Sunday, 31 December 2023

The coming of...a magnificent New Year!

Week Ending 5th January 1974




1973 has been quite a successful year for British Marvel Comics with three successful titles cementing Marvel super-heroes becoming play ground names with many kids getting the Fleetway Marvel Annual 1974 as a great present under the Christmas tree, creating more fans who will lap up the adventures of the Hulk, the Fantastic Four, Spider-man, the mighty Thor, the Avengers or Doctor Strange. With big changes and loads to look forward too around the corner the new year looks an exciting time to be a Marvel fan.  

The Mighty World of Marvel #66



This week's MWOM uses the cover from the Incredible Hulk #114 by Herb Trimpe and Dan Adkins supplying  the finishing inks, with certain adjustments made for the British version. First obvious adjustment is the Sandman's costume colour change, which has been christened by some the "Christmas decoration" version. A little harsh but still topical and funny. May be they thought that there was too much green already on the cover. The Sandman is lowered on the British version, possibly so that he wouldn't cover up the comic title, although it was big on the US version. The platform and story title are removed to create more space. Betty Ross is also removed. Did the UK editors think that girls on boys comics wouldn't sell on British newsstands?

The Incredible Hulk "At last I will have my revenge!"

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

Originally published in The Incredible Hulk #114
Cover date April 1969
(Published in January 1969)

I've been quite kind when giving my opinion on Herb Trimpe's artwork, although many in future UK letter pages point out that his pencil has started to get blunter and his fine lines have been getting thicker. I think this point in his career has started to show that flaw, although I'd always believe it to be a style choice rather than an art tools issue, he still creates beautiful panel angles with fantastic use of their positioning to fill a page. My major gripe about the Hulk stories originally from the late 60's and early 70's was the constant use of a big villain or giant monster of the week for the Hulk to battle without any rhyme, reason or plot. That fault may well lay with Stan Lee's plotting and writing, but the showman always gives what the readers wanted.

Yeah, I guess that was what readers wanted, more big battles. I guess I was more of an intelligent plotted story reader, or at least I thought so, than a "bonkers battle" reader, that's why I liked Spider-man more than the Hulk. As I got older I really got the charm of these old Hulk stories and lived my second childhood. This week's plot sees the Mandarin want revenge of the Hulk so while viewing the Hulk encounter with the Sandman he decides to form an alliance with the villain.
Betty Ross has started to become more involved in these stories, after a little while on the sidelines. She seems to have grown up some, becoming a 60's child with miniskirt and 60's hairdo, it's quite a change from her previous appearance. Betty feels quite odd in the Hulk stories as the only woman to make regular appearances. I don't think Herb Trimpe is very good or interested in drawing women.

What Trimpe is really good at drawing is big battles and spectacular looking monsters, so for that his absolutely great on the Hulk strip. Sandman, a Spider-man and sometimes Fantastic Four villain, always felt a little shoehorned into the Hulk strip, but really he works well and matches the power of the Hulk in a fighting sense. The Hulk is still more than a match for the Mandarin and the Sandman as you can well expect. The Sandman's fate is imaginative,  With the conclusion of this week's action as the Mandarin's plans fail as the Hulk overcomes them both so he sacrifices the Sandman by allowing him to fall into a vat of boiling chemicals while he makes his escape. The result is Flint Marko's sand molecules are changed into glass. The image and idea are fantastic and well worth the price of the comic alone.


The Mighty World of Marvel has a full page listing the big changes coming to British Marvel soon in the new year. But more on that later.







The mighty Marvel mailbag

P.J. Swindells writes to ask what has happened to Daredevil? Well the editor reply brings good news but again more on that later. Dr. Stephen (Doug) Strange, possibly a made up name, has collected Marvel comics since 1966 but stopped in 1968 when he believed he was too old to read comics. But since British Marvel released MWOM followed by SMCW and the Avengers he's gotten back on the reading horse, enjoying the very best of Jack Kirby. Martin Delk from Yorkshire, another DD fan who must be excited at the news I'll go through later. The next letter is from the father of the gods, the omnipotent Zeus, from mount Olympus in Greece, who is angered that his son hasn't had more appearances than the "green skinned answer to Joe Frazier." To be honest I'm not sure this letter is from a Greek God and could be another made up name. 

