Sunday, 5 January 2025

Fifty years ago today - January 1975.

Thanks to Charlie Horse 47 and Killdumpster for their sponsorship of this post, via the magic of Patreon
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The year may be new but the comics are still old.

Avengers #131, Legion of the Unliving

Somewhere in the tunnels of Limbo, the Legion of the Dead leave the Avengers feeling mortified, as the
Celestial Madonna Saga lumbers on and, hopefully, we get a little closer to the truth of what's going on with Immortus and Kang.

Conan the Barbarian #46

I'm pretty sure this is the one in which Conan defeats his foe by using his brain and dissolving his feet.

I do, of course, mean he dissolves the monster's feet. Not his own.

Dissolving your own feet, as a tactic, would be stupid and counter-productive.

Nor do I mean that he dissolves the monster's feet by rubbing them with his own brain.

I can reveal he doesn't rub anyone's feet with anyone's brains.

Just to get it straight, no one's brains rub anything in this story.

Captain America and the Falcon #181

Judging by that cover, this one certainly seems action-packed.

Inside it, wearing the guise of Nomad, Steve Rogers battles the Serpent Squad and Krang to prevent them from using an oil platform to raise Lemuria to the surface.

I'm assuming this must be a big oil platform.

And, somehow, someone called Roscoe becomes Captain America!

Daredevil #117, Mindtap

Now there's trouble. The, "All-powerful," Owl's captured Daredevil and will siphon off his mind unless the Black Widow captures Shanna the She-Devil for him.

Needless to say, this leads to the villain having to fight three heroes instead of just two, and the Black Widow and Shanna help Daredevil take the fool down.

But it's not all good news because, when the scrap's over, our hero must return to New York without the Widow.

Fantastic Four  #154

I seem to recall this issue featuring the return of a foe from the old Strange Tales Human Torch
and Thing series.

But is it really him? I forget exactly what the shock reveal is as regards his true identity but I have it in my head that he's really Reed Richards in disguise.

Incredible Hulk #183, Zzzax

I'm struggling to remember but I think Bruce Banner gets a job in a lab, by passing himself off as a skilled janitor but it all leads to Zzzax making an electrifying return in which he has the hots for a young woman.

In some ways, this issue does seem to serve as a prototype for the Incredible Hulk TV show and its protagonist's ability to land employment in any profession, anywhere, at will.

Iron Man #72, Melter and Man-Bull

Iron Man becomes Irony Man - doomed to die at a comic book convention.

As well as George Tuska; Neal Adams and Frank Brunner seem to have a hand in the pencilling of this issue.

And the story itself features cameo appearances by Roy Thomas and Mike Friedrich.

Amazing Spider-Man #140, the Grizzly

The stakes get ramped up to 11 when the Jackal attaches a tracking device to Peter Parker's arm. One that will explode if he tries to remove it.

Not that the webbed wonder's going to let that prevent him from putting an end to the Grizzly's reign of furry terror.

Thor #231

Has Thor met his match?

I can't remember.

In truth, I can't recall anything at all about this one but I think his opponent may be called Armak and may be a caveman who's been revived and has, somehow, gained super-strength.

Famous First Edition #F-6 (F-5), Batman

That's Marvel's big shots dealt with.

But what of DC comics?

What can we find if we open a random selection of its books which choose to  bear a cover date of January 1975?

Batman.

Who is he?

What is he?

Why is he?

It seems we may be in danger of getting an answer to all of that, thanks to him getting his very own Famous 1st Edition.

That's right. It's a reprint of 1940's Batman #1 in which the dark detective faces a new clown-like criminal who's killing celebrities and stealing their possessions, while, somehow, leaving them with a smile on their face!

In another tale, our hero faces a criminal who's invented a serum which creates giant monsters!

Elsewhere, Batman and Robin take a trip on a yacht, in an attempt to prevent the Cat from stealing a necklace.

Even more elsewhere, the Joker escapes from prison to resume his murderous rampage.

And we're treated to a Bill Finger article labelled The Legend of the Batman - Who He Is and How He Came to Be!

