Thanks to Charlie Horse 47 and Killdumpster for their sponsorship of this post, via the magic of Patreon.
***
Clowns to the left of me? Jokers to the right?
Well, this week in 1974, one of those clowns was stood right in front of you, serving you burgers because it was the week in which McDonald's opened its first UK restaurant, in London's Woolwich neighbourhood.
Granted, I've no evidence that Ronald McDonald was, himself, actually serving customers in that venue but I shall assume he was, for purposes of having a memorable opening to this post.
Elsewhere, the radio telescope at the Arecibo Observatory, Puerto Rico, was busy beaming an interstellar message at Messier 13 in the constellation of Hercules. For those breathlessly awaiting news as to whether it received a reply, that message won't reach its destination until sometime around the year 27,000 AD. So, don't build up your hopes.
That signal may have been aimed at a star but, on that week's UK singles chart, twinkly-eyed heartthrob David Essex was boasting he was gonna make you a star.
It's true. That very week, his song of that title hit the toppermost of the poppermost to give him his first British Number One.
While, over on the corresponding album chart, the Bay City Rollers were still riding higher than anyone, thanks to their LP Rollin'.
I'm impressed by how the Lizard always has a lab coat on, even in stories where Curt Connors is nowhere near a lab when he transforms into him.
Of course, in this story, he was near a lab when he transformed. Therefore, he does have an excuse.
But things are looking grim for Iron Man.
As if it's not bad enough for him that he's been captured by the Mandarin, he now has to endure the ring-happy windbag recounting a self-regarding and unlikely life story which incorporates everything from communist revolutions to dragons from outer space.
To finish off the issue, Thor wins his battle with the Super-Skrull.
But other matters are afoot when Odin sends Sif and Balder to find the three Evil Enchanters.
Roy Thomas' unique brand of social satire hits its peak when the Hulk finds himself entangled in the up-to-the-minute world of Radical Chic.
It's that one in which the verdant violence generator finds himself at a party in New York and, somehow, ends up having to fight the Valkyrie who's inhabiting the body of a young women's libber.
And, of course, Tom Wolfe turns up.
After that, if I'm not mistaken, Daredevil takes a flight to jollie olde Englande where Ka-Zar's been charged with murder.
Can it be true? Can the jungle lord really have turned into a bounder?
Or is his caddish brother behind it all?
And Daredevil's not the only one dropping in on foreign climes, because, upon accepting an invitation to visit a mysterious African kingdom, the Fantastic Four find themselves attacked by a man known only as the Black Panther!
I do believe I spot an Iron Fist cover that's been repurposed into a Shang-Chi one.
Inside, our issue begins with Quickliver and the Scarlet Witch falling into a trap set by Magneto who wants to re-enlist them into his battle against humanity.
That is, of course, an Avengers tale.
"Quickliver," was a typo but I like it. Therefore, I'm keeping it.
Next, Dr Strange teams up with Victoria Bentley in an attempt to find out where Clea is and rescue her from whatever fate it is she's enduring.
And, finally, Shang-Chi and Sandra Chen are on a flight when they're attacked by a whole planeful of assassins.
Needless to say, those assassins go the same way as do all assassins foolish enough to attack the master of kung fu.
I should point out, at this juncture, that I've recently become aware that, "kung fu," simply means any pastime which requires patience and skill to master. Which means Marvel could literally have launched a comic about a man who does nothing but flower arranging, every issue, and got away with calling it Master of Kung Fu.
Drac's back with a modified version of an old Neal Adams cover.
Inside, I do believe Frank Drake's still having problems with his vampiric girlfriend wanting to kill him. However, I suspect he quickly turns the tables on her.
Elsewhere, I suspect Jack Russell's hairy alter-ego's having problems with a bloke who's trying to strangle him to death for reasons I can't recall.
To be honest, I'm not sure I want to read the adventures of a werewolf who can be strangled to death by normal people. I do like my werewolves to have at least a modicum of super-strength.
And Frankenstein's Monster's in a romantic mood, as he forces his creator to build a mate for him.
However, as I'm sure you'd expect, it doesn't end happily for her.
I'm sure all music lovers remember Randy Hanzlick's classic song I'd Rather Have a Bottle in Front of Me Than a Frontal Lobotomy.
Sadly, our hero's going to have to settle for the second of those options.
That is, unless he can escape captivity.
And he does.
And has a run around Ape City.
And is then recaptured.
In his strip, Ka-zar's getting to know the Petrified Man better, as he and he travel to the Savage land where a woman called Zaladane heads a cult devoted to the stone-faced sailor and is inciting her followers to wage war on other tribes in that realm.
Gullivar Jones, though, is still on Mars, now drawn by Ross Andru and having to contend with a giant red water-monster reptile thing.
Steve - Shang Chi as Iron Fist? I thought I'd spotted it first, then I read your comment - I suppose it was too obvious! An internet search = Marvel Premiere # 15:
ReplyDeletehttps://marvel.fandom.com/wiki/Marvel_Premiere_Vol_1_15?file=Marvel_Premiere_Vol_1_15.jpg
Phillip
How disappointing that Marvel UK repurposed some artwork, without adding apes. A kung-fu ape would have been really cool.
ReplyDeleteThey could have done the Ape-vengers over 30 years early!
https://marvel.fandom.com/wiki/Ape-vengers_(Earth-8101)
-sean
OK, please don’t think of Charlie as a jackass…
ReplyDeleteBut is this month’s UK covers rather unusual in that the cover itself shows the character whose name is biggest on the cover?
