Thursday 1 September 2022

September 1st 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
***

Everyone knows the greatest film ever made is The Eye of the Tiger.

Sinbad and the Eye of the Tiger.

So great was it that it was released on a double bill, in 1977, with the Spider-Man TV movie that wowed the world.

But there was another movie called The Eye of the Tiger. And, scandalously, it didn't feature rubber monsters, Patrick Troughton or even Jane Seymour!

But it did feature Sylvester Stallone.

Then again, it wasn't called The Eye of the Tiger. It was called Rocky III.

Regardless, that film was responsible for what happened on the UK singles chart, this week in 1982.

And that is that the movie's theme tune, as sung by Survivor, hit the Number One slot, right then and there.

Over on the British album chart, things were holding steady, because the Kids From Fame were still at Number One, with their self-titled album.

Doctor Who Magazine #68

I do believe we get a look at the 4th Doctor story the Masque of Mandragora, while, in this week's thrilling Dalek strip, the Skaro supremacists are at war with the not-at-all-similar Mechanoids.

There's also an interview with the show's producer John Nathan-Turner but you can pretty much always take it for granted that there will be.

Marvel Superheroes #389, the Vision

I do believe that, this month, we enounter the Avengers' day off.

I struggle to recall exactly what that entails but I do remember us discovering that, in his spare time, Wonder Man works as a custard pie recipient on a children's TV show.

We also get a story called Bleeding Stones reprinted from Monsters Unleashed #7 and a tale called Blind Man's Bluff reprinted from the same comic.

There's also A Short History of Britain which seems to be a short history of Captain Britain.

And Night Raven has a four-page adventure that will, no doubt, linger long in the minds of all who read it.

Super Spider-Man TV Comic #495

That's a lively cover by Steve Dillon.

But what of the insides?

It would appear our hero teams up with the X-Men in a battle with the Lords of Light and Darkness.

I don't know much about the tale - or who the Lords of Light and Darkness are - but I do know it appears to take place in Russia and gives Sal Buscema a chance to draw the mighty mutants.

Meanwhile, if the cover's to be believed, this issue demands to know, "Are you one in 10 trillion?"

As there are only a few billion people on Earth, I would suspect not.

Blake's 7 #12

Apparently, it's decision time for Soolin. She must decide whether to sacrifice herself or condemn Vila and Avon to death.

Personally, in her shoes, I'd choose to condemn Vila and Avon to death.

Especially Avon.

And, for some reason, Marvel UK books are still going on about the Fruitgum Secret.

The Savage Sword of Conan #59

All I know of this issue is it features Kull the Conqueror in a tale called A King Comes Riding. And I only know that because it says so on the cover.

I do know, though, that that woman looks a bit too 1970s for my liking.

The Incredible Hulk #23, Mogol

It's one of my Hulking favourites, as the green grappler takes on Mogol and then befriends that stooge of Tyrannus before discovering he's a robot and murdering him.

Given such harsh treatment, I can't help feeling Mogol deserves to make a comeback.

Elsewhere in this issue, it would appear we get yet more adventuring from the Ghost Rider.

And, if the cover's to be believed, my drawing might be inside.

Which is good news, as I was wondering where it had got to.

Marvel Madhouse #16, Howard the Duck

Howard the Duck must confront the Cellar Sinister. While we must confront the adventures of Teen-Hulk.

Monster Monthly #6

The UK's best magazine dedicated to monsters hits us with an issue that covers the myths of Frankenstein and the activities of famous robots.

It would appear we also get a look at Amicus' Tales From the Crypt, that famed compendium based upon the works of EC Comics. It is, of course, most memorable for treating us to the sight of  Joan Collins being menaced by Santa Claus.

Star Wars Monthly #161

I can shed no light upon the contents of this issue but I do see that it too is determined to learn whether I know the Fruit Gum Secret.

I dread to think what Darth Vader will do to me if I give the wrong answer.

Rampage Monthly #51, Wolverine cuts loose

It looks like it's trouble for the Hellfire Club, as Wolverine invades their domain.

But will he be in time to thwart the White Queen and her evil schemes?

