Saturday 6 January 2024

The lodger's terms are in disgrace!

 Week Ending 12th January 1974


Last week British Marvel promised "BIG CHANGES" to their weekly line-up, they didn't wait long to take that first big step into the new year. With the first full week of 1974 the Mighty World of Marvel and Spider-man Comics Weekly copied the Avengers look by having glossy covers, front and back. For a while at least all three would have a main full length lead feature story followed by a smaller or half length back up strip. That contents format wouldn't stay that way for long, there's more changes on the way for all three mags.  Personally I've always preferred the glossy covers, but I know not everyone did. I guess we'll find out more from them in future letter pages and in the comments left in this blog and on the social media sites where you found the link to this page. 

The Mighty World of Marvel #67


This psychedelic cover by Ron Wilson and Mike Esposito is stunning, much more eye catching than the bland Herb Trimpe cover featured on the Incredible Hulk #115 from which this story was originally taken from. It uses the same elements as the US version, the large looming head of the Leader over looking a frustrated Hulk, but by adding the Humanoids restraining the green goliath, then maximising the background colours to a crazy level Ron Wilson's cover turns everything up to an eleven! It's just has to be my cover of the week. Another thing that makes it my COTW is what happened to it when I read this comic on New Years day 2024. After watching a DVD I had gotten free with Vworp Vworp #6 , a great Doctor Who Fanzine that can still be bought, stick with me I'll get to the point, I switched off the Xbox and my TV went to a stand by mode which left the screen a blue colour. With no other light, yeah I watch the TV in the dark a lot, the blue light made the near by comic's trippy colours glow like a fluorescent rainbow that was both eerie and magnificent at the same time. A Serendipity that would please the Third Doctor.

The Pen Pals Swap Shop page gets cut in half to make way for news of a new competition coming very soon in which you can win your very own colour TV! Now in 1974 colour TV's are a big thing, the BBC only broadcasted the first colour programme at midnight on the 14/15th of November 1969, a concert by Petula Clark from the Royal Albert Hall, at time set by the Postoffice General as the date when the colour broadcasting licence began. Colour TV's popularity grew steadily, but in 1974, a chance for a child to win a colour TV was gigantic. All you had to do was create your own super-hero or super villain, what could be easier or most fun? The full details on this exciting competition in next week's mags.

The Incredible Hulk "Lo, the Leader lives!"

Writer: Stan Lee
Artist: Herb Trimpe
Inker: Dan Adkins

Originally published in The Incredible Hulk #114
Cover date May 1969
(Published in February 1969)

After last week's capture by the US army General Ross blusterers around thinking of a solution on how too contain the Hulk as Betty despairs at the fact that the Hulk will blame her for trapping him. The solution to both their problems may lay with Rick Jones so they make a call to his last known residence, the Avengers Mansion. How ever there is no one home except for a cleaning lady. Who says after the tragedy that has befallen them there has been no word from him. That tragedy would have been Captain America's apparent death at the hands of Hydra and Madame Hydra as seen in the US edition of Captain America #111 cover dated March 1969, published December 1968. British readers would have to wait till 22rd December 1976 in Super Spider-man and the Titans #202 to read that classic or the 1982 Captain America Annual from Marvel/Grandreams. 


It feels a little strange having a "cleaning woman" answering the phone at the Avengers Mansion, where was Jarvis? It very possible it might have been Jarvis's day off or they might have needed extra help, in my 70's child's mind I wondered could she have been Madame Hydra in disguise? In the US version a text box directs you to the current issue of Captain America for further details, in the UK version you are sent to the Avengers comic. Another change from the original was that pictures of the Black Panther and Hawkeye are blanked out presumably because the Black Panther hadn't been introduced to British readers yet. They could have left Hawkeye in, may be they thought that this story would be printed before he had made his first Avengers appearance in Avengers weekly #13

The General's predicament with the Hulk is answered by the return of the Leader, who it seemed hadn't died after using the "Ultimate Machine" way back in MWOM #27, only eight months ago on the 7th of April 1973, which seems like a life time ago, to a kid in 1974. These super-genius super-villains always have an escape plan. In this case the Leader had set up a special Humanoid android that would be activated immediately on the loss of his heart beat. In this story the gamma spawned genius admitted that the gamma radiation that he absorbed had allowed him to survive the actual heart attack in the long minutes before his Humanoid could reach him and carry him to a specially prepared "Revivor Beam", which makes some sense as in-between that issue and MWOM #28 the Hulk pondered what had happened to the Leader for a time and at no point was any of the Leader's back-up plan shown.

