Sunday 4 August 2024

Fifty years ago today - August 1974.

Thanks to Charlie Horse 47 and Killdumpster for their sponsorship of this post, via the magic of Patreon
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Let us proceed without delay.

Avengers #126, Klaw

My recollections of this one are vague but I do believe the world's mightiest super-team must tackle both Klaw and Solarr in a tale which may feature the Rudyardian ambassador.

Is this the one in which the Scarlet Witch thwarts the villains by smashing them with an asteroid she yanks out of orbit?

Also, I do believe this issue's drawn by a combination of Bob Brown and Dave Cockrum - although there are clear signs of another, mysterious, hand being involved in the inking of certain panels.

Conan the Barbarian #41, the Garden of Death and Life

Gil Kane and John Romita serve up a dramatic cover when the a
ntediluvian aggro-meister must combat the maddening menace of a hostile tree!

Captain America and the Falcon #176

It's a classic tale in which Steve Rogers has one almighty great mard-fit and shocks us all by deciding to quit being Captain America.

Of course, before he does that, we get yet another retelling of his origin.

Daredevil #112, Mandrill

Daredevil invades Black Spectre's airship but is quickly captured, with a brainwashed Black Widow standing guard over both he and Shanna the She-Devil!

Not only is this bad news for them. It also means nothing can now stop the Mandrill from taking over the White House!

Fantastic Four #149, the Sub-Mariner

Can it be true? Is the Sub-Mariner finally going to succeed in conquering the surface world?

And doing so with the aid of Sue Richards?

I can't say, because I've never read it but I'm willing to bet good money the whole thing ends with him not conquering the surface world. And with Sue back in the arms of the Fantastic Four.

Incredible Hulk #178, Warlock reborn

It's the big one we've all been waiting for!

On Counter-Earth, not only does Adam Warlock get crucified on national TV, he then proceeds to return from the dead.

Its a subtle thing but I can't help feeling there's some sort of Biblical allegory hidden in all of this, somewhere.

Iron Man #69

Holy Hannah! Iron Man has to deal with a whole quartet of menaces!

I can't help feeling that any tale which features the Mandarin, Unicorn, Sunfire and Yellow Claw may prove a little overcrowded - especially in the ego department.

As if that wasn't enough, the issue also features Ultimo!

Fortunately, deadly as he is, Ultimo's always struck me as being mercifully free of ego.

Amazing Spider-Man #135, the Tarantula and the Punisher

It's a classic John Romita cover, as Spider-Man and the Punisher set aside their differences, in order to thwart the stabby-shoed menace of the Tarantula.

But, perhaps more significantly, this is the issue in which Harry Osborn discovers the true identity of Spider-Man!

Thor #226, Galactus

Galactus being a bit of a sad-sack there.

Tragically, not having read this one, I don't have a clue what it is he's being a sad sack about.

X-Men #89, the Sub-Human

I'm not familiar with this story but, to be honest, if I was labelled, "The Sub-Human," I'd probably want to smash things up too.

Adventure Comics #434, the Spectre

That's Marvel's finest heroes disposed of but, for every yin there's a yang. Therefore, what news is there of the House of Ideas' closest rival, and a random sample of its comics which bear the cover date of August 1974?

The Spectre materialises, once more, to combat villainy. But, this time, it's villainy with a difference.

This time, the phantom lawman's up against no mere common hood but a man who's bringing shop window dummies to life, in order to enrich and embetter his circumstances.

However, even a foe such as he is no match for a being who can know no rest until he's totally eliminated crime from the entire planet.

And, in fact, this time, there's a second difference because this issue isn't primarily drawn by usual artist Jim Aparo. Instead, it's predominately pencilled by Frank Thorne with able assist from Aparo.

Superboy #203

It's another of my fave Legion tales, as Validus reappears to cause consternation in the ranks.

It all begins when Invisible Kid collapses before revealing that, when he uses his power, he can see a hidden world inhabited by a fit bird.

Later, Dream Girl prophesies that Validus is coming to attack the Legion!

It can only mean one thing. That only an act of total self-sacrifice is going to be saving the day.

And it's Invisible Kid who's going to have to make it!

Limited Collectors' Edition #C-29, Tarzan

The lord of the jungle gets the 84-page treatment when we're supplied with a multi-part epic sourced from the company's 1972 Tarzan series.

We also get How to Draw Tarzan's Animals, an investigation into whether the hero is based on a real person.

And, of course, there's the table-top diorama no DC Collectors' Edition would be complete without.

