Sunday, 4 January 2026

Fifty years ago today - January 1976.

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

It's a brand new year.

Let's find out what kind of horrors it intends to inflict upon us.

Avengers #143

I believe this is the story in which the Avengers go back to the Wild West, to deal with Kang's latest act of naughtiness and, along the way, they get help from Kid Colt!

Having said that, I don't remember any of the members from this cover actually appearing in that tale. I may, therefore, be completely wrong.

If it is that story, I have noticed that an awful lot of the content of the 1977 UK Marvel annuals was culled from comics that came out in this time period.

Conan the Barbarian #58. Belit

BĂȘlit makes her debut...

...which would be fine except we're now going to have to put up with her for years, before she finally dies.

A feat she managed to achieve very quickly in the Robert E Howard version of events.

Anyway, a ship that Conan's on is hijacked by she and her pirates and, needless to say, it's not long before he's bonking her and having adventures alongside her and her men.

Captain America #193, Madbomb

Jack Kirby returns to the character he co-created - just in time to give us a tale in which that character is having trouble with mad bombs!

Daredevil #129, Man-Bull

I don't think I've ever read this one but it seems the Matador convinces the Man-Bull to steal a Golden Bull.

Whether that's the one Thor once tried to steal while under the control of the Ringmaster, I cannot say.

However, Daredevil messes up the plan, and the Man-Bull reacts with his usual good grace, by taking it out on the Matador.

Fantastic Four #166, Hulk

If this is the story I think it is, then it's yet another tale, from this period, which showed up in a 1977 Marvel UK annual.

Sadly, that annual only used the first half of the tale, leaving us all cliff-hanging until the second part was eventually published in the weekly comics.

Anyway, the FF are on a jumbo jet when it collides with the Hulk. Once the team have made sure all the passengers and crew survive, they set out to capture the monster.

And they succeed.

But just what will that victory lead to?

And just how is the Thing going to react to these events?

Incredible Hulk #195, Abomination

This story didn't appear in a 1977 UK Marvel annual but I believe it's the one 
in which Hulky teams up with the Abomination, convinced the fiend is his only friend.

A belief which proves the Hulk's even stupider than we all thought he was.

Iron Man #82, Super-Apes

I have very little recollection of this one but, if that cover's to be believed, Iron Man's about to come up against the Red Ghost and his Super-Apes!

This pleases me, no end, as I've always had a soft spot for those apes.

But what's this? How can it be? Iron Man rescuing Tony Stark? Surely, madness must have claimed us all!

Amazing Spider-Man #152, the Shocker

The Shocker's still causing trouble for our hero - and for New York - by attacking electrical sub-stations, in what I assume to be an extortion attempt.

Thor #243, tyrannosaurus

It's the one in which Zarrko recruits Thor and his mates for a trip to the future, to tackle a bunch of sinister beings who travel backwards in time but do so by moving in a spiral, bringing death and destruction wherever they go.

Obviously, all the discerning reader really cares about is it features a battle between Thor and a T-Rex!

The Brave and the Bold #124
I think we've all been thrilled by what we've just seen from Marvel but we should remember its creatives are not the only people on God's green Earth who can thrill us.

So can those of DC!

And that means I shall crank up the starting handle on my quantum computer's £200,000 AI-powered mega-randomiser and see what a haphazard selection of its comics which bear the same cover date are up to.

Things always seem to get a little strange when Batman meets Sgt Rock. Probably because such a team-up seems inherently unlikely but, also, because Bob Haney always seems to be the writer.

And so it is that we get a thriller in which a shipment of the military's new rifles are stolen and Rock must unite with the dark-night detective to retrieve them. 

This might seem like a tough task but the duo are assisted by Jim Aparo, Haney and Murray Boltinoff who use their creative powers to make sure the good guys triumph.

1st Issue Special #10

There are few things in this plane of existence that are capable of being stranger than absolutely anything created by Joe Simon and Jerry Grandenetti.

And, so, yet more weirdness is unleashed upon the unsuspecting minds of the world when 1st Issue Special gives us The Outsiders, a bunch of "unusual" people who even arrive at emergency scenes while singing their own theme song.

As far as my scrambled senses can recall, this issue's composed of the origin tales of its various cast members, and a tragic lot they are.

Does this book contain a one-page article about Tod Browning's Freaks? I have a feeling it does but can't officially confirm it.

Man-Bat #1

I'm not convinced many people have been crying out for a Man-Bat comic but we're getting one anyway.

And, to be fair, I'll go on to buy this very issue in 1978, from a shop in Lytham, near a miniature golf course. So, clearly, I must have been crying out for a Man-Bat comic.

In it, Conway and Ditko weave a tale in which the Baron Mordo-esque Baron Tyme takes control of our hero's wife and turns her into a homicidal maniac.

Needless to say, her spouse isn't going to put up with that kind of thing and tracks the villain to his lair, for a life-or-death confrontation.

