Sunday, 1 June 2025

Fifty years ago today - June 1975.

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

Once more, my past catches up with me. And that can only mean it's time for me to catch up with my past.

X-Men #93, Quicksilver

I do believe this is the one which features the Avengers
vs the X-Men on Magneto's island hideaway.

But, of far more importance, this is the last issue to feature the all-old, all-samey team before the all-new and all-different team takes over.

I suspect it'll be quite a shock for some readers when they pick up the next issue to discover a totally different bunch of characters have appeared, from nowhere, and taken over their favourite book.

Avengers #136, the Beast

Judging by the cover, I've a feeling we're encountering a reprint of that Beast solo tale in which he goes insane and thinks he's murdered Iron Man.

From that, I can only assume there must have been Deadline Doom problems with the planned Avengers tale.

I am struck, though, by just how totally unbothered by Iron Man's demise Cap, Thor and the Vision appear to be, on that cover.

Conan the Barbarian #51, Unos

It would seem that everyone's favourite barbarian's confronting the menace of Unos the Man-Witch who, I would assume, is not to be confused with Unus the Untouchable.

That aside, I know little of this tale but am aware that, whoever he is, Unos kills someone called Lupalina, that someone called Thalkalides is turned into a toad and that someone called Stefanya is installed as monarch of somewhere called Alkarion.

Captain America and the Falcon #186, the Red Skull

The Red Skull's still causing trouble for our heroes.

And what trouble it is!

Because the villain's unveiled the shocking revelation that Sam Wilson is, in truth, the criminal Snap Wilson, given a new personality, memories and a small bird of prey, via the use of the Cosmic Cube. 

And now he's out to kill Cap!

Daredevil #122, Blackwing

Drama piles upon drama,
as Daredevil, the Black Widow and SHIELD search for a Foggy who's been kidnapped by Hydra.

And, to achieve his aims, Daredevil must overcome Blackwing, while the Widow must get the better of El Jaguar!

Fantastic four #159, the Inhumans

I possess no knowledge, at all, as to what happens in this one but, given that it's set in the Great Refuge and guest stars the Inhumans, I shall assume Maximus the Mad is up to no good again.

Incredible Hulk #188, the Gremlin

Strangeness piles upon strangeness when an attempt to rescue Glenn Talbot delivers the Hulk into the clutches of the Gremlin, meaning the man-brute must endure the arrival of the world's only poetry-spouting triceratops.

Iron Man #75, the Black Lama

Not that I'm completely useless but I've only just noticed that it's, "the Black Lama," and not, "the Black Llama." To be honest, I think I prefer the thought of a villain being called the Black Llama. It has a certain uniqueness to it.

None of this disguises the fact I have little idea what occurs in this one, other than it seems to feature MODOK and the Yellow Claw!

Amazing Spider-Man #145, the Scorpion

Amazingly, this is the first time the Scorpion's appeared in this book since the days of Steve Ditko. It does seem astonishing that it took Marvel so long to bring him back.

However, Spidey's mostly fretting over an even more startling comeback.

And that's the seeming return, from the grave, of Gwen Stacy!

Thor #236, the Absorbing Man

Meanwhile, the Absorbing Man makes his million-and-oneth appearance in the pages of Thor.

I don't think I've ever read this tale but that won't prevent me from trying to guess just what Thor turns the copycat criminal into, this time, in order to defeat him. He's already turned him into helium and water, in the past. What dread transformation can be next for the hapless Crusher Creel?

Tales of Ghost Castle #1
Thus are Marvel's big-hitters accounted for.

But what of that company's biggest rival? That other venture we've grown to love and revere? Just what does a random sample of DC's comics bearing the same cover date look like?

It seems it's a month for new launches. And, so, Tales of Ghost Castle arrives to smash us between the eyeballs, with untrammelled terror!

In this 1st sensational issue, we encounter A Child's Garden of Graves, A Soul a Day Keeps the Devil Away and The Mushroom Man. All narrated by none other than Lucien himself.

