Thanks to Charlie Horse 47 and Killdumpster for their sponsorship of this post, via the magic of Patreon.
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Our Marvel heroes have never hesitated before flinging themselves into the fray. Therefore, I shall hesitate me not to do likewise.
Our adventurers manage to rescue the captive Lorelei but completely fail to prevent the villain from opening the Casket of Ancient Winters and, as far as I can make out, that somehow clears the way for Surtur and his army to invade the planet Earth!
The Norns, meanwhile, give Balder a pep talk that could transform his life.
Lovers of Silver Age comics will, of course, instantly detect a homage to the monster comics Marvel was churning out before The Fantastic Four came along to set the company on the route to super-heroic triumph.
But that's not all because, trying to find a cure for Reed's recent memory losses, he and the gang visit the home of his late parents - only to discover his father had a Dr Doom style time machine in his lab!
Granted, the improvement in his drawing skills, in the intervening years, means he graces it a lot more than he did back then.
Contained within, Storm meets Forge for the first time and they hang around in his apartment, discussing her history and loss of mutant powers. A loss caused by the very gun he himself created.
But because a super-hero comic can't be made up entirely of talking, I do believe that, while that's going on, Rogue is in sensational solo action against the Dire Wraiths.
And she's doing all her talking with her fists.
And that means Cloak, Spidey and the Black Cat have to try and stop him.
However, none of them succeed - until Dr Strange tries a noticeably more intelligent tactic than the others have.
However, that solution sees the green gargoyle exiled to an alien world.
One from which he may never be able to return.
And it's basically the same as the ones we've had before, just a bit more long-winded.
Regardless, in this issue, both Mother Superior and Baron Zemo discover the rapidly ageing Nazi has no regard for them. And I can't help feeling that fact will prove to be his downfall.
Needless to say, the small coterie of Avengers who happen to be present are not going to let that happen.
Luckily for them, Daredevil's on the scene to save them.
But possibly not so luckily for Vanessa who is killed in the subsequent scrap.
Then again, it turns out it is lucky for her because it's not really Vanessa who's killed. It's a lookalike hired by the Kingpin to protect the real Vanessa.
Which is good news for Vanessa but not for the lookalike; Heidi DeVoto.
However, the death of Heidi leaves the Kingpin feeling miffed and, so, he agrees to team up with DD in a bid to bring down Synn.
I don't know about this. I can't help feeling Kingie could easily bring down Synn without any help at all from Daredevil.
In a plot twist few would have seen coming, she really does turn out not to be a witch.
She is, however, some sort of moss creature who has to kill people in order to survive in open sunshine.
But can the revelation of this fact really be enough to get in the way of her and Fafnir's romance?
Needless to say, Kingie's not at all pleased about a hit being arranged without his permission.
But that might be the least of the corpulent crimelord's concerns as, by the end of it all, the Rose has agreed to ally himself with the Hobgoblin!
But even all of that pales into insignificance beside the true drama of the issue.
Which is that Mary Jane reveals that she knows Peter Parker is Spider-Man.
And that she's always known he's Spider-Man!!!
Vibro's still causing trouble and Rhodey's still out to stop him.
And he does stop him.
He also discovers the source of the headaches which have been plaguing him lately.
And it turns out to be that his helmet isn't set up right, having been designed for Tony Stark to wear.
Sounds like a good day, all round, for him.
18 comments:
First, Bill Sienkiewicz started on New Mutants, and then Marvel put out a double sized X-Men drawn by Barry Windsor-Smith. It was a conspiracy to get everyone reading Chris Claremont comics again!
Just when I thought I was out, they pulled me back in...
You're right, Steve. X-Men #186 does look a lot better than #53. Probably that wouldn't have come as a surprise to anyone.
And in fairness I think Claremont rose to the occasion. Or maybe Baz came up with some decent dialogue that - as he has said in interviews - the writer got the credit for. Either way, it was a pretty good issue, and obviously the best comic here.
But was it the best of the month? A month in which somehow DC still managed to give Marvel a bit of competition in new work by a legendary artist stakes with Steranko's 'Exile on the Edge of Eternity' among the contents of Superman #400?
Or did some newbies come out on top, with the return of Anton Arcane - free from the Comics Code - in Saga of the Swamp Thing #29...?
-sean
A bumper month for Marvel.
I obviously had that Thor, though I’m going to have to take a look at my reprint to remember what happens.
And that FF - I now know I must have bought that comic for a fairly long stretch, though the only issue I remember is the one where Sue loses her baby.
