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Thursday, 12 February 2026

February 14th, 1976 - Marvel UK, 50 years ago this week.

Thanks to Charlie Horse 47 and Killdumpster for their sponsorship of this post, via the magic of Patreon
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Just how many claims to fame does Midge Ure have?

Millions but, back in February 1976, he only had one.

And that was the song Forever and Ever which he performed as lead vocalist of Slik. However, it was enough of a claim to fame, as it was sitting proudly atop the UK singles chart.

When it came to LPs, those rankings were being dominated by no lesser offering than The Very Best of Slim Whitman by Slim Whitman.

Well, we all know that Slik's Forever and Ever is the greatest Bay City Rollers track that wasn't made by the Bay City Rollers but there were tracks I approved of even more on that week's UK singles chart. Among them were:

Mamma Mia - ABBA

Answer Me - Barbara Dickson

Evil Woman - Electric Light Orchestra

Midnight Rider - Paul Davidson

Itchycoo Park {1975} - the Small Faces

Bohemian Rhapsody - Queen

Dat - Pluto Shervington

Squeeze Box - the Who

I Love to Love - Tina Charles

and

50 Ways to Leave Your Lover - Paul Simon.

Should one wish to investigate matters more thoroughly, that week's UK singles chart can be found here.

While the accompanying LP chart lurks within

Marvel UK, Avengers #126

 But can it be true?

The Vision?

About to be killed by common-or-garden hoods?

As he can make himself as hard as diamonds, I suspect not.

I'm not so sure about the Scarlet Witch's chances though.

This, of course, relates to the tale within, in which the Avengers are attempting to help Red Wolf rid his tribe's land of the pesky Cornelius Van Lunt and his thugs.

Before that, Conan and a friend must decide whether it's worth stealing a priceless gem from the grip of a skeleton, bearing in mind that skeletons absolutely always come to life if you try to steal from them.

And, finally, Iron Fist finds himself in a tale called Morning of the Mindstorm that may feature the first-ever team-up of John Byrne and Chris Claremont.

Mighty World of Marvel #176, Hulk

Drama piles upon drama, as the Hulk and Betty - now cured of being the Harpy - fall from the sky and land on an island inhabited by strange, gigantic monsters from space.

It's a very peculiar tale but one I've always had a soft spot for.

Matt Murdock continues to let the world think he's dead, for reasons I can't recall, and then has to put up with the return of Mr Fear.

As for the Fantastic Four, with Sue pregnant but unwell, the rest of the gang travel into the Negative Zone, in search of a treatment for her.

But is this only going to lead them to their first ever encounter with a certain nihilistic grasshopper?

Marvel UK, Planet of the Apes #69, Conquest

I am impressed that Armando's main concern, on that cover, seems to be that there's a gang of apes waiting for him, rather than that he's about to hit solid concrete after falling from a high-rise building.

Needless, to say, this death is going to galvanise Caesar in his quest to right the wrongs of this world.

When it comes to Ka-Zar, he now has to contend with not just Gemini but also the Plunderer and Gog, in his bid to retrieve a stolen super-soldier serum that AIM are keen to get their hands on.

And, in Wakanda, the Panther manages to clear Monica Lynne of murder. And it's all done with kebabs!

Marvel UK, Dracula Lives #69

As far as I'm aware, Dracula turns up at Quincy Harker's house, looking to polish him off for good.

But the old vampire-hunter has more than a few tricks up his sleeve...

Meanwhile, thanks to Dr Glitternight, Jack Russell must fight his own sister who's been turned into a wolf-demon, by the arrival of her 18th birthday, while Topaz and Taboo attempt to thwart the doctor himself.

I'm not sure what occurs in Man-Thing's strip but I do know it's a tale called The Demon-Plague.

Spider-Man Comics Weekly #157

In a yarn that seems to have been going on forever, our hero and Dr Strange seek to rescue Flash Thompson from those Vietnamese monks who wrongly blame him for the death of their leader.

Speaking of things that seem to have been going on forever, Iron Man's still battling the Gladiator.

The good news is the story's titled, A Duel Must End! From this, I'm assuming this is the issue in which Shellhead finally triumphs over the foe that Daredevil usually defeats in about five pages.

Elsewhere, while Odin sleeps, Loki and his allies attack Asgard. An act which leads to the villain declaring himself supreme ruler of the kingdom!

But none of that's the big news.

The big news is this is the last-ever issue of Spider-Man Comics Weekly!

Does this mean we've seen the last of our friendly neighbourhood wall-crawler?

We'll have to visit our nearest newsagents, next week, to find out.

Marvel UK, the Titans #17, Hulk vs Captain Marvel

Captain Marvel may have the cover but I do believe this issue's first thriller sees the X-Men having to tackle the copycat might of the Super-Adaptoid.

And that gives us the Mimic vs Super-Adaptoid fight we've all wanted!