Sadly, this book will have its own life-or-death struggle and only survive for a mere two issues.

But my main memory of this adventure is of Ditko's strangely faceless Batman.

The Sandman #6

The Sandman hits his final issue, with an intriguing 
Bill Draut cover that leads us into The Plot to Destroy Washington D.C.!

It seems Doctor Spider's kidnapped the Sandman and Glob, meaning Brute must get Jed to help free the pair and thwart the Doctor's villainy!

Michael Fleisher supplies us with the words, while Jack Kirby and Wally Wood produce the pictures.

Limited Collectors' Edition #C-41

Well, that's all fine and dandy but we all know the real treasure is the friends we made along the way. 

And we've not just made friends, we've made super-friends!

I must confess to never having seen the cartoon of the same name but I can reveal this mighty tome contains a mix of new and reprinted material, including Operation: Jail the Justice League!, The Case of the Disabled Justice League! and a 10-page text article called TV Cartoons.

However, I see no hints of a 3-D diorama.

Wait!

What?

No 3-D diorama?

What kind of madness is this?

15 comments:

Anonymous said...

That Kirby Mad Bomb cover is typically THE cover that gets trotted out in articles, blogs, etc. discussing Kirby’s return to Marvel.

Always good to see it again. Though one might have thought with Kirby’s return Cap’s origin would have been revisited with Buckster in the background?

Anonymous said...

The Abomination demonstrates what one can achieve with super-strong toes!

Anonymous said...

And “yes,” the MAN BAT # 1 was part of Charlies retirement portfolio. Looks like it could be worth a cool $10-$20 nowadays!

Anonymous said...

Steve, I had that Marvel annual and it was strange that it featured two separate FF stories, both being parts of longer storylines (the other was the final part of the Galactus/Gabriel/Silver Surfer storyline). It took until Complete Fantastic Four weekly for us to find out whether the Thing recovered from the gamma-induced loss of faculties. (*spoiler, he did*).

DW

McSCOTTY said...

Steve, yes, this very strange issue of "1st Issue Special" contains a one page article on Freaks. The "Super Friends" edition contains a great intro and final set of pages by the late great Alex Toth ( plus the TV Cartoons article that drawn by Toth).

Colin Jones said...

Belit was topless in REH's Queen Of The Black Coast!

My local Tesco is still selling Christmas crackers and yes, Easter eggs too.

Redartz said...

An interesting batch of comics! 1976 was starting off well.
I remember that Avengers arc fondly; a fair bit of humor within it. The image of Moondragon with a bonnet still sticks in my mind- can't imagine there were too many bald women running around the American west in the 1880s.
As Anonymous noted, that Cap cover has become iconic. Kirby's return to Marvel began with some pretty sharp covers; on the other hand I was rather disappointed in the storytelling (having been spoiled by Steve Englehart's work on cap so recently). I haven't read one of those 'neo-Kirby' Cap tales since they were published. Wonder if they might read better now. Anyone read one recently?
Spidey was pretty solid- not a classic by any stretch, but a good comic story overall. Always rather liked the Shocker and his pneumatic outfit...
Steve, essentially every book you show on this illustrious blog is one that I recognize, if not by reading then at least by sighting on the newsstand. However that "Outsiders" book is an exception- I've never seen that anywhere before! Sounds intriguing, and Jerry Grandenetti's art is always pretty nice...

Redartz said...

Oh, and Colin- our local Meijer store was bringing out Valentine's candy on Christmas eve; by New Year's they too had out the Easter candy...

Anonymous said...

1.) Cap cover = Cap Treasury Edition - Bicentennial Battles!

2.) Iron Man & Tony pictured simultaneously = Tony gets Happy Hogan to wear his armour - c.f. Matt getting the Black Panther to wear the Daredevil suit, or Peter getting Hobie to wear the Spidey costume!

3.) Thor pose - v. similar to cover of Silver Surfer # 4 - Gil "inspired by" Big John B?

4.) Thomas Dolby features on Haunted Generation (a little "off topic" thrown in, there! )

Phillip

Colin Jones said...

Phillip, I wonder if Marvel will publish anything special for America's 250th anniversary ?

Captain America's Bicentennial And A Quarter Battles perhaps?

Anonymous said...

A reissue of Deathok - or one of Captain America's other nightmare versions/flipsides - is more apt, after the last couple of days, Colin!

Phillip

Anonymous said...

Deathlok - sorry, missed out the 'l'!

Phillip

Anonymous said...

They should do a special Cap starring in Orwell’s 1984. Only question is is the 3rd block Sino-Russian or European-Russian. Based on current events….

Then Cap could fight the block formerly known as Commies. Cap the Commie Crusher!

CH

Anonymous said...

Check the cover to Cap #195 in a couple of months, Charlie - "It can happen here! The savage world of - - 1984!"
Kirby knew what time it was!

-sean

Anonymous said...

Sean- im surprised you haven’t commented on SANDMAN? Wally Wood and Kirby? CH