Soon to be regular letter writer Jim Ivers from Dublin writes a letter of length about the decrease in the page count for MWOM and SMCW and the drop in paper quality. He's noticed cuts in the Hulk story but doesn't want to see the letter page length cut. Jim suggests that if the British comics are 32 pages 20 pages could be used for one story while the rest used for pin-ups, letter pages and ads. Another solution would be to have the MWOM return to having 40 pages. He would like to have a readers survey to find out who their favourite characters are and would an increase in price be acceptable if it meant an increase in page count. Jonathan Priddey  from Walsall cannot figure out why Mister Fantastic doesn't snap. Dave Cox from Stroud is a new reader but thinks it would be a good idea to have two pages of swap shop. Alex Price of West Lothian who thinks that taking Daredevil out of MWOM was a good idea. Guess he might not be happy at the up coming news. But as they say you can't please everyone all the time. 

The Fantastic Four "The final victory of Dr. Doom!"

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

Originally published in The Fantastic Four Annual #2
Cover date September 1964
(Published in July1964)

At last British Marvel uses the original title for this story as part three's closing title on this catch up page. Reed breaks Doom's hypnotic spell over the Human Torch and the Thing allowing the battle is carried over to the Baxter Building where the evil Doctor Doom makes his last attempt at destroying the Fantastic Four. 

Mister Fantastic challenges Doom to a final confrontation with a battle of minds. Reed offers the Doctor a toast of a drink before they use Richard's powerful Encephalo-Gun. Encephalo from the Greek meaning "combining form related to the brain". It's a lovely bit of Kirby tech that is used as a simple metaphor to arrange a battle of minds. Little by little the super villain sees panic fill the face of his opponent until Mister Fantastic very form grows dimmer and dimmer, eventually it completely fades from sight. With victory over his ex-university colleague Doctor Doom leaves the Fantastic Four as he has no further interest in any of them at takes his leave. Sue, Ben and Johnny are stunned that Doom walks away as Reed leans against a wall and allows him too. Reed explains that he had given Doom the same berry drink that Doom had given Sue, Ben and Johnny, allowing the mind with the stronger mentality to create an illusion of victory over the weaker mind. One in which Doom had defeated Richards. Over the last three weeks, this FF story had seemed to have been rushed Understandable as it was originally the last story in an annual which would have tighten up the deadlines for the writer and artist as they completed their regular work. I know how that feels. So I can forgive some of the poor artwork,  but in all honesty it's been quite an enjoyable read with some nice ideas. 


The back page from this issue features the double dynamite of advert for British Marvel's other two weeklies. Exciting covers that would make any young Marvelite want to spend their pennies on these hits. So with that let's get on with looking over their contents.










Spider-man Comics Weekly #47


Another cover that uses the original cover of this weeklies headline strip. From John Romita Sr Doc Ock tackles the amazing Spider-man. Much is the same apart from the colour of Doctor Octopus's tentacles, grey in the US version and green in the UK version. Mike Esposito is said to have inked it. If you're interested I'm going to make this my cover of the week.

Spider-man "Enter: Dr. Octopus"

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

Originally published in the Amazing Spider-man #53
Cover date October 1967
(Published in July1967)

Like many of the stories in early British Marvel I wouldn't read fully until later in my collecting life, unless I peaked at them if my brother had bought them at the time. "Enter: Dr. Octopus" was one story that I read much later. Well over ten years later in fact, in the pages of the incredible iconic Marvel UK monthly The Daredevils issue 3, from March 1983. I was in my teenage years then and this was the most grown up comic that I bought. It had Alan Moore's and Alan Davis's Captain Britain, Roger McKenzie's and Frank Miller's Daredevil, articles by Alan Moore and tucked away at the back was a Stan Lee and John Romita Sr Spider-man story from the 60's (which had come over from the cancelled Spider-man Pocket Book,)  that pulled its weight and wasn't afraid to rub shoulders with these new kids. Yeah it's run in the monthly wouldn't last long, in truth the magazine wouldn't too, more is the pity, as this comic even with its strange mix was absolutely amazing. 

British Marvel comics from the 70's were pretty darn well cool too. That why inspired by what my brother was reading and becoming a serious collector in the late 70's and early 80's I made it my mission to collect all those early British Marvels and I'm so glad I did because I got to read this gem again. Peter Parker is really becoming a more mature character, with a growing cast like Gwen Stacy who is really becoming attached to our hero. Harry and Flash do sometimes fall into the old rolls of bullies but only so that Gwen can show how much she feels for Peter.   
  