I definitely picked up the X-Men - at that point in life, I only knew of Barry Smith as a famous name, so his art here was a pleasant revelation. I wonder if I’ve still got my copy in the loft? Probably. I should sell it and cash in.
Look how much better that DD cover is than the interior art. Mazz should have been inking from the off.
Sean - so Superman 400 was this month? Wow. I remember picking that up. Not deeply satisfying, but lots of pretty nuggets. Certainly the blockiest and most basic Frank Miller art I’d seen to date. I keep trying to track down the softcover where that Steranko story was reprinted once and once only, but no luck as yet.
That comic introduced me to my one and only comics friend back then. I’d almost forgotten. The week after I’d picked up my Superman 400, I saw someone else in the newsagents picking up a copy, and I nervously ventured ‘that’s a good one that’. And so we got talking, and this guy Andrew was also a comics fan - though his tastes were a bit more mainstream than mine.
We used to meet up every month or so and do the rounds together, as we rarely had to compete for any issues. I think that guy was the only person I ever met in the wild who was also into comics.
Lost touch a couple of years later.
PS: that Eternals cover is pretty dreadful.
I know I bought that X-men and was properly impressed by Smith’s art, but I’ll be damned if I can remember f***-all about the story. Like Matthew, I think I probably still have my copy — somewhere — but can’t be arsed to go hunting for it.
Steranko’s “Exile At The Edge Of Eternity” is more of a formal exercise than a story. At that point in his career, he seemingly could only be motivated to write and draw comics if he could somehow innovate, and do something that had Never Been Done Before In The History Of Comics. In the case of “Exile”, that meant telling a story in a rigid graphic framework consisting entirely of double-page spreads broken up into top-to-bottom vertical panels with a dynamic full-figure at the center of each spread.
It’s gimmicky as hell. The eons-spanning Future History is equal parts Olaf Stapledon and E. E. “Doc” Smith. The title is a Harlan Ellison pastiche. It ends with the hoariest of science-fiction cliche’s, Adam and Eve.
But y’know what — it’s freaking GREAT. It definitely gets my vote for best comic of the month, at the very least.
Was that really the last comic he ever drew? Golly.
b.t.
Matthew, I'm sorry to hear you had only ONE comics friend. I knew a number of other kids who were comics fans (only Marvel though) and we were always swapping comics. Steve often shows comics which I didn't buy but acquired through a swap - the recent Power Man vs Power Man was one such comic.
Matthew, not only did X-Men #186 and Superman #400 come out the same month I'm pretty sure it was the same week. I definitely recall getting them together, and being stupidly excited about it.
I mean, as a kid into comics Jack Kirby was the first artist who's name I knew and work I could recognize as different from anyone else's. But after that the next ones to really hit me as doing something distinctive were Barry Smith - after being blown away by the Conan treasury with 'Red Nails' in it - and then Steranko when Marvel UK ran his SHIELD stories in the old Captain Brexit weekly. I was mad for their stuff, but because of the time when I discovered it - in reprint editions - I hardly ever saw anything else by them.
So two comics at the same time? Wow.
Unfortunately though, b.t. is correct about 'Exile at the Edge..' being pure formalism. Actually, I'd go a bit further and it say it seemed like something out of one of those Byron Preiss books, those early 'graphic novels' that got rid of the word balloons in order to look less comic booky. That was interesting in the late 70s maybe - I was intrigued when I discovered 'Chandler' on a market paperback stall back then - but by 1984 that approach came across a bit dated. And don't even get me started on that ending.
Tbh I think that was where I began to become disillusioned by Jaunty Jim (although it took me a while to admit it to myself).
Baz on the other hand... he's always been worth keeping up with, even doing X-Men comics. Most recently there was his awesome 'Monsters' book. Hard to imagine anyone else of his generation coming out with anything remotely like that at this stage of the game.
-sean
OMG, has anyone heard about the mayor in Mexico who was beheaded by a drugs gang?? I've just seen a photo of his severed head which was left on top of his car. Meanwhile we Brits make a fuss about Starmer's free glasses and rich pensioners losing £300...
Sean -
I’m quite fond of those old Byron Preiss books. I’ve still got the Harlan Ellison one (which freaked me out when I bought it from a remainder bookshop, aged 11) and Chaykin’s ‘The Stars…’.
And I think you’re right. Swamp Thing 29 edges out Superman 400 as the best comic this month.
I'm not knocking those Byron Priess books, Matthew. I liked both of those you mentioned, and the Delany/Chaykin 'Empire' (in spite of their flaws) - but they're very much of their time.
