Tuesday, 5 August 2025

The Marvel Lucky Bag - August 1975.

Thanks to Charlie Horse 47 and Killdumpster for their sponsorship of this post, via the magic of Patreon
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August 1975 didn't see the release of a million films of note or distinction but it did witness the unleashing of Picnic at Hanging Rock, The Land That Time Forgot and The Rocky Horror Picture Show, all of which are memorable in their own sweet way.

As for which is best, I'm tempted to nominate The Land That Time Forgot as my Movie of the Month - purely because I'll watch anything that has monsters and Doug McClure in it - but I must confess that Picnic at Hanging Rock is clearly a classier film and has Neighbours' Mrs Mangel in it, and the presence of that icon alone is enough to make any film a classic in my books.

Werewolf by Night #32, Moon Knight

History is made, as Marvel's answer to Batman arrives and takes the chance to cause trouble when he's hired, by The Committee, to capture everyone's favourite werewolf!

Super-Villain Team-Up #1

We all like to see super-villains team up before turning against and betraying each other.

And, now, we've got the chance to see it every two months, as a brand new book arrives to set our spinner racks a-spin.

It looks like Subby has his work more than cut out for him when he has to deal with not only Dr Doom but also Attuma and Tiger Shark! Not to mention the diabolical Dr Dorcas!

Skull the Slayer #1

And another new title hits our shelves, with the arrival of Skull the Slayer!

I'm not totally sure why we need another battler of dinosaurs, when the company already has Ka-Zar to fill that role but here he is.

In this phenomenal first issue, military type Jim Scully and friends get lost in the Bermuda Triangle and find themselves in a bizarre realm populated by prehistoric monsters and futuristic aliens.

At least, I think he does. That's how I remember it, anyway.

I can predict this book will run for a sensational eight issues.

The Savage Sword of Conan #7, the Citadel at the Centre of Time

Speaking of men fighting dinosaurs, everybody's favourite barbarian gets to do just that when he gets to show a T-rex who's boss, thanks to the Machiavellian malarkey of yet another sinister sorcerer. I think this may be the story that introduced me to the word, "ziggurat."

Not only that but we get a look at The Gods of the Hyborian Age, Part II: Crom and Mitra: Gods to Swear By.

Then, there's Lin Carter's The King Is Dead - Part IV of Chronicles of the Sword: An Informal History of Sword-and-Sorcery Fiction.

That's followed by Robert E Howard's cheery Lines Written in the Realization That I Must Die.

And we finish off with Roy Thomas' adaptation of REH's essay The Hyborian Age, Chapter 1: The Pre-Cataclysmic Age.

But, of course, the real reason for buying this issue is Boris Vallejo's never-to-be-forgotten cover.

Strange Tales #181, Adam Warlock

It's a day out for Adam Warlock that we'll never forget, as he finds himself on a world populated entirely by clowns.

Clowns who bear a strange resemblance to our favourite comics creators, as Jim Starlin decides to bite the hand that needs him.

The Invaders #1

The Invaders get their very own mag and immediately start as they mean to go on, by smashing it to the Nazis.

To do that, they head for Berlin, in search of a villain called Brain Drain!

Dead of Night #11, the Scarecrow

I do believe this is the first appearance of Marvel's Scarecrow.

I know little of the character and I know less of this story but I do know he likes to pop out of a painting and he does just that, this month, in order to battle an evil cult.

This, however, is the last issue of Dead of Night, which means he'll have to pop out of any future paintings somewhere else.

Doc Savage #1

You've seen the film. You've read the books. Now experience the magazine when Marvel gives us its take on the Man of Bronze and entices us in with a Roger Kastel cover.

In this issue's 52-page main story, Doc and we encounter The Doom on Thunder Isle!

And There's a look at George Pal: The Man Who Shot Doc Savage!

24 comments:

Anonymous said...

Anyone know how much an artist earned for a cover painting like Conan or Savage?

CH

Colin Jones said...

Wasn't Picnic At Hanging Rock supposedly based on a true story?

The Scarecrow joined the line-up in Marvel UK's The Super-Heroes starting with #41 which I remember being advertised at the time but I've never read any Scarecrow stories and to this day I still don't know a thing about him.

I've mentioned this before but I saw The Rocky Horror Picture Show for the first time only a couple of years ago (on BBC iPlayer) though I already knew the song Let's Do The Timewarp Again from when it was a hit by Damien in the '80s.

Steve W. said...

Charlie, sadly, I don't know the answer to that one.

Colin, it's often claimed to be based on a real incident but, as far as I know, it's total fiction.

Matthew McKinnon said...

Moon Knight is 50!
For such a crap knock-off character, he’s certainly got legs.
Open question: was the Jake Crawley secret identity introduced after the movie Taxi Driver, or was it present from the beginning? I don’t have early early stories to hand so I can’t check.