Before I said that Herb Trimpe can't or possibly doesn't want to draw girls, John Romita Sr can and really does want to draw them. He can draw them in any decade from the 60's and 70's to 80's, capturing the feminine look to a tee. It's no wonder Peter falls for Ms Stacy I think as a kid, or a teenager, or as a middle aging man she's always caught my eye. It might be worth noticing that she and Peter might have caught Professor Warren's eye here too, but in a different way, that will play out in later stories.

Professor Warren has invited Peter to a science exposition. The Professor tells Peter that he can also take a guest, so in turn he invites Gwen to come along too. Was this the Professor's intention all along? One uninvited guest at the expo was Doctor Octopus who had escaped a watery death in his last encounter with the web-slinger. As much as Romita can draw the girls he's also a master of action scenes. Just look at the panel to the right as Octavius disposes of the guards to steel the new US missile defence weapon called the Nullifer which is being displayed at the science expo.

In the confusion Peter slips out and changes into our webbed hero to confront his arch-enemy. It's nice to see that Gwen is more concerned about Peter than the danger that is going on around her. And she doesn't connect Peter's quick exit with Spidey's dynamic entrance. Some might say a little "hair-brained", but don't you colour my Gwen in any bad light, she's just showing how much she really loves Peter, alright! Doc Ock does escape but thanks to Spider-man's intervention, without the Nullifier. He does slip away with a gift of a Spider-tracer instead.


Peter returns making up an excuse that he was looking for a camera, into the welcoming arms of Gwen. I think it's safe to say that she wants Peter and herself to become an item. With her being the only girl to never ask for an explanation whenever he rushes of to change into his webbed red and blue long johns Gwen makes perfect girlfriend material. That and she's crazily beautiful too helps.


Doc Ock finds the little Spider-tracer so the fiend sets up a trap for our webbed hero. A dummy of himself in a dark room sitting at a control panel, with the Spider-tracer luring Spidey into the Doctor's devious booby-trapped explosive panel. Betting on the sheer simplicity of his trap that will make it virtually escape proof the Doctor leaves to find somewhere to set up again and plan his next move.
Of course this doesn't fool Spidey or his Spider-sense and he trigger the explosion with a web ball, but where will Doc Ock turn up next? It could be somewhere that Peter won't be happy with. A lot of the early Spider-man stories were more Ditko's work than Lee's, whereas Romita Sr and Lee is possibly more of a partnership with both sharing the plot ideas, Romita smashing the page layout and artwork, all wrapped up with Lee's scripts on top form.


 A Marvel Masterwork Pin-up that features the invisible Iron Man, coming soon to Spider-man Comics Weekly. News on that very, very soon. This artwork is by Jack Kirby.











Another double dynamite from the Magnificent Marvel! This in-house advert is presented on the inside black and white pages, page twenty one to be precise. That nicely leaves the colour back page for something a bit more special.













The Web and the Hammer

Stephen Rounds from Bilston wants to congratulate Marvel on how good Spider-man Comics Weekly issues 38 and 39 were. He adds that Peter Parker seems to have gotten into the same "muddle" with girls as he did before, stating that in college it was Betty Brant and Liz Allen, now it's Mary Jane and Gwen Stacy. The current "muddle" is a really nice "muddle" to be in. Thomas Holloway from London Derry who wants to swap some items with other comic fans. Thomas isn't there a swap shop page for that sort of thing. Paul Brookes from Manchester thinks that Thor deserves a bigger spot than he is currently getting. Sula Jacovicks from London got her older brother to write this letter to say that she is an eight year old girl who draws Marvel pictures and  wants to read comics when she grows older. I suspect he was meant to write in the letter that she wants to write or draw comics when she is older, as she asks how Marvel staff started their comics and where they get their ideas from? Quentin Bradford from Middlesex who wants to see loads of interesting clashes with various heroes and villains. He recently  purchased Marvel Annual 1974 and would highly recommend it. He's not wrong there.

