Thursday, 19 June 2025

June 21st, 1975 - Marvel UK, 50 years ago this week.

Thanks to Charlie Horse 47 and Killdumpster for their sponsorship of this post, via the magic of Patreon
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Little of interest happened, this week in 1975. Therefore, I shall launch straight into my look at the activities and antics of Marvel's mightiest heroes, as they seek to fill, with thrills, spills and heroics, the pages of the UK's favourite comics.

Spider-Man Comics Weekly #123, the Prowler is back

The Prowler makes his not-necessarily senses-shattering return, meaning Spidey faces a battle to reach the airport, before Gwen can use it to take her to England and out of his life forever.

But it's bad news for Iron Man too because the Melter's built himself a new melting gun, used it to escape from prison and is now demanding Tony Stark create an even better one for him.

Next, we take a journey into mystery when it finally dawns on the thunder god that he can't be the real Thor if he's really Don Blake who only got the powers of Thor because he found a magic stick in a cave.

Cue a reprint of Thor's first appearance in the Marvel universe, back when he battled the invading Stone Men.

And cue our hero trying to make sense of it all.

Marvel UK, the Avengers #92, the new Goliath

I think we can all see there's a huge development in the pages of the comic's main strip.

But, before that, John Buscema draws a tale in which Shang-Chi decides to invade his father's secret lair.

Following that, with the other Avengers busy elsewhere - and the Black Widow kidnapped by Egghead, the Puppet Master and Mad Thinker - Hawkeye sees no choice but to swallow Hank Pym's growth serum and become the new Goliath!

And then there's a treat for us all, as Barry Smith descends upon Dr Strange's strip, to pencil a tale in which, after narrowly avoiding being run over by a truck, the sorcerer supreme finds himself in a strange reality where nothing makes sense.

Mighty World of Marvel #142, the Hulk and Ant-Man

I remember acquiring this issue in a city centre stationers that had a subterranean tunnel which linked it to the biggest toy shop in Europe.

I can't help feeling all stationers should have a tunnel linking them to the biggest toy shop in Europe.

As should all houses.

I know what doesn't have a tunnel linking it to a toy shop.

And that's Hydra's HQ.

If it did, they'd all probably act a lot nicer.

As it is, they still have the Hulk running loose in that HQ - and he's got the help of Ant-Man!

But what of the Chameleon?

And, at the story's end, has he, as seems likely, managed to squish Bruce Banner beneath his evil shoe?

Following that, Daredevil's still battling the Exterminator's Ani-Men but, holy smoke, he gets zapped by their T-Ray and flung out-of-sync with the rest of humanity. He does, at least, find himself in the company of Debbie Harris and other earlier victims of that ray.

Elsewhere, the Fantastic Four are not only facing Ronan the Accuser on the streets of New York, they're defeating him!

You might think that's all their current problems over and done with.

But is it?

After all, while that's going on, Alicia's abducted from her apartment, by a man of mystery.

Marvel UK, Dracula Lives #35

As far as I can make out, Dracula's in nostalgic mood and thinking back to a time when a man told him about the existence of a pool of blood that can confer immortality upon those who drink from it.

Meanwhile, Jack Russell's still a prisoner of the wizard Taboo and his lovely daughter Topaz.

And Frankenstein's Monster's also up to something but I can't say exactly what.

I suspect the pig creature he fought last week will be looking for revenge.

Marvel UK, Planet of the Apes #35, Beneath the Planet of the Apes

That cover can only mean one thing.

We've finally reached the start of Marvel's adaptation of Beneath the Planet of the Apes, as presented by Alfredo Alcala and Doug Moench.

It, of course, features yet another astronaut landing in the simian wonderland and setting out to discover just what's happened to his predecessors.

Speaking of people who arrived from outer space, Adam Warlock's experiencing Count-Down for Counter-Earth! which, I think, involves him deciding to go on the rampage and destroy that planet.

But the other big news we need to hear is that this issue sees the launch of Marvel's adaptation of The Golden Voyage of Sinbad, thanks to Len Wein and George Tuska!

Marvel UK, Savage Sword of Conan #16, Elric

Conan and Elric continue an encounter that sees them call a truce, so they can travel to the sunken city of Yagala and battle the combined might of people called Xiombarg, Prince Gaynor, Kulan-Gath and Terhali.