Worzel Gummidge #12

Confusion reigns supreme because this may the very last issue of Worzel Gummidge's monthly magazine.

Then again, there may be another three issues to go. It depends which website you believe.

However, whatever the case, I do know the scarecrow will be back in March 1983 when Marvel UK hands him his own weekly comic. One that will clock up 23 issues before merging with the company's Rupert Bear weekly.

Starburst Magazine 049, The return of Spock

Hooray! The nation's favourite sci-fi mag takes a look at the return of Mr Spock, thanks to the arrival of Star Trek II!

Why that's more worthy of celebration than the return of any of the film's other characters, I cannot even speculate.

For those who like their thrills a little more Earthbound, the issue also casts its gaze upon the 19th James Bond convention.

But perhaps even more intriguingly, there's a report on the making of a brand new Ridley Scott film called Bladerunner.

Hanna Barbera's Scooby-Doo and His T.V. Friends #28

It's the news all educationalists have been crying out for because Scooby-Doo goes back to school!

And I've no doubt it'll prove to be haunted.

51 comments:

dangermash aka The Artistic Actuary said...

One thing to be grateful for in the post-Dez years. Worzel not getting enough teaders and gets merged into Rupert Bear Magazine.

Five years before and he'd have been merged into Mighty World Of Marvel.

Matthew McKinnon said...

*insert tedious, lengthy nostalgic comment from me about Starburst 49 here*

Anonymous said...

Hulk smash puny Worzel, dangermash.

Steve, that 'Short History of Britain' in Marvel Super Heroes #389 - about the first super-hero from "a nation previously known for a series of fascinatingly demented murderers" - was by Affable Al Moore, giving us a foretaste of the nice line in back handed compliments and irony we'd soon see more of in his articles for Daredevils.
Along with the return of Captain Brexit, once he recovered from being dead.

Amicus films... now theres a topic for a Steve Does Comics thread.
Both of those Dr Who films with Peter Cushing were on tv last Saturday - any thoughts? I still have a soft spot for the second one. Sort of.
Anyway, their portmanteau horror films were alright. Somewhat mixed, but at least when there was a boring segment you'd know it wouldn't be long before something better came along.

Isn't the story about the woman with three wishes who's husband dies as an unintended result of the first in 'Tales from the Crypt'? Thats better than the Santa bit.
'Asylum' is their best horror anthology though. Britt Ekland was more happening in the early 70s than Joan Collins imo.

-sean

Anonymous said...

Gawd, a James Bond convention. That sounds like an ordeal.
I think I'd rather even watch Blake's 7...

-sean

Colin Jones said...

September 1st 1982 was my first day in the 6th Form - 40 years ago today!

Colin Jones said...

I think my favourite Amicus film is 'Dr Terror's House Of Horrors' which I first saw in one of those BBC2 horror double bills. It stars Alan 'Fluff' Freeman - norr arf pop pickers! - as well as Peter Cushing, Christopher Lee...and Roy Castle so what's not to like? And there's a great twist ending too (SPOILER: they're all dead).

Rocky III...yawn. But I loved 'Sinbad & The Eye Of The Tiger' which I first saw at the cinema on Monday, October 24th 1977 during the school half-term holiday but it wasn't a double-bill with the Spider-Man Movie, Steve - I did see the Spidey film too but I'm pretty sure it was on a seperate occasion. Anyway I remember 'Tiger' had an interlude at the point where evil Queen Zenobia realises she's permanently lumbered with a bird's foot when there's not enough magic potion to make her fully human again after she turned herself into a seagull to spy on Sinbad's ship.

Anonymous said...

I was going to comment that Queen were originally approached to perform 'Eye if the Tiger' but a quick google search suggests Stallone actually asked them for 'Another One Bites the Dust', which they refused.

Colin, Im also a fan of Dr Terror's House of Horrors which I also recall from a BBC 2 double feature. Very influential on the League of Gentlemen, particularly the first (only?) Christmas Special. We did get the Sinbad/Spidey double feature which was enjoyable if a little underwhelming.