Mark Hampson F.F.F.M, what ever that means, asks a few questions, 1) who is stronger Spidey or Captain America? 2) When will DD be back? 3) In The Avengers #7 John Gleeson asked why don't they bring out a British hero? Mark also would like to know that too. 4) How does the Wasp fly? 5) How does Spidey grip through his Spider-suit? 6) When is he going to receive FOOM #3? Well because it's Christmas I'll try to answer them, 1) Spider-man does, 2) Some time in January, more on that later, 3) It's a great idea, wait till you see the Black Knight and Captain Britain in a couple of years time. 4) With her tiny wings. 5) through the super thin material, it's no problem. 6) The editor says by the time you get to read this letter, but honestly I wouldn't have a clue. Donald Barwick R.F.O. wants to build up a larger collection of American Marvel comics, but he does buy the three British weeklies every week and asks does this make him qualify for a R.F.O. award? In Britain it does so he gets to add Real Frantic One after his name.

The mighty Thor "The final battle!"

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

Originally published in Journey into Mystery #121
Cover date October 1965
(Published in August 1965)

Another great use of the cover from the original US comic that this story appeared in, as an opening splash page for this week's second-half. Although new text boxes are added to fill the reader in on what happened last week, there are no creator credits. The image ties in very nicely, continuity wise, with Thor's continued battle against the Absorbing Man. Panels after panels of battling titans. 

Yeah it's a great action story but there is one part of this tales sub plot that intrigues me though. Nurse Jane Foster's situation where a mysterious hooded man keeps her in an apartment and asks her to stay away from the windows. Even though I've read this story before and the following Thor tales in SMCW I can't for the life of me think who that turns out to be. Jane says his voice sounds vaguely familiar but that doesn't help me. Why would the man need to keep his identity a secret? Maybe he's just a weirdo! I guess I'll have to keep reading to find out next week.


Big changes from Marvel coming in January 1974. New from the Mighty World of Marvel the return of Daredevil. OK he isn't exactly new to that comic but that's how the advert is pushing it. While in Spider-man Comics Weekly issue 50 joining Spider-man and Thor comes the power of Iron Man. As well as having three 'big" stories each magazine gets an increase in page count up to 36 pages and new glossy full colour covers just like the Avengers.
Some people will love the changes, especially the return of DD and the the introduction of Iron Man in his own strip but some will lament the end of the matt newsprint covers. You can't please everyone all the time. Even 2000AD went on to have glossy covers. The newsprint covers would return, especially in Dez Skinn's Marvel revolution era. Some readers would hate them too, but soon the glossy cover would come back as standard. For me, when I think of British Marvel weeklies I think of three (or four strips,) and glossy covers. Each to their own. Either way we've got them for quite a bit.

The Avengers #16


The original cover the Avengers #19 by Jack Kirby is said to be by many a classic. I can't say I was a big fan of it, much preferring this cover created especially by Ron Wilson and Klaus Janson. It does show that the Swordsman is no push over. Not as good as this weeks Spider-man Comics Weekly cover though. 

The Avengers "The coming of...the Swordsman!"

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

Originally published in The Avengers #19
Cover date August 1965
(Published in June 1965)

I got some feed back from some people not enjoying last week's Avengers tale, I can't be sure they won't like this tale either. Although personally I do think it's an improvement. Stan and Don introduce a new villain, one of which matches the power levels of the new Avengers. Playing withe the popularity of Hawkeye instead of a bow and arrow hero we get a sword swinging villain. I guess that either or both Stan and Don liked Errol Finn films.

The Swordsman believes that an Avengers I.D. card would allow him to get anywhere and away with anything, so he's off to join the assemblers as his ego believes that "those costumed do-gooders would be fools to reject his membership". He breaks into the Avengers mansion and confronts Cap, Quicksilver and the Scarlet Witch. Putting up a reasonable show the Scarlet Witch downs him with a Hex bolt. After Cap checks the Swordsman credentials with European law agencies  they fine out that he is dangerous and wanted in a dozen countries. He escapes before Hawkeye enters. After hearing the name Swordsman Hawkeye recalls his own origin and how the Swordsman had taught him to use the bow and arrow in a circus. The archer also recalled how the Swordsman had stolen from the circus paymaster and had tied to kill his young apprentice when he had confronted him, leaving him for dead.