And we encounter a page of Ghost Cackles, as provided by the almost inevitable Sergio Aragonés.

Tor #1

Who needs Tarzan? Who needs Ka-Zar? Who needs Raquel Welch in a fur-lined bikini?

Not us!

We've got Tor around to save us from any deadly beasts that nature might fling at us.

It's true, a sensational new savage arrives in our lives to clobber caveman, brain dinosaurs and thump pterosaurs. And, as any good palaeontologist would expect, it all happens exactly one million years ago!

But what actually occurs within it?

Well, it seems that, while out hunting, one day, Tor remembers a valuable lesson he once learned during childhood. I'm sure the story itself is far more thrilling than that plot description makes it sound.

Elsewhere, we find a single-page article called Dinosaurs for Reel which would appear to be about movies dedicated to the terrible lizards.

Sadly, Tor will only last for six issues before becoming extinct.

Justice, Inc. #1

How well I recall the house ads announcing the arrival of this comic.

And how happy I would've been to have bought it.

Sadly, I never did buy this issue and I never have read it but I do know we're treated to the origin of the Avenger. Not to mention that of his support organisation Justice, Inc.

It seems he's Richard Benson and, due to the traumatic kidnapping of his wife and child, the muscles in his face have frozen, enabling him to mould his features into any shape.

Tragically, only four issues of this mag will ever be published.

Claw the Unconquered #1

You might think that, in this, the year of our Lord, 1975, the world doesn't need another comic dedicated to barbarians.

But it seems DC disagrees with you.

And with me, as well, because the latest antediluvian smiter of evil arrives to deal with the case of The Sword and the Silent Scream.

Beyond that, I can shed no light upon the contents of this one. I'm not sure if Claw even is antediluvian in nature. For all I know, he could be from the future, or another planet completely. But I do know his book will go on to last for 15 issues.

Adventure Comics #439, the Spectre

However, not everything in this world has to be new. And so it is the Spectre's series continues. This time, with a yarn in which Jim Corrigan wakes to discover his wish to be alive again has been granted.

But not until after he's been shot in the chest, on behalf of a bad guy with a rubber duck.

Or is it a real duck? I've never been too sure.

Not only that but we find Chapter 3 of The Seven Soldiers of Victory, during which the Green Arrow and Speedy find themselves in Father Time's Inn!

Weird War Tales #38

Joe Kubert brings us an eye-catching cover for an issue which hosts such tales as Born to Die, The Renegade Dogface! The Return and The Man Who Would Be God.

16 comments:

Anonymous said...

X-Men # 93 - A classic, which Marvel Superheroes Monthly featured in its first issue! Here, the Panther defeats the original X-Men's Beast - seemingly. Yet, later, in Jim Shooter's Avengers, vs the Whirlwind, the Beast was superior to T'Challa ( at least at hanging on, without getting dizzy! )

Avengers # 136 - The Beast knocking Iron Man seemingly senseless, with a clubbing blow! Hulk Comic (in 1979?) featured that one. Steve Englehart's Beast stories were action-packed, and never failed to deliver!

The Black L(l)ama? What about the Black Alpaca?

Phillip

Anonymous said...

Oh - forgot to mention. 'Justice inc' - is the cover an inspiration for Nick Fury's Infinity Formula cover? There's a similarity - even if it's not exact:

https://britishcomics.fandom.com/wiki/Savage_Action_Vol_1?file=Savage_Action_9.jpg

Phillip

Simon B said...

This was clearly a good month for 8-year old me, as I somehow acquired the X-Man, Conan, Captain America, Daredevil, Iron Man, Thor *and* Tor issues! I must have maxed-out a year's pocket money there. Of course, the likes of Spidey and Hulk were in their non-distributed-in-the-UK eras - I'm sure I would have picked those up if I could...

Simon B said...

That should say "X-Men", of course...

Anonymous said...

I didn’t buy that AVENGERS because I already had the original printing of the story from AMAZING ADVENTURES. IIRC, it was Stainless Steve’s very first script for Marvel, and not bad at all. It also had wild, intense art by Tom Sutton and Mike Ploog.