No proper Captain Britain strip for a few month, now (insert sad face).

DW

Anonymous said...

Is 'Dr Terrors House of Horrors' the one with Christopher Lee as an art critic?
Don't know about the best - its hard to beat Herbert Lom's little automatons in 'Asylum' (they really disturbed me on Friday night tv as a kid) - but it is a good one.
Thats actually Tubby Hayes band in the voodoo jazz segment - a shame they had to go and put Roy Castle in it. See also: 'Dr Who and the Daleks' (although he's even more annoying in that, and - unlike Dr Terror - theres not much else there).

-sean

Colin Jones said...

After five years back at Marvel the Conan licence is moving to Titan Comics in 2023 - I was watching a YouTube video on this subject and most of the comments were glad that Conan is leaving Marvel because Marvel is too "woke" apparently and Conan might come out as gay or become a feminist sympathizer if he stays too long at Marvel. Obviously that's total bullsh*t but the modern Conan covers do lack any cowering scantily-clad wenches!

Apparently Conan goes out of copyright on January 1st 2028 so Titan Comics will probably be the last company that holds the Conan licence. I've heard that sword & sorcery authors are counting down the days until the Conan copyright expires so they can flood the market with new Conan novels!

Anonymous said...

Sean

Yes, that's the one. As bad as Roy Castle was in Doctor Who, he wasn't as bad as Bernard Cribbins in the sequel. I can't remember Asylum but having read the wiki page, it does ring a bell. Amicus did used to get some pretty decent names for their not-exactly mainstream films.

DW

Anonymous said...

Steve, Sinbad and the Eye of the Tiger has a dear place in my heart as well.
Mind you, I was probably nine years old when I saw it, and that was a pretty good age to see it.
It was before all this computer-generated stuff, when a Ray Harryhausen monster could still hold a kid in awe. Remember the Minoton? Brrr.
After that I almost wanted to visit Hyperborea myself. That giant troglodyte gave me pause, however.

M.P.

Anonymous said...

YES!!!
SINBAD & THE EYE OF THE TIGER was a double bill with LASERBLAST at the drive-in that AMAZINGLY I talked my mom into.

My mom's best friend had a son my age who also wanted to see both films, so they agreed to take us all. He had 2 younger sisters just like myself. Luckily the moms & the girls elected to group in one car, while Brian and I had one to ourselves.

Anonymous said...

Steve:
Granted that the lady on the Conan cover does look very 1970s — at least she doesn’t look like Doc Savage wearing a skirt and an ill- fitting wig (as most of Bob Larkin’s Conan and Kull figures tended to do).

Oh, those Amicus portmanteau movies. Most of them have at least one segment that’s worth watching. TALES FROM THE CRYPT is probably my sentimental favorite. I read the novelization years before I ever saw the movie. The ‘Monkey’s Paw’ story really weirded me out ; the guy returning to life, but in agony because he’d already been embalmed, and then unable to die even after his wife chopped him up into bloody strips was pretty hardcore. The film version seemed pretty tame, compared to the version I ‘saw’ in my head. I do like the Joan Collins Vs. Santa segment and the one with Peter Cushing as a reanimated corpse is excellent.

b.t.

Anonymous said...

To continue the story, we revelled in the Harryhausen magic. LASERBLAST was the second feature, and though trashy grade B, we enjoyed it almost as much. Must've been the over indulgence of Orange Crush & Kit Kats.

There was a small topless scene in LASERBLAST, and after it ended we both looked over at our moms' car and they were giving us the "death-stare",

We were old enough to think that was funny as hell, and had "howls of derisive laughter". Both moms didn't say a word on the way home.

-Killdumpster

Anonymous said...

b.t.-
Agreed, oh my brother.

TALES FROM THE CRYPT is also my fave Amicus anthology as well. Definitely on my re-watch list.

-Killdumpster

Steve W. said...

Am I the only person present who's never heard of Laserblast?

Sean, I love the Peter Cushing Doctor Who movies. They have their failings but they move a lot faster than the original serials did. And the Daleks look great in them.

Colin, happy 40th sixthformiversary.