I guess the Leader is back for good, in those early adventures I was getting a little bored or the arch-fiend, when I see him in these stories I either think "Oh dear, the Leader again!" or "Oh yeah, the Leader again!" The Leaders plan to restrain the emerald giant is to hold him inside a plasti-thene prison. Plasti-thene is the same substance that the Leader uses for his Humanoids outer skin. So does the Hulk escape this predicament? To be Hulktinued, or at least that what it should say if not for the badly shading of the Hulk's pants in this strip. All you get to see is the word "HULK" and a "D!" at the bottom of the last panel.

The Mighty Marvel Mailbag

David Wilson from Coldstream wants to see printed the origin of Captain America and  a double page of Spider-man, I presume he means a double paged poster of the Web-slinger. He also wonders how did Don Blake's cane get to be in the cave, leading him to pick it up and become the mighty Thor. I've always assumed that the omnipotent Odin placed it there. David offers some suggestions too, a cartoon, but instead of Disney characters, Marvel ones could be used. A Marvel Team-up like Spider-man and Thor vs Doctor Doom. Cartoons, Marvel, Disney? That will never catch on, or will it? As for Marvel Team-ups with multiple characters, well who knows? John Mason Savage from Cheshire writes in to ask Marvel how the Human Torch got his power? (Didn't John read MWOM #1?) John also mentions that he and his friends are a gang called the SS, a sort of Secret Society, who I presume is a Marvel gang and not something else. Leigh Kemp RFO, KOF, FFF, TTB now gets to become a QNS (Quite 'Nuff Sayer.) after getting his letter printed. The point of his letter is to ask for Daredevil and the X-Men to be permanently added to the weeklies, although I suspect that it was to gain a QNS and brag about his other awards. Leigh how could you have a TTB, a Titanic True Believer, given to anyone who earns a No-Prize, if you hadn't had a letter printed yet with any No-Prize winning comment? A FFF is an honorary title bestowed for devotion to Marvel above and beyond the call of duty, again without a letter printed how did you receive that? Had he meet a Marvel editor in the past? Only joshing Leigh I'm sure you deserve them. Neil Huntsman from Colchester asks about the FF's and DD's origins, I guess like John Mason Savage in the aforementioned letter he too hadn't read MWOM #1 or MWOM #20 for the Human Torch and Daredevil's origins. He also asks how Iron Man's armour move's so easily? The answer is super-technology and Marvel magic.

After reading James Harrington's letter in MWOM #42, in which he asks for another Marvel mag to be published, this week Nigel Day from Morriston asks Marvel to not do it! His reason is as his Mother buys him one weekly and he spends eleven pence of his twenty five pence pocket money on the other two comics he has little left. Things are fine at the minute but you might want to ask for a pocket money rise around October this year! Simone Dean from Birmingham point out that in MWOM #52 the Hulk kills the Rhino but two weeks later in SMCW #35 the Rhino returns to battle Spider-man. The editor states that the encounter with Spider-man took place before he fought the Hulk, which is true in Marvel's main continuity but not so for British Marvel continuity. Where at that time adjustments were made to both stories to explain the Rhino's appearance in the Hulk story before he first appeared in Spider-man. The real, simple answer is that the Rhino didn't die, that is true both sides of the Atlantic. 

The Fantastic Four "The mad menace of the Mole Man!"

Writer: Stan Lee 
Artist: Jack Kirby
Inker: Chic Stone 

Originally published in The Fantastic Four #31
Cover date October 1964
(Published in July 1964)

This story, like many others starts of with some hi-jinx as an earthquake shakes the Baxter Building which sets them off on a run of the mill adventure that sees the Mole Man as responsible for the quake, with his kidnapping of whole city blocks that sink downward into the depths of the Earth. Sue reads a headline in the newspaper and decides to stay behind to think, leaving the other three to go off and investigate the disturbance. More on that mystery man next week.

