Sunday, 25 January 2026

January 1986 - Marvel UK monthlies, 40 years ago this month.

Thanks to Charlie Horse 47 and Killdumpster for their sponsorship of this post, via the magic of Patreon
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In January, 1986, the Space Shuttle Challenger exploded, just 73 seconds after takeoff, killing its crew of seven astronauts, including schoolteacher Christa McAuliffe.

In Britain, meanwhile, unemployment hit 3,204,900. A post-war high that represented 14.4% of the workforce.

It may have seemed, at that point, that the month had nothing going on but doom, gloom and depression.

However, there were some bright spots.

For instance, the United Kingdom and France announced plans for a Channel Tunnel, expected to open by the early 1990s.

And, in Australia, the Gateway Bridge opened in Brisbane, becoming the world's longest pre-stressed concrete free-cantilever bridge.

While, on an even lighter note, the game show Catchphrase was launched by ITV, hosted by Roy Walker along with the computer-generated Mr Chips.

Meanwhile, far out beyond our world, any minds immeasurably superior to ours would have seen the Voyager 2 space probe make its first encounter with Uranus. A fact about which I'm saying nothing.

But what of the art form that hath the power to tame the savage breast?

In the UK, any savage breasts that may have been on the rampage were being tamed by the Pet Shop Boys whose debut hit West End Girls sat proudly atop the singles chart. However, that soon had to make way for A-ha's The Sun Always Shines On TV. I did always feel that title made it clear A-ha had never seen any British television.

On the accompanying album chart, January arrived with Now That's What I Call Music! 6 at the summit before that was then deposed by the return to prominence of Dire Straits' Brothers in Arms.

Doctor Who Magazine #108

There's clearly something special going on because this month's edition of the magazine dedicated to the universe's greatest interventionist has no fewer than eight extra colour pages!

Just what that special thing is, I have no idea.

However, as we can clearly see, this issue presents us with the 22nd Season Survey results, a brand new comic strip called Exodus and a look at alien worlds.

I'm assuming those are the alien worlds of Doctor Who but don't quote me on that.

Elsewhere, we encounter an Interview with Victor Pemberton, writer of Fury From the Deep.

And there's a feature titled Growing Up With the Doctor. 

Captain Britain #13, 1986

Captain Britain's monthly mag penultimates but does it do so in style?

I'm not totally convinced it does, as this is the issue in which poor old Betsy Braddock is blinded by Slaymaster. A fact which, to be honest, is a development my delicate sensibilities could have done without.

Then, the Black Knight finds himself tangled up in Dawn of the Hellravens, as reprinted from 1979's Hulk Comic #3.

Next, there's A Dream of Night-Raven, reprinted from Hulk Comic #12.

And that's followed by a new five-page yarn titled Captain Granbretan.

And we complete the issue with a five-page Cherubim tale the world knows as Playgrounds and Parasites! Part 3.

30 comments:

Anonymous said...

Savage breasts? "Timorous beasties" more like! A happy Burns Night to any and all Scots - and half-Scots - frequenting SDC!

Phillip

dangermash said...

Cheers Phillip from 50% of me 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿

Anonymous said...

dangermash - I hope you enjoy half a haggis/neeps & tatties!

Phillip

Anonymous said...

Pre-stressed-concrete, free-canilever bridges are marvelous! Always felt safe driving on them!

Is it true that this year marks 50 years of Cpt Britain? Steve - are you planning anything special?

Anyone going to the London comiccon at month end? Do your cons have DC Thomson and such on offer as well?
Curious CH

Anonymous said...

DW - your boys are certainly making an effort to not be relegated! Knocking off Sunderland like that was well done!

Keep the faith! CH is! (Well i am also cheering for Villa and Crystal Palace this year as well! Great to have no emotional skin in the game being so far away and historically and culturally disconnected! Charlie is a free spirit!)

CH

Anonymous said...

So, Phillip, theres an English doctor starting at a Scottish hospital being shown around on his first day, and when he gets to the last ward he's asked to examine a few patients.

The first one looks at him and says:
"Fair fa' yer honest, sonsie face
Great Chieftain e' the puddin' race!
A boon them a' ye two your place,
Painch tripe or thairm:
Weel are ye worry o' a grace
As langs my arm..."

A bit puzzled, the doctor, then goes to the next patient, who says:
"Some hae meat, and canna eat,
And some wad eat that want it
But we hae meat and can eat
And say the Lord be thankit"

This continues with a third patient, who says:
"Wee sleekit cow'rin tim'rous beasties
O what a panics in thy breastie!
Tha need na start awa sae hasty
so bickerin' brattle.
I wad be laith to run and chase thee
wi murdering prattle!"

