Thanks to Charlie Horse 47 and Killdumpster for their sponsorship of this post, via the magic of Patreon.
***
We all like a good scrap and, half a century ago, as Santa started to get his boots on and charge up the batteries on his reindeer, the battle to be the UK's Christmas Number One was already starting to hot up.
Not that you'd know it from what was then topping the UK singles chart, because it was Barry White's not noticeably seasonal offering You're the First, the Last, My Everything.
And the summit of the accompanying LP chart was similarly devoid of festive spirit, held, as it was, by Elton John's Greatest Hits.
I don't mind that Barry White track, but singles I approved of even more on that week's Hit Parade were:
Gonna Make You a Star - David Essex
Juke Box Jive - the Rubettes
Magic - Pilot
Streets of London - Ralph McTell
Junior's Farm - Paul McCartney and Wings
How Long? - Ace
Killer Queen - Queen
Hey Mister Christmas - Showaddywaddy
The Bump - Kenny
and
Stardust - David Essex.
Should you wish to study the matter in greater depth, that week's UK singles chart may be found by clicking this link.
While the accompanying album chart is located here.
From that cover, it looks like we're encountering the shocker in which Magneto's turned out to threaten the United Nations Security Council.
The one in which in which Wanda gets shot in the head, which convinces Quicksilver to rejoin Magneto's Brotherhood of Evil Mutants!
I do believe Shang-Chi's still on the loose in the Amazon and, in the space of just a handful of pages, manages to be in conflict with crocodiles, Nazis and his own father.
Dr Strange, meanwhile, is still trying to prevent Dormammu from reaching a portal that would allow him to gain access to the planet Earth.
And, frankly, it's not looking good for our hero.
Things move up a gear, this week, as not only do Taylor, Zira and Cornelius manage to escape Ape City, they also head off into the disturbing wilderness of the Forbidden Zone.
Following that, there's a two-page text article about the Apes on TV.
Then, the Savage Land's getting distinctly wet, as Damon the Man-God rides around on his magic horse and causes no end of trouble for the locals until he's finally convinced to go away by someone called Lelania.
But all of that pales into insignificance besides what happens in the final third of this issue.
And that's because a sensational new series begins when everyone's favourite masked monarch Dr Doom gets his very own strip!
And, in it, he must contend with Diablo who's taken his beloved Valeria hostage!
Somehow, I can't see Doomy putting up with that kind of behaviour.
Is it a cover originally drawn by Neal Adams but heavily modified by John Romita?
My knowledge of this week's Dracula thriller is a little limited but I do know it involves the vampire getting his hands on a mirror which doubles up as a time machine.
Needless to say, Vlad's determined to make use of it.
And he does.
Elsewhere, Jack Russell meets a man called Buck and, together, they set off in search of the pesky Darkhold everybody seems to want to get their hands on.
This leads the pair to an island.
And, I've no doubt, a huge pile of trouble.
But at least things look to be going better for Frankenstein's Monster. He has, after all, been befriended by a tribe of Neanderthals.
However, that's when another tribe shows up with hearts filled with nothing but aggression.
And quickly manages to become a super-villain, thanks to his terrible plan to make himself look heroic.
Yes, you guessed it, the world most powerful window cleaner has finally arrived in the form of Hobie Brown who decides to put his gift for inventing things to good use.
But will that use be up to the job of battling Spider-Man?
Iron Man seems to be missing from this week's issue but we still have plenty of Thor to look forward to.
Sadly, that means we also have to endure Odin and his hissy fits.
The old duffer's managed to defeat the villainous Forsung but when he orders Thor, Balder and Sif to return to Asgard, Thor says he want to stay on Earth, and the king of the gods reacts like any rational person would and promptly exiles him and strips him of his enchanted powers.
Fortunately, there's always work available in a circus, for a strong man.
Not so fortunately, the circus Thor decides to join is run by the Ringmaster, and its entertainers have a noticeably criminal vibe about them...
From that cover, I'm going to guess Victor Von Doom's still trying to get the Hulk to be his deliverer of bombs for him.
And I'd guess the Hulk's not being overly helpful.
Daredevil, meanwhile, must confront the terrifying return of the Stilt-Man who's about to team up with the Masked Marauder.
While everyone else must confront the terrifying return of Mike Murdock.
And, in our final tale of the issue, we get to discover the mind-boggling origin of the Black Panther, as related by the man himself.
