Wednesday, 25 December 2024

Forty Years Ago Today! The 1984 Marvel UK annuals for 1985.

Thanks to Charlie Horse 47 and Killdumpster for their sponsorship of this post, via the magic of Patreon
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Christmas. It's a time for peace, love and goodwill to all men. A time for all who have minds to contemplate the year just gone and what needs to be done in the year to come.

But there's only one thing I care about at Christmas.

Presents!

And what's on TV!

Christmas Day 1984 saw BBC One deliver such festive treats as Pages From Ceefax, The Noel Edmonds Live Live Christmas Breakfast Show, Blue Murder at St Trinian's, Top of the Pops, Christmas Blankety Blank, Hi-de-Hi!, The Paul Daniels Magic Christmas Show, Just Good Friends, The Two Ronnies, Wogan and Some Like it Hot.

BBC Two, meanwhile, offered, among other things, Chaplin: A Dog's Life, Polar Bear Alert, Chaplin: Limelight, Telly Quiz, The Nutcracker, The Master of Mouton and The Italian Film: Kaos.

ITV had Dangermouse, Emu at Christmas, Bugs Bunny's Looney Movie, Top Pop Videos of '84, Jayne Torvill & Christopher Dean, The Man with the Golden Gun, A Tribute to Eric Morecambe, Raiders of the Lost Ark, Des O'Connor Tonight and The Christmas Night Thriller : Home for the Holidays.

And what of that other channel we had now that we were a fancy modern country with more than three stations? Channel 4 supplied us with The Story of St Francis, The Custard Boys, Jour de FĂȘte, The Young Visiters, Brookside, Jean Sibelius, and Ian Breakwell's Christmas Diary.

The weird thing is I have no memory of having watched any of those shows.

Marvel Superheroes Annual 1985, BHS

But here's an oddity. A Marvel Superheroes Annual published exclusively for sale in British Home Stores. With offers like that, how on Earth did the retailer go bust?

Once we've bought this mighty tome, what can we expect of it?

We can expect plenty.

For a start, there's the unmitigated awesomeness of the first-ever clash between the Silver Surfer and Abomination. I'm sure I don't need to tell you this was the first Marvel Comics material I ever read, way back when it featured in the pages of IPC's TV21 in the summer of 1971.

There's also a tale in which Spider-Man teams up with Thor but I have no more details on what happens in that epic than that.

I do, however, know we get a text story bearing the melodramatic monicker Pit of Doom.

Also, Ms Marvel must battle the Vision when someone plots  to steal a truck loaded with a Top Secret cargo.

A second text story sees the Fantastic Four battle robot duplicates of themselves.

And, following a text adventure starring the Hulk, the Original X-Men must survive a meeting with the Sentinels, thanks to the pencils of Neal Adams and words of Roy Thomas.

On top of all that, Sal Buscema gives us a thriller in which Spider-Man must crack the mystery of who killed a scientist left alone in a locked room with nothing but a computer for company.

Return of the Jedi Annual 1985

For those who prefer space fantasy to super-heroics, the Return of the Jedi Annual shows up to treat us to plenty of reprinted Marvel goodness.

Sadly, I can shed little light upon the exact contents of this tome, other than to reveal it contains an adventure labelled Chanteuse of the Stars.

Hulk Annual 1985, Marvel UK

If there's one thing we can always depend upon, it's the presence of a Hulk Annual on our book shelves.

And we launch it with the Watcher demanding to know, "What If Rick Jones Had Become the Hulk?"

From what I can remember, such a thing would lead to a Hulk who speaks in nothing but Stan Lee style teen-speak. And if that isn't the best kind of Hulk we could hope to encounter, I don't know what is.

That's followed by a seven-page text story in which our hero's attacked by an army of androids sent by The Maker to capture him so the villain can study his strength, in order to make his androids even tougher.

If I'm not mistaken, wasn't that the plot of the Hulk's initial meeting with the Leader?

Next, we find a six-page text masterpiece in which a scout for the shape-changing alien race the Sprulku, investigates whether Earth is ripe for conquest. Needless to say, an encounter with the green grappler quickly convinces him it isn't.

I'm sure I'm not alone in noticing that "Sprulku" contains many of the same letters as "Skrull."

Finally, as the cover hints, we encounter the Hulk's first punch-up with the Rhino, when the thick-skinned miscreant's contacted by the men who gave him his costume and now can offer him a newer and better one.

That, of course, doesn't prevent our hero from quickly beating him into a coma.

Spider-Man Annual 1985, Marvel UK

As any fool knows, where there's a Hulk annual, there's bound to be a Spider-Man one.

Romance is in the air when the webbed wonder must deal with the return of the Black Cat who, having escaped from a psychiatric institution, tells the wall-crawler she wants to help him fight crime.

And be his girlfriend!