Elsewhere, Thongor's vanished from the comic, to be replaced by none other than that puritan purifier Solomon Kane who finds himself in an adaptation of Robert E Howard's Skulls in the Stars.

Marvel UK, The Super-Heroes #16, Silver Surfer vs the Inhumans

It's a turning point in the life of the Beach Boy from space, as he meets the Inhumans and it all goes so well that the experience leads him to set out to destroy the entire human race.

How odd that both he and the equally cosmic Adam Warlock should decide to destroy their adopted planets in the same week.

As for the X-Men, they and the Brotherhood of Evil Mutants are both trying to recruit the Stranger - only for him to reveal he's an alien and then abduct Magneto and the Toad!

23 comments:

Anonymous said...

Whenever one thinks nothing in particular happened on a given date, one merely needs to google “on this date, a Florida man… “. Almost always something good like “Great White Sharke bit hand of Florida man reaching into its mouth to retrieve baseball cap.”

Anonymous said...

Avengers cover Goliath pic - c.f. 1977 Superheroes card game:

https://tainthemeat.wordpress.com/2014/11/14/marvel-superheroes-top-trumps/

Phillip

Anonymous said...

HELP- Charlie never ever read a swamp thing, before in his life. However, last weekend at the local comic book store he picked up a full reprint of swamp thing number 37 for $3.99, lol. My question for you swamp thing veterans is why would DC choose to reprint this? It is number 37 and entitled growth patterns and written by Alan Moore.

I am not saying the story is “bad” but It is hardly worth reading as a standalone story if you have zero familiarity with swamp thing?

Is this a really important story in the life of Swampy???

Anonymous said...

Charlie:
I think SWAMP THING 37 had the first appearance of John Constantine.

Steve:
JAWS opened in US theatres this week in 1975. I don’t know if it opened in the UK on the same day or not.

Jack Russell’s run-in with Taboo and Topaz in WBN 13 and 14 were my first Mike Ploog comics. As such, they hold a special place in my nerdy little heart. I know sean hates Frank Chiaramonte’s inks, but I’ve always thought that anytime Ploog was too busy to ink his own pencils, Chiaramonte inks would be the next best thing. Nostalgia aside, those two issues look especially nice to me, very much like “Full Ploog”.

I can’t speak for the UK printing of that first installment of the BENEATH THE PLANET OF THE APES adaptation, but Alcala’s art looked beautiful in the U.S. version. First time I’d ever seen him employ his painterly ink-wash technique instead of just that famous linework rendering of his.

b.t.

Colin Jones said...

bt, JAWS didn't open in the UK for many more months - I finally saw it in the summer of 1976.

The start of Beneath The Planet Of The Apes AND the start of The Golden Voyage Of Sinbad all wrapped up in a fantastic painted cover - POTA #35 was a cracker!!

Anonymous said...

Also, this week in 1975:

The Captain and Tennille finally hit the top spot on the Billboard Hot 100.

Seeing Janis Ian’s “At Seventeen” and Judy Collins’ “Send In The Clowns” on the Hot 100 in the same week (#77 and #85, respectively) triggered a memory of a warm summer day spent reading Michael Crichton’s novel “The Terminal Man” while listening to the radio. I remember hearing both of those beautifully sad songs that day. Unfortunately, all this was happening in our backyard as I foolishly sat in the sunlight and succeeded in getting a pretty bad sunburn.

b.t.

Matthew McKinnon said...

Charlie -

Yeah, as BT says, this is the first ever appearance of John Constantine (though I think he appears as a face in the crowd in issue 24…?). And it’s 40 years old this year so maybe for that reason - 40 years of JC?

Charlie, you should read Moore’s Swamp Thing! It’s great!

Colin Jones said...

Funnily enough, bt, I was thinking about "At Seventeen" only the other day - according to Wikipedia it reached #3 on the Billboard Hot 100 but here in the UK it didn't chart at all (the UK singles chart only consisted of a Top 50 at that time).

Anonymous said...

Interesting that it didn’t dent the UK charts but it must got enough airplay (somewhere, some time) for you to become aware of it. Maybe because of its usage in other media (like MEAN GIRLS) or cover versions by other artists? Or maybe just via worldwide cultural osmosis?

b.t.

Anonymous said...

Ar 17… i always assumed it to be a Carly Simon or Carole King song.