The FF return to the Baxter Building to get equipment to investigate the missing city blocks to find that Sue missing, leaving them a note saying she had to go to the Police headquarters downtown. A radio report alerts them that the very same block on which the Police station was has also sunk into the ground. The Mole Man and his Moloids are holding Sue and a number of citizens hostage which sends the FF to that site. The Mole Man dispatches the FF quickly to the surface with a a powerful jet of pressurised air, to be greeted by the Avengers. The earth mightiest heroes offer to face the Mole Man but what will happen to Sue and the other hostages if they do? Find out next week.


 Another dose of double dynamite from magnificent Marvel comes in the shape of The Avengers and Spider-Man Comics Weekly. With covers and adverts like these it's no surprise that like Nigel Day from this week's Mighty Marvel Mailbag you would want to be able to afford all three mags. So with that let's take a look at the next weekly from fifty years ago as Spider-man must face "The tentacles and the trap!" and Thor walks---"where mortals fear to tread!" in this weeks Spider-man Comics Weekly.








Spider-man Comics Weekly #48


This week Spider-man Comics Weekly cover is lifted directly from the cover of the Amazing Spider-man issue 54 by John Romita Sr. The only subtle differences are the slight colour changes in Doctor Octopus's costume and tentacles. In the original edition he wears an all green costume and his tentacles are a silver colour. I much prefer the green and orange costume that has become the standard for this four limbed villain. I also love the green tinged appendages too, I don't think that Marvel US ever coloured them that way, but they should have as they look very cool and eerie. 

 Spider-man "The tentacles and the trap!"

Writer: Stan Lee 
Artist: John Romita Sr
Inker: Mike Esposito

Originally published in the Amazing Spider-man #54
Cover date November 1967
(Published in August 1967)

What a title! "The tentacles and the trap!" No where else would that title be used, no-one but Stan Lee would have thought it up, never has a bizarre title made as much sense than that one in this comic. This story starts off with what looks so innocent as a new lodger enquires about a room for rent at Aunt May's home, but once you see that the lodger is Doctor Octopus and you see the imaginary shadow cast by the villain with it's menacing tentacles the story swings into intriguing mode. They even cover the last time Aunt May and Doc Ock have meet beautifully with May's over trusting dismissal of the facts. For all you "continuity connoisseurs" take a look back at SMCW #10 for that encounter. Another thing, have you noticed that Romita draws Aunt May exactly as Steve Ditko drew her. Well if it ain't broke don't fix it.

 
As you can well imagine that after Peter gets round to visiting his Aunt to discovers who her new lodger is, things are going to kick off big style. Spider-man tries to lure the Doctor outside to battle him away from his Aunt. The villain sends his "Master Planner" henchman after the Web-slinger. Let's face it a group of henchmen won't stop Spider-man. But Doc Ock still won't come out and play. So Spidey has to come in and face him Spider. to Octopus. 


Aunt May hears the disturbance and goes up stairs to investigate. The shock of seeing Spider-man and Doctor Octopus battling in her spare room is too much for her frail heart to take and she collapses with a suspected heart attack. Doc Ock flees and Peter calls a Doctor. His verdict is that if May suffers a similar attack the results could be fatal. I do always wonder why with the number of heart attacks she has had, that she's very lucky to still be around. It must be something to do with that blood transfusion from Peter back in SMCW #2 and the special serum that she had to take to overcome the radiation from Spider-man's radioactive blood as seen in SMCW #27. She'll outlive us all. 

