Thanks to Charlie Horse 47 and Killdumpster for their sponsorship of this post, via the magic of Patreon.
***
But what of Marvel?
And its random marvels?
In it, we learn that Hawk's dad liked to play-act as a Sherlock Holmes type figure and that Old Skull wants to hang around with cartoon animals.
Perhaps worthy of even more note is that this cover was created by Nick Cardy and it's the only example of his work I can remember ever seeing on the front of a Marvel publication. It's just a shame it's not one of his better covers.
Also in this issue, Lin Carter writes about stories which feature lost races, illustrated with stills from such movies as Spartacus and Gulliver's Travels.
But there's more because we also receive five pages of stills from the The Land that Time Forgot!
Needless to say, it's made up of reprints, mostly The Master Plan of Fu Manchu, that multi-part epic in which Shang-Chi, Iron Fist and the Sons of the Tiger must independently interfere in the villain's plan to destroy the United Nations. Each without any knowledge that the others are involved.
And there's more.
We also encounter a reprint of the tale in which Cap and Rick set off in search of Bruce Banner, in the mistaken belief he may be able to separate them for good.
And, of course, that leads to a clash with Bruce's less reasonable alter-ego who turns out not to be half the scientist he is.
In this one, while Steve hangs around in the Avengers Mansion, costumed thugs break in, looking to steal any secrets or weapons it may contain!
In the next tale, Baron Zemo sends an army of assassins after Cap. Fortunately, for our hero, Rick Jones is around to help him.
Then, Cap must face The Strength of the Sumo!
Then, he must break up a prison riot.
And, then, we get a retelling of his origin.
Needless to say, all these masterpieces are brought to us by Lee and Kirby.
Ron Goulart, H. G. Wells and Dan Adkins bring us a warning of just what can go wrong when a man turns himself invisible.
But no one cares about that.
Not when we've got The Legion of Monsters to keep us company.
In our first death-defying tale, Frankenstein's Monster attends a costume party but becomes inconveniently framed for murder!
Next, Manphibian finds itself in a drama labelled In Vengeance Crude!
That's followed by something called The Flies!
Which is followed by a partial adaptation of Bram Stoker's Dracula .
Tragically, as far as I can make out, despite the title of this magazine, there is no actual monster legioning going on.
29 comments:
Nick Cardy is credited as the cover artist on Marvel Premier (Legion of Monsters)on several websites Steve, although I don't quite see it.
Yeah, it's screaming Neal Adams at me.
Charlie is a big fan of 3 DAYS of the CONDOR. He rewinds it seemingly every 3 years yet he knows he’s only seem it like 5 times. If you are a LECARRE fan you will enjoy this, guaranteed (i.e., it ain’t JASON BOURNE…
If you are familiar with the story of 3 DAYS OF THE CONDOR, Charlie actually had a job offer to be a “reader” in Paris, France in 1994 for the CIA. Charlie advised he was not interested in spying on his then-wife’s homeland. Charlie was assured the job was overt, not covert; he would be reading newspapers, magazines, attending shareholder meetings (the CIA actually buys shares in publicly-traded companies for this purpose) and filing reports. Anyhow, even with free lodging, the pay was a real deal breaker. Now, Charlie just contemplates retirement as a career more. :(
Btw… did anyone here win the $1,700,000,000 in Power Ball lottery last nite?
Been awhile since I last read that Killraven story. I remember that Craig Russell’s pencils were inked by Dan Green and the finished art looked just as spectacular as usual. Also, I remember the VR Sherlock Holmes stand-in tangling with a Hound of the Baskerville-esque burning beast, right after opining that it was fake.
The ‘Panther’s Rage’ finale was dramatic and exciting overall, but I thought the climax was a bit abrupt and anti-climactic.
Steve:
I agree that Nick Cardy’s MARVEL MOVIE PREMIERE cover painting wasn’t great. He also painted a couple of DEADLY HANDS OF KUNG FU covers that I didn’t like very much.
b.t.
Steve, I think Paul means the cover of MARVEL PREMIERE 18, featuring the one-time ‘monster legioning’ team-up of Ghost Rider, Morbius, Man-Thing and Werewolf By Night as drawn by everybody’s favorite artist Frank Robbins. I’d wondered myself for years who had drawn the cover, as the style didn’t look like any of Marvel’s ‘usual suspects’. When I saw that the GCD credited it to Cardy, I thought it was possible, even though it doesn’t look much like his DC covers. Maybe he did it over a layout by Marie Severin…?
b.t.