Muskrat Love. Capt and T’s finest hit? Anyone watch their weekly TV show?

Anonymous said...

That must be Charlie :)

What about “Muskrat Love”? I always that was a weird-ass song, myself, even by the standards of an era that gave us “Kung Fu Fighting” and “Spiders and Snakes”. And I think I saw their TV show maybe once.

b.t.

Colin Jones said...

bt, I'm not sure where I first heard "At Seventeen" but there were other big US hits in the '70s that didn't chart at all in the UK including "I Am Woman" and "Delta Dawn" by Helen Reddy and "Indian Reservation" by Paul Revere & The Raiders.
But there were also songs by British artists that reached #1 on the Billboard Hot 100 without ever charting in the UK such as "Saturday Night" by the Bay City Rollers and "To Sir With Love" by Lulu. The Beatles reached #1 in the US with "Yesterday", "Eight Days A Week" and "The Long And Winding Road" but none of those singles were even released in the UK!

Colin Jones said...

Have any UK readers heard of a 1964 film called THE BARGEE starring Harry H Corbett (of Steptoe & Son fame) and written by Steptoe/Tony Hancock writers Alan Simpson and Ray Galton? I'm amazed that I'd never even heard of The Bargee until today despite being a big Steptoe fan.

Anonymous said...

SWAMP THING - Yes BT, I think you are correct about #37 being a first appearance of John Constantine. B/c otherwise I can't figure out why it deserved reprinting.

SEND IN THE CLOWNS - indeed a melancholic tune. About 50-55 (early 70s) years ago, WGN TV of Chicago ran a brief commercial promoting their Bozo the Clown daily TV show that had become a nationwide phenom. (WGN did that, like DC and Marvel did house ads in their comics.) The commercial was set to SEND IN THE CLOWNs showing slow-mo scenes of BOZO and the gang and their antics. It always struck me as it was signaling the end of an era... of the end of local TV losing to the nationwide broadcasters, of the end of black and white going to color, of the end of all the good (not the bad) nostalgia - "leave it to beaver-ish if you will" - losing out to an advancing world. Melancholy bit of advertising indeed.

Steve W. said...

Colin, I've heard of The Bargee because it turns up on the likes of Rewind TV and TalkingPicturesTV but I've never seen it.

Anonymous said...

I've never heard of The Bargee, Colin.

Charlie - The term 'bozo' frequently appeared in Marvel. As a kid, I thought it was just American slang for an idiot. Only later did I learn it referred to a tv clown!

Phillip

Steve W. said...

Phillip, it's only in the last 10 years that I've discovered Coco the Clown really existed.

Anonymous said...

For decades, Ronald McDonald hasn't made an appearance. He's like a figment of everyone's imagination now, too!

Phillip

Anonymous said...

Hope you've been having a good day, Steve, as the great wheel of the year passes the mid-point between Bealtaine and Lughnasadh.
Beannachtaí ghrianstad an tsamhraidh sona duit. And to everyone else here too of course.

Here's some pics from this morning -
https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/gallery/2025/jun/21/2025-summer-solstice-at-stonehenge-in-pictures

Which reminds me that you are mistaken about little of interest happening this week in 1975. Hawkwind played at Stonehenge for the first time that year!

-sean

Anonymous said...

b.t.-

I don't wanna be a complete A-hole, but technically speaking, Constantine showed up first in Crisis on Infinite Earths. Or at least it came out first.
Or so I've read.
Just a cameo, really. He was hanging out with Mento, who would soon find out that hanging around with John Constantine is a bad thing to do.

Sean, I had forgotten about Hawkwind!
And Stonehenge. Which I recommend seeing!
Happy summer solstice to all!
Unfortunately, here in South Dakota we're in a HEAT DOME, which means it's 99 degrees and utterly miserable.
Cheers!

M.P.

Anonymous said...

Well, if we're talking John Constantine first appearance, its actually in Saga of the Swamp Thing #25, 'The Sleep of Reason'. Sort of.
You can see an unnamed character who looks suspiciously like him in the background of a couple of panels...

-sean

Steve W. said...

Happy Maxsunnynessday to you too, Sean. And to all who come this way.

Anonymous said...

FWIW, the GCD cites Constantine’s appearance in SWAMP THING 37 as his ‘full introduction’. Must make people who obsessively collect First Appearances a bit twitchy.

b.t.