Everyone else, thanks for your comments. :)

McSCOTTY said...

Laserblast is new to me as well Steve. I had a look at the trailer and it looks a pretty awful movie to me.

https://www.imdb.com

Anonymous said...

As regards Marvel Superheroes, Night Raven helps gumshoe Mike Macey avenge his partner, (spoiler alert...) catching a shady prison warden & his villainous chief-guard, who let prisoners out to commit crimes, with the fake alibi that they were in prison when the crimes were committed.

Alan Moore's Captain Brexit piece irks me. To Moore, Captain Brexit was crap (excepting the Byrne Spidey team-up), prior to the faux-Tolkien stories (in Hulk comic). I disagree. I like the Claremont origin, at a stone circle (very atmospheric) in the Cheviots, with the Lady of the Northern Skies (again, very atmospheric). I also thought 3 of the Ron Wilson & Pablo Marcos issues were excellent. That being said, to say Friedrich's stately Braddock Manor was a bad idea, is a serious understatement. Unlike Moore, to me, the Tolkien/ Arthurian stories were CB's low point (Death's White Rider, particularly).

The Avengers has Perez inked by Rubinstein - an interesting combination. Compare with Byrne & Rubinstein in Cap's own comic.

In the Avengers, Cap goes in the Avengers' mansion garden, to be on his own - like Gary Cooper (or Greta Garbo?) - whereupon Ms. Marvel goes out to see Cap, on the pretext of bringing him some wax to polish his shield - or something. Some kids decide to throw a snow ball at Cap. But Cap's aware of the kids' presence - even though they're behind him - and casually tosses his shield, which ricochets, intercepting the snowball! Who needs Daredevil and his radar-sense?

Ms.Marvel suggests Cap's a philosopher, as well as a superhero - but Cap doesn't respond to Carol's banter. "Just the facts, ma'am!"

The Vision's in the Avengers' "Danger Room" (do all teams have one?), trying to be a "lone wolf", like Gary Cooper (or Greta Garbo) - whereupon Jocasta decides to visit him on the pretext that...

At the end Jocasta said what the Vision said sounded poetic (which gets him annoyed!) "Just the facts, ma'am!"

So is the Avengers full of philosophers and poets? No, Wonder-man & the Beast are playing table tennis! The Beast sees Simon making a fool of himself on a kids tv show. Why didn't Wonder-man get some acting tips from Bob Diamond? Diamond was a proper theatre actor (see Iron Fist, prior to the Ninja stabbing Bob)! And how did Simon Williams go from being a rich industrialist to a jobbing actor?

There's some dated stuff about mental health issues (burly 'men in white coats', etc) - which doesn't age well - regarding a guy called Selbe - or something - whom Ms.Marvel is unsympathetic towards, but Janet Pym wants to help. There's more to this than meets the eye, and the Avengers must go after Jan, and sort things out!

Phillip

Charlie Horse 47 said...

Last night I'm at the driving range with a fraternity brother from univeristy. I mentioned [SDC] 40 years ago "eye of the tiger was #1"

He tells me, I saw the singer a few years ago at Fullers Car Wash. Purple hair, leopard print pants, lol. Apparently he lives around here, probably Hinsdale, IL.

IIRC, though, he says they barely made a nickel of Eye of the Tiger as all the rights to the record and movie belong to whomever. They only profited in the sense that it inspired people to come to their concerts.

Sounds like Siegel and Shuster, et al. from our world of comic books.

Charlie Horse 47 said...

Colin, et al. As I was hitting golf balls last night with my university friend he reminded me that 40 years ago we started our senior year.

That means I'm like going to start farting dust any day now...

Charlie is not enjoying the aging process all that much.

Ah well... my trip to the LCBS rejuvenates me. Yesterday I picked up POISON IVY #3 b/c it looked compelling but also b/c there seems to be a tribute this month in the DC comics to NEAL ADAMS. I have to wonder if Marvel is doing same?

Anyone know the ratio of ADAMS' DC to MARVEL work?

Charlie Horse 47 said...

