Sunday, 1 December 2024

Fifty years ago today - December 1974.

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

The maelstrom awaits.

I shall enter it.

Avengers #130, Titanic Three

It's East vs West, as the Avengers mistakenly tangle with the Titanic Three who turn out, on this occasion, not to be the wrongdoers our heroes had assumed them to be.

Which, of course, poses the obvious question of just who are the bad guys?

That, I fail to remember but I do know this is the month in which we experience the Swordsman's funeral.

Conan the Barbarian #45

Judging by that cover, Conan must overcome the glummest-looking monster he's ever encountered.

I've never read this one but it seems the world's favourite barbarian and someone called Laza-Lanti kill the thing but then Laza-Lanti and someone called Timara commit suicide.

It all sounds quite depressing.

Daredevil #116, the Owl

The Owl's back and making a nuisance of himself in San Francisco where Matt Murdock has gone in an attempt to reunite with the Black Widow.

However, their meeting is interrupted by muggers who work for the floating fiend!

Fantastic Four #153, Mahkizmo

"We can't stop him from exploding!"

They don't write dialogue like that anymore.

But is it true? Was this, as claimed, "The mightiest FF saga ever!"?

And was Mahkizmo the worst name in history for a villain?

These are questions I ask as I contemplate the nature of reality, from my mountaintop eyrie.

When it comes to plot, the testosterone terror gloats that our heroes can't thwart his plan to merge his world of Machus with that of Thundra's Femizons.

And, to prove it, he forces them to fight big monsters!

Incredible Hulk #182, Hammer and Anvil

Hammer and Anvil make their first appearance when an injured alien mistakes their attempts to kill it for a successful attempt to help it.

Thus it is that it grants them super-strength and a lifelong bond that can't be broken.

Until the Hulk breaks it.

More importantly, this is the issue in which we meet Crackajack Jackson.

And then wave goodbye to him as he, sadly, snuffs it.

Amazing Spider-Man #139, The Grizzly

I sometimes think I'm the only person alive who appreciates the Grizzly but I've always had a soft spot for him, even if he is, basically, just a cut-price rehashing of the Rhino.

That said, I must admit I struggle to recall the actual plot of this one, beyond him being an ex-wrestler who wants revenge on someone for something or other.

Thor #230

And my memories of this one are also vague.

I suspect Thor's travelled to an underworld, in order to rescue the abducted goddess Krista from a villain not depicted on the cover.

Given that it's an underworld, I shall assume her abductor to be either Pluto or Mephisto.

I could, however, be wrong about that.

X-Men #91, Magneto

After visiting Professor X's funeral, 
Quicksilver goes back home to Magneto's lair but is plagued by doubts about having left the Avengers to rejoin his old master.

Needless to say, that can only mean an X-Men/Magneto scrap is on its way...

There's also a Lee/Ditko reprint in which a criminal kills a night watchman before fleeing into the past, with the aid of a time machine. But, there, he has a violent encounter with the machine's creator.

Captain America and the Falcon #180, Nomad

What's this? Steve Rogers creating a whole new identity for himself?

And calling it Nomad?

Is this a good idea or bad?

Only time - and the fashion police - can tell.

Until then, he's going to be needed because Madame Hydra's killed the original Viper and, having, adopted his name and costume, goes and reforms the Serpent Squad!

Plop! #8

That's what Marvel's big hitters are up to.

But what of DC?

Just what will we find if we grab a random smattering of its books which bear the same cover date, from the spinner racks of our youth?

Plop! hits its eighth issue, with a Basil Wolverton image that'll inhabit your nightmares for as long as you may live.

Inside, we find a whole string of short tales of a humorous bent, from the likes of Wolverton, Steve Skeates, Dave Manak, Sergio Aragonés, Robert Johnson, Don Edwing and multitude others.

Weird Western Tales #25, Jonah Hex

Weird Western Tales is a comic I was always tempted to buy, due to it looking like a horror comic but one I always failed to buy because of it being a Western mag.

Regardless, in this issue, Hex encounters a land owner who demands an exorbitant toll to cross his road.

This is bad news because those who refuse to meet the asking price are forced to take a detour through the deadliest of quicksand.

The Unexpected #160, 100 pages

The Unexpected gets the 100-page treatment - and that means I'm expecting lots of reprints. 

Granted, if that proves to be the case then it won't be unexpected and the book will have failed to live up to its title.

But what was I worrying about? Upon closer inspection, it transpires that no fewer than four of its tales are brand new.