Remember that letter from Captain America to Nick Fury, asking for a job last issue? Well it got to Fury's office but a group of Hydra agents stole it, thinking it was worth something. Finding it worthless to them, they discarded it. The letter finds its way down the criminal underworld and into the hands of the Swordsman. Replying to it as Nick Fury, Cap is offered a job with the SHIELD, all part of a plan to trap Captain America and force him to grant the Swordsman Avengers membership. Hawkeye stops some criminals who tell him of the Swordsman's plan. The trap works and Cap is captured. It's a vast improvement on last week's adventure, but can the three new Avengers save their leader? Find out next week. 

Avengers Assemble

Edwin Clarke R.F.O. Rotherham unlike me thinks that Doctor Strange battling Baron Mordo is fantastic, I'm getting a little bored of it. David Sharrock from Lancashire who wants to give the Marvel editor some positivity even if other letter writers seem not too, he believes that their comments aren't meant to be overly negative. Frank Lythgoe from Wigan says it's about time his letter was printed as he has written in five times before. How does he know it's going to get printed? He's eagerly awaiting the time when the Defenders meet the Avengers. Well Frank you're going to have to wait nearly four years to see that in British Marvels. Jimmy Kavangh from Kildare reads the Mighty World of Marvel and the Avengers every week, he's prepared to pay more money for more pages and a longer Doctor Strange strip every week. 

I have to say I really like the Iron Man image in the centre of the letter page, it looks really cool. Trever Pickering from Birmingham thinks that the Avengers weekly is brilliant and would like to see another weekly with Daredevil and the X-Men in it. Cameron Smith from Norfolk wants the Silver Surfer in the pages of the Avengers as well as Doctor Strange. Billy Montgomery wants to know if Marvel are producing models of their super-heroes. David Holmes also from Birmingham suggests that they put adverts on the back of the Marvel Masterwork Pin-ups so that when cut out it doesn't spoil the great stories. Stephen Hankinson from Lancashire wants to know why the Melter nearly destroyed Iron Man's armour even though it's made from secretly tempered and hardened lightweight steal? Russell Thompson from Warrington has a few complaints, first up Doctor Strange isn't long enough and he's always facing the same villains. Finally Alex Casey from Staffordshire wonders why Captain America has a shield? Can't he dodge laser beams like all the other Avengers can? Cap without a shield, that doesn't bear thinking about!

Doctor Strange "The Demon's disciple!"

Writer: Stan Lee 
Artist: Steve Ditko
Inker: George Roussos 

Originally published in Strange Tales #128
Cover date January 1965
(Published in October 1964)

In this week's mystic tale Doctor Strange is visited by a disciple who tries to warn the Doctor of his master known as the Demon, just before the man disappears. Tracking the Demon to his lair, Strange is trapped by the Demon who uses a spell that casts the Crimson Bands of Cyttorak. Unable to free himself the Doctor sends his spirit self to learn a way to free himself. 


It's a fairly tame Doctor Strange story but Ditko makes good use of his new Amulet and cloak of levitation to defeat the evil mystic in combat. Ending with Strange casting a spell that makes the Demon renounce the mystic arts for the purposes of evil. I kind of like these quick reads, it fills the page count and wraps up the mag nicely. 


Speaking of a nice treat another Marvel Masterwork Pin-up from Jack Kirby, or was it John Romits Sr? As a new year competition, with absolutely no prize but a Power of the Beesting No-Prize can anyone identify the artist and where this artwork was originally from?

The Avengers glossy full colour back page is fittingly used as an in-house advert for the big changes to the Mighty World of Marvel and Spider-man Comics Weekly in the new year, showing how good those covers might look in spectacular glossy colour. This version makes great use of the Daredevil and Spider-man images painted by Spanish artist Rafael López Espí. Wow, wouldn't they make great pin-up posters? Maybe in the future, who knows? The only way to find out is to either flick through you're British Marvel collection or stick with the Power of the Beesting each week as we continue our nostalgic trip back in time when life was easier and comics where brilliant! 
All to be continued... next year!

Have a Happy New Year!

Have fun, stay safe and I'll....

See you in seven.

Make Mine Marvel.

Tuesday, 26 December 2023

A merry Marvel-ous Christmas- The Marvel Annual 1974

Marvel Annual 1974


Merry Christmas to all Friends of the Power of the Beesting. As a special Christmas present to you all in between eating mince pies and turkey left overs I present a special look back what was in many Marvelites Christmas stocking 50 years ago this Christmas. It wasn't in mine but happily enough it was in my older brother Andrew's pile of gifts from Father Christmas.  I sneaked looks at it every chance I could, so much so that years later Andrew would generously re-gift it to me. It was probably the greatest gift I could ever receive, as it started me on the path of loving Marvel comics, which would lead on my passion for other comics. So let's look at why it's burnt into my childhood memories.


