Tuesday, 10 December 2024

The Marvel Lucky Bag - December 1984.

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

This month in 1984, the dedicated cinema-goer probably couldn't even make up his mind just what films he wanted to see in his local cinema.

And that's not surprising. It was a month, after all, which saw the release of such box office stardust as Beverly Hills Cop, 2010, City Heat, The Cotton Club, Dune, 1984, A Passage to India, Johnny Dangerously, Starman and, of course, Breakin' 2: Electric Boogaloo.

I must confess the only ones of those I've actually seen are Dune and Starman and I refuse to vote for either of them as being Film of the Month because, if either of them is, there's something seriously wrong with the world.

Buckaroo Banzai #1

I think it's the comic we've all been waiting for, when Marvel's adaptation of Buckaroo Banzai makes its sensational reprint debut.

Join it as Bill Mantlo and Mark Texeira reveal just how Buckaroo and his gang learn the Earth is imperilled by aliens.

And, then, I assume they set out to do something about it, or it wouldn't be much of a comic. Nor much of a film, either.

Conan Annual #9

Conan gets his ninth annual and seems to be up against the Stone Men from Saturn!

Upon closer research, it seems the Stone Men from Saturn are not involved but, instead, the barbarian and his crew of pirates blunder across a ship carrying warrior priests intent upon protecting the giant statue of their sleeping god.

And what's the betting that that sleeping god is about to wake up?

Beauty and the Beast #1

What's this? An adaptation of Disney's Beauty and the Beast?

Even though it won't be coming out for another seven years?

That's what I call a preemptive strike.

But no! It turns out this book has nothing to do with the Disney film. Nor with any associated fairy tale.

Instead, it's a story of furry super-heroics, as the X-Men's Beast hits Hollywood, looking to hang out with his old mate Wonder Man.

I shall assume Wonder Man isn't the, "Beauty," of the title and will, therefore, speculate it's the Dazzler, who's signed up to perform with an, "experimental," theatre.

This all leads to her powers going out of control, causing her to vanish into thin air.

Can the mutant crime-buster find her?

And, even if he does, then what?

Mother Teresa of Calcutta #1

They said it couldn't be done.

And probably assumed it wouldn't be done.

But done, it has been.

At last, Mother Teresa has her very own Marvel comic devoted to her!

I can reveal almost nothing of the plot of this one - mostly because I don't have a clue what its plot is  - but I shall assume that plot bears a remarkable resemblance to her life story.

And if that life story doesn't bear a remarkable resemblance to The Sound of Music, I shall be highly disappointed.

The Amazing Spider-Man Annual #18

Unless my instincts let me down, Spider-Man's 18th annual sees the return of no lesser threat than the Scorpion!
  
Not for the first time, the titanium-tailed terror's out for revenge upon J Jonah Jameson. And, this time, he's going to do it by abducting JJ's bride-to-be Marla Madison, and his son John.

But, if John Jameson's around, does that mean Man-Wolf will also be putting in an appearance?

The Sisterhood of Steel #1

Another new mag enters our eyes and brains when someone called Ataluma is enslaved by pirates.

After tricking someone called D'lak into killing someone called Thibbeus, she rallies some women to her side and forms something called the Sisterhood. Ataluma then murders D'lak and takes over somewhere called Ildana.

Much later, while completing her training, someone called Boronwe tries to cover-up for someone called Kelki when one of them runs off with the lover of one of them.

Frankly, I've no idea what any of that means.

But I'm suspecting this is the comic book equivalent of those dodgy, female-led, straight-to-video 1980s Sword and Sorcery films of a certain reputation.

Sheena #1

First, Marvel gave us Shanna. And now it gives us Sheena!

Despite what the Ramones may have told us, Sheena is not a punk rocker.

Instead, she's a full-fledged jungle queen and, within, this adventure, the villainous Prince Otwani's plot to murder a king is successful but his plan to usurp the throne may fail because our heroine's rescued the shaman he was planning to use as a scapegoat.

Gray Morrow supplies the artwork. Therefore, it is, at least, guaranteed to be pleasing to the eye.

Marvel Super Special #37, 2010

In the 1970s, Jack Kirby gave us Marvel's take on Stanley Kubrick's masterpiece.

Now, that same company gives us its take on the sequel to that masterpiece.

I'd reveal the plot of this one but I don't know what it is.

I'm going to guess monoliths and spaceships are involved. And, possibly, a trip to another world.

It's probably like Alien: Prometheus, or something.

I do know, though, that J M DeMatteis, Joe Barney and Larry Hama are the creative talents behind this version of the venture.

Marvel Super Special #36, Dune

On the other hand, I have seen the movie version of Dune.

On the not-other-hand, I don't have a clue what that one was about either

However, I do know this version is 64 pages long and brought to us by Ralph Macchio and Bill Sienkiewicz.

Wait. Hold on. Wasn't Ralph Macchio the Karate Kid?

Marvel Super Special #35, Conan

Speaking of action stars, the biggest of them all gets a Marvel book all to himself, as the company's adaptation of his second Conan film hacks and slashes its way into our tame existences.