I would like to declare he has the good sense not to hook up with a woman who's just escaped from a lunatic asylum.

But, of course, he hasn't.

Next up, there's an eight-page text story called Eight Legs Hath the Spider.

That's one page for every leg.

That's followed by an eight-page text story called Lord of Light.

And we close the annual  - and this post - with a drama in which Spider-Man and the Black Cat have conflicting emotions about their new status as lovers.

And it's a conflict which leads to her, seemingly, leaping to her death in the river!

18 comments:

Anonymous said...

Do not wrap my present! I like to live in the presence!

Colin Jones said...

1984 was of course the year when Band Aid and Wham's Last Christmas first stormed the charts. I don't know what's happened to the Band Aid 40th anniversary release which combines the 1984, 2004 and 2014 versions but it hasn't made the current UK Top 100. Were the 2024 crop of music acts considered too untalented to sing a new version??

Colin Jones said...

Charlie, Andy Williams is #7 in this week's Billboard Hot 100.

Anonymous said...

It’s my turn to ask if anyone knows who drew these covers. The SUPERHEROES one is signed but I can’t make out the name, and I don’t recognize the art style on any of the others. Definitely not Ron Wilson and Giacoia/Esposito, that’s for sure!

Is it just me or does Luke Skywalker look more like Mick Jagger than Mark Hamill?

b.t.

Anonymous said...

b.t. That Superheroes cover is by John Higgins (later colourist on Watchmen). I don't remember any of these but Spiderman and Hulk look vaguely like Paul Neary, but I'm not sure. The Superheroes annual is a throwback to the SuperHeroes weekly, featuring both Silver Surfer and X-men tales. An odd choice.

Belated Christmas greeting to everyone.

DW

Matthew McKinnon said...

BT -
The Hulk and Spider-Man annuals are definitely Paul Neary.

The ROTJ one I have no idea, but it’s terrible. Why didn’t they just use a pre-existing bit of art?

The Superheroes one gives me a John Higgins feeling. Something about the Silver Surfer’s face - Higgins did blocky tall faces in that fashion back then. If it’s him, I’m surprised it’s not more lushly coloured though, as his painted colours were amazing.

Anonymous said...

Actually take it back about the Superheroes colours: they’re pretty nice and I think are another indication that it might be Higgins.

Anonymous said...

Steve - The Silver Surfer vs the Abomination, & Ms.Marvel vs the Vision were both in previous Superheroes Annuals, circa 1980/81. Thus, if that annual is a 'Superheroes Special Edition' annual, could it be a compilation of previous UK Superheroes annuals?

Phillip

Anonymous said...

Matthew, the Superheroes cover is definitely Higgins - he signed it (by Sue Storm's lower leg).
The ROTJ one baffled me, so I tried to find out online. According to the GCD it was pencilled by... Glynis Wein.
https://www.comics.org/issue/954450/

Which was a bit of an unexpected result. If true, that would suggest that the pic was a pre-existing piece rather than specially drawn for Marvel UK, but I'm a bit sceptical. Not least because she's credited as interior colourist, so its not hard to see how an error could have happened putting the entry together.

DW, I can see the logic behind featuring the X-Men in any Marvel publication in 1984 (although the All-New, All-Different ones would make more sense).
But the weird thing is featuring a Thomas/Adams story that had been reprinted in an X-Men annual just a couple of years earlier, and (I think) an issue of Marvel Superheroes.

-sean

Anonymous said...

So did you get any nice presents, Steve? Or were you a bad boy all year?

-sean

Anonymous said...

Sean, yeah I would have thought an unpublished (in the UK) new X-men story would make more sense. I don’t think US X-men annuals 3, 4 or 5 had been published locally at the time.

DW

Anonymous said...

Hope everyone had a good Christmas.
Or, even better, a dread one...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LxI9vH9Kvgk

-sean

Colin Jones said...

Sean, it's still Christmas and will be until January 6th so nobody HAD either a good OR dread one.

If Christmas is only one day then why don't people take down their decorations on Boxing Day?

Anonymous said...

Well that's me told!

-sean

Anonymous said...

Please don’t wrap my present. I like to live in the present.

Anonymous said...

I always feel some melancholy the day after Christmas. It was still semi-dark when I got up this morning so literally the first thing I did (even before pouring a cup of coffee) was turn on the Xmas lights outside the house and on the Xmas tree. For about 45 minutes I enjoyed a little bit of Leftover Yuletide Cheer.

b.t.

Steve W. said...

Sean, I'm afraid I've been unrelentingly evil all year and, so, not only did Santa not bring me any nice presents, he kidnapped me, took me back to the North Pole and flung me in the dungeon where he keeps the naughty people.

Anonymous said...

You little Northern rascal, Steve. The good news for you is that evil looks like being the in-thing in 2025.

-sean