At the price of 70 pence for 128 pages even by 1973 prices that feels like a bargain. Fleetway was a branch of IPC Magazines (International Publishing Company,) and would regularly produce licensed annuals. In 1972 and 1973 they had a licence for publishing annuals using Marvel characters. Longterm POTB readers may remember the Marvel Annual 1973, published in autumn 1972. Well its Christmas 1973 and Fleetway produced the Marvel Annual 1974 and here is its story. 
The first attractive thing about this annual is the eye-catching cover by Geoff Campion. Campion started out as a tax inspector but soon got bored and changed career to become an artist drawing strips for Knock-Out and later became a steadfast artist on many Fleetway productions, most notably in the 60s when his work became the house style for AP/Fleetway with his work on Lion, drawing Captain Condor, Typhoon Tracy and The Spellbinder, in Valiant, drawing Captain Hurricane. When the 1970s came he worked on Battle Picture Weekly, drawing D-Day Dawson, The Eagle, Fighter from the Sky, Sergeant Without Stripes and Action Force. Campion's version of Spider-man makes a hard hitting image, especially on the thugs jaw, which as a child I imagined the gun-man deserved it. I also thought that in the background you could see the Post Office Tower (now called the BT Tower,) so was the scene from London not New York?


I love the inside cover art of the Silver Surfer by John Buscema, the Thing by John Buscema and Frank Giacoia from the Fantastic Four #112 and Daredevil by Jack Kirby and Bill Everett from the cover of Daredevil #1

Spider-man "On the wings of death!"

Writer: Stan Lee
Artist: John Romita Sr
Inker: Sal Buscema

Originally published in the Amazing Spider-man #94
Cover date January 1971
(Published in March 1971)

This Spider-man adventure would see print in Spider-man Comics Weekly #125 on the week ending 5th July 1975. This was my first ever Spider-man adventure and it would see Peter Parker at one of his lowest points as he has to deal with the fact that Gwen has left him for London. It give Peter a chance to look back at his life and how he became Spider-man. Looking back at it, this story was a great jumping on point. Even though I was too young to understand many of the emotions Peter went through in this story Romita's artwork and Lee's writing did give me a sense of this being a grown up story.

John Romita Sr may not have been the original creator of Spider-man, that goes to Lee and Ditko, but to me he was the artist I think of when I think of Spider-man, his ultimate artist. Just look at the panel to the right, Romita only created the Rhino and the Kingpin in that image but his version of the other villains, the Vulture, Doctor Octopus, the Beetle, the Lizard, Sandman and the Green Goblin are the definitive versions. This strip is probably the best ever Spider-Man strip, all thanks to John Romita's art, beautifully enhanced by Sal Buscema's inks. Spider-man heaven!

Daredevil "The origin of Daredevil"


Writer: Stan Lee
Artist: Bill Everett 
Inker: Bill Everett, Steve Ditko and Sol Brodsky

Originally printed in Daredevil #1 
Cover date April 1964
(Published February 1964)

I've already reviewed this origin story from MWOM #20 and MWOM #21 but for those of you who haven't read those blogs let me tell you this story is probably the best Daredevil story ever! OK that might be a hard sell to Frank Miller fans I get that, but Miller's work is practically a homage to this style of story that Lee and Everett got so right in 1964. There never is any doubt that a blind man can be a super-hero, this story is packed with a fully formed secret identity with Matt Murdock, the story of how he got his powers, his reason for becoming a super-hero vigilante and his first adventure all neatly wrapped up in 22 pages! Now that's a great Christmas present.

"The Star Raiders"


Writer: Stan Lee
Artist: Steve Ditko 
Inker: Steve Ditko

Originally printed in Tales to Astonish #37 
Cover date November 1962
(Published August 1962)

I love this sci-fi short story from Stan Lee and Steve Ditko, at 25 panels over three pages, one of them being an opening splash page, Lee and Ditko really know how to cram in the action with this size twisted future tale. If I'm being honest it was probably Ditko doing all the hard work but still this one's perfect. A little cracker. Also truthfully this story was cut down from five pages to three, probably by the UK annual editor, cutting and pasting more panels per page than the artist originally intended. A technique used to get more story to every page, as seen in Dez Skinn's Marvel UK period from the late 70's. I have to say with this story it really does work. 

