Thursday, 17 October 2024

October 19th 1974 - Marvel UK, 50 years ago this week.

Thanks to Charlie Horse 47 and Killdumpster for their sponsorship of this post, via the magic of Patreon
***

Sad, sweet dreamer. It's just one of those things you put down to experience.

How many times have I uttered those immortal words?

Thinking about it, probably never. However, I feel like I should have, as they seem packed to the gills with the kind of wisdom that only I can impart.

And those words were serving the band Sweet Sensation well, this week in 1974, as the song from whose chorus they're drawn hit the top of the UK singles chart.

Hitting the top of the UK album chart was, on the other hand, Rod Stewart who smashed straight in at Number One with his brand new LP Smiler, a record I've never heard of in my whole life. Looking at its Wikipedia listing, I can't say I recognise any of the tracks on it and I also have to say that Smiler is a terrible name for an album.

Having said that, it entered the listings at Number One. So, I can only assume the failing must all be on my part.

The Mighty World of Marvel #107, the Hulk

You wouldn't know it from that cover image but this issue sees the start of the tale in which the Leader decides to pit mental projections of the Hulk's deadliest foes against him in an attempt to give the brute a lethal heart attack.

Amazingly, despite the villain's reputation as a scoundrel of the highest order, Glenn Talbot and Thunderbolt Ross agree to help him with this.

Fortunately, Jim Wilson is on hand to provide the voice of common sense and sabotage.

The Hulk may be having to contend with many foes but Daredevil has plenty of them on his plate too.

That's because he's forced to battle the Tri-Man who's three different criminals merged into one. 

It can only mean the Gladiator and Masked Marauder have hatched their latest plan and it's all being done in a bid to gain control of the Maggia.

Or Hydra.

Or AIM.

Or the Kingpin's mob.

Or someone.

And I do believe the Fantastic Four have found the climax of their first encounter with Galactus. One which sees the Human Torch return to Earth with the Ultimate Nullifier, thus putting the wind up the big space galoot and leading to a pledge from him to never threaten our planet again.

Spider-Man Comics Weekly #88

Our pal Sal gives us his second consecutive Spider-Man Comics Weekly cover while, inside, the hero's at odds with the police, the Maggia have the Terrible Tablet, the Maggia have Curt Connors, and the Maggia have Connors' wife and son.

Can things possibly get worse?

I suspect they will.

Thor, meanwhile, must thwart the intentions of the Growing Man, an android which belongs to Kang the Conqueror and insists on getting bigger every time you hit him.

Some of us might think the solution to that problem is to stop hitting him.

But that solution would never occur to any self-respecting Marvel hero. Therefore, how can even the god of thunder hope to defeat such a foe?

I suspect he'll probably pull a brand-new super-power out of his backside, like he always does whenever his familiar powers turn out not to be of any use.

The sharp-eyed will have noticed there's no sign of Iron Man in this week's issues. Can it be curtains for the canned clobberer of criminals, counterfeits, catastrophisers, communists and counter-insurgent co-conspirators?

The Avengers #57, Dr Strange

Iron Fist is still invading Harold Meachum's office and still encountering the myriad deadly booby traps you'd expect when doing such a thing.

But, even if he gets past all of those obstacles, can he survive an encounter with the man they call Triple Iron?

And just who is this mystery ninja who keeps appearing and disappearing?

Elsewhere, the Avengers conclude their Central Park tussle with the Super-Adaptoid, by the straightforward tactic of all ganging up on him.

And we end with a retelling of Dr Strange's origin, as recounted by Roy Thomas and Dan Adkins.

But, before we depart the scene, I should add that I do suspect this week's Marvel UK books contain ads for two new comics which will be appearing in our newsagents, next week.

But what are they?

And will we like them?

30 comments:

Anonymous said...

Pretty sure one of those two new Marvel UK comics was well liked round these parts, Steve.

Can't say I ever understood the appeal of Rod Stewart, or heard 'Smiler'. But then my idea of a good British lp from this period would be 'Red' by King Crimson which came out this month -

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bA27IWspddM

- but I'm fairly sure it wasn't a number one hit album, so what do I know?

As for the comics... I much prefer the original Lee/Ditko origin of Dr Strange to the Houseroy/Adkins re-make.

