Eagle (Fleetway Publications) #[423] (28 Apr 1990). [relaunch]
Doctor Who Adventures (Panini UK) vol.2 #01 (2015).
Character Births:
Brian Braddock (Captain Britain; 1956); Elizabeth Braddock (Psylocke; 1956).
Births:
Billy Bunter of Greyfriars School actor Gerald Campion (1921); Will Spencer (1921); Roy Cross (1924); Ed "Stewpot" Stewart (1941); Art Wetherell (1961)
Deaths:
William Shakespeare (1616); Leo Baxendale (2017)
Notable Events:
Gilbert Thomas Webster was a castaway on Desert Island Discs, on BBC Radio 4, in 1942.
William Timyn (Tim) was issued with a Naturalisation Certificate, becoming a British citizen, in 1949.
The Jethro Tull album Too Old to Rock 'n' Roll: Too Young to Die!, illustrated by Dave Gibbons, was released in the UK in 1976.
Eagle became full-colour, and printed on better paper, with #423 in 1990.
The Comedians set of stamps, with illustrations by Gerald Scarfe, was released by the Post Office in 1998.
The Best of Low exhibition began at the Political Cartoon Gallery in 2008.
Birmingham Comics Festival began in Edgbaston Stadium, The County Ground, Birmingham, in 2016.
For other material of interest to chroniclers of British publications, please see BCD Extended. Normal service will be resumed as soon as possible.
Showing posts with label Leo Baxendale. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Leo Baxendale. Show all posts
Tuesday, April 23, 2019
Saturday, April 20, 2019
On This Day: 20 Apr
Space Aces! Comic Book Heroes from the Forties and Fifties! by Denis Gifford (1992)
Super Duper Supermen! Comic Book Heroes from the Forties and Fifties! by Denis Gifford (1992)
Births:
Rudolph Ackermann (1764); Herbert Foxwell (1890); Giorgio Olivetti (1908); Terry Maloney (1917); John McNamara (1918); Carole E. Barrowman (1959); Igor Goldkind (1960); Asia Alfasi (1984)
Deaths:
Robert Seymour (1836); Will Spencer (2002)
Notable Events:
The fourth Shrewsbury International Cartoon Festival began in 2007.
The BBC 4 radio series The Reunion, broadcast in 2008, celebrated D.C. Thomson & Co., Ltd. comics by asking editors, writers and artists to talk about their work. Contributors included Walter Fearn, Jim Petrie, Bill Ritchie and Dave Torrie, with archive recordings of Leo Baxenedale, Tony Robinson, Michael Rosen, A.N. Wilson and Jacqueline Wilson, among others.
Super Duper Supermen! Comic Book Heroes from the Forties and Fifties! by Denis Gifford (1992)
Births:
Rudolph Ackermann (1764); Herbert Foxwell (1890); Giorgio Olivetti (1908); Terry Maloney (1917); John McNamara (1918); Carole E. Barrowman (1959); Igor Goldkind (1960); Asia Alfasi (1984)
Deaths:
Robert Seymour (1836); Will Spencer (2002)
Notable Events:
The fourth Shrewsbury International Cartoon Festival began in 2007.
The BBC 4 radio series The Reunion, broadcast in 2008, celebrated D.C. Thomson & Co., Ltd. comics by asking editors, writers and artists to talk about their work. Contributors included Walter Fearn, Jim Petrie, Bill Ritchie and Dave Torrie, with archive recordings of Leo Baxenedale, Tony Robinson, Michael Rosen, A.N. Wilson and Jacqueline Wilson, among others.
Labels:
Asia Alfasi,
BBC,
Bill Ritchie,
Carole E. Barrowman,
D.C. Thomson,
Dave Torrie,
Igor Goldkind,
Jim Petrie,
John McNamara,
Leo Baxendale,
radio,
Robert Seymour,
Terry Maloney,
Will Spencer
Thursday, April 11, 2019
On This Day: 11 Apr
Overkill (Marvel Comics UK Ltd.) #01 (24 Apr 1992)
The Last American by John Wagner & Alan Grant, Mick McMahon, Phil Felix. (Rebellion; Apr 2017) ISBN 978-1781-08544-8
Births:
George Gordon Fraser (1859); Jane star Christabel Leighton–Porter (1913); Peter O'Donnell (1920)
Deaths:
John Brosnan (2005)
Notable Events:
The first episode of I'm Sorry I Haven't a Clue broadcast on in 1972, with Humphrey Lyttleton as chair.