PHILIP - Charlie really enjoyed your "name your favorite triumvirate" from Tuesday!

Initially Charlie was wondering if it would get traction but then they just started pouring in! I suspect it would have gone over 100 comments if it had posted on a Thursday!

Colin Jones said...

On the subject of Phillip's troika topic here's a final entry inspired by Sinbad:

The 7th Voyage Of Sinbad (1958)
The Golden Voyage Of Sinbad (1973)
Sinbad & The Eye Of The Tiger (1977)

Anonymous said...

Charlie & Colin, thanks - I'm glad the topic worked! I'm as surprised as everyone else!

Phillip

Colin Jones said...

It's strange there haven't been any more Sinbad films and it's also strange there wasn't a Sinbad comic from Marvel or DC. The character of Sinbad is hundreds of years old so there were no rights issues and he'd have been perfect for a sword & sorcery comic full of monsters, evil wizards and scantily-clad Arabic wenches.

Colin Jones said...

Steve, count me as another who's never heard of Laserblast!

Anonymous said...

Colin - Although I don't know of any more Sinbad films, a Sinbad tv series made it onto the small screen, in the 1990s!

Phillip

Anonymous said...

I've not heard of 'Laserblast' either. According to the wiki its about "an unhappy teenage loner who discovers an alien laser cannon and goes on a murderous rampage, seeking revenge against those who he feels have wronged him".
For a film made in '79 it sounds quite up to date in twenty-first century America. One for all the 4Chan Conan crowd whinging on Youtube about the wokeflakes at Marvel perhaps.

Colin, it'll be interesting to see what happens with Conan in 2028. Just because the character enters the public domain it doesn't necessarily follow he won't still be trademarked - ERB inc took out a lawsuit claiming trademark infringement against Dynamite a while back over Tarzan and John Carter (even though the characters were out of copyright, and the comics were called 'Lord of the Jungle' and 'Warlord of Mars').

That was settled out of court, so theres still a test case to be had. Five years after Conan its Superman's turn, then Batman... I don't see DC/Warner/Discovery or whatever the corporation is by then sitting around while anyone who wants to makes their own Supes and Bats films, computer games, comics and whatnot.

-sean

Colin Jones said...

Sean, apparently the US Supreme Court has already ruled that trademarks can't stop anyone from using characters in the public domain. If ERB Inc had gone to court I think they'd have lost. But when Superman goes out of copyright in 2034 it'll only be the earliest version of him as seen in Action Comics #1 and later more familiar versions (eg: with the kiss curl) will still be under copyright. Mickey Mouse goes out of copyright in 2024 but only the very earliest version of him as seen in the cartoon 'Steamboat Willie'.

Anonymous said...

I watched Laserblast on Youtube one time!
...I'm not sure why I did that. I think beer and insomnia had something to do with it. That's an hour or so of my life I'm never going to get back.
I felt bad for that kid in the movie. God only knows what a teenage M.P. woulda done, had he had access to an alien death-ray gun.

M.P.

Anonymous said...

I'm more worried about what a middle-aged M.P. might do...

Colin, as I understand it there are specific legal arguments about whats copyrightable, and whats covered by trademarks. Plus, things are complicated by the different jurisdictions (iirc ERB inc had a secondary argument about Dynamite's comics being exported to Europe, where they still held copyright on Tarzan).

Probably in 2028 you'll be able to publish your own Conan novel or comic but you won't be able to put the character's name on the cover, and there'll be limits to what you can refer to. Although who knows, maybe the law will change? Mickey Mouse should have gone into the public domain in the 90s, but US copyrights were extended. I expect theres a lot of lobbyists currently working on the politicians, given the amounts of money involved.
Like, I was reading about the new Amazon 'Lord of the Rings' - apparently it cost $465 million to make eight episodes. And they paid a crazy amount to the Tolkein estate for rights... and that was just for the appendices to LOTR!

Thats another one where the fans are complaining about political correctness gone mad. Dragons and elves are fine, but it seems you can't have black people in Middle Earth - thats just too fantastic. What plonkers.

-sean

Anonymous said...