38 comments:
My guess is that Iron Man's missing from SMCW because they thought The Prowler was too lame a villain to be spread out over four weeks
Iron Man was back in SMCW issue 97, I have no idea why he wasn't in issue 96 though. That song "Magic" by Pilot was sung week in and week out at Scottish football games by both Celtic and Rangers fans, as such it's not a favourite of mine.
That Hulk 144 cover is perhaps Charlie’s fav Hulk cover. Something about the physical contact between the two and the look andHulk‘s face like “I’m gonna punch you so hard your head‘s gonna fly off and go into orbit around the Earth. “
Steve, how could you omit 'Wombling Merry Christmas' from your list??? It's a total festive classic (and to quote Mrs Slocombe, I am unanimous in that!) which would soon reach #2, stuck behind Mud's Lonely This Christmas. You also ignored 'You Ain't Seen Nothing Yet' by Bachman-Turner Overdrive, a line later made famous by Ronnie Reagan of course.
Disaster!! This week's Planet Of The Apes wasn't available in my newsagent, a situation that didn't arise again until #62 a year later. But I do know that this week's POTA included a letter from the young Kid Robson of Crivens fame!
Good to see you don't mind Barry White after all, Steve.
But I'm not sure I can take your opinion of this week's singles seriously when Je T'Aime... by Jane Birkin & Serge Gainsbourg didn't meet with your approval.
Come on now.
-sean
I've never heard of Showaddywaddy's Hey Mr Christmas so I've been listening to it on YouTube and it was OK but hardly a classic like the Wombles!
All
Day
Long
We'll go wombling in the snow
We wish you
A wombling merry Christmaaaasss
Apparently there's a parody of Mud's Lonely This Christmas called Freezing This Christmas by Sir Starmer & The Granny Harmers which is meant to be a protest about the means-testing of the Winter Fuel Payment for pensioners. Naturally GB News and right-wing bloggers are promoting this song and hoping it'll be the Christmas #1 but none of them give a f*ck about freezing disabled people or families affected by the two-child cap on Child Benefit - nope, only well-off Tory pensioners get any sympathy. You'd think the Winter Fuel Payment was 10K rather than 200 quid considering all the fuss about it.
SEAN - thanks for mentioning Serge and Jane!!! You rock, bro!
Charlie never heard "Je t'aime... Moi non plus" until maybe 30 years ago, LOL, certainly not 50.
GAINSBOURG was, and still is in many ways, a legend. I mean, anyone who can have a relationship with Brigette BARDOT and have half the country want to beat your ass to a pulp...
I'd always heard that the... um.... lady trying to catch her breath on that song... um... was actually Bardot not Birken as it had originally been recorded with her a few years earlier.
That said, a bit ago Charlie was in a posh ladies consignment shop taking a chair while Ms. Charlie eyeballed, touched and tried on various articles. The owner was making conversation with Charlie and asked if there was anything otherwise he might be interested in seeing. Being Charlie, Charlie asked if she had any Birken bags... "Oh my... I just sold the last one we had yesterday but tell me which one you want and I should find one within a month." Charlie suddenly felt very small, lol.
The U.S. Hot 100 for this week in 1974 looks a lot like last week’s. “Kung Fu Fighting” is still #1. “When Will I See You Again”, “Angie Baby”, “Lucy in the Sky” and others are still moving up the charts, while others like “I Can Help” and “Ain’t Seen Nothin’ Yet” are moving in the opposite direction.
Barry Manilow’s “Mandy” peaks at #30. Funny, I thought for sure it must have charted higher than that, but nope. Y’all are probably gonna give me sh*t but I always liked that song. Sedaka’s “Laughter in the Rain” too.
b.t.
b.t...--
Nothing wrong with being sentimental about old songs,, my friend. I like Manilow too!
I was in the supermarket the other day and they were playing Christmas songs. They played "2000 Miles" by the Pretenders (an achingly beautiful song) and I almost started bawllng.
That song gets me every time
M..P..
We can't talk Wombling Merry Christmas without mentioning the great Roy Wood / Wombles mashup. Enjoy.
https://youtu.be/oyuxPjnFqyA?si=Aurw7v4g43pN-EyK
bt, I just checked on Wikipedia and Barry Manilow's Mandy reached #1 on the Billboard Hot 100 on January 18th 1975 - why did you think it peaked at #30? Mandy also reached #1 in the UK in 2003 by Irish boy-band Westlife.
it seems inconsistent to me to put the avengers on the cover of the avengers. One would think that with kung fu fighting still at the top of the chart that kung fu would be on the cover of the avengers, not the avengers.
