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Thursday, 18 June 2026

June 16th, 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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Come! Let us fling ourselves into the thing they call Yesteryear!

Marvel UK, Avengers #144, Conan and Red Sonja

"Barbarism beyond belief!" claims the cover, clearly underestimating just how much barbarism I can believe in.

But this is the last issue I ever owned of Marvel UK's Avengers - and not too far off being the last issue ever published, as Conan and the Sonj find themselves prisoners of a pair of pervy sorcerers who live in a tower and can't wait to get their oats. All depicted by John Buscema and the Crusty Bunkers.

In a far colder clime, the Avengers find themselves confronting a Ronan the Accuser who's not only turned Hank Pym into a caveman but also managed to brainwash Goliath into helping the Kree Sentry battle the team.

And it seems Shang-Chi is caught up in The Night of the Ninjas!

Marvel UK, Planet of the Apes #87

This is it. The arrival of a tale mankind shall never forget!

Or at least it'll never forget the title because it's the debut of the yarn known as The Magick-Man's Last Gasp Purple Light Show.

And that means the return of Jason and Alexander. Not to mention Brutus.

Meanwhile, in the present, Ka-Zar's up to something or other. Possibly in his Conanesque phase.

And I do believe this is the issue in which Captain Marvel acquires his Cosmic Awareness, whatever that is.

But, hold on. If he has it, does that mean Rick Jones has it too?

Marvel UK, Dracula Lives #87

Can it be?

Can Dracula have finally met his Waterloo?

Yes, it can.

But it's not the incorrigible Dr Sun to blame.

It's that far greater menace the world knows as "Circulation Decline." Which is ironic, as Dracula, presumably, doesn't even have any circulation.

Anyway, this is it. The last issue of Marvel UK's Dracula Lives. Next week, it shall survive only as a lodger in the company's Planet of the Apes mag.

However, there is one last hurrah for the lord of the vampires before he makes that manoeuvre, as Quincy Harker and friends resurrect him to defeat the aforementioned evil brain.

And, then, the Foolkiller thrills us all by revealing his origin, before deciding, rather foolishly, to take on the Man-Thing.

But here's a nightmare for us all. While Drac and Manny may be making the move to Planet of the Apes, the Son of Satan's making no such transfer.

And that's bad news because, this week, we receive the first part of his second adventure. The one in which we discover his origin and see just how he stole Satan's trident. But the book's cancellation means we shall never get to see the second part of that tale. Infernal curses indeed.

Super Spider-Man with the Super-Heroes #175, the Kangaroo is back

It's good news for all lovers of Antipodean antagonism when the kicking, clobbering, cobbering Kangaroo returns to use his awesome power of jumping about a bit, against Spider-Man.

You've got to hand it to him. He may be useless but he's an optimist.

Although I seem to remember his optimism not saving him from being incinerated at the end of this tale.

Then, we encounter The World Beyond! An episode which, I believe, sees the launch of an epic drama in which the mysterious Infinity gets to menace the universe. So great is his power that Odin himself sets off to tackle the fiend.

But will he ever return?

Following that, I do believe the Thing and Iron Man conclude their battle with an out-of-control Prester John.

But poor old Dr Strange. He doesn't have to worry about Infinity but he does have to worry about Eternity!

It's true. The galaxy-packed galoot appears above New York City and announces the end of the world!

And Iron Man has a new foe to survive when he confronts the might of the Night Phantom!

Mighty World of Marvel #194, Hulk vs the Missing Link

Hooray! The Missing Link is back!


A monster I've always had a soft spot for. Mostly because he's easy to draw.

Anyway, back on Earth, following his recent adventure on Counter-Earth, Bruce Banner finds himself befriended by a small mining town but soon discovers that one of its inhabitants is very large and pink...

When it comes to the X-Men, shock follows shock, as we're treated to The Death of Professor X. A man who's died more times than I've had hot dinners.

And that's at least five times.

It all happens when Grotesk decides to activate his earthquake generator.

That's followed by Part Two of the tale in which Cyclops and Professor X must tackle the Living Diamond. An event that leads to Scott agreeing to join the newly formed X-Men.

Elsewhere, Daredevil must tackle Mr Hyde, the Cobra and Jester in an abandoned theme park.

Marvel UK, The Titans #35, Thing vs Torgo

Hooray! Torgo makes his debut!

