountain.

I would say Moments of Pleasure is my Number One pick of those.

McSCOTTY said...

Sean,b.t. I was pretty surprised by Lydon's praise of Trump and his about turn on the Queen. Everyone's entitled to their opinions but a 360 degree change just shows what a fraud he was.

Anonymous said...

Lydon's 360 degree change was quick, Paul - in 2016 he was pretty dismissive of Trump running for president, and ridiculed the idea of Brexit. So I suspect since then he's either just been trolling liberals, or he's so out of touch he thinks he's siding with some sort of 'rebellion' against the establishment.

Er, not that it makes much difference - he's still become a bit of an idiot in his old age. The ridiculous part of it imo is his insistence that he has 'working class' opinions about that all that stuff.

-sean

Colin Jones said...

Roger Daltry and Noel Gallagher also support Brexit and have moved to the right (Gallagher called Ed Milliband a Marxist) so maybe it's a thing that happens to clapped-out old rockers.

Steve, I'd also include Hounds Of Love as one of my favourite Kate Bush songs. A few years ago I bought a special magazine all about Kate Bush which claimed that she had persuaded Alfred Hitchcock to appear in the video for Hounds Of Love - but that song came out in early 1986 and Hitchcock had died in 1980!!

It's in the trees
It's coming...

I also like December Will Be Magic Again which is a refreshing change from the usual sickly Xmas song.

Anonymous said...

Oops. Apologies for mentioning the Brexit, Steve.

-sean

Anonymous said...

Charlie horse did a scan of the USA charts for Kate Bush songs. It seems she seldom charted in the USA except in the early 90s with two or three songs of which one of them hit number one on the alternative chart list. The only exception being Running Up That Hill from 1985 which hit top 20 on the dance charts. But Charlie was in Germany then and heard that in the german dance clubs and subsequently on a UK “Now that’s what I call music”CD I picked up in London in 1987. Miss Charlie is quite familiar with Kate and has her Sensual World playing on her Spotify thingie so she is bringing ip to speed on Kate! Wuthering Heights seems to have not charted at all in the USA. One of those things…

Anonymous said...

I was listening to Kate Bush when I was in Germany too, Charlie.
Back in the army barracks there was a lotta borrowing of CD's, people sharing music and discovering new stuff. Some guy introduced me to Jethro Tull (which I like!). I think that I turned on a couple guys to Iggy Pop and Lou Reed.
Scratch a soldier, you get a rock and roller, I guess.
But I never tried to get anybody to listen to Kate Bush, as far as I remember.
A bridge too far, maybe.
"Reaching Out" is my favorite Kate Bush track.

M.P.