The Web and the Hammer

Zack Jacoisdes from London has two ambitions, one to get a letter printed and two to buy an American Spider-man comic, as he can't find them anywhere. Peter Robinson from Yorkshire buys all three British weeklies, He wants to see Peter get his own flat away from the fussing Aunt May and for Spider-man to have a partner like "Conan"???? So that Jameson wouldn't think of Spidey as a crook! Not sure how that one works. Paul Hoffman from Leigh-on-sea, seriously wants to know what happens to Sandman's lungs, heart and bones when he turns to stand. That. quite's a good question. He also wants colour pin-ups of Spidey and the FF and asks can Black Bolt talk? Every part of Sandman turns to sand apparently, well these stories are fantasy really. Black Bolt can talk but his conversation is a bit of a killer. Derek Macbod from Inverness want's to know why Spider-man had a broken arm in SMCW #39 but in the same week in the Avengers story from the Avengers weekly he doesn't?  The truth is events in the Marvel Universe don't all happen at the same time as these stories are printed. 
Martin W. Anderson from County Durham wants to see a Spider-man costume offer in the mags. Timothy Martin from Birmingham thinks it would be a great idea to have a competition for readers to design their own super-villains with the prize being a year's supply of SMCW or MWOM. Sounds like a fabulous idea, have the Marvel editors stolen Timothy's idea for next week's competition or is it all a coincidence? Amerzit Singh Bhamrg thought that it would be a nice idea to give away a free gift on the anniversary of SMCW. Martyn Beard from Oxfordshire, (There's a lot of Martin/Martyn's this week isn't there.) would pay for a large poster of Spider-man or Thor. Rosamond Clark is a girl who is interested in music but also likes to read Marvel comics. Her favourite heroes are Thor, Spider-man and the Hulk. T. Southall from Staffordshire wants the Hulk taken out of MWOM so that Daredevil and the Black Widow can replace him. They also want to see the Defenders in British weeklies, the Swordsman and Mantis in the Avengers, (Spoiler: all in good time.) and may be the X-Men as back up to the Defenders in their own comic. 

The Mighty Thor "Where mortals fear to tread!"

  
Writer: Stan Lee 
Artist: Jack Kirby
Inker: Vince Colletta

Originally published in Journey into Mystery #122
Cover date November 1965
(Published in September 1965)

The Absorbing Man boasts over defeating the mighty Thor, but his boasts are too premature as the Thunder God isn't beaten yet, so instead we get an almighty rematch between the two power houses until Loki transports the Absorbing Man to his side with an Asgardian "Attractor Beam"! Leaving a bemused Thunder God free to find Nurse Jane Foster.

Thor is quickly alerted to the cries of help from Jane Foster who is held captive by a masked abductor. Jane faints from the fumes of an explosion, quite handy that as she won't see what comes next, which is Thor changing into Doctor Don Blake. The transformation from God to man is captured by the camera of the masked man who turns out to be reporter Harris Hobbs! (Last seen in SMCW #33.) Who has arranged for Jane's peaceful abduction so that he could get an exclusive on Thor, which by the look of things has worked really well. 

Meanwhile, I love that word, it's the perfect linking device, Loki has brought the Absorbing Man to Asgard to help him overthrow Asgard, to which he agrees after being told that he can share dominion over the universe. They attack the throne room after defeating the palace guards, wherein the Absorbing Man is hopelessly repelled by a guard with an Asgardian mace 'causing him to absorb the properties of the weapon, transforming him into a living mace. What we end up this week is some cracking battle scenes from Jack Kirby that look great, none more so than this final page showing us Crusher Creel, the living mace! How cool is that!!? Can't wait for next week. 

The back page in Spider-man Comics Weekly offers up "Big changes" with Daredevil returning by popular demand to the pages of the Mighty World of Marvel. Yeah as we've seen we do get the glossy covers and an increase in page count up to 36 pages in both SMCW and MWOM this week, Daredevil is nowhere to be seen. OK technically the advert only suggests that big changes are on the way. The lower cover might be meant that before Daredevil returns you can still buy this week's issue, still "Now on sale". And also "Don't miss this week's Avengers". So we best not. Without further ado...







The Avengers #17


It's another original US comic cover slightly re-coloured for this week's Avengers. Created by Jack Kirby with inks added to it by Wally Wood, originally from Avengers #20. It's dramatic as it tells the story of what's to be found within, which is fine so let's find out how it went.