But DC are clearly determined to spoil us because we're also presented with adventures for Major Bigsbe an' Botts. Plus, Detective Terry Gallant and Lt Bill Wayne. Not to mention Ginger Snap and Uncle Zep.

And, in a one-page feature, we meet Batman "creator" Bob Kane.

Limited Collectors' Edition #C-32, Ghosts

The comic that only ever gives us true stories of the supernatural gets its reward for such honesty by being granted a Limited Collectors' Edition.

But what happens inside that dark and eldritch tome?

I can share few details. Mystery, of course, being an uncertain thing.

But I do know we find chillers which bear such titles as A Specter Poured the Potion, Death's Bridegroom!, The Horrors of Witchcraft, The Dark Goddess of Doom, Death, the Pale Horseman!, The Spectral Coachman!, The Crimson Claw!, Famous and Infamous Ghosts, The Fanged Spectres of Kinshoro, Death Awaits Me, The Diabolic Cult of Voodoo, Ghost Cargo from the Sky and Death Is My Mother, mostly reprinted from the very earliest issues of the monthly mag of the same name.

The Brave and the Bold #116, Spectre and Batman

It's the big one, as our two favourite Jim Aparo drawn heroes get to join forces.

Frankly, I'm not sure why the Spectre would need to enlist the help of Batman. Then again, I'm not sure why Superman would either but, still, it keeps happening.

Bizarre murders are being committed by upstanding citizens who turn out to be impostors. They're then discovered to be possessed by the spirits of worshippers of Kali.

And they're out to enable that goddess's resurrection!

But, of course, there's more. For this is a 100-page comic and even the Spectre and Batman can't be expected to fill a hundred pages.

Therefore, the Teen Titans prevent an invasion from another dimension, an heir to a throne is assigned to deliver the Sun Ruby to a neighbouring kingdom and, as the Silent Knight, he surmounts all obstacles, Batman's pursuit of a new villain is complicated by Wonder Woman and Batgirl falling in love with him, and we encounter The Many Lives of the Spectre.

On top of all that, Bob Rozakis takes a look at DC heroes whose careers began with their death, or near-death. Off the top of my head, the only ones I can think of who fit that category are the Spectre and Deadman but I've no doubt there are many more where they came from.

The Shadow #8, Mummy

It's the first issue of The Shadow I ever read!

And, needless to say, I was impressed.

Granted, not so impressed that I can recall exactly what happens in it but I do recall that it's all kicking off in Central America where people are being killed by a mummy, after disturbing its tomb.

Needless to say, it's all a ruse and the mummy's not the real deal.

Also needless to say, the Shadow knows.

Black Magic #7

Kirby and Simon give us a cover guaranteed to make sure none of us ever venture into our attic for as long as we might live.

In our first story, a man called Paul Darvas orders a new cloak - only to discover it's been cursed by Asmodeus himself.

Next, we sail into a single-page retelling of the mystery of the Mary Celeste.

Then, someone called Sylvia goes on a date with a Doctor Austin. But it's not long before Sylvia discovers his family's hidden secret.

Finally, while stricken with fever, a young boy describes life in ancient Rome.

And does it in perfect Latin, despite not even being Italian!

Needless to say, these chillers are all reprints. In this case, from the 1950s.

Weird Mystery Tales #15

Luis Dominguez's frontispiece seems guaranteed to make even the most jaded of fans want to grab this comic from its position on that spinner rack and take it home with them. While, inside it, we unearth a trio of terrifying tales that boast spine-chilling titles like Doom On Vampire Mountain, Drive-in Death and Blood Moon.

All of them narrated, as we'd expect, by none other than Eve herself.

16 comments:

Simon B said...

Of all these cataclysmic comics, the only one the 8-year old me bought at the time was Fantastic Four no. 154, probably the least interesting of the lot. The Man in the Mystery Mask was indeed Reed Richards in disguise in the Strange Tales reprint, but turned out to be Nick Fury in the new framing sequence. He was apparently testing out new SHIELD weaponry and decided to pick on the FF as guinea pigs, while disguised as an obscure '60s villain. I mean, why not?
Happy New Year, Steve and everyone!

