Thanks to Charlie Horse 47 and Killdumpster for their sponsorship of this post, via the magic of Patreon.
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I don't like to boast but I've seen a housefly, a horsefly and even a botfly but I've never seen an elephant fly.
Come to think of it, I have.
I've seen it in Dumbo.
And, if I'd had a ticket to the cinema, this month in 1972, there's a fair chance it would have got me in to see that movie, thanks to it being out on re-release.
Then again, the ticket may also have been for Last Tango in Paris which was also doing the rounds. Let's hope no one got their tickets mixed up and took their kids to see the latter film when they'd meant to show them the former.
Over on the UK singles chart, it was good news for David Cassidy who began October at Number One, thanks to his smash hit single How Can I Be Sure?
Well, he couldn't. And that's why, just two weeks into that month, he was cruelly dethroned by Lieutenant Pigeon who seized the top spot with Mouldy Old Dough and then stayed there for the rest of October.
Proving totally immovable at the top of the UK album chart was the LP the world knew as 20 All-Time Greats of the 50s by that classic 1950s act Various Artists, thus demonstrating that the early-1980s Rock and Roll revival began in 1972.
Because the Doc Savage Revival is here!
And probably ends very soon afterwards.
Regardless, the Man of Bronze can finally thrill the reader of the 1970s as much as he did the reader of the 1930s.
Sadly, I can't say just what Doc does to thrill him/her, as I've never read this tale but I'm sure it's bound to be bad news for any villains he encounters.
After an, admittedly, much shorter absence.
In this month's thrilling adventure, Manny decides to take swift action when he discovers an infant being abandoned in the Everglades.
But that's not the only story, this issue.
We also receive The Spell of the Sea Witch! and There Is Something Strange About Mister Jones! in which a crook tries to mug Davy Jones.
That's Davy Jones of the Locker fame. Not of the Monkees fame.
This time, it's Gunhawks that gets an unleashing, with a tale entitled The Thundering Herd.
Instead, we get the mind-numbing terror of Dig Me No Grave!, House! and You Show Me Your Dream -- I'll Show You Mine!!
The book will, of course, go on to achieve immortality as a home for Panther's Rage but, for now, it's happy to give us Lorna the Jungle Girl, Tharn, Bazo, and Jann of the Jungle. All highly original creations, I'm sure.
I do believe this is the one in which Subby encounters a bunch of aquatic mutants who're convinced they can never fit into any civilised society.
Namor thinks they can.
And he says so.
But then his Imperial Guards show up and - based purely on the mutants' appearance - immediately prepare to shoot them.
Thus it is that the Avenging Son must contemplate the uncomfortable truth that the outcasts may have been right.
14 comments:
Is that not a Jimmy Steranko cover on Doc Savage???
Where is Luke Cage Hero for Hire??? On hiatus???
DOC SAVAGE 1 cover by John Buscema, pencils and inks. Steranko did the covers for issues 2 and 3.
b.t.
Thanks BT!
The London Rock and Roll Show in the summer of 72 - with Bo Diddely, Jerry Lee Lewis, Little Richard and assorted local has-beens like Screaming Lord Sutch and Heinz - was one of the first music events in Wembley stadium Steve - I assume that was part of the impetus for that Various Artists lp.
I suppose its been a bit forgotten these days, but from that point on 50s nostalgia was a cultural trend through the 70s, even where you wouldn't expect it - Ziggy Stardust was based on Vince Taylor for instance, and of course it fed into punk, with Malcolm McLaren's shop in the Kings Road starting off by selling old 50s records, clothes, and assorted tat.
The comics though seem to be moving forward. That Man-Thing story in Fear #10 was the first work for Marvel by the mighty Howard Victor Chaykin (inked by Gray Morrow - nice).
And 'You Show Me Your Dream...' in Journey Into Mystery #1 has the first credit - along with 'art assist' in this months Amazing Spider-Man - for Judo Jim Starlin. Inked by Mike Ploog no less, so it looks a bit better than most of his early work.
-sean
I was curious about Gunhawks - a black western hero struck me as noteworthy for '72 (a couple of years before Blazing SWaddles even!) - so I had a go at reading that first issue online.
But I gave up a few pages in, at the point Reno Jones explains why he was for the south in the civil war, because there was more to it than slavery and anyway "not all the plantation owners were cruel... the one who owned me for instance, he was a good man"
Eh. I'm all for a nuanced understanding of history, but I don't think an early 70s Marvel comic written by Gary Friedrich is really the place to get it...
-sean
*Blazing Saddles
Obviously. Not sure where that stray W came from...
King Charlie categorically recommends the Subby! The cover is not really representative of the contents! In fact the first several pages wrap up the Subby-Sunfire-Dragon Lord battle royale! Its all written and drawn by the incomparable Bill Everett in a style all its own, serious yet mirthful at the same time. KC dug it out of the long boxes this weekend to prepare for this occasion and would be pleased to know others here equally enjoyed this unique creation!
The Subby actually has 3 separate stories. The 2nd one is that which Steve wrote up with art by Alan Weiss (?). The 3rd is a real gem: a 1950s reprint (by Everett natch!) about teenage Namor.
Namor meets his cousin Namora for the first time. Observations:
- Namor prefers to play with Prince Byrrah (boys) than Namora (girls) as a younger boy and ditches her.
- Getting trapped in the torpedo tube while playing in a WW 2 submarine, Byrrah flees leaving Subby to die. Namora had tagged along and punches a hole through the steel submarine to rescue Subby.
- Namora like Subby is white Neither have wings.
You know... somehow I think Marvel really botched Subby. I mean, Namora presumably has proportional strength to Subby, they have blue-skinned Atlantean parent and presumably white, earth-dwelling parent.
The whole mixed-race awareness of the 60s/70s onward could have been explored.
A small family of super powered water dwellers could have been explored.
Instead they kill his queen, kill his dad all within a few issues, and per usual Namor is basically just a quick-tempered impulsive, guy in speedos instead an Imperius Rex until Everett shows up.
Lastly - I really don't get the cover with the sea monsters when they could have used Sunfire again... Maybe monsters were the order of the day?
Sean, over 10% of African-Americans voted for Trump so there are probably some who think slavery was OK.
As regards this month's pick, we've all read different titles!
Phillip
PHILLIP! Out of the batch above i only bought Savage and Subby off the spinner. If Steve had shown us, say, Luke Cage #3 instead of Mandingo I would have hit a trifecta!!!
Charlie - I've read DD, FF & (I think?) Avengers!
Phillip
I didn’t have any of these when they were hot off the spinner rack, but i’ve acquired most of them in the years since, all except GUNHAWKS 1, I believe. Not a big fan of Syd Shores’ art.
i did have some comic that must have been released in the same month as these, because I remember a house ad touting the premieres of DOC SAVAGE, GUNHAWKS and FEAR (at the bottom of the Bullpen Bulletins page, I think).
b.t.
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