Steve, sorry I meant Cardy is credited as the artist on the colour monthly Marvel Premier featuring the Frank Robbins Legion of Monsters. The monthly black and white one off Legion book here is by Neal Adams
Looks like we’ve covered most of the notable comics cover-dated September 1975, but here are a few stragglers that might be worth mentioning:
DEMON-HUNTER #1 by Rich Buckler and David Kraft, possibly the last halfway decent comic published by Atlas
DOOMSDAY + 1 #2, with fun, bouncy, early “pro” art by John Byrne
HAUNTED #23 and HAUNTED LOVE #11 both have nice painted covers by Tom Sutton (Sutton also wrote and drew “Journey to Lost Orlaak”, HL #11’s Lovecraftian cover story)
HOUSE OF SECRETS #135 has a nice Wrightson cover
KULL AND THE BARBARIANS #3 features nice art by Vicente Alcazar, Howard Chaykin (Red Sonja’s origin story) and Alan Weiss
STAR REACH #3 has a nice and spicy S&S story written and drawn by Frank Brunner
SWAMP THING #18 has lovely art by Nestor Redondo
Charlton’s VENGEANCE SQUAD #2 is kinda like a watered-down version of the various Men’s Adventure paperback series that were so popular in the 70s, with quirky, occasionally Tuska-inspired art by Pete Morisi
b.t.
Wow, I sure use the word “nice” a lot. Really should proof-read my posts more closely before hitting “PUBLISH”…
I picked up Giant-Sized Captain America #1, a few months later, and found it very confusing. I’d only recently discovered the smaller Marvel All-Colour Comics and my 7 year old self thought this was actually Captain America #1 (origin and all). The fact it referred to the stories originally appearing in something called ‘Strange Tales’, didn’t register. Nor the fact that these stories had recently appeared in the weekly Titans comic. This simply confirmed that these strange American comics were colour reprints of the original UK titles.
I can laugh about it now but at the time it was terrible…
DW
Steve, I don’t recall seeing that Master Of Kung Fu treasury edition previously. I avidly collected these, and thought I had all of the variants (Treasury edition, Treasury Special, Special Edition etc). Did this get any kind of release in the UK? I can’t even recall it being advertised in the weeklies.
DW
DW:
The SAVAGE FISTS OF KUNG FU Treasury didn’t get much pre-publication hype here in the States either, as I recall. No house ads, not even a heads-up item on the Bullpen Bulletins page. It just showed up at newsstands unannounced, seemingly out of the blue.
As it happens, it was the first Treasury I ever bought, in fact it was the first one I ever saw for sale out in the wild. I’d seen ads for all the previous ones, and BOY, did I covet them (especially that first Conan one) but sadly, they just didn’t get distributed in my area (or maybe they did but some other nerd swooped in a grabbed ‘em before I had a chance to).
The KUNG FU Treasury isn’t numbered as part of the main Treasury series either. It’s technically a one-shot, like Kirby’s CAPTAIN AMERICA BICENTENNIAL BATTLES and 2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY.
Having said all that — it’s not one of my favorite Treasuries. The majority of the reprinted stories are pretty weak. Even back in the day, I was disappointed by it.
b.t.
b.t.
I did google it after I posted and it didn’t appear to get a UK release. Perhaps the licensing for material from the Curtis magazine line was different than from the regular monthlies. I didn’t MOKF in Avengers weekly and so don’t know whether the black and white magazine material was reprinted. The Planet of the Apes magazine material was reprinted in the UK weeklies and so I suspect it wasn’t an issue and was purely commercial. From a UK perspective, it did feature a few original covers, done exclusively for the Avengers weekly, around the time MOKF was getting most of the cover action.
Oddly, most of the treasury editions could be found quite easily in UK newsagents, but they were specially imported, as they had pence prices and were heavily advertised in the weeklies.
DW
didn’t read MOKF in Avengers…
DW
Sorry, McScotty. I should have read your post more carefully.
Charlie, I won the $1,700,000,000 in the Power Ball lottery last night.
Bt, I too felt let down by the resolution of Panther's Rage. I do expect my heroes to win their own battles.
Steve- so glad it was you who won the $1.7 BB! I am sending you an email about a small loan right away! CH
Oh, this month is an Amazing Adventures/Jungle Action twofer, with Dauntless Don McGregor's Killraven and the Black Panther - nice (as b.t. might put it).
Steve, the kid in Jungle Action #17 was Kantu, who the Panther saved from a charging rhino earlier in the storyline, back in #9. I think Dauntless Don was making a point there, rather than just doing the standard 'hero saves the day' thing, which can get a bit boring.
Btw I would question whether #17 really is the end of 'Panther's Rage'. While it's true that by and large the action concludes, the next issue is an extended epilogue looking at where the various characters are - including Killmonger's delightful girlfriend, Madame Slay - and how things stand in Wakanda as a result.
