Thanks to Charlie Horse 47 and Killdumpster for their sponsorship of this post, via the magic of Patreon.
***
It's like a living nightmare. Of this week's comics, I only had Planet of the Apes.
Will I let that put me off talking about what was in the rest of them?
Of course I won't.
Prince Namor defeats Warlord Krang, saves Lady Dorma and reclaims the throne of Atlantis.
Only for it to be hit by an earthquake.
Nick Fury has plenty on his hands when Hydra decides to set off a massive bomb!
It's World War Two and Captain America and Bucky must spend a night in Greymoor Castle. A place in which I believe German spies to be operating.
And tragedy strikes Captain Marvel, when his beloved Una dies.
But he barely has time to mourn her before a being called Zo decides to give him a whole new bunch of super-powers!
The Avengers are up against Arkon who still has the Scarlet Witch captive.
From that, I can only assume, he's having to survive an adaptation of Robert E Howard's The Hand of Nergal.
Sadly, I am having trouble recalling just what that tale actually involves.
And Dr Strange is, at last, battling Shuma-Gorath who I think has just burst out of the Ancient One's brain!
Dracula, looking like he's about to hit the world's biggest chord on his piano - just before discovering he's forgotten to bring his piano.
Dracula, looking like he's about to hit the world's biggest chord on his piano - just before discovering he's forgotten to bring his piano.
But, inside, he has better things on his mind, as he must escape a room that's rapidly filling with water - and then try to find the statuette that everyone's been going on about for the past few issues.
And the Werewolf by Night?
It seems his search for a cure is about to lead him into conflict with a mild-mannered scientist who accidentally drinks a formula that turns him into a Mr Hyde knock-off called DePrayve.
Meanwhile, the Living Mummy and friends encounter a bunch of the Elementals' lackeys on the streets of Cairo.
This week's thrilling instalment of Escape from the Planet of the Apes is called When the Calliope Cries Death.
This week's thrilling instalment of Escape from the Planet of the Apes is called When the Calliope Cries Death.
What that title has to do with Escape from the Planet of the Apes, I have no idea.
Then again, perhaps it means this is the week in which the chimps are introduced to Ricardo Montalban's circus.
In his strip, Ka-Zar bumps into both the Man-Thing and agents of AIM.
And I do believe it means we experience that weird gear shift in which the art switches from being by John Buscema to being by Neal Adams and back again, with Adams' artwork suffering from some of the heaviest, scratchiest, awkwardest, obscuringest, inking I've ever seen.
Meanwhile, the Black Panther confronts his would-be usurper Erik Killmonger, at a waterfall, and gets flung off it.
I can't help feeling that's not really a happy ending.
Still, the good news is that it, at least, foils Kraven's plan to do whatever it is he was planning to do.
Next, the Unicorn's out to wreck a science convention, for reasons that escape me. And that can only mean it's a job for Iron Man.
Following that, Thor and the Warriors Three are failing to stop Thermal Man's rampage around New York.
But, fortunately for mankind, the Communist party of China is about to come to the rescue!
Half man.
Half fish.
Half witted.
And all hissy
Yes, the Captain Omen drama rolls on, as the Hulk's recruited by Omen's crew, in the hope he can help them overthrow the ageing tyrant.
But, first, there's Aquon to be dealt with.
And a room full of water.
Elsewhere, Daredevil's still trying to prevent Starr Saxon's robot from killing Biggie Benson.
And still making a terrible job of it.
Never mind. There are always other people around to sort that kind of mess out.
And the Fantastic Four shrink themselves down to sub-atomic size, as they search the Microverse for the Silver Surfer.
But we get an extra treat, this week, thanks to a short tale titled Spell of the Sea Witch in which a bank robber's flight from justice leads him to encounter the ghosts of pirates.
Or does it?
But, then, the prickly pilchard does a Stilt-Man and accidentally shrinks himself to sub-atomic size!
Which does make me wonder if he bumps into the Silver Surfer while he's down there.