Also, again, don’t think Charlie a jackass because he has probably asked this before…
ReplyDeleteBut do all these comics open and read like normal comics? Or are they printed in landscape style and just 4-5 pages of black-and-white of each character?
Whole lotta repurposing going on at Marvel UK this week! Not only has Iron Fist become Shang-chi, but that MIGHTY WORLD OF MARVEL cover started out as the cover of GIANT-SIZE DEFENDERS 1. Namor’s been turned into Daredevil, the Silver Surfer’s been turned into the Human Torch, and Dr. Strange has been turned into — would’ja believe —The Thing. It might have been easier just to make an All New cover from scratch….
ReplyDeleteb.t.
Bt, Phillip and Sean, they certainly do seem to have put a lot of work into avoiding having to do any work.
ReplyDeleteCharlie, all these books are portrait format. The first of the landscape books doesn't appear for another year or so. Each strip has around ten pages dedicated to it.
The Avengers book is the one book that routinely struggles to decide who its cover star is.
I can see the logic behind Marvel UK putting Shang-Fist or Iron Chà on the Avengers covers because 'Kung Fu' was popular on tv, Steve.
DeleteWhat I don't get is making Dr Strange the cover star occasionally. But presumably sales didn't significantly dip on those particular issues, or they wouldn't have done it more than a couple of times...?
Speaking of the good Doctor, I believe this week's story was from Strange Tales #171, in which inevitably Victoria Bentley secretly loves Doc who's mad for .Clea in the inevitable 60s Marvel romantic triangle. What else were lady characters for, eh?
The main point of interest in what was not a great story is that - unusually - it was drawn by Tom Palmer. Which means of course Gene the Dean's first Strange comes next (or here in a couple of weeks).
Fortunately Palmer was retained for inking duties on #172. Apparently this was not particularly planned - they didn't even know each other's work - and the two styles meshing so well was complete serendipity...
-sean
*Dr Strange #171
DeleteNot Strange Tales. Duh.
-sean
November 16th 1974 was the date I bought my first ever Marvel comic, Planet Of The Apes #5 which won't be featured on SDC until NEXT week because Steve prefers the WEEK ENDING cover date rather than the actual publication date.
ReplyDeleteFrom this week the masthead and corner-box image on Spider-Man Comics Weekly are the classic ones I associate with that comic and they remained unchanged until the end of SMCW in February 1976.
ReplyDeleteAs I’ve mentioned many time, this week’s Planet of the Apes (#4) was my first and gateway to another (better) universe. Actually I struggled to understand who this Taylor character was, and why Virdon and Burke weren’t involved.
ReplyDeleteCharlie, these issues were portrait and generally printed three stories, which were loosely half a US issue. I.e. MWOM printed half a US issue of Hulk, Daredevil and Fantastic Four. This is a general rather than strict rule.
What still surprises me is that slap bang in the middle of Kirby’s brilliant FF run, they didnt use a single Fantastic Four cover. Big green monsters were the sh#t, apparently.
DW
My first comic,
ReplyDeleteColin, you lucked out. POTA #5 is vastly better than #4.
ReplyDeleteDW
DW-
ReplyDeleteBig green monsters will always remain the sh#t! as you so eloquently put it!
I always liked the Lizard. Apart from the ever-present white lab coat, didn't he always have purple pants on?
It's because purple and green together kinda look sinister, I guess, like with the Green Goblin. Or Mesmero (I hadda look that one up)
But the Lizard's trousers were always purple for some reason, which also undermines my theory that the Hulk's pants were that color because of the effect of gamma radiation on various fibers.
M.P.
M.P. - The Brute kept Marvel's usual colour conventions, but gave them a twist. Rather than being green with purple pants, he was purple with green trunks!
ReplyDeletehttp://www.rapsheet.co.uk/rapsheetmain/Character2.asp?UniqueId=2941
Phillip
Those ape surgeons - or maybe more accurately, vets - on that POTA cover posted here are purple and dressed in green too, Phillip.
Delete-sean
DW, the absence of Virdon & Burke was confusing to me too. I'd never seen or even heard of the apes movies so when I saw POTA #5 on sale I just assumed it must be something to do with the TV series. Reading the apes story inside was a pretty baffling experience but it featured talking apes and a cliffhanger ending so I was hooked.
ReplyDeleteThe actor Timothy West died this week, aged 90, so do any UK readers remember him playing King Edward VII in ...er, Edward The Seventh from 1975? I remember watching the first two episodes during the Easter holidays and a later episode when he got crowned (I normally had to be in bed by 9pm for school the next day but I was allowed to stay up to watch the coronation episode).
ReplyDeleteFUN FACT: Edward's elder sister was played by Felicity Kendal and the first episode of The Good Life was broadcast just three days after the first episode of Edward The Seventh.
ReplyDeleteNot the bloody Good Life, Colin...
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rQCi67CQHXY
-sean
Sean, a few months ago I watched an episode of The Young Ones on BBC iPlayer and it was excruciating. How did anyone think The Young Ones was even remotely funny? By contrast The Good Life is one of the most classic sitcoms in British TV history and Margo Leadbetter is totally iconic :)
ReplyDeleteCan I be the bridge over these troubled waters?
ReplyDeleteIn my household, The Good Life is revered to the point that one of our cats is called Margot.
However, we also feel that The Young Ones was lightning in a bottle. It was and is magic. So much energy and invention in every episode. And it’s funny as hell.
I think the Young Ones was of its time, and would agree with anyone saying it doesn't always hold up well now. But that monologue about the Good Life and the myth that everyone in Britain is a loveable, middle class eccentric, is great.
ReplyDeleteAlthough personally I would probably go further...
-sean