My fave Killraven is Amazing Adventures #34, but 'Only the Computer Shows Me Any Respect' is a really good one too.
On the "Sherlock Holmes figure"... I always assumed Hodiah Twist was just a stand-in, probably for rights reasons. But if you read the Twist stories - in a couple of issues of Vampire Tales, and Marvel Preview #16 - the interesting thing is that he was actually a fake character himself, a person acting out a fantasy role because he couldn't face an unbearable reality.
Well, I thought was interesting anyway.
-sean
’Dog Day Afternoon' and 'Three Days of the Condor' were ok, Steve, but you didn't mention Louis Malle's 'Black Moon', a fantasy set during a period of civil warfare between men and women. Its worth checking out if you get the opportunity -
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2zgWStXxJzA
b.t., 'Day of the Sword' - Red Sonja's origin - is not one of Marvel's better sword and sorcery tales. And don't get me started on that Solomon Kane story from Kull & the Barbarians, set in Africa...
Also out this month:
Marvel Preview #3, featuring Blade. Which introduced Marvel's first Welsh character, rozzer Dai Thomas.
FOOM #11, with a senses shattering two word cover headline: Jack's Back!
'Nuff said.
-sean
* A bit of that comment went missing so just to be clear. 'Black Moon' was another film released this month '75.
Sean, Dai Thomas was a regular character in the Captain Britain weekly (1976-77) and I'd always assumed he'd been especially created for that comic so thanks for informing me otherwise!
Sean:
I’d forgotten that Hodiah was actually kind of a deranged Sherlock Holmes fan. IIRC, in that first VAMPIRE TALES story, there was an amusing bit where a hooligan was in the midst of calling him a halfassed Sherlock Wannabe and Hodiah bashed a ceramic pitcher over the guy’s head.
b.t.
Colin, I assume the reappearance of Dai Thomas in the original Captain Brexit was down to Chris Claremont, who also wrote that Blade story in Preview.
Also, I meant mention that Captain Marvel #40 came out this month, the first of a new direction for the series, as Mar-Vell and Rick Jones were no longer bonded together. No more dropping acid in the Negative Zone...
After the Trial of the Watcher, Rick makes it back to Earth in time for his gig in Denver, with foxy chick Dandy. "The 50s haircut - the 60s ballads - the 70s spacesuit!" I have little doubt his music was terrible...
-sean
*meant to mention
This bunch? I've got Killraven (2nd hand, with biro on the cover) & Captain Marvel (whose main story was reprinted in UK MWOM Annual 1978).
That MOKF cover's definitely familiar; but I've perused contemporary Warlock house-ads, and can't find it anywhere. Puzzling...
Charlie - Almost a CIA super-spook? Incredible! Here's a soothing, sleep-inducing (not because it's boring, but lullaby-like) Beatles instrumental album, as a consolation prize:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9v0V9IwA6O0
Phillip
Phillip! Thanks for that bit of Beatles! It has soothed Charlie’s troubled soul which is troubled because he in no way can justify forking out the $ to see Paul McCartney with Mrs. Charlie. Sheesh!!!
And here is a happy coincidence… Charlie was playing that same tune on his ukulele this weekend with Mrs. Charlie singing along. She has an uncanny ability to remember lyrics… and a nice voice :)
'Day of the Condor' is a really good film. I can remember watching it with our dad and he really enjoyed it. Another film he really enjoyed was the 'Osterman Weekend'. He like the leading actress and she was also in 'Assault on Precinct 13'. He was a bit of a John Carpenter fan. I don't know if you know but he also loved the Mad Max films. I can remember him taking me down the Wicker (to the cinema that usually showed porn films) to see Mad Max 2. It was awesome, we had never seen anything like it and we loved it. I watched it again the other day and it is still awesome. He also also took me to see '2001; A Space Odyssey'. It was beyond me but I do remember the obelisk and the apes (and thinking WTF). We really do owe so much to Dad for our interest in the things we are interested in. You were always the clever one but he had to make do with me (because I was older) to share the films and books with. A lot of the stuff I saw and read kind of went over my head at the time but now I have revisted a lot of things and really appreciate the introduction he gave me. Only taken about 50 years to get to grips but I have always been a slow learner. Do you remember scouring the shops in Blackpool for comics? I often think of those days. More and more as I get older. I see now so much of my life has been shaped by our childhood. I often think you are the one feeding the flame. Bless you and thank you.
Dear, mystery anonymous person, I do indeed remember scouring the shops of Blackpool for comics. I thought you were supposed to be the clever one. You read books that didn't have pictures in them.
What gave me away? Was it because we share a dad? And holidays in Blackpool?
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