Thanks to Charlie Horse 47 and Killdumpster for their sponsorship of this post, via the magic of Patreon.
***
Oh is he more, too much more than a pretty face?
I don't think so.
Then again, perhaps I do think so.
He is, after all, still at Number One on the UK singles chart, with his latest smash Gonna Make You a Star.
I refer, of course, to David Essex who's discovered what it's like to rule supreme over the British music scene.
It is, of course, November 1974.
It took me far too many years to realise that, on this cover, the Black Knight's flying vertically, with the Avengers falling towards the skyscrapers below, rather than him flying horizontally, with the Avengers floating behind him in a disorganised manner.
I did always wonder how Goliath and Hawkeye were managing to fly.
From what I can make out, Taj and Rachel prevent Frank Drake from committing suicide and this enables him to join their cause which I'm sure he'll prove massively valuable to.
We complete the issue with a short tale from 1953's Adventures Into Terror. It's called The Executioner and features Francis Tourneau's efforts to create a more efficient means of executing people.
And so is the Human Torch, in a comic which bears a Gil Kane cover of mystery origins. Was it drawn specially for this issue or is it a reprint from somewhere else?
That, I don't know but I do remember asking that selfsame question in an ancient post you can find right here.
Meanwhile, Iron Man's still having to endure the Mandarin boring him to death with his origin story. and then trying to spin him to death with his sizeable wheel.
But maybe Shellhead's the lucky one because, when he's done that, the villain wants to start a global nuclear war, with him being the only winner.
Fortunately, the Chinese government have something to say about that sort of malarkey.
And say it, they do.
Elsewhere, it's triple trouble for Thor, Balder and Sif when the Enchanters Three show up in New York.
And they've brought their Living Talisman with them!
Then again, let's be honest, there wouldn't be much point in them bringing their dead talisman with them.
It took me far too many years to realise that, on this cover, the Black Knight's flying vertically, with the Avengers falling towards the skyscrapers below, rather than him flying horizontally, with the Avengers floating behind him in a disorganised manner.
I did always wonder how Goliath and Hawkeye were managing to fly.
Elsewhere, Dr Strange and Victoria Bentley are in a bizarre world, in search of Clea, when who should show up but Dormammu!
And now, Strangey's going to have to go through him if he's to ensure the survival of those two women!
As for Shang-Chi, he's in Beijing, trying to protect Sandra Chen's scientist father from the Manchurian machinations of his own fiendish father.
Shangy does such a great job of it that, by the end of this issue, that scientist's dead and our hero's unconscious.
From what I can make out, Taj and Rachel prevent Frank Drake from committing suicide and this enables him to join their cause which I'm sure he'll prove massively valuable to.
Elsewhere, Jack Russell's furry alter-ego finally wins his fight with Max Grant .
And Frankenstein's Monster avenges the death of the Bride of Frankenstein by killing his creator's wife.
Unfortunately for him, the French Revolution breaks out and he becomes the first victim of his own machine.
From that cover, I think we can all assume this is the pulse-pounding issue in which Taylor finally proves to the apes that he can speak.
When it comes to Gullivar Jones, Wayne Boring takes over the art chores but will Wayne live down to his surname?
The machine the world knows as, "the guillotine."
Defeated by a blonde?
It can only happen in the pages of They Shoot Hulks, Don't They? when the brute finds himself flung from the top of the Empire State Building.
Meanwhile, the man without fear's still in England and still trying to clear the name of Ka-Zar who's been framed by his evil brother the Plunderer.
And the Fantastic Four finally overcome the Wakandan traps set for them by the Black Panther and confront him, ready for him to reveal the dynamic truth about his origin.
From that cover, I think we can all assume this is the pulse-pounding issue in which Taylor finally proves to the apes that he can speak.
Not that that's likely to do him any good.
Especially as his first words to them are so abusive.
In Ka-Zar's strip, the Petrified Man becomes Garokk, the Sun God and thwarts Zaladane's attack on the Vala-Kuri. Obviously, the highlight of this issue is Garokk coming up against a T-Rex.
When it comes to Gullivar Jones, Wayne Boring takes over the art chores but will Wayne live down to his surname?
I suspect not, as Gullivar and Chak the pterosaur man strive to survive while the lovely but hapless Meru is taken captive by someone or other.
18 comments:
Planet of the Apes' most famous line falls completely flat without 'damn' ( in my mind, it's 'damned' ) in it! Then again, the US PoTA comics covers don't seem to have any dialogue at all.
It's a pity that Daredevil Ka-zar story, & the Ka-zar story in PoTA weren't combined in the same comic, just for completeness.
The Petrified Man & Zaladane only came my way later, in the X-Men. There's far more back story here, those X-Men tales could either have back-referenced, or drawn upon.
Phillip
That's a horrible SMCW cover, with only half of the sales on the lizard's head drawn in. A sneak preview of some horrible Kane and Coletta artwork the next time we see the Lizard in 25 months US time or about a year U.K. time.
The Romita and/or Buscema and/or Demo artwork in this issue is amazing though. Refreshing after all those times Marvel would put Kirby artwork on the cover and He k or F***** R****** on the inside.
Steve- for future reference, assume Hawkeye and Goliath cannot fly.
I invite fellow patrons of this blog to list other heroes and villains who cannot fly, for Steve’s reference. He may have developed incorrect interpretations of their powers over the decades.
Spider-Man can't fly. Except in ASM #8 and Avengers #11 where he can fire out webs mid air and mentally turn them into wings, which is all you need to be able to fly, yeah?
And isn’t there an early Avengers issue where Scarlet Witch is flying on the splash page?
And that one ⬆️
And another. I was logged out of Google, ok? ⬆️
Daredevil cannot fly.
That's my comment ⬆️
Aquaman cannot fly. Submariner can but not always fly!
In fairness to you, Steve, the colour on that Avengers cover does detract from recognizing that those are buildings (seen from above) in the background.
Francis Tourneau...? That must be whoever invented la guillotine in the Marvel universe, Steve, because in ours its generally attributed to an 18th century French surgeon called Antoine Louis (who I don't think was executed with one).
At least it is by the French. But then, they would say that, wouldn't they? In fact there was a very similar device used in Yorkshire since at least the 1500s -
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halifax_Gibbet
Amazing, isn't it? The English basically had a guillotine at least a couple of hundred years before the French... yet here we are in 2024, and you still have Royals. Go figure, eh?
-sean
Phillip, not sure I agree with you about that the 'damn' (or if you prefer, 'damned'). It doesn't appear in the líne in the Planet of the Apes musical, yet it still works -
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JlmzUEQxOvA
Maybe Troy McClure is just a better actor than Charles Heston?
-sean
*Charlton Heston
#@%*ing spellcheck.
My main take-away from that SPIDEY WEEKLY cover is that it looks like the Lizard is giving Spidey a solid THWACK! right in the goolies. Ouch!
For a split-second I thought Gentleman Gene Colan drew that DRACULA LIVES cover but I guess Pablo Marcos was just doing his best Colan impression. Not bad.
b.t.
As POTA #5 was my first ever Marvel comic I assume the other Marvel weeklies were advertised inside so this week's covers were the first time I ever saw Spidey, the Hulk, the Avengers and Marvel's version of Dracula.
The above comment was mine (forgot to sign in AGAIN).
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