Kamandi, the Last Boy on Earth #20, Chicago

I've never read this one but that's a memorable cover while, inside, it would seem Kamandi discovers the mind-numbing secret behind the humans of Chicago!

My guess is those humans have all turned out to be robots.

However, I'm assuming that's only the case in this comic and not in real life.

The Witching Hour #45, Uncle Harry

It's another memorable cover from Nick Cardy.

And I've no doubt the insides are packed with goodness too, as various talents serve up such treats as Something Sinister About Uncle Harry, Bet Your Life, For Whom the Ghost Bells Toll and Ghostly Genie.

Action Comics #438, A monster named Lois Lane

Things get inconvenient for the man of steel when his girlfriend keeps turning into a homicidal monster!

What can be behind this revolting development?

From what I can recall, it's being caused by a necklace he gave her as a present. One that came from another world and gives off strange radiation.

You might have thought he'd have checked for things like that before giving her the thing.

Elsewhere, we have a backup strip featuring the Atom. From what I recall, a Professor Myles Adrian manages to trap the under-sized crime-fighter in the magnetic tape of his telephone's answering machine.

25 comments:

Anonymous said...

Steve - Wanda plucked a meteor from the heavens, bringing it crashing down on Kang's final, and most powerful Macrobot - Thor was inside it! (in Super Spidey # 264 - one with the White Tiger on the cover - and a very good issue!) Confusing it with Klaw & Solarr's understandable, Cockrum being heavily - and very successfully involved in both!

Klaw & Solarr's story was one of many resolved by destroying the villain's power source. "Mr. Ambassador's briefcase" - the offending article - being stamped on, by T'Challa! The Black Panther then took a "leave of absence", having served the Avengers with distinction - at least according to Thor. This was one of at least two occasions when the Black Panther's skill & agility saved the Avengers, not the raw power of the big three!

No more Black Panther, until he came storming back in the cracking Graviton story, just after the start of Jim Shooter's Avengers. Happy days, reading those stories!

Phillip

Anonymous said...

Kang's Macrobots confused me as, defeating the Avengers to start with, the Vision, Iron Man & Thor, weren't inside each robot, powering them. The Macrobots seemed to be calibrated to defeat the Avengers' powers, nevertheless. Later, in that story, after the Vision's Macrobot is defeated (Hawkeye's oil(?)gloop arrow, blocking off the Vision's forehead jewel's supply of solar power? - I forget), Kang unleashes Iron Man's Macrobot, declaring: "Iron Man's armoured might far outstrips that of the Vision!" if memory serves. Yet, much earlier in the Avengers, Iron Man was smashing his gauntlets to bits on the Vision, with implying that the latter was tougher! Jim Shooter taking over, however, Iron Man seemed to get much more powerful. Maybe - against Nefaria - the Vision got the idea of plummeting down from the sky, at top density, from Wanda's tactic to defeat Kang's Thor Macrobot! But why didn't Wanda do it to Nefaria? Maybe a conveniently passing meteor wasn't around, at the time!

I see Grotesk, who battled Ms.Marvel, is gracing one of the other covers!

Phillip

Anonymous said...

implying - not 'with implying' !

Phillip

Anonymous said...

Steve,
Besides featuring Wanda pulling an asteroid out of orbit, Neal Adams was the “other, mysterious hand involved in the inking “ of GIANT-SIZE AVENGERS 2 that you were thinking of. Other than that, your recollections of the contents of AVENGERS 126 are pretty spot-on :)

In contrast to my usual snarky comments about Ron Wilson , I must say his cover on that issue looks quite nice. It’s probably one of those that he pencilled from a Romita layout (and Giacoia’s inks help too) but still, it’s a good one.

b.t.

Anonymous said...

b.t. - I totally agree. With Ron Wilson, the inker makes all the difference. With my first(the last) Captain Britain story, that I loved, being a case in point. I got the prior issue, decades later, which was vastly inferior. Ron Wilson, with a different inker, just wasn't as good.

Neal Adams - a diverse hand for Kang. I'm digesting that - his dynamic style would certainly fit Cockrum.

Phillip

joecab said...

I bought that Action Comics off the newsstand and thought seeing the Atom get caught physically on magnetic tape was so cool! Yikes.

Colin Jones said...

Steve, you clearly didn't read Marvel UK's Complete Fantastic Four #17 from January 1978 which featured this month's FF story. Namor's "invasion" of the surface world was all part of a cunning plan to get Reed and Sue back together again after their recent separation - and it worked!