CONAN 51 featured the final chapter of a 6-part adaptation of one of Gardner F. Fox’s Kothar novels. It’s pretty much a mess, but the art at least is nice.

I was still boycotting Daredevil during this period because of the ugly Brown/Colletta art.

Halfway decent FF cover by Buckler and Sinnott. I dig this month’s HULK’cover by Happy Herb.

TOR, JUSTICE INC. and CLAW THE UNCONQUERED were all part of DC’s short-lived ‘Adventure Line’, which supposedly was partly an attempt to crowd the Atlas comics off the spinner racks.

I was already a fan of The Avenger from reading the paperback reprints of the pulp novels, so I was excited to see JUSTICE INC. 1 on the spinner at Michael’s Liquor. Sadly, that first issue was kinda ‘Meh.’

b.t.

Anonymous said...

Oh, and I can never pass up an opportunity to rag on Stainless Steve’s thoroughly awful ‘Snap Wilson’ storyline. It’s dumb and insulting.

b.t.

Anonymous said...

Cover of the month: Weird War Tales #38.
Best Gil cover: Conan #51. Nice composition.
Cover cliche of the month: Claw #1. Admittedly the Conan cover has a barbarian and cowering scantily clad wench too. But she's not at his feet, so Claw wins.

I will second b.t.'s comment, as I really dislike the Snap Wilson storyline too.
Not only that, Cap #186 was drawn by Frank Robbins...

-sean

Anonymous said...

Actually, now I think about it, does the Red Skull beat up Peggy Carter in that issue too...?

-sean

Colin Jones said...

A "man-witch" is called a warlock.

McSCOTTY said...

Sean, it was in issues 184 ( Herb Trimpe art) and 185 ( the great Frank Robbins lol) that the Red Skull beats up Peggy.

I think all of the new DCs titles Ghost Castle, Claw, Tor and Justice Inc only lasted for a few issues , from memory they were pretty bland.

Redartz said...

This month's Amazing Spider-Man was pretty good; it was fun seeing the Scorpion's return (odd that I remembered him; the Ditko issues came out before I ever picked up a comic- must have recalled him from the 1967 Spidey cartoon series ). And of course Gwen's 'return' set off events and ramifications which lasted years.
Also enjoyed that Fantastic Four issue. Inhumans appearances were always welcome. Like b.t., I admired that cover. Actually, it also graced the cover of a Mead school notebook cover that I carried to my debut in High School that fall.
And Sean, your assessment of the best cover is spot on- Kubert wins the day.

Redartz said...

Oops, one too many "covers" in that line about the notebook. Poor editing, redartz...

Anonymous said...

Alas Charlie had pretty much moved on from comics but for the esoteric or nostalgic. This he did get JUSTICE Inc.

And to prep for this posting Charlie did pull it out of the long boxes! But glancing through it yesterday he recalled it was rather bland 50 years ago and it still is today.

Charlie is inclined to think only the SHADOW really stood out among the 3 pulp revivals of Shadow, Doc Savage, and Justice Inc.

Anonymous said...

Paul, thanks for the clarification on violence against middle aged women in Captain America.

Btw Claw lasted a bit longer than those other comics. For about three years in fact! Admittedly that was with a six month break between #s9 and 10, and then another one about a year after #11, so the final issue - #12 - could appear just in time to beat the DC Implosion that finally wiped the series out.

-sean

D.D.Degg said...

Iron Man on his back for that Avengers cover, Conan going back to avoid a death ray, Cap being punched backward, DD on his back in the air, Spidey being forced backward, Thor falling back. I can only assume they are all Marie Severin layouts.

Anonymous said...

I rather liked Justice Inc.!
Nice little Kirby Komic from the 70's.
I guess the stories were based more or less on the original pulp hero stories of a guy named Paul Ernst.
i noticed that in a least a couple the bad guys die after falling from a great height, howling all the way down.
"My invisible plane got shot! It's not working!
"YAAAAAAAAHHHHHHH"
They were fun.
M.P.