Anonymous said...

14 year old Charlie bought that issue of the SHADOW off the spinner. He dragged it out of the long box last month to actually read it so that he would remember it and perhaps be able to make a contribution to this vulnerable blog known as STEVE does Comics.

Charlie’s commentary will need to wait because at the moment he is sitting in a ladies consignment shop with Mrs. Charlie as she’s looking at some clothing., truly just for killing time (licking the windows as the french say). Charlie has put the sales girls in a real tizzy because he asked if they had any Birkin bags, lol. They are suddenly my best friends!

Steve W. said...

Happy New Year to you too, Simon and to everyone else who comes this way.

Anonymous said...

That Thor story appeared in either the 1980 or 1981 UK Grandreams annual. Although Armak, the 'first man', had Hulk-like strength, he didn't have Hulk-like invulnerability, and died after falling from a building. Weren't his dying words, "You're...so beautiful" ? Not to Thor, but the female Goldilocks was rescuing. Jane Foster? I forget....People regressing to atavistic, bestial men was popular. The Animus, in Captain America; maybe, at a stretch, the Brute, as Reed Richard's bestial self. too. Some others I've probably forgotten, as well. A happy & prosperous ( at least as regards accruing nostalgia ) New Year to all!

Phillip

Anonymous said...

CTB 46 is the first part of a 6-part “epic” adapted from a (pretty weak) S&S novel by Gardner F. Fox. I’ve always thought Ernie Chan’s inks over John Buscema’s pencils tended to make everything look dirty (as in “needing a good cleaning” not “nudge nudge wink wink”) but Joe Sinnott’s inks are so slick they make the Hyborian Age look a bit too civilized IMO). Not a bad issue overall tho. GCD says Buscema pencilled and inked the cover, with “corrections/alterations” by John Romita — but I would swear that Buscema just inked this one. Look at the composition, the poses, the anatomy — I’m 99.9 % positive that Gil Kane pencilled it.

FF 154: Oh boy, a Dick Ayers- drawn reprint with a framing story drawn by Bob Brown. Be still, my heart.

SPIDEY 140: The bomb strapped to Peter’s wrist will EXPLODE IF HE TRIES TO DEACTIVATE IT!!!! And then Peter deactivates it and it doesn’t explode. Not that I really wanted to have Peter get his arm blown off but 5 decades later I’m STILL sore that Gerry Conway couldn’t be bothered to come up with some kind of clever way to get Peter out of that jam.

BRAVE AND BOLD 116 : I’m happy to have Aparo drawing another story featuring The Spectre, but I wish he was the same extreme, twisted, avenging spook then still appearing in ADVENTURE. I know I’ve read this story (more than once) but I couldn’t tell you what happens in it if you put a gun to my head.

I love all 3 issues of the Frank Robbins SHADOW, and I think this one is my favorite. In fact, I think it’s my favorite comic published this month! Even though mummies are my least favorite of the Classic Monster archetypes, and this particular one is a total Scooby-style Fake, Robbins stages all the Mummy Attack scenes for maximum impact. Honestly, I don’t think I’ve ever seen scarier Mummy Art in a comic book. Once again I’m reminded that as much as I like Robbins’ pencils inked by Giacoia or Springer, there’s no comparison to full Robbins pencils and inks. Every page of this issue is magical to me.

b.t.

Redartz said...

Greetings, folks; sitting here waiting out a winter storm and hoping the power stays on (good thing my tablet is fully charged).
Now we have entered the bronze age realm of 1975- another pretty good year (no 1974, but still full of pop cultural goodness). B.t. effectively described that FF issue, presumably an instance of the Dreaded Deadline Doom. Spidey was better, but no classic either. For Marvel's offerings here, Avengers gets the blue ribbon. Sharp Kane cover, fun story with Kang recruiting various dead beings to fight our heroes, and pleasing art by the team of Sal Buscema and Joe Staton. All told, a pretty good return on your 25 cents US.