Picnic At Hanging Rock is a great movie, but has anyone else read the book? It’s a solid gold masterpiece. It’s one of those books that makes the movie adaptation look like Cliffs Notes. Highly recommended.

The Rocky Horror Picture show is one I keep meaning to revisit. I saw it in 1986 when I was 15, in a rare (for where I lived) late night double bill with Young Frankenstein. I liked it a lot.

Then it became kind of a naff studenty thing and dropped off the cultural radar. But I kind of feel I should give it another go. There was a great article on The Quietus website arguing for its transgressive aspects, which seemed on point.

I love The Land The Time Forgot. I feel I’ve already explained why in the past so enough said.

Anonymous said...

Steve:
Funny, you mentioning SAVAGE SWORD OF CONAN #7 possibly being your introduction to the word “ziggurat”. Mine was definitely DOC SAVAGE #1 — the villain of the story called himself the Silver Ziggurat. I’d certainly never encountered that word before then.

Strange that SAVAGE SWORD’s lead story had a time travel component the same month SKULL THE SLAYER #1 hit the spinner racks. Kind of a nutty story from what I remember of it, with typically beautiful Buscema / Alcala art. That was the one with the humongous crossbow thing, right? Simonson’s art on the adaptation of Howard’s pseudo history lesson was quite nice as well.

SKULL THE SLAYER was kind of an odd duck of a comic, wasn’t it? Felt like it wanted to be a little bit REH, a little bit ERB, a little bit IN SEARCH OF, a little bit Irwin Allen (the group of supporting characters along for the ride always reminded me of LAND OF THE GIANTS).

b.t.

Anonymous said...

Some other interesting comics cover-dated August ‘75:

Kirby’s cranking ‘em out at the tail end of his DC contract : 1st ISSUE SPECIAL 5 (Manhunter), OUR FIGHTING FORCES 158 (The Losers), KAMANDI 32, RICHARD DRAGON, KUNG FU FIGHTER 3 (it’s pretty weak) and SANDMAN 4 (inked by Wally Wood). Those last two are actually “Sept 75” comics but maybe sean won’t notice…

GIANT-SIZE MAN-THING 5 — unusually for the Giant-Size line, it’s a collection of shorter tales, including the second Howard the Duck solo story, “Hellcow!”. My favorite story in the issue is “There’s a Party in 6G” by Gerber and Sutton.

MASTER OF KUNG FU 31– Moench and Gulacy really finding their groove with the multi-issue Super-Spy-style thrillers.

PLANET OF THE APES 11 — Ploog art up front, Alcala art in the back = solid issue.

SCARY TALES 1 — an all-new Charlton horror comic, hooray!

b.t.

b.t.

Anonymous said...

Oh no, I did it again

Oh no, I did it again

Anonymous said...

Yes, I noticed the Sept '75 thing, b.t. b.t.
The problem is that it means you missed out this month's awesome OMAC #6 in your list of late DC Kirby klassics (although I'm not sure Dragon Fighter #3 counts as a klassic - even Kirby couldn't elevate that sh*t).

Matthew, I'm fairly sure that at this point Moon Knight is just Marc Spector, merc for hire. Actually iirc in that WBN story it seems like its the Committee who give Spector the Moon Knight costume and identity, specifically to take down the werewolf... it all reads a bit oddly in light of later developments.
The various other alter-egos came with what I think was his next appearance about a year later - his first solo outing - in two issues of Marvel Spotlight.

Steve, Moon Knight didn't seem obviously Batman-like at this point - not like, say, the Shroud did straight away, in Super-Villain Team Up - and I reckon it's really with his solo series and Sienkiewicz, who's style back then possibly inspired Doug Moench to try and write like Denny O'Neil, that the comparison makes sense.

-sean

Anonymous said...

sean sean:
Yeah, Kirby’s KUNG FU FIGHTER is pretty krappy. I think his Manhunter story in 1st ISSUE SPECIAL is pretty bad too.

b.t.

Anonymous said...

Btw b.t., you forgot to mention Dr Strange #9 in your list of other comics this month. Its a good one (although unfortunately Gene Colan's work was inked by Frank Chiaramonte).

Steve, there were a few interesting other films released this month that you didn't mention.
Like Akira Kurosawa's 'Dersu Uzala', about a Nanai hunter, set in the Russian far east around 1900.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=adiSoh_u7eQ
A Soviet production, it revived Kurosawa's career after 'Dodesukaden' had been a flop, and the Japanese film biz wouldn't touch him.

And in the US, Ralph Bakshi's somewhat controversial - and questionably titled - 'Coonskin'.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ulxI0qs1jdA
Hm. Personally, I think the film does seem a bit racist, irrespective of Bakshi's intent (I'm not convinced that pointing out it has a go at Jews and Italians too is really the best argument in his defence). On the plus side though, Barry White is in it.

Plus Just Jaekin's 'Histoire d'O'/'Story of O'. The French, eh?

-sean

Anonymous said...