And all seriousness, though, well, I could never get into kung fu. I did like Billy Jack. Not sure why Billy Jack didn’t have more traction.
Charlie
Also in the United States 50 years ago this week we have Paul McCartney at number 10 with junior’s farm. We have Ringo Starr at number 18 with only you. We have George Harrison at number 32 with dark horse and we have John Lennon at number 40 with whatever gets you through the night.
One cannot ask for much more in life, can One?
That said, Sarah Ginsburg is definitely not on the top billboard 100 in the United States, lol.
What seems really strange is that ELVIS has a song at number 14 in the United States called promised land and something around number 10 in the UK with my boy. I listen to both just now on YouTube and have never heard them before.
BT- I peaked a head and looked at the billboard hot 100 for 49 years and 11 months ago.
in a short span of 30 days, Barry Manilow‘s MANDY will go from not even being on the charts to number one and already sliding back to number three.
The Billboard chart that I’m looking at has columns for “THIS WEEK” — “AWARD” — “ LAST WEEK” — “PEAK POSITION” and “WEEKS ON CHART”.
For “Mandy” it says “30” — (blank) — “37” — “30” — “5”.
It looks like an official Billboard site but yeah, those numbers don’t seem right.
b.t.
Sure enough, at that very same site, it says that for the week of January 18, 1975, “Mandy” was at #1 — at #5 the previous week — Peak Position, #1 — it had been on the charts for 10 weeks.
I don’t know how to explain the discrepancy between this chart and the one for Dec.14 1974 :(
b.t.
Charlie:
BILLY JACK was a big enough hit that it spawned two sequels, and got him on the cover of Marvel’s DEADLY HANDS OF KUNG FU (painted by Neal Adams).
b.t.
Kung Fu pioneered slowed down fights, & flashbacks. Where would later shows, like Six Million Dollar Man, & Highlander ( who carried on those innovations, respectively) be without Kung Fu laying the groundwork?
Phillip
OK… Charlie may be the oldest one here and he remembers seeing kung fu on television. The reason Charlie and his friends watched must To see somebody getting Billy jacked. However, it seemed like KUNG FU’s show needed 45 minutes of drama before we finally got to the 4 to 5 seconds of Billy jacking.
This was no fun for a 11-year-old kid. Charlie didn’t really wanna know so much why someone was getting Billy Jack as much as watching him get Billy Jack. Or, in business parlance, kung fu was a poor return on investment.
That’s why shows like the green hornet or Batman were much more productive for young boys.
Honestly… KUNG FU was TV’s equivalent of SILVER SURFER.
BILLY JACK OR BUST!
Alas… BOBBY VINTON the POLISH PRINCE is sliding down the charts.
One Saturday 50’years ago I was driving with my uncle up to Zion Illinois because he was meeting somebody to buy a horde of Nazi SS medals and knives and Luger’s and what not.
It was a 2 hour deive from Gary, Indiana and we must’ve heard that song 22 times each direction LOL.
We met my great uncle and took him along with us. He advised me that my uncle probably had a screw loose for buying that shit.
Charlie, Andy Williams rises to #13 on the new UK singles chart.
Wham! at #1, Mariah Carey at #3 and Brenda Lee at #5.
Band Aid goes DOWN to #14 from #8 last week!!
Charlie, thats right, Serge Gainsbourg did originally record 'Je T'Aime' with Bardot, along with a few other songs like 'Comic Strip' -
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=22Uf4-khGAk
But she got cold feet about 'Je T'Aime' and wouldn't allow it to be released, so Serge recorded it again with Jane Birkin. Which is just as well, as the second version is quite a bit better.
Despite being banned by the BBC it was a hit here first time round in 1969 - twice, at the same time on two different labels! Fontana Records withdrew it - supposedly because the label boss's wife was appalled - and then independent label Major Minor quickly picked up the license in time for it to hit #1.
Meanwhile, in Italy the head of the record company that put it out there was excommunicated by the Pope...
Later - perhaps inevitably - Malcolm McLaren recorded it too -
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=phJqrTLINLU
-sean
PS Before McLaren, the first cover version of 'Je T'Aime...' released here was by that well known cultural provocateur, er... Frankie Howerd. With June Whitfield.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PguPq2SphYU
So very English...