Anonymous said...

You'd think the US authorities would have had something to say about launching an Atlantean attack on New York - with Giganto, no less! - just to provide a bit marriage guidance counselling, Colin.

Steve, you are correct about the 'humans' of Chicago being robots in Kamandi. However, we found that out in #19 so its not the hope destroying TRUTH! revealed in #20. Which is that the 'city' is in fact the Chicago-Land museum/theme park, and Chicago itself was destroyed in the Great Disaster.

Not sure Kirby was firing on all cylinders with that story. Don't get me wrong, its a pretty good comic, but the electric chair scene - and critique of the barbarism of capital punishment - doesn't quite hit as powerfully as you'd expect (given what the King was generally capable of).
I wonder what was going on with Kirby at this point, as the Demon and Mister Miracle we're cancelled at the start of the year so he'd only been doing the one comic for about six months. An unusual situation for him!
Still, maybe his mind was just on his new series, which would debut in September. Yeah, OMAC comin'...

Btw, in Action #438 it wasn't just the necklace from the other world that turned Lois into a rampaging beast-woman. She had a cold too! No, really - apparently the alien necklace radiation wasn't really that strong, and it only affected Lois because of her weakened state.
So to sort things out, Superman used his advanced knowledge of Kryptonian science to come up with a cure for the common cold!

-sean

Anonymous said...

Is it just me, or does Conan #41 look a bit like an Atlas comic from that cover...?

-sean

Anonymous said...

It’s just you, sean.

b.t.

Redartz said...

Some heavyweights out there this month!

That Captain America issue was a bit unusual (except for the umpteenth retelling of his origin); as all the action was essentially dialogue- Steve getting advice, or Steve debating himself. Nonetheless it was a very memorable issue closing out the Secret Empire saga, and ending quite dramatically. Plus that cover (Sal Buscema, with some Romita help?) is sharp.

Fantastic Four did indeed conclude the Reed vs. Sue storyline, with the marital assistance of Namor and the Inhumans. More nice visuals from Buckler and Sinnott, and a good issue overall. Perhaps it sits so fondly in my memory as it brought Sue back to the fore, and much as I liked Medusa, Sue was tops.

And then there was Amazing Spider-Man; with that magnificent cover. My favorite cover of the entire series, actually- Romita had everything going (figuratively and literally) on it. The iconic pose Spidey displays, the striking spider silhoutte framing the various scenes, those dramatic depictions of the book's contents; and all wrapped up in sharp black background!
The story itself is decent but not epic; even with the Punisher's return. Yet that cover alone keeps that book in the list of Bronze Age Bests...

Anonymous said...

sean:
All smart-assery aside, I’m staring at the Conan cover and wondering what kind of Atlas-isms you might be seeing. The only thing that kinda/sorta/maybe feels a bit Atlas-y to me are the hard-angular letterforms in Gaspar Saladino’s logo. And Atlas used that red and yellow color combo a lot on their logos too — but of course, so did EVERY comics company.

Anyhow, I think it’s a good cover and overall a very solid Thomas/Buscema/Chan issue of CTB. I thought at the time that I detected a subtle change in how Ernie was inking Big John’s pencil after being away for a few months, that his inks weren’t as heavy as they were before his brief hiatus. Maybe he paid attention to how Buscema inked his own pencils on issues 38 and 39, or maybe Buscema changed the way he was pencilling to get a desired effect. Or maybe I was just seeing something that wasn’t there.

b.t.

Steve W. said...

Bt and Phillip, thanks for dispelling my confusion as to which Avengers issue I was thinking of.

Bt, I suppose that a homicidal tree eating people is reminiscent of Morlock 2001.

Sean, thanks for the Lois Lane clarification. I should have known there'd be a rational explanation for why the necklace affected her like that.

Colin, you are correct. I didn't read that issue. Come to think of it, I think I only ever had one issue of The Complete Fantastic Four, which was the one that saw the return of the Miracle Man.

Joe, his worst predicament, for me, was when Dr Light trapped him inside a lightbulb and then turned it on. To be honest, if I was the Atom, I'd have hired bodyguards to accompany me wherever I go.

Red, it is indeed a classic cover.

Anonymous said...

Steve - Homicidal trees? 'From Hell It Came' !

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qv4jcKJROFA

Phillip

Anonymous said...