The doctor turns to his Scottish colleague, and asks "so is this the psychiatric ward then?"
"Och no," says the Scottish doctor "it's the Serious Burns Unit"

-sean

McSCOTTY said...

Lol that was pretty good Sean.

Anonymous said...

Sean - That joke's second verse reminds me of a vegetarian girl I used to know, who said she still hankered terribly for bacon butties! ( But it probably means 'meat' in the old sense, meaning food generally.) Great Burns Night joke! ; - )

Phillip

Anonymous said...

CH canna understand! BT? red? Mp?

Anonymous said...

Steve, thanks for including a Brisbane-based fun fact. I’ll be driving over the Gateway bridge later this afternoon. It’s Australia Day today, which is the public holiday celebrating the arrival of the first fleet. Given that day was a bit sh@t for the First Nations, you can understand why some refer to it as invasion day. I’m shallow enough to take the public holiday but it has to move to another, more inclusive, date.

I also agree that Slaymaster blinding Betsy had the whiff of unearned edginess about it.

Charlie, West Ham have certainly improves over the last few weeks, but unfortunately so to have Forest and Leeds. I still fear it’s going to be one of those season.

DW

Colin Jones said...

Charlie, 2026 does indeed mark the 50th anniversary of Captain Britain! The original CB weekly was launched on October 6th 1976 and ran for 39 issues. The first 23 issues included colour pages so Captain Britain and Steranko's Nick Fury were published in colour with the Fantastic Four in b/w.

Sean, as well as a good joke that's an impressive knowledge of Burns' poetry assuming you actually remembered those lines!

Phillip, my father was Scottish but he rarely drank alcohol (except beer at Christmas) so no whiskey on Burns Night. He also had a truly appalling memory and couldn't even remember his own birthday let alone the date of Burns Night!

I once read that the USA has more statues of Robert Burns than any other person. Is that true???

Anonymous said...

Colin - who is Robert Burns? Sorry. CH

Anonymous said...

Don't worry, Steve - Betsy Braddock got some bionic eyes from an alien dimension when she returned in the X-Men (not to mention a whole new look after that, when she became an east Asian mutant ninja).

Seriously though, that CB story is actually worse than it sounds. At least, my recollection is that it strongly implied she basically asked for what happened to her, because... well, women eh? Of course they make rubbish super-heroes.

Actually, now I think about it, she got her extra super-hero powers from wearing Kapitan Briton's costume. That was her brother's Nazi counterpart from an alternate universe, who'd tried to rape her. How very edgy.

Captain Granbretan was a text story, written by one Grant Morrison. Pretty sure that must have been their first published work for Marvel (but someone interested may well know better than me).
History has not recorded whether Michael Moorcock knew about the story, or has an opinion. Although we do know he wasn't impressed when he came across the writer's ah, homage to Jerry Cornelius in The Invisibles later -
"I've read Morrison's work twice. Once when I wrote it, and then when he wrote it" Lol.

-sean

McSCOTTY said...

Charlie, Burns is Scotland's national bard he wrote many famous poems , letters and songs ( most written in broad Scots). His most famous works are To a mouse ( the original of the phrase of mice and men), Auld Lang Syne, A man's a man for a that, A red red rose and Tam O'Shanter. Many of his phrases are used in everyday use ( in standard English) throughout the world, without many folk realising it . Burns night is a celebration of his work and life when most households have haggis, tatties and neeps ( haggis, potatoes and turnip) for dinner. We are a strange people.

Anonymous said...

Charles -

https://travelwithintent.com/2018/11/20/oor-wullie-and-his-mate-rabbie-burns/

http://www.rampantscotland.com/poetry/blpoems_wullie.htm

Phillip

Colin Jones said...

Charlie, Robert Burns (1759-1796) wrote the song Auld Lang Syne which you've surely heard of??

Anonymous said...

Thanks ALL on the info on Robert B! I will check out the links! CH really enjoys these cultural insights which is indicative of the superlative folks who hang out here!!!

Anonymous said...

I just saw the sad news that Our Pal Sal Buscema died yesterday, one day before his birthday. He was 89. Godspeed, Sal!

b.t.

Anonymous said...

Man. I JUST saw that too BT! Hebwas a real work horse like gil kane! Turned out some great work too.

McSCOTTY said...

Awe that is sad, I always loved Sals art especially his 1970s Captain America. He is possibly the last of the great comic book artists from the early 1960s to leave us.

Redartz said...

Sorry to hear about Sal. He and his big brother were iconic Marvel artists for many years, and the house style owed much to them. "Our Pal Sal" illustrated some of my favorite stories back then...especially Avengers, Defenders and Marvel Team-Up. Rest well, Sal, in that Big Bullpen Beyond...

Colin Jones said...