Harry Harrison underwent a quadruple bypass operation in 2000, after visiting hospital for an angiogram.
The Beano Room exhibition, focusing on Leo Baxendale artwork, began at the Mills Gallery in 2005.
The Last American by John Wagner & Alan Grant, Mick McMahon, Phil Felix. (Rebellion; Apr 2017) ISBN 978-1781-08544-8
Births:
George Gordon Fraser (1859); Jane star Christabel Leighton–Porter (1913); Peter O'Donnell (1920)
Deaths:
John Brosnan (2005)
Notable Events:
The first episode of I'm Sorry I Haven't a Clue broadcast on in 1972, with Humphrey Lyttleton as chair.
Harry Harrison underwent a quadruple bypass operation in 2000, after visiting hospital for an angiogram.
The Beano Room exhibition, focusing on Leo Baxendale artwork, began at the Mills Gallery in 2005.
Sunday, March 31, 2019
On This Day: 31 Mar
Tiger and Jag (Fleetway) #[] (1969).
On Comedy; The Beano and Ideology by Leo Baxendale (Reaper Books; 1989)
Wallace and Gromit: The Complete Newspaper Comic Strips Collection (Titan Comics) vol.3 (2015) ISBN-10: 1782762043
First Appearances:
Luke Jarvis (The Mindstealers) in The Crunch (D.C. Thomson & Co., Ltd.) #12 (07 Apr 1979).
Births:
Bill McCail (1902); Bill Humphries (1911); Frank Humphris (1911); Jack Kirkbride (1923); Pablo Marcos (1937); Ian Gray (1938); Simon Henwood (1965)
Deaths:
Leonard Raven–Hill (1942); Dennis M. Reader (1995); Barry Took (2002); Massimo Belardinelli (2007)
Notable Events:
Roscoe Moscow in "Who Killed Rock 'N' Roll?" by Alan Moore, using the pen–name Curt Vile, began in Sounds magazine in 1979.
Douglas Bader was the subject of BBC television's This is Your Life in 1982.
Millie newspaper strip began in The Daily Mirror in 1990.
The Glasgow Comic Art Convention began in City Chambers, George Square in 1990.
Songs from the stage show Andy Capp: The Musical released on CD in 2014.
On Comedy; The Beano and Ideology by Leo Baxendale (Reaper Books; 1989)
Wallace and Gromit: The Complete Newspaper Comic Strips Collection (Titan Comics) vol.3 (2015) ISBN-10: 1782762043
First Appearances:
Luke Jarvis (The Mindstealers) in The Crunch (D.C. Thomson & Co., Ltd.) #12 (07 Apr 1979).
Births:
Bill McCail (1902); Bill Humphries (1911); Frank Humphris (1911); Jack Kirkbride (1923); Pablo Marcos (1937); Ian Gray (1938); Simon Henwood (1965)
Deaths:
Leonard Raven–Hill (1942); Dennis M. Reader (1995); Barry Took (2002); Massimo Belardinelli (2007)
Notable Events:
Roscoe Moscow in "Who Killed Rock 'N' Roll?" by Alan Moore, using the pen–name Curt Vile, began in Sounds magazine in 1979.
Douglas Bader was the subject of BBC television's This is Your Life in 1982.
Millie newspaper strip began in The Daily Mirror in 1990.
The Glasgow Comic Art Convention began in City Chambers, George Square in 1990.
Songs from the stage show Andy Capp: The Musical released on CD in 2014.
Labels:
Alan Moore,
Barry Took,
Bill Humphries,
Bill McCail,
D.C. Thomson,
Frank Humphris,
Ian Gray,
Jack Kirkbride,
Leo Baxendale,
Massimo Belardinelli,
newspaper strip,
Simon Henwood,
The Beano,
Titan
Sunday, March 3, 2019
On This Day: 03 Mar
Tottering-by-Gently: In the Garden with the Totterings (Frances Lincoln; 2011) ISBN-13: 978-0711231856
Births:
Sir Edward Hulton, 1st Baronet (1869); Raymond Sheppard (1913); Ronald Searle (1920); Dino Leonetti (1937); Charlie Brooker (1971); David Fickling
Notable Events:
Crisis #39 (03 Mar 1990-16 Mar 1990) was published in conjunction with Amnesty International in 1990.