-sean
Do any UK readers remember the Grumpy Old Men/Grumpy Old Women TV shows from around 20 years ago in which celebrities would complain about various aspects of modern life? I've been watching the Grumpy Old Men Christmas Special from 2003 and the Grumpy Old Women Christmas Special from 2004 (both on YouTube) in which celebrity talking heads complain about Christmas and while there were some valid points being made I definitely felt they were overegging their supposed hatred of Christmas just for the sake of it. YouTube also has The Grumpy Guide To Christmas from 2009 so I'll watch that next.
Regarding anon's comment up there (uh, is that you Charlie?) the Silver Surfer series and Kung Fu are pretty similar. I never thought of that.
A misunderstood loner, shunned and different from everybody else, goes around, ends up fighting injustice...
Same deal with the Hulk tv show.
Maybe it was the zeitgeist. Y'know, the anti--hero.
M.P.
Colin, I remember the Grumpy shows but I don't think I ever watched them.
Colin - I watched the Grumpy shows. Doesn't seem 20 years ago, but my vagueness probably proves it is. In terms of the "talking heads", Don Warrington's contribution was impressive, I seem to remember. I also recall some woman who resembled Peggy from Hi-de-hi (but wasn't).
Charlie & M.P. - Yes, Kung Fu & Hulk both had the Kimble / "Fugitive" trope, with Caine hunted for killing the royal nephew who murdered his mentor, Master Po - and the Hulk being hunted - despite being innocent - for the murder of Dr. Elaina Marks (?) - and Banner himself (?) - after the lab fire/explosion in the first episodes.
In addition, Kung Fu had the 'find your missing brother' trope (also revived in Airwolf ) - whereas Hulk had the protagonist's 'wife dies' trope - often, but not always, in the first instalment - (c.f. Earth Final Conflict, Star Trek DS9, First Wave, Jason King, James Bond, etc. ) Is this to get female viewers' sympathy? "Oh, he's such a tortured soul - I could comfort him!"
Renegade's twist on that trope was different. Rather than the protagonist's wife being killed outright in the first episode ( after being shot ), she was in a coma, on a life support machine. That way, for the writers, the protagonist could be a tortured soul for months - eliciting more sympathy.
To return to Kung Fu, Shang-Chi & Iron Fist ( particularly carrying the cauldron into the snow) owe a significant debt to that show.
Phillip
Such a tortured soul, Phillip -
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TzMSfaNXYZg
-sean
MP. I Want to belatedly thank you for that ridiculous cold front over the last 48 hours. To go from 50° to 25° to 5° in 48 hours was a real thrill for this Chicago cat.
By the way, if the great white buffalo shows up in your mother’s basement, dancing all over your comic book collection, it wasn’t me who gave him the address.
Sean - Indeed!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q1Ux0KxPO_g
Phillip
Phillip, you might be thinking of comedienne Jenny Eclair as the woman who looked like Peggy.
The Grumpy Old Men Christmas Special featured a cast of British celebrities and...er Elliot Gould. I have no idea why an American Hollywood film star was included in the talking heads line-up.
And in The Grumpy Guide To Christmas (which I've just watched) the token American celebrity was Huey Morgan of The Fun Lovin' Criminals. Did most BBC2 viewers in 2009 know who Huey Morgan actually was? I must admit I wasn't entirely sure and had to google him.
Colin - Yes, Jenny Eclair! She must be like Peggy, as you immediately knew who I meant!
Phillip
I've just been watching the edition of Top Of The Pops originally broadcast on December 11th 1980 (on BBC iplayer) which featured new-fangled computer graphics that must have looked amazing in 1980 but look comically primitive 44 years later. The line-up included Showaddywaddy, Madness, The Police, Adam & The Ants, Queen singing the theme-song of the Flash Gordon movie, an old clip of the newly deceased John Lennon singing Imagine and ABBA's Super Trouper at #1.
Super-per Trouper-per
Lights are gonna find me
Shining like the sun...
Yeah, I nearly went with that one instead, Phillip.
I was surprised not to find more variations though. It was a bit disappointing no-one had combined that piano theme with footage of Rishi Sunak (remember him?) in the rain...
-sean
Sean - For Sunak, I'd nominate 'Laughter in the Rain', by Neil Sedaka!
Phillip
Post a Comment