But that may not be good news for the Thing who must fight him to the death, to please the Skrulls.

But what's this? The other members of the Fantastic Four have found a Skrull spaceship and are on their way to rescue their orange colleague?

Back on Earth, the Ghost Rider's fighting Crash Simpson, in a bid to save Roxanne Simpson's life. 

Below the sea, the people of Atlantis have to endure another attack by Attuma, as they seek a new place to live.

Jim Steranko arrives on Nick Fury's strip, as the tussle for control of the Overkill Horn continues.

And the reader will, no doubt, be shocked, as, following a date with Sharon Carter, Captain America makes the bold decision to retire from crime-fighting!

12 comments:

  1. May I assume all you UK gents were bowled over by Jauntin Jim Steranko art on Nick Fury? Would this basically be your first exposure to him? At least regarding Nick fury?

    I have no idea if you had seen the couple Captain America. He did previously in reprint?

    ReplyDelete
  2. Joe,
    The 1977 Superheroes card game had 3 Sterankos:

    Silver Surfer = Steranko:

    https://retromash.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/MarvelSuperHeroesCardGame01.jpg

    Thor & Cap = Steranko:

    https://retromash.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/MarvelSuperHeroesCardGame04.jpg

    Also, late 1977 UK Annuals (cover dated 1978), had the classic Nick Fury poster page ( his right leg at an impossible angle).

    Phillip

    ReplyDelete
  3. In other words, I was late to the Steranko party!

    Phillip

    ReplyDelete
  4. Charlie, the only Jim Steranko work I can recall appearing in Marvel UK before this was his cover for Hulk Annual #1.

    For me, the impact of his arrival was muted because we'd already experienced a mountain of Paul Gulacy's work on Shang-Chi. So, Steranko's style was already familiar.

    ReplyDelete
  5. S Steve notes Steranko's Hulk annual issue 1 appeared as the cover to Mighty World of Marvel issue 129. The MWOM cover featured Steranko's original Hulk face which was redrawn for the US Hulk annual cover by Marie Severin. I seem to recall seeing the famous Nick Fury in space cover from the US Nick Fury agent of SHIELD comic (#6) , was used for the 1980 first issue of the UK Future Tense weekly.

    Charlie, I read Steranko's comics ( Nick Fury, Cap America etc,,) when they were reprinted in various Alan Class comics in the early 1970s.

    ReplyDelete
  6. I think I might have included this under a Steve Does Comics post before, but anyway... seeing as Paul mentioned Steranko's work appearing in Alan Class comics, here's a few of the covers (among other foreign editions):

    https://13thdimension.com/13-covers-steranko-around-the-world/

    The first time I saw Jaunty Jim's work was in Captain Brexit #1, which reprinted the first half of the SHIELD story from Strange Tales #159. It looked really striking.

    -sean

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. But anyhow, wasn't Steranko's first work on Nick Fury - with the Overkill Horn riddle - over Kirby layouts?

      -sean

      Delete
    2. *Riddle...? Stupid autocorrect.
      I actually wrote 'tussle' there.

      Delete
  7. Steve, my recollection from Captain Marvel #29 is that acquiring Cosmic Awareness mainly involved a change of hair colour, from white to blonde.
    I can't help but feel this may have been an even more underwhelming development for Marvel UK readers, what with the reprint being in black & white...

    -sean

    ReplyDelete
  8. The final issues of Dracula Lives and Planet Of The Apes!

    I vividly remember buying this week's issue of The Titans on a very wet Saturday morning so clearly the famous drought of 1976 hadn't yet started - according to Wikipedia the hot, dry weather began on June 22nd.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Greetings!
    Alan Cass was the publisher who published random issues of random comics in the UK? I think one of you gents a few years back, said that it’s impossible to collect or correlate the Comics published because they were so…. random?

    Oddly enough, Charlie’s first exposure to Steranko was like Steve’s in that he saw a contemporaneous house ad in a Marvel comic for the Hulk annual.

    And Charlie’s first purchase of us Duranko comic was an early reprinting of his Nick fury series by Marvel. Or perhaps, it was the original material and he simply drew the cover covers? But not the interiors? I seem to recall Nick fury on the cover, dressed as a underwater scuba dude?

    ReplyDelete
  10. Andy Burnham has won the Makerfield by-election with a 9,000 majority!!

    Happy Juneteenth holiday to all of SDC's American readers!

    ReplyDelete