In it, Queen Taramis promises to restore Valeria to life if our hero performs the simple feat of escorting her niece to somewhere or other.

The only problem is that Thoth-Amon is around.

And, of course, he's up to his customary no-good.

Iceman #1

It's taken a long time but Marvel's frostiest fighter of foes, fools, filch-meisters, felons, Pharaohs, fumblesome fops, flops, flunkies and fiends has a book of his own!

Can the walking popsicle make it on his own?

All I know is he heads off to attend his father's retirement party but it turns out his parents still aren't happy that their son's a super hero.

To make matters worse, two people called White Light and The Idiot show up. 

Happily, he defeats those clowns but will his parents ever forgive him for using his mutant powers in front of everybody?

22 comments:

Anonymous said...

Something about Mother Teresa being juxtaposed on Sister Steel and Sheena makes Charlie want to go home and crawl inder the covers… sort of.

What a mad world it is.

Someone pass the meds please.

Anonymous said...

STEVE! Thank you! I was wondering what sort of “time capsule “I would open for my two adult children as they spend time with me over Christmas, lol. They are 28 and 26 respectively. I’m thinking the original “BREAKIN” or perhaps “FLASHDANCE” might do the trick?

If anyone else can think of some early 80s/new wave inspired clothing that features in movies, let Charlie know ASAP!

Otherwise its TURBO and OZONE vs. JENNIFER BEALS.

Anonymous said...

Actually I might show both to demonstrate that there was a time when women did not need breast augmentation to be considered hot.

Charles

Matthew McKinnon said...

"Bill, we need a cover for this Beauty & The Beast X-Men spin-off. You've done a lot of that sort of thing haven't you?"

"Sure" - picks up felt pens and starts to scribble - "how's this for a layout? Obviously, I'll do a full painted version and it'll be -"

Editor grabs rough sketch, "No, this is fine, this'll do. Tight deadline here, and your fans'll accept any old thing. Remember that ROM cover? Thanks, Bill, send us your invoice."

I had the Dune Marvel Super Special, though I picked it up in 1985. I was very impressed with it at the time, but these days it does look a LOT like copied photo reference material. Surprised it hasn't been reprinted since.

I'm still fond of the first hour of Lynch's DUNE. And it was the film whose publicity led me to watch Eraserhead on Channel 4 late at night in January 1985, which was a life-changing experience.



Anonymous said...

I saw 2010, THE COTTON CLUB, DUNE and STARMAN at the theatre. I thought DUNE was a disappointing mess, and thought the others were all passably entertaining at the time. I’ve since seen DUNE numerous times — I still think it’s a mess, but an intriguingly quirky once. I’ve never re-watched any of the others, or had any desire to.

Hard to imagine any 4-issue Limited Series that i’d be less inclined to spend my money on than one drawn by Don Perlin (BEAUTY AND THE BEAST). Unless it was a 4-issue Limited Series drawn by Alan Kupperberg (ICEMAN).

I bought all those MARVEL SUPER SPECIALS back in the day because of my horrible completist tendencies. I don’t recall being impressed by any of them, not even Sienkiewicz’s DUNE adaptation (nice cover though)

b.t.

Anonymous said...

Matthew:
I agree, the first half of DUNE is much more weird and fun. I start zoning out after Paul and his mom hook up with the Fremen.

b.t.

Matthew McKinnon said...

I am quite fond of 2010. I know it has no reason to exist and that making such a literal, expository sequel to one of the most ambiguous films of all time seems like a bizarre practical joke. But it’s a good solid bit of SF film-making by Peter Hyams. I never get tired of it. James Cameron nicked quite a lot from it for Aliens.

Anonymous said...

Sisterhood of Steel is actually better than you would expect from that cover, Steve.
Better than I expected anyway, back when it was the first Epic title I completely passed on at the time, til I got a couple of issues in one of those packs comic shops would sell featuring a few direct market titles together cheap that they couldn't shift individually at full price.
I probably got them with Scorpio Rose, Ms Mystic #2 or something like that...

Anyhow, it turned out to be pretty readable actually. It probably helped that Sisterhood of Steel was written by a woman - Christy Marx (who I think only co-write a couple of issues of Red Sonja beforehand?) - and as sword & sorcery goes it was more Ursula le Guin than Robert E Howard (or Roy Thomas, let alone Michael Fleischer).

The main drawback is Mike Vosburg's artwork. I don't want to be too down on him, because in fairness theres a variety of characters - his women are middle aged as well as young, and range from butch to girly - and aside from that cover he avoided the 'male gaze' approach you usually get with fantasy comics. Frank Thorne he wasn't!
But his inks are fairly workmanlike, and compared to his earlier stuff for DC - like Starfire and Isis (which I think were inked by Vince Colletta?) - the result is a bit bland. Which is a big problem for sword & sorcery, a very artist driven genre imo.
A shame Marvel didn't get someone like Alfredo Alcala or Nestor Redondo to do the inks - that would have made for a pretty good comic.