Those are the ones the world knows as Death of an Exorcist, Over My Dead Body, Panic in the Dark and Among Us Dwells a Man-Beast.

The issue's reprints, meanwhile, are blessed with such titles as The Fear Master, Bewitched for a Day, The Riddle of the Glass Bubble, The Wizard of the Diamond World, Doom Was My Inheritance, The Man Who Was Death, The Unlucky Birthstones and The Enchanted Costumes and are all sourced from the 1950s and '60s.

Swamp Thing #13

Nestor Redondo gives us an iconic cover, as DC's greatest swamp dweller
 returns to do whatever it is he does this month.

You may have surmised my knowledge of this one to be limited and you'd be right but I do know the story within is called The Leviathan Conspiracy and introduces someone called John Zero.

Batman #259, The Shadow

Can it be? Are DC's two most nocturnal crime fighters about to meet, despite the different eras in which they operate?

Yes it can when Batman sets off in pursuit of a known felon, falsely believing him to have stolen a priceless tiara.

But, of course, that's not all we're getting. This is, after all, a 100-page comic.

Thus it is that we also encounter The Great Batman Swindle!, The Strange Costumes of Batman!, A New Look for Robin, Heroes by Proxy!, Two Batmen Too Many! and The Failure of Bruce Wayne. All of which have been recycled from the distant past.

Weird Adventure Comics #436, The Spectre

Jim Aparo gives us a cover that proves purple and green can go together.

What don't go together are the Spectre and the Third Reich. Thus it is that a self-declared Nazi field marshall meets a tentacular termination when he decides it's a good idea to try and blackmail the city, with threats of terror attacks.

Elsewhere, Aquaman must battle the deadly Bugala, a huge sea monster which is on course to destroy Atlantis itself.

But is that monster all it seems?

22 comments:

dangermash said...

Grizzly might be a Rhino knockoff but he is the inspiration behind my favourite onesie.

Anonymous said...

The Grizzly looked very formidable in the 1977 Superheroes Card Game. Unfortunately, when I later obtained a back issue issue featuring the Grizzly, he cut a less impressive figure. Never meet your heroes - or villains, for that matter.

Has Anvil got blond hair to look less like Tony Curtis, in 'The Defiant Ones' ? (Clearly Hammer & Anvil's inspiration! )

The Black Widow's hand gesture's reminiscent of Amazing Spidey # 86. On this DD cover, she should be depicted larger.

Phillip

Anonymous said...


Adventure comics was one of my favourite comics at the time and was a must buy for me. I had all the Aparo's Spectre and Aquaman runs and still have most of them. I thought the journalist Crawford, looked like Clark Kent. This issue also had an Aquaman back up by Steve Skeates and Mike Grell that didn't feature Grell's best art.

Anonymous said...

Magneto, Steve? And on that Avengers cover, the Titanium Man? With the Crimson Dynamo along for the ride...?
Somewhat surprised you not to find a mention of Sir Paul McCartney in the post, who presumably had at least two of this month's Marvels.

Swamp Thing #13 is the last issue written by Len Wein, and marks a kind of ending of sorts, as Matt Cable finally discovers - wrongly as it would later turn out - that Swampy is Alec Holland, and stops pursuing him.
The military/industrial complex bureaucrat formerly known as John Zero appears only briefly, but would return in #23 as camp 70s super-villain Sabre -

https://stevedoescomics.blogspot.com/2021/08/swamp-thing-23-no-sabre-dont-kill-him.html

I've not read that issue of Adventure, but for some reason the cover pic of Spectre and the purple tentacles looks familiar somehow...

-sean

Anonymous said...

*Somewhat surprised not to find a mention...
Apologies for that stray 'you' there (poor editing).

Cover of the month here has to be Plop #8, right?
Although it wouldn't be if OMAC #2 - quite possibly the greatest single issue of a mainstream 70s US comic - had been included.

-sean

Anonymous said...

I dunno, sean — I like the PLOP! cover just fine but I think that spooky WEIRD WESTERN cover (with Jonah Hex riding OUT of a pool of quicksand) is the most striking out of all the ones here.

And yeah, where HAVE we seen that image of The Spectre and purple tentacles before? I’m sure it’ll come to me.

b.t.

Anonymous said...

Jim Aparo Spectre comics are truly things of beauty. I owned a series of reprints at one time which were printed on fancy paper and recoloured and they were gorgeous. The stories can be a little samey when read all at once, but of course they weren't intended to be.

Anonymous said...