Elsewhere, the Cat and Spider-Man are battling the Man-Killer whose mind snaps when she discovers she's, unknowingly, been working for a bunch of men!
And the X-Men must overcome a Count Nefaria who's assembled a crack team of villains that includes such heavyweights as the Scarecrow, Plantman, the Eel and Porcupine!
Clearly, if you're a fan of the Porcupine, this is the issue for you.









12 comments:
I bought that Avengers Weekly at a junior school sale ( along with Spider-man Comics Weekly # 101, Super Spider-man & C.B. # 233 & # 237! )
One powerful image sticking in my mind's eye is Captain America rescuing the Black Panther, who is pinned by electric current to a machine in the Avengers' mansion laboratory. Cap holds his shield, with one hand on either edge, and smashes it down on the offending contraption! Now, let John Buscema & Tom Palmer's art create that pic in your head! For anybody who doesn't know the story, it's from U.S. Avengers ' 76!
Phillip
That Avengers story also had Clint Barton-Giant Man, & the Dame Edna- spectacled-Black Canary version of the Black Widow. Considering I knew Clint Barton as Hawkeye, & the Colan & Palmer Daredevil Black Widow, that Avengers story should have thrown me, but - even as a kid - I realized it was significantly earlier. An old classic that never went out of fashion!
Phillip
A pedant writes:
Clint Barton was Goliath for a while, not Giant Man (sorry Phillip, sometimes I just can't help myself).
Mind you, I recall seeing pics of the earlier Black Widow in UK Avengers weekly reprints too, and "Dame Edna-spectacled-Black Canary version" is a great description.
Even if they weren't actually spectacles (;
-sean
Perfectly valid point, Sean. Unlike Goliath, Giant Man has antennae sprouting out of his head. Moreover, this Black Widow incarnation's Dame Edna spectacles aren't spectacles anymore than the Super-adaptoid's were!
Phillip
Steve, I'm not surprised you have no recollection of REH's The Hand Of Nergal considering he never wrote such a story! What he DID write was a mere fragment, the first couple of pages of an intended Conan tale.
Grumpy Old New Year is finally available on YouTube! Last year I watched the various "Grumpy" festive episodes from the Noughties but I was disappointed that Grumpy Old New Year (originally broadcast in 2006) was missing so I'm glad to report it's now on YouTube.
A rather meagre selection of Christmas cards in Tesco this year - are they going out of fashion?
Most of the younger folk I work with ( under 40) don't buy cards but send e-cards. Those that do send cards seem to use places like Moonpig. I haven't even looked at cards this year, but did start my present shopping today.
Colin, thanks for the Nergal clarification.
Steve, IIRC the Neal Adams section of that Ka-Zar story with the ‘heavy, scratchy, awkward, etc’ inking was printed from Neal’s un-inked pencils, with some obvious ‘art fixes’ by John Romita. And yes, it didn’t look very good.
b.t.
Charlie still sends out Christmas cards. Maybe an even dozen. He is slowly using up all his so-called collectible stamps acquired over the last 20 to 30 years, which are now so old that I have to use glue on the back to get them to adhere to the envelope.
Nothing like sending out a Christmas card with a couple of Marilyn Monroe stamps on it with her skirt blowing up, lol.
And, while I do the Christmas cards, I like to listen to “Mr. Christmas “himself Andy Williams on the old turntable. You know that Kat has like a dozen Christmas albums probably right up there with Bing Crosby. Who himself had something like 50 to 75 albums that he released though not all xmas.
And by the way, Colin, Mr. Charlie and Mrs. Charlie, and Charlie’s daughter Rachel, I’ll agree that those Panetone (?) Italian cakes in the cardboard box are bland, boring and way too dry to be enjoyable. I remember the first time I saw one was when the neighbors brought their one over for a gift about 20 odd years ago and we sliced it up and my former wife and I afterwards thought that is just a really strange cake.
Even our kids couldn’t be bothered to eat it, lol, which suggest something.
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