-sean

Colin Jones said...

I expected those two new comics to be featured in THIS week's post as they went on sale on Saturday, October 19th 1974 but Steve has chosen to go with the "week ending" date of October 26th so they won't appear till next week.

But what can those two new comics possibly be? The tension is unbearable...

Phillip, yes - BAGGY TROUSERS!!

Anonymous said...

Obviously this is the Spidey cover, discussed a few weeks ago, which was offered as a cloth patch. Is this a new take on ASM #70 or another US issue? I recall a similar cover without the bullets, which lessened the drama.

I had to double-take the Trimpe signature on MWOM. It looks a bit shoddy, as MWOM covers tended to at the time.

Poor old Dr. Strange. Waits more than a year to cover star, and its a duff one.

Can’t wait to find out what the two new titles will be.

DW

Anonymous said...

Pedant alert! DW, thats actually Dr Strange's second go at being cover star of the Avengers weekly. His first was #54, a few issues earlier.
In fairness, it was quite forgetable...

https://stevedoescomics.blogspot.com/2024/09/september-28th-1974-marvel-uk-50-years.html

-sean

Anonymous said...

Its the Marvel UK colour that really ruins that Avengers cover though. The original, from Dr Strange #169, is a bit on the bland side but not too bad.

https://www.comics.org/issue/21938/cover/4/

-sean

Anonymous said...

That’s embarrassing. I must have been in suspended animation three weeks ago. Yeah, that original Dr. Strange cover is much better.

DW

Anonymous said...

Steve, just the other day I was thinking it’s been too long since we’ve had one of your astounding assemblies of alliterative adages arranged to amaze and amuse. “Canned Clobberer” :D

To everyone complaining about Adkins’ Dr. Strange cover — you’re not wrong. Yes, the color on the AVENGERS version makes it worse (that electric blue hair!) but the actual drawing of Doc’s Astral Self is genuinely pretty bad, even in the original U.S. color. The hands are awkwardly posed and the graceless contours, volumes and wrinkles on his puffy sleeves make them look like sodden laundry, wrung-out and ready for the clothesline.

Are the gunmen on the Spidey cover TRYING to miss him?

b.t.

Anonymous said...

It's hard to draw an astral self, b.t.!
...I dunno. I'm just messing around. ;)

You mentioned Rod Stewart, Steve. I have nothing against the guy. But some years back they released an anthology of his songs titled "Storyteller."
Storyteller.....like, "If you want my body, and you think I'm sexy." Or "Hot Legs."
That's...kind of a story I guess.
Not exactly Bob Dylan or Johnny Cash, is what I'm saying.

M.P.

Anonymous said...

M.P. - Rod's song's are how you've described them, for the most part. Your intellect isn't what understands them. A few Rod Stewart songs, however, are narrative, in nature. 'Young Turks', 'The Killing of Georgie', & 'Back When We Were the New Boys', spring to mind. Still, like you say, to justify 'Storyteller', as a title, 3 such tracks aren't enough!

Phillip

Anonymous said...

I suppose 'You Wear It Well' is kind of narrative, too!

Phillip

Anonymous said...

More pertinent still, the tracks I mentioned probably weren't on that album. I've been too lazy to check!

Phillip

Anonymous said...

Maggie May - a narrative element to it, I suppose. Some albums have so few tracks, maybe Rod's nearing enough narrative songs to be a 'Storyteller' !

Phillip

Anonymous said...

Actually M.P., I suspect Dan Adkins - who learn't his trade as Wally Wood's assistant - was the kind of artist who would find it hard to draw a convincing astral self. He couldn't use black to create weight and form, like he did with the physical Doc on that cover.

Funny you should mention Dylan (and indeed Johnny Cash) as I looked up that Rod Stewart album on the wiki like Steve suggested, and it includes 'Girl from the North Country'. So I recognized that track title, at least.

I haven't got round to checking out Rod the Mod's version yet - I suspect life may be too short to bother with that - but I was surprised to see on the wiki that Dylan is credited as the writer. I'd always assumed it was a traditional tune, as it does sound suspiciously like 'Scarborough Fair' in places.
No doubt its a complete coincidence that Dylan wrote it while he was in London at the same time as Paul Simon, and they both hung around with folk music geezer Martin Carthy.