But before that there's a "Spot-the-difference" competition on the inside cover of this week's Avengers weekly. It's not run by British marvel but by Scalecraft by way of an advert. The first prize, worth £50 is a portable tape recorder and the ten top cassettes of your choice. While 100 lucky runner ups will win a Scalecraft snap-together kit. You could have a Messerschmitt ME109 plane, a model Jeep or a Mustang P51 model plane. Simply circle as many differences you can spot in picture B from picture A, then write in no more than ten words why you like Scalecraft kits. Send all that away with a cut out of "Scalecraft" from one of their kits, if you're a Scalecraft member you wouldn't need to do that as entry is free to you. Good luck, oh wait a minute, the closing date is the 8th of February 1974. I guess we're a bit late then. 

The Avengers "Vengeance is ours!"

Writer: Stan Lee
Artist: Don Heck
Inker: Dick Ayers

Originally published in The Avengers #20
Cover date September 1965
(Published in July 1965)

A quick re-cap from last week's issue, the Swordsman wants to join the Avengers so that he can get up to lots of bad things while pretending to be a good guy, but the Avengers soon see him for what he is, a crook wanted in a dozen countries. His next move is to force them into excepting his membership by capturing their leader Captain America. He lays out his demands with the good Captain tided up on top of a construction site. Just then Cap falls, or was he pushed? He in fact jumps believing that his group of young Avengers would have the skill to save him, which they do. 

Believing they have surrounded the Swordsman the want-to-be Avenger vanishes right in front of their eyes. Only to reappear in front of the Iron Man villain the Mandarin. In truth for British readers he has appeared against the Hulk more at this time than Iron Man. So until we get to see those Iron Man strips coming soon to Spider-man Comics Weekly we'll have to accept his desire to destroy the Avengers and Iron Man at face value. Over come by the Mandarin's greater powers the Swordsman agrees to follow the Mandarin's plan to defeat the Avengers. The first part is to send a holographic message from Iron Man to the Avengers to accept the Swordsman as a new member. With Iron Man vouching for him the Swordsman soon becomes a member. After a probationary period the Swordsman is accepted but the Mandarin demands he plant a device inside the Avengers mansion. Finding out that the device is a bomb the Swordsman changes his mind and tries to remove it but he's caught doing so which makes it look like he's doing the opposite. While escaping he manages to remove himself and the bomb which he detonates safely, regretting having botched his chance of joining a team of noble heroes. Will that feeling last? Who knows, only time will tell.

It's mail opening time

Oh goodness, I wish they would stick to a title for the Avengers mailbag. It really busts my chops how many they've had. But anyway let's get on with it, first up Robert Brindley from Winksfield, loves the Avengers and would love to live in a world where they and Captain America exist. Adrain Hooper from Norfolk wonders why Captain America says that an alien who can turn people into stone from the Avengers weekly #1 must have looked like a woman similar to the legend of the Medusa. I guess Adrain mustn't know of the Greeks legend. Kevin Bowman from Chester what's to know why if the Avengers is a British mag why don't they have Captain Britain instead of Captain America? Give them time. John Redford from Somerset loves the Avengers but also is a massive fan of the Sub-Mariner, John loves swimming too, he even has his own skin-diving suit and oxygen gear. 

Leonard Bullham Northants never really believed that British Marvel would bring out a comic featuring the Avengers but he's so glad they did as he's a Marvel fan for many years with a large collection of US Marvels. Harry Withers from Yorkshire thinks that even though Marvel editors stated that Giant Man was the maximum size to reach his maximum strength, there may also be a reason for his strength. As Ant Man he shares an affinity with ants who for their size are one of the most strongest living creatures, therefore that is also why Giant Man has incredible strength. I'm not buying that. I still think it's just a size to strength ratio really. Ralph Skelton from Chesterfield can't believe that more readers aren't fans of Doctor Strange as he's one of his favourite characters. One thing that does bother him is after reading a book on magic by Dennis Wheatley, in which it states that Black Magic is an evil kind of magic and that white magic is a good form of magic.  So does that make Doctor Strange, the Master of Black Magic a "goodie" or a "baddie"? Sidney Smith from Devon wonders is it true that Stan Lee gives lectures on Marvel Super-heroes to American colleges? If so would he be interested in performing them for British schools? Finally for this week, Gary Reeves from Ryton-on-Tyne has been a regular reader of MWOM since the first issue, only missing two issues when his newsagents had sold out. He's not making the same mistake with the Avengers, he gets it delivered to his home every week. His Dad pays for it when he pays the newsagent for his daily news paper bill, he doesn't even mind. Well you wouldn't as reading Marvel comics like The Avengers is a great form of education.