Now we just need the Absorbing Man to join in.

Then, Spider-Man and Captain America have plenty on their plates when the Grey Gargoyle returns.

Next, Nick Fury and SHIELD set out To Free a Brain Slave!

From that cover, I'm going to guess we encounter the first part of the adventure in which Rick and Mar-Vell set off to recruit Bruce Banner's help in permanently freeing them from the Negative Zone.

And I do believe that, at last, Subby rescues Lady Dorma from Krang, returns to Atlantis and exiles the villain, yet again, from the environs of that fair kingdom.

And I'm sure he'll never return and never cause any more trouble.

Marvel UK, the Super-Heroes #50

And what's this?

Not only is Spider-Man Comics Weekly hitting the buffers. So is The Super-Heroes?

It's true. The comic that never quite managed to get its arse in gear has reached its very final issue.

And, as the cover features various people whose strips have sustained its fifty weeks of life, I think we can assume it knows it's the last issue.

But does it go out in style?

It goes out with the Man-Thing and Thing defeating the all-new Molecule Man.

The Black Knight must stop the revived threat of Modred.

And Giant-Man and the wondrous Wasp overcome the mighty Colossus.

Thus, are all loose ends tied up.

12 comments:

  1. CH always gets a huuuuge feeling of nostalgia whever he sees original Giant Man. Not sure why. No other character seems to do it.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Charlie, I reckon any Giant Man induced nostalgia is probably down to his antennae (or whatever those are supposed to be, sticking up from his shades). Thats such a sixties design touch.

      -sean

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  2. The only issue of The Super-Heroes I ever bought was #9 featuring the Silver Surfer story "The Heir Of Frankenstein".

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  3. So farewell Spider-Man Comics Weekly but hello to 16 months of landscape Spidey...

    Those gorillas on the POTA cover should be wearing red overalls!

    ReplyDelete
  4. Who cares about an impending new Spider-Man comic? The important thing is that this week fifty years ago the authority-baiting, Pat Mills assembled new paper for boys Action #1 hit the newsagents, cover-dated 14th February.
    Why would anyone spend 8 or even 9p on a comic featuring some American long underwear types, when for 7p they could read about Hook Jaw, Hellman of Hammer Force, Dredger, Blackjack and the rest instead?

    https://downthetubes.net/british-comics-reference/action-the-sevenpenny-nightmare/

    But wait! There's more. Bullet #1 - from IPC rivals DC Thomson - was in the shops too, also cover-dated 14th February 1976!
    I know, right? Ok, it wasn't Action - and frankly Fireball was a bit of a knob imo - but it did feature The Smasher drawn by the mighty Ian Kennedy.

    https://downthetubes.net/comics-for-valentines-day-celebrating-40-years-of-action-and-bullet/

    -sean

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Action #1!

      I got that - Action was the first comic I bought regularly. Because of Hook Jaw, which was the only strip I read.

      And at 5 (actually still 4 at this point) I was waaaaay too young. But thanks, progressive & tolerant Mum & Dad!

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  5. The 1976 singles chart includes Mike Oldfield's Xmas tune IN DULCI JUBILO still at #24 in February!

    And at #21 is Yvonne Fair's IT SHOULD HAVE BEEN ME which was included on MOTOWN CHARTBUSTERS, the first compact disc I ever bought after buying a CD player in 1989...

    Somebody call the po-leece
    That woman down there is a doggone thief...

    ReplyDelete
  6. When Charlie mentioned Giant Man nostalgia, I thought of the 1978 Avengers Annual cover. But it isn't Giant Man!

    Colin - I got Motown Chartbusters Vol 3 (a tape) in 1989, too - I think. The HMV price of £4.99 is still on the tape. I think I got it for 'Tracks of My Tears'.

    Phillip

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  7. The Superheroes was reborn as a successful annual, in the late 70s/early 80s (as UK SDCers well know! ) Prior to each story (e.g. Thor, Silver Surfer, Namor), a little text introduction, and an illustration, gave the Superheroes annual a luxury/quality feel. The Titans, as an annual, wasn't quite as successful, not continuing into the early 80s.

    Phillip

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  8. Phillip, I can't remember the volume number of my Motown Chartbusters CD.

    I bought my current CD player in December 1998 and it still works after more than 27 years!

    ReplyDelete
  9. Phillip, according to Wikipedia Yvonne Fair's It Should Have Been Me was on Motown Chartbusters Vol 10.

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  10. Colin - The back listing on my tape provides song titles, but not artists. However, opening the tape, the artists are provided, and Yvonne Fair's definitely not one of them. Strangely, there's also a NASA picture of the Moon, plus a written intro by Alan Freeman. "Fluff" ends by saying: "P.S. Don't you ever read sleeve notes BEFORE you play the record?" In my case, the answer's no!

    Phillip

    ReplyDelete