Anonymous said...

I read BT's review of the SHADOW and was wondering if I had read January 1976 instead of January 1975, lol...

I'll just say I found the story line clunky and jumpy.

We have Margot exploring the identity of the Shadow which seems odd since she tells the Shadow she thought he was Lamont Cranston. Well... he is Lamont but this is my first awareness of her pondering his identity?

There seems to be a fair amount of effort put in to bringing Harry and Shrevee into the story? There are 3 pages dedicated to introducing Harry and his rather rando gun fight outside the museum.

The Professor strongly invokes Professor Calculus of TinTin (who is modeled on Auguste Piccard).

Also, b/c of the art and the clunkiness of the story I did have a bit of a hard time following the story.

Well, that's just me. I still have the this comic in one of my 6 long boxes 50 years on, so one must conclude I thought it worth keeping over the last 5 -6 decades.

Anonymous said...

Do the 1960 TEEN TITANS have a nostalgic spot in anyone else' comic book heart? Honest to Pete, I can't say I every really liked any of those 1960s issues of theirs but there is just something about the concept itself that I always dug. (This is in reference to the 100-pager B&B above.)

McSCOTTY said...

I really loved the Teen Titans comics from the late 1960s to the early 1970s period, mostly for those amazing Cardy covers ( and Cardy, Kane etc art).

Anonymous said...

Charlie (?) :
In the previous 7 issues, Lamont Cranston was presented as The Shadow’s alter ego (like Bruce Wayne and Batman), straight-up. This was consistent with the radio show. The set-up in the pulp magazine was more complicated : there, Cranston was actually a completely seperate person, who just allowed The Shadow to impersonate him whenever he was out of town (usually in Europe) for whatever reason. It was eventually revealed that aviator Kent Allard was The Shadow’s “true” identity. I always thought it was an unnecessarily complex and confusing situation. I don’t know why Denny O’Neill suddenly decided to introduce the Cranston/Allard/Shadow tripartite thing in issue 8. IIRC, it was never mentioned again. Weird!

Having said all that, I still think THE SHADOW 8 kicks all kinds of ass :)

b.t.

Anonymous said...

Lamont Cranston = Shadow's alter ego.

Larry Cranston = Mr.Fear's alter ego.

Curious!

Phillip

Anonymous said...

BT et al. Upon reflection after spending the last 45 minutes in a car driving to work, lol, I have the impression that SHADOW 8 was inspired and condensed from another story?

Perhaps a Shadow paperback? Perhaps a Tintin story? (The professor, looking like professor Calculus from Tintin, is a clue? “Tintin and Cigars of the Pharoah” from the 1950s?].

Colin Jones said...

Charlie, your description of SDC as "this vulnerable blog" provides amusement in the post-Christmas gloom :D

Post-Christmas?? Today is Christmas Eve in the Russian Orthodox Church so Merry Christmas to Steve's Russian readers!

This morning I found an unopened 500ml bottle of Pepsi lying in the street so I claimed it.

Anonymous said...

Sometimes Charlie's interested in weird UK sports & pastimes, like wife-carrying, bog-snorkeling, & cheese-rolling. Well, it being Jan 6th/12th Night, today saw the 'Haxey hood' take place:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cx27jzqer0vo

It featured on Calendar, a local news show, about 20 minutes ago!

Phillip

Anonymous said...

Phil--

You forgot perhaps the most devious Cranston of all---Bryan Cranston!
Yeah, I know he's just an actor who plays villains on occasion.
But he's got beady eyes.
I don't trust him.

M.P.

Anonymous said...

And on another note...

Sean!

My apologies, I just got around to reading older posts of SDC, and I'm glad you're giving Morrison's stuff a try.
I honestly hope you enjoy it. What a joy to share things one likes.
But if you don't dig it that's okay too. You have a critical eyeball, methinks.
I have always enjoyed the debate, the back and forth.
Cheers!

M.P.