It is funny to think that Shadow only predates Batman by nine years. That might seem like a lot but 80 - 90 years later it's basically the same era. Did they ever fight each other?

McSCOTTY said...

I'm not sure if they fought each other but Batman and the Shadow teamed up in Batman issues 253 and 259 in the 1970s. They've also teamed up in a DC/Dynamite limited series relatively recently.

Anonymous said...

The Conan cover re-appeared as a cover of Marvel UK's The Avengers & The Savage Sword Of Conan in 1976 (can't recall the actual number). It was one of the rare occasions when Conan was allowed to be on the cover of that merged comic.

Colin Jones said...

The above comment was mine.

Anonymous said...

Charlie read “December’s” DAREDEVIL so as to be able to comment intelligently! Imagine his surprise when he saw the covers above and the daredevil he read was not the same as the one picture. Regrettably Charlie read December 1975, not 1974. I encourage everyone to stick around for at least another 12 months to read my insightful thoughts.

Anonymous said...

Charlie:
Ha! Well, I did read the December 74 DAREDEVIL 50 years ago, but don’t remember much about it now. It was in the middle of a run where Bob Brown was the regular penciller but occasionally Gene Colan would come back for a fill-in issue and this was one of them. Even with Vince Colletta doing the inks, I remember liking the art. The GCD tells me this was Steve Gerber’s last issue as scripter. That’s all I got!

b.t.

Anonymous said...

Hi BT…

Yes, the art is OK. Not quite Gene the Dean-ish but much more than serviceable!

The story is OK too.

My only knit to pick is that the introduce a character who, the born on earth, wants to return to his planet, where he was raised many many years away. So, he harnesses some “astral power “and is able to create steps going off into the atmosphere and presumably into space through the galaxies Antique climbs each step and presumably he is going to do this for God knows how many light years until he gets home, lol.

And the weird thing is, because the dude is doing it as fast as you or I would, he is going to age. It’s not like he’s traveling the speed of light, lol.

Anonymous said...

Wait — you’re talking about the December 1975 DAREDEVIL now? Sorry, I got a bit lost there…

Okay, I’m up to speed now…

Yes, Klaus Janson inks made Bob Brown’s art more appealing. MUCH more so than Vinnie Colletta — I find the Brown/Colletta DDs really ugly and hard to look at .

I haven’t revisited many of those Wolfman/Brown/Janson DD comics since buying them off the rack all those decades ago, so I don’t remember that particular story — the guy is literally gonna WALK back to his “home” planet? I wouldn’t worry too much about him getting too old to climb the “Space Stairs”, I think he’s gonna run out of food, water and air long before then. Even by Marvel’s “hand-wave-y” space travel /physics rules, the whole thing seems really dumb!

b.t.

Anonymous said...

The Brown/Janson Daredevil run means Copperhead, & the Torpedo, according to my memory.

Phillip

Anonymous said...

Phillip:
Yes, and Death-Stalker. And Uri Geller :D

b.t.

Anonymous said...

Phillip - I can say that the letters' column does refer to Copperhead!

Anonymous said...

This is an interesting collection of comics you've given us to ponder, Steve.
I could go on and on but brevity being the soul of wit and me being lazy, I'll just ask, was that Captain America comic the one where Nomad steps on his own cape?
It was either that issue or the one after.
Not a lotta Marvel characters with capes. Thor's a "small g" god, so he gets one. A cape indicates arrogance, like with Doc Doom.
That Spectre run on Adventure Comics...I dunno. There's something almost sadistic about the whole thing. I mean, turning a guy into wood and taking a chainsaw to him? That's pretty severe.

M.P.

Steve W. said...

MP, sadly, I can supply no information as to just when Nomad stepped on his own cape. Perhaps others can be more enlightening than me.

Anonymous said...

Nomad does indeed trip over his own cape in CAP 180.

b.t.

Anonymous said...

Not sure if anyone is still dialed in…

But my general recollection is that Marvel strongly avoided capes due to the copyright infringement litigation 10 years earlier between Fawcett and DC Comics.

One of the examples of copyright infringement that DC comics pointed to, in the litigation involving Captain Marvel and Superman, was that Captain Marvel took a cape like Superman.

Charlie thinks it’s absolute bullshit that a kid would mistake Captain Marvel for Superman or that all aspects of Superman should not have been allowed to be used by any other comic book character.

I tend to think of this case was litigated today DC would’ve been bounced out of the courtroom. How in the hell can you protect all aspects of Superman: from having a cape to flying to super strength to etc. etc. etc.