Btw, I particularly rate Steranko's 'Repent, Harlequin...'
Seeing as I was having a bit of a go at him above, I should really say something positive. It was so strange! When I first read it I (mostly) couldn't see how the images related to the text... but thats what was interesting! Because of the way the human mind works you try to make sense of the juxtaposition, and start to find associations and meaning in it (plus I'd already read the Alex Nino adaptation, and nobody - I don't care who they are - nobody was going to be able to do a better regular comic version than that).
One of Jaunty Jim's best, where he really was the kind of innovator he'd like us to believe he is.
-sean
sean— I love Steranko’s CHANDLER. Well, I love looking at the art. I’ve never been able to read the entire story. Occasionally (once every decade, maybe) I pull it off the shelf and give it another try. I never get very far, I get bored with those (all perfectly even) blocks of prose before I get even halfway through and then I just start looking at the pretty pictures. And they ARE pretty, for sure.
Same with the Delaney/Chaykin EMPIRE. Stunning to look at, one of Chaykin’s better “painted” comics (er, sorry, graphic novels). And it’s not that the prose is bad, but something about it just doesn’t hold my interest.
I’m pretty much resigned to just enjoying the art on both of ‘em at this point.
b.t.
I have actually read Chandler all the way through, b.t. Thats how mad I was for Steranko when I got it. Back then though I also thought Don McGregor would be recognized as a major literary figure and poet of our times once snobby critics finally started taking comics seriously...
You're not missing much. Even if Chandler was the first Graphic Novel. According to that well known historian of comics, er... Jim Steranko.
-sean
There must be champagne corks popping at Labour and Lib Dem HQs tonight as the Tories choose between two hard-right crackpots as their new leader!
Trump-supporting, ECHR-leaving Robert Jenreich vs Kemi Kokonut, the black racist!
sean—
On the back cover of FICTION ILLUSTRATED #1, Byron Preiss calls SCHLOMO RAVEN “Volume One of America’s first adult graphic novel revue!”
I actually consider myself a Preiss fan. I have every FICTION ILLUSTRATED, all the original WEIRD HEROES books, the two WEIRD HEROES-adjacent stragglers (GUTS and I, ALIEN), the ILLUSTRATED ZELAZNY and ELLISON books, EMPIRE, THE STARS MY DESTINATION, assorted books in the TIME MACHINE, DR. BONES, BE AN INTERPLANETARY SPY, ASIMOV’S ROBOT CITY and ARTHUR C. CLARKE’S VENUS PRIME paperback series. Plus various illustrated anthologies like Fritz Leiber’s THE GHOST LIGHT and Philip Jose Farmer’s THE GRAND ADVENTURE. I appreciated his early explorations of new and interesting formats for the comics medium. But even I cringed at “America’s first adult graphic novel revue” back in the day!
b.t.
Well gosh!!!
For 20 years straight Charlie and his family spent a week at Run Away Bay on Anna Marie Island, Florida in March. (Charlie’s parents rented the same condo on the beach for the month of March.)
And it is now Ground Zero! The only that will be left is the swimming pool!
Those hurricanes always hit Republican-run states which is strange because I thought God voted Republican. You'd think he'd send hurricanes or earthquakes or something to devastate those evil lefty states like New York and California :D
Today (Oct 10th) is the 50th anniversary of Harold Wilson's fourth and final election victory!
Charlie-
Yeah, the swimming pool will still be there. Probably.
It might be full of debris, but also water!
I'm guessing half the whole goddam state is gonna be a swimming pool at some point.
M.P.
Colin, of course hurricanes hit Republican states. Thats because the weather is controlled by the federal government, as explained recently by that nice American lady Marjorie Taylor Greene.
They use space lasers to do it apparently.
-sean
Is that Preiss thing a comic book adaptation of famous sci-fi classics?
Let's hope Hurricane Milton doesn't badly affect Comics Fan (Peerless Power), as he's in Florida. Tallahassee's in the north, so hopefully he's avoided the worst of it.
Yesterday, on Dick Turpin, a toff villain, with a pack of hounds, hunted Turpin like a fox. Reminiscent of that X-Men scene Mastermind planted in Jean Grey's mind, with Scott Summers as the fox. Regarding Jason Wyngard (Mastermind), Rewind TV repeated Peter Wyngarde's 'Department S', and now 'Jason King'. What could Chris Claremont have been watching on tv that night?
What's more, tonight, at 9pm, Sapphire & Steel - the original X-Files!
Phillip
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