Sean-
I've read Morgoth makes a brief appearance.
That sounds interesting, I've always wondered what he looked like, but I'm darned if I'm gonna pony up money to subscribe to a streaming service.
Nuts to that!
I'll just have to rely on my own fertile imagination.
And Youtube. (everything ends up there eventually. No doubt aliens are monitoring it and have decided not to invade)

M.P.

McSCOTTY said...

Sean - I heard that the Netflix Lord of the Rings series has to call Hobbits "Harfoots" which I think was due to some copyright issue despite Netflix paying a ludicrous amount on the series.

Anonymous said...

To me, Tolkien happens in a northern European winter (maybe late autumn, at a pinch). That's my mental picture. But scenes in the Netflix Tolkien look "bright", like a Mediterranean - or maybe Balkan - Tolkien. Atmosphere & tone not promising. My LOTR cover had a Bakshi movie still, with the Ring Wraiths in front of a snow-covered village - that's probably why I associate Tolkien with winter.

Phillip

Anonymous said...

Come to think of it, Greece had a lot of snow last year, didn't it?

Phillip

Colin Jones said...

Sean, Mickey Mouse is a trademark clearly associated with Disney but what is a Conan trademark associated with? The sword & sorcery authors I mentioned earlier seem pretty convinced they'll be completely free to use Conan in whichever way they want from 2028. I'm not a lawyer and this is a complicated issue but, as far as I understand, the US Supreme Court decided that using trademarks to control characters no longer in copyright created a grey area which meant those characters had one foot in the public domain and one foot out - how can something be in the public domain if you still need permission to use it??

In my opinion copyright lasts far too long already and it's totally outrageous that companies can use trademarks to keep control of profitable characters even when they've gone out of copyright.

Colin Jones said...

Companies and estates.

Colin Jones said...

By the way, when I said that only the 'Steamboat Willie' version of Mickey Mouse goes out of copyright in 2024 and the Action Comics #1 version of Superman in 2034 obviously the later, more familiar versions of Mickey, Superman etc will also go out of copyright eventually.

Colin Jones said...

J.R.R Tolkien died in 1973 but his books are still under copyright which is absolutely ridiculous.

Anonymous said...

"Only the 'Steamboat Willy' version goes out of copyright in 2024..."

Well there you go Colin - thats an example of how a character can be in the public domain and out at the same time. When Marv Wolfman and Gene Colan produced 'Curse of Dracula' for Dark Horse in the late 90s they had to do a new take on the character, to avoid any difficulty with Marvel's lawyers (Drac is public domain, but the specific 'Tomb...' version isn't).

The rights to Conan currently belong to Conan Properties International, a subsidiary of Cabinet Entertainment (I looked it up) - presumably they have the registered trademark. What happens from 2028 probably depends on how much they think its worth, and what they're willing to spend on hassling anyone who tries using the character.
Interestingly - but perhaps not surprisingly for the work of a writer who topped himself at a relatively young age and was fairly obscure for a while after - it seems that its always been debatable whether anyone holds the rights to Conan -
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conan_the_Barbarian#Copyright_and_trademark_dispute

Thats the thing about Intellectual Property - theres the legal theory, and then theres what you can enforce if you have money; and what you can get away with - or not - if you don't.
Didn't the owners once try it on with Conan O'Brien a while back for using the name?

-sean

Anonymous said...

PS Just to be clear Colin, I completely agree with you about Tolkein - the whole point of copyright was to protect living writers and their immediate estate, not give large corporations an earner.

-sean

Anonymous said...

McScotty & Sean-
Totally agree that LASERBLAST is a pretty awful hunk o' B-grade cheese. It was an early Charles Band effort, before he formed Full Moon Productions. Those were the folks who put out such franchises as TRANCERS, PUPPET MASTER, DOLLMAN, DEMONIC TOYS, EVIL BONG, etc.

Steve & Colin-
Don't blame you for not knowing the film, but a few sci-fi/monster mags in the states were really promoting it. There was very little star power as well. Rainbeaux Smiith, Keenan Wynn, and Rowdy McDowall were the 'big' names. It was also the film debut of the insufferable Eddie Deezen.