Giant-Man and the Wasp "When Attuma strikes!"


Writer: Leon Lazarus
Artist: Carl Burgos 
Inker: Paul Reinman

Originally printed in Tales to Astonish #37 
Cover date April 1965
(Published February 1965)

Although un-credited Leon Lazarus was the writer of this story, virtually an unknown to many comic fans, his name sometimes considered a pseudonym on the rare occasions it appeared in the credits, Lazarus had been an editor and writer for some time with the pre-Marvel Timely and Atlas Comics. Carl Burgos is most well known for creating the original Human Torch, first seen in Marvel Comics #1. As much as "The Star Raiders" had captured my imagination with its strong sci-fi elements this story made me sit up and pay attention with the opening panel featuring a giant ant! The artwork is really imaginative, although I'm not completely happy with Attuma's look, but that's a minor gripe. 

The story starts with Giant-Man working on a new experiment with help from Janet Van Dyne, but an accidental dropping of a test tube causes an argument between Henry and Janet ending in Janet leaving to take a break and a solo holiday. The mix of sci-fi and soap was something that I didn't expect but non the less it was a refreshing change. The Wasps flight takes her near Attuma's monstrous octopus-like undersea ship, hidden under a fake island that releases a flurry of bubbles with the power to capture the jumbo jet like a butterfly in a net. The passengers are taken hostage while Van Dyne releases a messenger flying ant to relay her predicament to Giant-Man.

I love the way Giant-Man leaps into action with  his fighting technique when confronting Attuma's forces. The sudden changing of height from Ant-Man to Giant-Man and back, while throwing punches and karate chopping strange devises is brilliant. Ant-man and Giant-Man stories might not fill the average comic fan with joy but this tale is really cool and possibly the best non-Avengers story to feature Giant-Man and the Wasp. It was something different than what I've ever seen before. 





Giant-Man A Special Feature.

"All you want to know" and all you need to know about Giant-Man. I kind of wanted a special feature on  Spider-man in this annual, but over time I would get endless features on the web-slinger. After reading and reading this feature on the big G-Man over the ages it became more interesting.

The Giant-Man story and this feature are the only pages to use black and white with red tones, making them feel more special than the rest. That presentation really worked on my childhood memories as it forms an everlasting memory. I always looked out for the three strips on the side of Giant-Man's mask, as a child I was fascinated when I read it was a "ingenious cybernetic nerve centre" and the the antennae were also important and not just for show as a left over from Henry Pym's old Ant-Man identity. 
I never really thought of heroes constantly training and honing their skills to remain fighting fit. The Avengers would do that and so would the X-Men in their danger room but when I was young I always remembered Giant-Man doing it first in this feature. Giant-man's astonishing headquarters with it's incredible "sky hooks", gym and labs was also a revelation, in my mind it came before the Fantastic Four's Baxter Building, which of course it didn't, but reading this annual before any other Marvel comic made me think it did. 

Spider-man "And then came Electro!"

Writer: Stan Lee
Artist: John Romita Sr
Inker: Jim Mooney

Originally published in the Amazing Spider-man #82
Cover date March 1970
(Published in December 1969)

Spider-man Comics Weekly readers would have to wait till the 18th of January 1975 to see this story published in issue 101. With over a years worth of comics to read, this story won't disappoint those readers when they read it again, unlike some of the Spider-man adventures in last years annual where some stories were fresh or would soon be printed in the weekly comic.
This second Spider-man story appeared 12 months before the first web-slinger tale shown in this annual "On wings of death!" Peter was in a steady relationship with Gwen but Aunt May's health issues have become a point of worry for Peter and so are her medical bills.  

The old "earn money be appearing on TV" idea comes to Peter's mind, but getting the gig would mean washing his dirty Spider-man costume, we get the first "paper-bag" Spider-man outfit as he has to take the red and blue webs to the laundrette for a quick wash. Johnny Storm might have given that look to Spider-man as a joke when he needed something to wear after finding out his new black and white costume turned out to an alien parasite, but it was John Romita Sr created the original fun idea. It's a classic look! 