-sean

Anonymous said...

DW, are you up bright and early, for the West Ham/Spurs game?
Good luck...

-sean

Anonymous said...

I’m currently watching from tropical North Queensland. 9.30pm kick off. Very civilised.

Anonymous said...

DW

Colin Jones said...

I think my favourite Rod Stewart song is I Don't Want To Talk About It which spent 4 weeks at #1 in the UK in 1977 - there was also a version by Everything But The Girl in 1988 which reached #3 and which is very poignant for me because my sister had died only a few weeks before it was released. The original Rod version comes from the album Atlantic Crossing in 1975 and was only released in 1977 because it was brought to Rod's attention that the song was very popular with his fans and so might be a potential hit single. I Don't Want To Talk About It was at #1 when the Sex Pistols' God Save The Queen reached #2 and the BBC were accused by some of rigging the chart so the Pistols didn't get a #1 hit.

Today is 50 years since the launch of the two comics we mustn't mention as it'll spoil next Thursday's big reveal.
(Note to our US friends: we're only keeping up this charade for your benefit :D)

Anonymous said...

Well that was shambolic.

DW

Anonymous said...

Just as well you didn't have to get up too early, DW.

West Ham were actually ahead early on. I was so excited for them (admittedly because it was Spurs who were down)...
But that didn't last for long.

-sean

Colin Jones said...

I've just discovered that Ron Harper who played Alan Virdon in the Planet Of The Apes TV series died last March aged 91.

Anonymous said...

Colin - Check out Crivens!

Phillip

Colin Jones said...

Phillip, it was a comment from me a few days ago that reminded Kid of the 50th anniversary!

Anonymous said...

From the sound of it, the POTA tv show may have had more fans in the UK than on this side of the pond!

b.t.

Anonymous said...

Charlie is in profound suspense, waiting to see which two new marvel UK comics are revealed for us next week! Thank you!

BT - I recall watching the planet of the apes serial on television 50 years ago. However, I don’t recall why I sort of lost interest in it? I was certainly captivated by the movies though.

Anonymous said...

ROD STEWART- around 1976 or so, when Rod Stewart was supposed to perform in Chicago, there was this incredible rumor going around that he had to cancel his show because he had ingested a pint of…

Crazily enough, I remember reading discussion of this rumor in a very popular Chicago newspaper 20 years on (30 years ago). The article was very logical and scientific explaining the impossibility of said rumor.

No need to discuss the particulars as I do not want anyone to possibly fall ill to their stomach. I am just curious if this rumor had spread on the other side of the ocean though?

Colin Jones said...

Never heard that before, Charlie - strange that Rod cancelled a show after drinking a pint of beer ;)

McSCOTTY said...

I remember hearing about that rumour about Rod Stewart and his err pint of "beer" over this side of the pond as well. Pretty unlikely though imho just like the similar urban legend about Richard Gere and a hamster .

Anonymous said...

The scientific analysis of Rod Stewart consuming a pint of “beer” over an evening was a master piece of mathematical analysis .

Reminds me of the late Sir John Keegan’s (Brit Historian and Author - one of my favs) analysis of the Battle of Agincourt and mathematically assessing how many french knights on horse could have been in line and attacked Henry V in 1415.

I like math. I mean it does not dispel that maybe Rod consumed less than a pint of beer and fell ill. Nor does it mean that the French did not lose it Agincouet in 1415.

But it puts an upper limit on things.

Steve W. said...

I remember a documentary once looking into Roman claims that Atilla the Hun's horde had half a million men in it, which came to the conclusion that it couldn't possibly have had more than 30,000.

Anonymous said...

Charlie:
Personally, I lost interest in the POTA TV series because it just seemed somewhat dull to me. It followed what, at the time, was a very common formula for episodic TV series — the “Fugitive formula”. Our protagonist (or group of protagonists), on the run from the authorities, wanders from place to place, meets a different group of people each week, solves whatever problem it is they’re having and wanders off to their next destination at episode’s end, rinse and repeat. See also “Run For Your Life”, “Kung Fu”, “The Incredible Hulk”, “Logan’s Run” etc.

I think I watched two or three episodes before giving up on it.

b.t.