M.P-
Sorry you feel it was time wasted seeing the movie. As I've said before, I love cheesy movies as well as good ones. Maybe more so.

Recommend to anyone remotely interested in seeing LASERBLAST, watch the Mystery Science Theater 3000 version. They tear it to shreds.

-Killdumpster

Anonymous said...

Not having heard of 'Bong World' either, I looked it up.
Who needs a film about being trapped by a malevolent bong in another world? Been there, done that...

-sean

Anonymous said...

Kim Milford, the Star of LASERBLAST also played Frank N. Furter’s studly blond tension-reliever Rocky Horror in the L.A. cast of THE ROCKY HORROR SHOW. When the movie became a cult hit, the ‘Original Roxy Cast’ recording was the only album available for purchase in the US for a year or two, so Milford’s version of ‘Sword of Damocles’ is the one I’m most familiar with, and the one I tend to hear in my head.

I saw LASERBLAST on a double-feature with another early Charles Band stinker, END OF THE WORLD in ‘78. Perfectly horrible way to spend an afternoon.

b.t.

Anonymous said...

b.t.-
I go to 20 hour movie theater marathons that play even worst drek than that. Luckily I have a few pals that also enjoy garbage cinema, and the theater is BYOB.

-Killdumpster

Anonymous said...

Sean-
I referenced EVIL BONG, not BONG WORLD. I never saw BONG WORLD. If I was still a stoner I might've had interest in seeing it.

b.t.-
A theater in the 'Burgh played ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW every Saturday night at midnight. After my first viewing I came prepped with a small tarp. The place became an apocalyptic water gun battle during the raining scenes, and thousands of bread slices filled the air during the 'toast' scene. What a lot of fun.

Drama students from Carnegie-Mellon University re-enacted a number of scenes while the film played. I sure miss those days

A younger girl I was dating had never seen it. We rented it on VHS, and she was blown away. She also said that Tim Curry is the sexiest man alive. Lol.

She bought me the ROCKY HORROR SHOW recording on LP for my birthday, but was disappointed it wasn't the film's soundtrack.

-Killdumpster

Anonymous said...

Sorry Kd, there probably isn't a 'Bong World' - that was my mistake. Not sure what I was thinking but that should be 'Evil Bong' above.

-sean

Anonymous said...

Hah! Funny thing is I probably was LIVING in "Bong World" in the late 70's/early 80's. Lol.

-Killdumpster

Anonymous said...

Charles Band's Full Moon was also responsible for a series of GingerDEAD Man films. Much like CHUCKY, an evil guy's soul is transferred into a cookie (biscuit). Original films were voiced by Gary Busey.

Oh the wonderful world of fantasy.

-Killdumpter

Anonymous said...

Steve - Mogol was a favourite of mine, too. An old copy of MWOM containing that story, was in my junior classroom's rainy day cupboard, circa 1979/1980.

Having cut my teeth on the Len Wein/Sal Hulk, this was quite different.

For a start, with Len/Sal, the Hulk was the absolute standard against which everyone else was judged. "The most powerful creature to ever walk the earth" (except with gas!)

Yet - astonishingly, to post Len/Sal me, Mogol matched the Hulk's strength (albeit not his invulnerability). To a little kid, this was almost sacrilege! And, reading the Herb Trimpe ones later, many foes gave the Hulk a good run for his money!

Yet the story was so good! It was poignant - to young kids - the Hulk destroying Mogol, who claimed he just wanted to be the Hulk's friend, all the while!

To me, the ultimate Hulk's in the Mongu & Dr.Druid story, by Len/Sal/Ernie Chan - but, nevertheless, this Mogol one's up very close!

Wasn't Mogol also that age-old trope of being an android who didn't realize he was an android (until the end)?

Phillip

Matthew McKinnon said...

Does this mean that as time passes, each specific iteration of a character will pass into public domain?

Steve W. said...

It's hard to say, Matthew. Copyright and trademark law are a tangled web that often seem to make no sense at all.

Phillip, the demise of Mogol haunts me still.