I always liked that Colan / Giacoia art combo — on early issues of DD and Iron Man, one issue of Sub-Mariner and even a Brother Voodoo. I think DD 112 may be the last time they ever teamed up :(

I liked the Black Spectre serial back in the day but I have to admit i find it kinda dumb now. I especially ‘like’ the part where DD breaks Natasha out of her Mandrill-induced trance by yelling at her about that guy mugging an old lady in a previous issue — kinda surprised he didn’t continue with ‘And remember you were all hysterical and almost killed that guy, and I had to give you the back of my hand to get you to stop? Now snap out of it and release me and my half-naked Jungle Lady-friend from our bindings!’ Wouldn’t put it past him, DD could be a real tool sometimes during Gerber’s run.

b.t.

Anonymous said...

b.t., If there had ever been an Atlas Team-Up comic, I could see the cover of an Iron Jaw/Morlock issue looking not unlike that Conan one.

-sean

Anonymous said...

Did Nixon resign as president before or after the Mandrill and his army of facially tattooed ladies occupied the White House?

-sean

Anonymous said...

That might have been during the Ford administration, Sean.

About that Thor comic, Steve, it was I think, the issue that came after the one above that served as my introduction to Thor. Or the one after that.
Galactus had come to Earth apparently seeking the aid of Thor, IIRC. He had once again tried to devour Ego, the living planet. But according to Galactus, Ego had gone insane and now posed a threat to the whole universe.
Well, no wonder Ego was in a bad mood! Who wants to get devoured? But Galactus somehow convinced Thor and Hercules to join with him and the newly introduced Firelord to go cool Ego out.
I guess.
Anyway, THAT comic was maybe one of the first times I saw Thor. Rich Buckler pencils, a lot of swiping Kirby, but little M.P. was duly impressed.
It was cosmic!
And there was that effect, which Buckler also swiped from Kirby, where Thor is swinging his hammer around and it looks like one of those models of an atom, with protons and neutrons spinning around a nucleus.
Even at the age of maybe seven or eight, I recognized that symbol. But we're all children of the nuclear age, right?
I thought it meant Thor had atomic powers. In any event, he put some hurt down on Ego. I was a Thor fan after that.

M.P.

Steve W. said...

Sean, I think you've hit on it. That's what could have saved Atlas. If they'd launched an Avengers style comic where all their heroes teamed up to fight crime. Who wouldn't want a comic that featured the Destructor, the Phoenix, the Tarantula, Target, Tiger-Man, the Brute, Demon Hunter and any other character whose awesomeness I've forgotten? Granted, the writer might have had some difficulty preventing them from eating each other but that would've just added to the drama.

MP, thanks for the Thor/Sad Galactus/Ego clarification.

Anonymous said...

Well, Steve, there was also Morlock 2001.
...and yeah, he did eat people.
After turning into a plant monster.

What was going on at Atlas, anyway? We'll likely never know.

M.P.

Anonymous said...

Rando thoughts at 5:00 AM -

Ego discussion is reminding me of the old b&w movie where the moon has a rocket ship in his eye. The scene was used during the Olympic opening ceremony (Jules Verne being french) so its fresh n my hesd.

Thor is now Galactus’s herald. Or was a few years ago. I have a stack of a dozen Thor’s I never finished reading from that time.

After having seen Little House of Horrors live in theatre last autumn, I notice the people-eating plant schtick everywhere. I assume that play was the inspiration material for Atlas at that time?

Ok… time to get a move on.

CH-47

Anonymous said...

Charlie, I remember that scene where the moon gets a rocket ship in the eye!
Probably everybody here has seen it.
It is scary in a way. Yikes! It spooked me when I was a kid.
And the idea of an entire planet with a face on it, like Ego, that's...that's pretty disturbing, if you think about it.
Seeing a human face where there shouldn't be one seems horrifying to me.
Think about that for a moment and you'll get my point.
Like that dog in Invasion of the Body Snatchers, with the human head?
$#!#! That scared the hell outta me.

N.P.

Anonymous said...

About ten years ago, someone tried to revive the Atlas comics line and one of the titles they published was called ATLAS UNITED or something like that, featuring Iron Wolf, PhÅ“nix, The Grim Ghost and I don’t know who else, all getting together to have adventures , or maybe just hang out and watch football on TV. I’ve actually been curious to check it out, but not enough to spend cash money to acquire a copy on eBay, or drag my ass over to my LCS and see if they have one in their dollar bin that I could shoplift.

b.t.

Steve W. said...

MP, I must confess I was totally unaware of that. Now I feel a strong desire to experience that comic.

Steve W. said...

Oops, sorry. That last comment should have been addressed to Bt, not MP.