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It is time, once more, for us to enter the cinemas of 1974 and discover just what lies in wait for us, therewithin.
Therewithin, we encounter Blood for Dracula, Confessions of a Window Cleaner, The Life and Times of Grizzly Adams, Earthquake, The Tamarind Seed and The Land that Time Forgot.
A cynic may argue it's a "unique" kind of month when The Land that Time Forgot is the pick of the crop but, then, even the maddest of fools knows The Land that Time Forgot would be the pick of the crop in almost any month in human history.
But that's not all - because this issue also contains a reprint of the Fantastic Four's first-ever encounter with Rama-Tut. The one in which they go back in time to Ancient Egypt, seeking a cure for Alicia's blindness - only to discover the land is ruled by Kang the Conqueror's earlier incarnation.
Still, I can at least say that's a dramatic cover, if nothing else.
And that, dear Reader, is why I never pursue magic statues.
Mostly, we get Satana stories titled This Side of Hell and Doorway to Dark Destiny.
There's also a chiller called Fright Pattern, starring a woman called Mary Jane. I'm going to assume it's not that Mary Jane.
And, of course, we close with Gabriel in To Worship the Damned.
Needless to say, he won't be.
We also get a two-page map of Wakanda, overlaid with images from the serial so far. That means we can now know exactly where each story's taken place, should anyone ever ask us.
I assume he fails in the task, although I've no doubt at all that he'd easily vanquish Werewolf by Night.
Drama hits ever-higher levels when the High Overlord sends the Death Breeders after Killraven and his gang.
I think this might be Craig Russell's first issue as artist but don't quote me on that.
4 comments:
Steve - It's Killraven who's Conanesque, with that supine girl, cowering against his knee-joint! Volcana Ash would never cower like that!
Phillip
I didn't know Grizzly Adams was a cinema release. I saw it on TV around 1978 or 1979 [it made me cry at the end], and I just assumed ever since that it was a TV movie.
Yeah, The Land That Time Forgot all the way though.
I just checked my Masterworks edition and yes, that War Of The Worlds was the first Russell. And what a great start.
When I was a teenager in the mid-80s, a friend of my older cousin was having a clear out of all his comics and there was an issue of WOTW with Russell art, along with an early issue of Warlock. I was intrigued. The fine-line 70s art was very appealing,
Neither would Camilla Frost, Phillip, but that didn't stop Judo Jim Starlin drawing her cowering at Killraven's feet on that cover anyway. Oh dear.
#smashthepatriarchy
Amazing Adventures #27 was the first Killraven story I ever read, fresh from the newsagents this very month (note to b.t. or anyone else with a thing about on sale v cover dates: the transatlantic delay meant in the UK they were the same thing for imported US comics).
After that, it was one of those titles that seemed quite easy to find regularly, and I read every issue. Except for AA #39, the last one ):
-sean
sean:
Yeah I was thinking the same thing — Camilla would be more likely to punch Killraven right in the nuts than crouch at his feet. Judo Jim also did covers for MARVEL TEAM-UP, MARVEL TWO-IN-ONE, MARVEL SUPER-HEROES and MARVEL PREMIERE that month — he had time on his hands since he’d quit writing and drawing CAPTAIN MARVEL.
Steve:
Yes, behind that excellent (if somewhat generic) Kane / Palmer TOMB OF DRACULA cover is the first of a multi-issue saga featuring Dracula’s quest for the magical Chimera, which would grant him the power to do…something…I don’t remember what, exactly. Turns out that pesky brain-in-a-box Dr. Sun wants it too.
I remember being very impressed by the Buscema/Alcala art on this month’s KA-ZAR. I could be wrong but I think this might be the only four-color comic those two artists did together — maybe that’s why you thought it felt particularly “Conanesque” — ?
Oh, and I think LAND THAT TIME FORGOT was released in ‘75, not ‘74. I only know this because I remember getting the MARVEL MOVIE PREMIERE adaptation the same summer that Marvel flooded the B/W magazine zone with a crapload of Annuals and whatnot. SHERLOCK HOLMES and STAR-LORD were originally announced (and advertised) as being ongoing B/W magazines before someone got cold feet.
b.t.
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