Doctor Strange "Beware...Tiboro! The Tyrant of the Sixth Dimension!"

Writer: Don Rico 
Artist: Steve Ditko
Inker: Steve Ditko 

Originally published in Strange Tales #129
Cover date February 1965
(Published in November 1964)

Don Rico used to work for Marvel's forerunners Timely Comics and Atlas Comics as an editor and writer, his most noticeable contribution to the Marvel Universe was the co-creator of Natasha Romanova also known as the Black Widow, with plotter Stan Lee and artist Don Heck. This story is another footnote in his Marvel career, all be it quite a good one. Doctor Strange is dismissed as a Black Magic expert fraud when he refuses to appear on a TV programme called "The twelve hour" Instead three "experts" panelists appear on the show and talk about a Pagen Idol named the "Screaming Idol" found by Professor Schuyler, one of the panelists, on a trip to Peru. The three panelists and a technician mysteriously disappear during the recording of the program. Doctor Strange is asked to investigated. Discovering that the Idol is a passage way to another realm, Strange asks his mentor what he knows of the idol. The Ancient One identifies the idol as an effigy of Tiboro, who used to rule in ancient times. 

Doctor Strange travels into Tiboro's realm where he finds the hostages and the evil sorcerer. Strange battles the powerful tyrant in hand to hand combat, then later magical combat. The odds are in Tiboro's favour until Strange calls upon an illusion spell that gives him time to cast a spell of paralysis on Tiboro's wand, causing him to admit defeat and release his hostages. After placing a spell of forgetfulness on the four Doctor Strange returns them to the TV studio seconds after they have been kidnapped. Tiboro vows revenge on the Earth sorcerer. He'll return in another great Doctor Strange tale like this in the future. Keep reading the Avengers weekly or this blog and we'll get to it. 


The back page features this in-house advert that had already been seen in last week's MWOM and SMCW, announcing upcoming "Big Changes" from Marvel,  We've had the glossy full colour covers and the page increase this week, but we'll have to wait two more weeks for the introduction of Iron Man in his own strip and the return of Daredevil to the Mighty World of Marvel. So stick with the Power of the Beesting and we'll rediscover how Marvelous it was to be a reader of British Marvel mags in 1974. 
So until next time...

See you in seven.

Make Mine Marvel.

4 comments:

  1. Happy new year, Mr. Wilson. I'm looking forward to another year of re-living the days of Marvel UK blowing my mind once a week.
    I remember this particular week well, when they established a uniform look to all comics that made them all seem classier than the average British "comic paper" and the glossy covers certainly made the colours "pop" while also giving more protection to the pulp pages within. Great days!

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  2. I have a feeling that I remember the winning character for that TV quiz, I am reasonably certain that I entered a character myself too.

    As to CoTW, has to be SMCW although you are quite correct in stating that the MWoM cover was superior to that of Hulk 115.

    And Spider-Man and Conan as an ideal team-up!?

    Last but not least, was it really such a good idea to recommend The Devil Rides Out to young readers!?

    Until next time...

    See you in seven.

    Make Mine Marvel!

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    Replies
    1. Mark I'll make close attention to the winners and entrants in that one when they print them. What was your character called? As for "The Devil Rides Out" recommendation, I know what you mean, although I imagine that it might have gone over the heads of very young readers. I have to say I was way too young for the novel at that time, but it is now one of my favourite Hammer films. A classic.

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  3. IF my Swiss cheese memory serves and IF is a doing a lot of heavy-lifting here, I think the winning character was called Blitzkrieg with animal/shape-shifting powers....as to my character, I have no recollection of the name although as I vaguely recall it had vortex/whirlwind style powers.

    As to TDRO, it's a great film one of my absolute Hammer favourites and the book (as I have read a lot of Wheatley - wherever did I get that from?!) is even better, give it a whirl sometime!

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