I like Moon Knight.
But they seem to have changed his personality quite a bit.
When I first encountered him as a guest star in Defenders, he was full of wisecracks. He even made jokes when the Hulk was chasing him, and Scorpio complemented him on his "wit".
But the last time I saw him in a comic, he was like Batman in a bad mood.
Almost an obsessive lunatic.
I think I rather prefer the comedian.
M.P.

Anonymous said...

Pedants corner. Wasn't Crawley Jake Lockley's fly-infested stool-pigeon?

When Adam West supplied most kids' Batman, Moon Knight - with his occult edge - seemed a more serious character by far. The boy wonder's absence wasn't a hindrance, either.

The demise of the Shroud's parents, is identical to Batman's. Thus, as Sean said, the Shroud gets the laurels as Marvel's true Batman-impersonator.

Bill Sink's art on Moon Knight resembling Neal Adams Batman art is something I only noticed much later.

Phillip

Anonymous said...

Possessive apostrophe needed after Adams. Typo City, Arizona!

Phillip

Anonymous said...

You're right, Phillip - it was Jake Lockley, and Crawley was the grass. Pedant City, South Dakota! Don't worry about it - corrections like that are what commenting on comic blogs is all about (good catch - I missed it completely).

Btw the funny thing about the Shroud is that back when he was introduced, learning stuff from monks in the Himalayas wasn't part of Batman's origin. So he became even more like Batman retrospectively.

Colin, I still haven't seen the Rocky Horror Picture Show. And I don't think I've mentioned that here before.

-sean

Matthew McKinnon said...

That's right, sorry. It was Jake Lockley who was the cabbie identity. Thanks!

Matthew McKinnon said...

I've no idea where Moon Knight stands now. Every few years they seem to try a different take on mentally ill with him and I've lost track. I read the fairly recent Bendis and Lemire runs but I can't remember what they did in the end.

Tried a single episode of the Marvel show but... how can I put it? It 'wasn't for me'.

Colin Jones said...

If UK readers (especially Sean) are interested, there's a new comedy panel show on Radio 4 tonight at 6:30pm called OLIVER CALLAN BINS THE BORDER which imagines what a united Ireland would be like. It might be a fun listen but I'm assuming the Unionists will be absolutely livid that such a show has been produced and they'll say it's blatant propaganda for a united Ireland!

Colin Jones said...

The Land That Time Forgot is one of the few films I actually went to the cinema to watch!
Others include...
When Dinosaurs Ruled The Earth
Jaws
Beneath The Planet Of The Apes/Battle For The Planet Of The Apes (double-bill)
Sinbad & The Eye Of The Tiger
Bambi (yes, really!)
Star Wars
Spider-Man The Movie (the exclusively British release which stuck two episodes of the TV show together)

As you can see, I didn't go the movies much!

Colin Jones said...

There's an amusing scene in Picnic At Hanging Rock when the Headmistress tells the young ladies they can remove their gloves if the weather gets too warm during the picnic - the film is set in 1900 so removing their gloves would be the equivalent of going topless nowadays :D

Anonymous said...

Rocky horror picture showed – it was funny for Charlie and his friends around 1980 at a midnight showing, throwing hot dogs, snapping latex gloves, launching spooge, etc in the air. And there are two entertaining songs.

Saw it again a few years ago on TV… meh. Like anything else on TV…

Anonymous said...

I would imagine seeing BENEATH THE POTA followed by BATTLE FOR THE POTA would be a bit confusing.

b.t.

Anonymous said...

b.t., Perhaps it's only to be expected that Kirby should produce a few klunkers in his last months at DC, given how they treated him. 'Hey, Jack, can you draw an issue of Kung Fu Fighter for us on your way out the door?' is a long way from the Fourth World.
Not to mention that he had to have been at least ambivalent about going back to the House of Ideas (even though those ideas were mostly his).

What's surprising really is how good some of his last DCs were. The final Losers, OMAC and Kamandi stories were great. And of course 1st Issue Special #6...

-sean

Anonymous said...

sean:
True, every word. And I’ll say this — his issue of KUNG FU FIGHTER may not be one of his masterpieces, but it does have a weird charm. His interpretation of Asian fighting arts action and stances is unique. In places, the figures look like robots imitating big cats. It’s kinda like the way he drew cityscapes, even during his “peak” years at Marvel in the ‘60s — the outlines looked enough like real buildings to get the idea across but the details looked nothing like genuine architecture. I sometimes wondered if that was just how they actually looked to him?

Stephen King once said he had an idea for a story about Lovecraft’s pillow — what kind of strange things might it have absorbed over the years from being in contact with his head while he dreamed. Now imagine what kinds of things Kirby’s pillow might have absorbed….

b.t.

Matthew McKinnon said...

I went to see that Spiderman movie. It was a double bill with the equally crappy 1978 Thief of Baghdad TV movie.

My grandfather took me, bless him. I can’t imagine being an adult and sitting through those.