-sean

Anonymous said...

On the subject of the male gaze, I've seen the Marvel Super Special edition of that Sheena adaptation and it is not as pleasing to the eye as you'd hope.

Sad to say, Gray Morrow was past his prime by the '80s, and while he was still capable of doing alright work - like his two issue Lois Lane mini-series from a year or so later, which was ok - Sheena wasn't a particularly good example of that.

-sean

Anonymous said...

Not particularly classy of Marvel to attempt to sting X-fans for five titles (X-men, New Mutants, Kitty Wolverine, Dazzler Beast and Iceman) and that’s not including Alpha Flight. If you’re going to gouge your readers at least get decent creators, or spread them out a bit.

I liked Lynch’s Dune and thought his bonkers Harkonnens were great. Has anyone tried the new Dune Prophecy tv series? The first two epidodes are pretty confusing (and I read the first two books as a teenager, and did watch the recent two movies) but the third is good. I’m sticking with it.

DW

Anonymous said...

DW:
Yeah, I was ready to give up on DUNE: PROPHECY after the first two episodes. I thought they looked great, production value-wise, and the performances were mostly solid, but the storyline just wasn’t grabbing me. There was a sameness of tone that I found dull. But the third episode was a bit more interesting, so i’ll keep watching for now. I still have one (pretty big) problem with it — I don’t actually care about any of the characters.

b.t.

Anonymous said...

Its hard to know who Marvel thought would buy a solo Iceman comic, DW, let alone all four issues of a mini-series. Unless maybe it had been drawn by John Byrne.
But Alan Kupperberg...?!? Even in the era of X-Mania its hard to see that as a money making proposition. But then maybe it just goes to show you can't underestimate the completist tendency of comic fans.

-sean

Colin Jones said...

Mother Teresa fights Dr Doom in her comic and is invited to join The Avengers but declines.

In school one of my classmates was called Sheena (Meredith).

Mariah Carey is #1 on the new Billboard Hot 100 with Brenda Lee at #2 and Wham! at #3 (the only British Xmas song in the entire Hot 100). Charlie will be glad to know there are more Xmas songs on the chart than last week and Andy Williams has reached #11.

Anonymous said...

Sean - Maybe the Sheena job fell to Vosburg, with She-Hulk & Ms.Marvel (albeit briefly) being in his portfolio. A go-to artist for female empowerment characters? ( late 70s/early 80s version of 'empowerment', that is! )

A trick was missed on that Ice Man comic. "The Ice Man Cometh!" should have been its title. Maybe, Marvel HQ thought: "Too obvious!"

Dune's difficult for a movie. Audiences understand quests for a ring in Tolkien, for example. But, in Dune, the spice melange & complicated politicking is difficult to grab an audience with.

The sandworms in Dune nevertheless inspired the Tremors franchise, on some level ( perhaps). A good thing, or not? Kevin Bacon was kept afloat by it, seemingly, before his gigs advertising UK mobile phone networks!

Phillip


Matthew McKinnon said...

The first hour of Dune kind of proceeds at the right pace, I think. Plenty of time for little eccentric details.

It's the second hour where the story becomes just ridiculously compressed - it's like a montage version of the novel. And it feels like the budget runs out as well.

Colin Jones said...

My local Tesco played 'River' by Joni Mitchell - a nice but little known and under-rated Christmas song.

Anonymous said...

Seeing DUNE for the first time in the theatre, it was interesting to hear the perplexed audience reactions to beautiful Virginia Madsen delivering that 2 minute info-dump in her calm ASMR tones — the media blitz and merchandising campaign had done their best to sell the movie as a space adventure — people were muttering things like “I thought this was gonna be like STAR WARS?”

b.t.

Anonymous said...

Can One see the latest Dune movie without having read the book? Mrs. Charlie thinks the books are excellent and read them decades ago. Mr. Charlie never really became aware of them until the past 10 or so years and tried reading Dune. He lost interest after the first few chapters. This has happened three times lol with Dune.

Anonymous said...

I think the newer Dune films would be pretty easy to follow. My daughter hadn’t read the novel (or seen the Lynch movie) and had no trouble at all . Just be sure to start with the first one though!

b.t.

Anonymous said...

Charlie, yes I agree with b.t. The new two-part movie doesn’t require any prior knowledge.

DW

Anonymous said...

The only Dune film I've seen is the Lynch one.
Unless you count the documentary about Alejandro Jodorowsky's 70s version that didn't get made; the one designed by Moebius and HR Giger, with Orson Welles, Salvador DalĂ­, David Carradine and Mick Jagger set to be in it, and Pink Floyd and Magma doing the soundtrack.

Which sounds like it would have been the most 70s thing ever...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-fv4F8HasKA

-sean

Matthew McKinnon said...

Yes, you’re probably better off watching the new films without having read the books.

That way you won’t be sitting there saying ‘why did they leave that out? Where is so-and-so?’.

They’re pretty good movies! The first one didn’t quite hit the mark for me - though everyone I know loved it - but the second is very good indeed.