  
This story is obviously about a Spider-man battle with Electro, who in his civilian identity is working at the TV studio as an electrician, finds out that the web-slinger would be appearing on a live show as so sets out to battle him on the live TV. Fighting the master of electricity is never an easy task at the best of times, but Stan and John make this fight as...well as electrifying as ever. Spidey just about gets the upper hand, but in the process he gets quite a beating. Life is never a walk in the park but that is why Spider-man is like no other super-hero.







Spider-man "The terrible threat of the Living Brain!"

Writer: Stan Lee
Artist: Steve Ditko
Inker: Steve Ditko

Originally published in the Amazing Spider-man #8
Cover date January 1964
(Published in October 1963)

Again another story that readers of Spider-man Comics Weekly will have already read "the Living Brain!" story in MWOM #18 as I blog about last February. It's a fun classic Stan Lee/Steve Ditko short story that appeared with "Spider-man tackles the Torch!" story in the pages of Amazing Spider-man #8, if you was a comic collector in the 80's you might have read them both in Marvel UK's Spider-man Pocket Book number 8 published in November 1980. It's a really great early Spider-man strip, a fun read.

"The origin of... the Hulk"


 Writer: Stan Lee
Artist: Jack Kirby
Inker: Steve Ditko

Originally published in the Incredible Hulk #2
Cover date July 1962
(Published in May 1963)

This pre-story "origin of" bonus page is taken from the third page of The Incredible Hulk issue 2 with the first two panels removed so that the title and opening text could be added. It may only be one page but to me this was the ultimate version of the Hulk's origin, the very best version. It looks proper scary as Banner chokes as his shirt starts to bulge and rip, then followed by the black eyed menacing image of the looming, imposing, incredible Hulk! 

The Fantastic Four "The Incredible Hulk!"

Writer: Stan Lee
Artist: Jack Kirby
Inker: Dick Ayers

Originally published in the Fantastic Four #12
Cover date  March1963
(Published in December 1962)

This is yet another classic Marvel tale that has lived with me as a bench mark of how great Marvel comics can be, simply because it was burned onto my mind as a child while reading this annual. It originally first appeared for British Marvel readers in MWOM #24 and #25. If you've read those blogs you'll know how much I adore this tale. A cross over of Marvel's heavy hitters made possible by the simple but obvious plot that the US army need the Fantastic Four's help in stopping a "Wrecker", who military "intelligence" believe to be the Hulk, from destroying a number of experiments that will safeguard US defence. 

This story gives Kirby a chance to flex his pencil holding hands and draw some of his best pages with monster smashing action and high tech machinery. This panel showing the seconds before Marvel's mightiest powerhouse meets Marvel's first family is beautifully choreographed. Stan Lee's dialogue is weighed perfectly too throughout the story. Everyone gets to appear in the spotlight, it's an action packed Cold War thriller too all about who to trust and who to believe as prejudices colour General Ross's hatred of the monstrous Hulk, blaming him for all the sabotage while an enemy spy makes fools of everyone.


I love how Lee and Kirby tease the project destroying Wrecker for the majority of the military base scenes. Then we get to see the Wreckers giant robot fully for just one panel before the Thing makes scrap metal out of it in another panel. It's perfect action, comedy and thrill in the Marvel style. Lee and Kirby were the masters of it, that's why these stories found in this annual are Amazing, Incredible and Fantastic, simply the Marvel way!


After the Giant-Man feature I was dying for a Spider-man feature but with 128 pages to cram all that Marvel action into we only get one page of facts "All about Spider-man", but whether by design or  by accident this afterword does make me want to find out more about the web-slinger and his amazing friends. 

Two of the Hulk images shown at the top and bottom, are taken from a Hulk story with art by Dick Ayers with inks by John Severin from the Incredible Hulk #144 cover dated October 1971, published July 1971. While the second Hulk image is taken from the previous issue, #143. All three are nice page fillers that feed a child's imagination. 
This annual worked on mine, setting me off on an incredible journey of discovery through the highs and lows of Marvel comics and comic reading. And for that I could thank Stan Lee, Jack Kirby or Steve Ditko, but I won't, because the person I need to thank for making me a "true believer" is my older brother. Without his re-gifted annual and encouragement to read I would never have gotten the chance to fall in love with the wonderful world of Marvel that's kept me entertained for over 50 years. 

So with that, thanks Andrew. You're a well deserved KOF, a proper Keeper Of the Flame. 

Make Mine Marvel.