Don't forget Sal was also the inker on Barry Smith's early Conan issues!

Anonymous said...

Sal first got on my Nerd Radar as an inker on two issues of his brother John’s SILVER SURFER (6 and 7) and CONAN THE BARBARIAN 25. I thought he was excellent in that capacity. For me, John B’s art looked best when he inked his own pencils, but Sal inking his big brother was absolutely the next best thing.

A bit later, I discovered he was a penciller too, and enjoyed his work on CAP, DEFENDERS, MARVEL TEAM-UP and lots of other titles. When Barry Smith’s Conan stories were being reprinted in GIANT-SIZE CONAN, I saw that Sal did a great job inking those as well.

I especially liked Sal’s two short-ish runs inking his own pencils, on ROM and INCREDIBLE HULK in the 80s. They had a spontaneous sparkle that was sometimes missing when his pencils (and often just layouts) were inked by others.

b.t.

McSCOTTY said...

The first Sal comic I can remember buying was Sub Mariner #27 but it was his run on Captain America and the Falcon ( from around #160) that made me a fan of his work. The early issues of the Defenders was another excellent title that I loved. His art was always soap opera dramatic with characters regularly show with clenched fists and teeth with his characters being punched and flying off the page their faces contorted in agony. His later with DC and some indy publishers also shone. Sadly, Sal must have been the last of the classic Marvel legends to leave us.

Anonymous said...

There is still Jim Steranko and Roy Thomas. Alas neither were staples of the artist bullpen. Other than that…? CH

Anonymous said...

Terrible news about Sal Buscema. When I started, aged 8, for me, Sal's artwork defined Marvel comics. In MWOM, he drew the Hulk; in Rampage, the Defenders, & Nova; in Spider-man Weekly, even Spidey stories, sometimes. Sal's artwork was Marvel's dominant "House style", it seemed, with other artists adding variety, around it.

Favourites? There are many...

1.) The Mongu story, in Hulk (inked by Ernie Chan) - three issues before & including MWOM # 271:

https://www.comics.org/issue/361714/cover/4/

That Sal & Ernie quality continued with the Constrictor, & Jack of Hearts pt.1.


2.) Sal Buscema's Avengers, inked by Marcos. For a start, Wonder-man knocking Namor unconscious (even the Thing, Thor & the Hulk hadn't done that, before! ) - in Spider-man Comic # 328:

https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjjqPPoRZvx3Y6MCGGEuAeDJ2h4jgz0m2WEUzvcLLj-_k6TcvXhtyS1tb2IJqtbpLGgZ7Y1b3EWVcC_aP83qY290RUhHBgq1R-QqnQKtJvpWOutsn6DGd4hRl3ehhFR0t8_Coq3jWahW_OA/s1600/892131.jpg

3.) Wonder-man vs the Vision ( one of Marvel's greatest battles, to me, in the Avengers, in Spectacular Spidey Weekly # 333 ):

4.) Graviton, in Marvel Superheroes Monthly's first issue:

https://britishcomics.fandom.com/wiki/Marvel_Super-Heroes_Monthly_Vol_1?file=MSH_353.jpg

5.) Defenders # 24/Rampage # 23 ( Sal & Bob McLeod on Sons of the Serpent penultimate issue.)

6.) So many others! With Joe Staton, on both Hulk & Avengers. Plus, early issues of ROM gave Sal Buscema a whole new lease of life. Nova vs the Firefly, with Frank Giacoia inks. And that's just scratching the surface!

7.) Sal's inking - on DD, Silver Surfer, etc - as b.t. & others have mentioned.

Sal Buscema's the last of the old-school greats. I really hope he gets the tributes he truly deserves.

Phillip

Steve W. said...

Charlie, other than Thomas and Steranko, the only other living creators I can think of who worked for Marvel in the 1960s are Larry Lieber and Barry Smith.

Anonymous said...

Omg… random googling of artists at Marvel and even DC and they have all passed.

There is BWS as Steve mentioned. Joe Staton is still kicking as Phillip mentions. But man oh man… i suddenly feel old.

Makes me wonder how many comic book readers under 40 know their names.

McSCOTTY said...

CH, Steve etc good suggestions on the art side of comic legends, I forgot about Steranko and I still consider Barry Smith as a newbie comic kid ( he's not of course). I had no idea Larry Leiber was still going strong.

Redartz said...

Nice job, guys, at recalling the remaining 60's era creators. Can't think of any others to add to your list; if you move into the 70's the list grows longer (but still shrinking, sadly).
Anon's (Charlie's?) comment about the recognition of older artists by younger fans prompted a question in my mind. Kind of flipping it: what current comic creators stand out, and would be recommended to older fans? Perhaps a suggestion in anticipation of the next episode of Speak your Mind...