Leo Baxendale delivered his final I Love You, Baby Basil newspaper strip to The Guardian in 1992.
Neil Gaiman's adaptation of his and Dave McKean's The Tragical Comedy or Comical Tragedy of Mr. Punch was broadcast on BBC Radio 3 in 2005.
Mirrormask released in the UK in 2006.
The third Gorillaz studio album, Plastic Beach, was released in the UK in 2010.
Comic Empire event began at the Royal National Hotel, Bedford Way, London, in 2013.
Bryan and Mary Talbot signing at Inky Fingers, Cowley Road, Oxford, in 2018.
Births:
Sir Edward Hulton, 1st Baronet (1869); Raymond Sheppard (1913); Ronald Searle (1920); Dino Leonetti (1937); Charlie Brooker (1971); David Fickling
Notable Events:
Crisis #39 (03 Mar 1990-16 Mar 1990) was published in conjunction with Amnesty International in 1990.
Leo Baxendale delivered his final I Love You, Baby Basil newspaper strip to The Guardian in 1992.
Neil Gaiman's adaptation of his and Dave McKean's The Tragical Comedy or Comical Tragedy of Mr. Punch was broadcast on BBC Radio 3 in 2005.
Mirrormask released in the UK in 2006.
The third Gorillaz studio album, Plastic Beach, was released in the UK in 2010.
Comic Empire event began at the Royal National Hotel, Bedford Way, London, in 2013.
Bryan and Mary Talbot signing at Inky Fingers, Cowley Road, Oxford, in 2018.
Labels:
Bryan Talbot,
Charlie Brooker,
Comic Empire,
Crisis,
Dave McKean,
David Fickling,
Dino Leonetti,
Gorillaz,
Leo Baxendale,
Mirrormask,
Neil Gaiman,
Ronald Searle,
The Guardian,
Tottering-by-Gently
Thursday, November 1, 2018
On This Day: 01 Nov
Doctor Who: It's Bigger on the Inside (Marvel Comics Ltd.; 1988).
The Best of the Oldie Cartoons edited by Alexander Chancellor. (Oldie Publications Ltd.; 2015) ISBN-13: 978-1901170245
The International Book of Comics by Denis Gifford. (Hamlyn; 1984).
Marshal Law: Fear Asylum by Pat Mills & Kevin O'Neill. (Titan Books; 2003).
Judge Dredd: Kingdom of the Blind by David Bishop. (Black Flame; Nov 2004) ISBN-10: 1844161331.
Judge Dredd - War Planet by Dave Stone. (Big Finish Productions; 2003).
Judge Dredd - Pre-Emptive Revenge by Jonathan Clements. (Big Finish Productions; 2004).
Judge Dredd - Grud is Dead by James Swallow. (Big Finish Productions; 2004).
Send for a Superhero! by Michael Rosen. (Walker Books Ltd.; 2014) ISBN-13: 9781406327090.
Births:
J.F. (James Francis) Horrabin (1884); Sir Robert Leicester Harmsworth, 1st Baronet (1870); Terence Tenison Cuneo (1907); Graham Coton (1926); Alberto Salinas (1932); Michael Fleisher (1942)
Character Births:
Wilson, the Wonder Athlete (1795)
Notable Events:
Leo Baxendale left IPC – and comics – on discovering his work was being reprinted (without payment) on this day in 1975.
The Revolver Hallowe'en Tour descended on Forbidden Planet, 36 Dawson Street, Dublin, in 1990. Garth Ennis, John McCrea and Will Simpson joined the other creators.
Michael Bennett, editor of the Frontier line of comics, officially left Marvel Comics in 1993.
Mark Millar and John McCrea visited Blue Peter in 2011, where they revealed the first page of a Blue Peter-themed comic strip.
The Daily Mirror included a free promotional copy of The Beano, containing original material, in 2014.
The Leeds Comic Art Festival began in 2016, running until 06 Nov.
The Grandville: Force Majeure exhibition (of Bryan Talbot art) began at Orbital Comics, London, in 2017.
The Best of the Oldie Cartoons edited by Alexander Chancellor. (Oldie Publications Ltd.; 2015) ISBN-13: 978-1901170245
The International Book of Comics by Denis Gifford. (Hamlyn; 1984).
Marshal Law: Fear Asylum by Pat Mills & Kevin O'Neill. (Titan Books; 2003).
Judge Dredd: Kingdom of the Blind by David Bishop. (Black Flame; Nov 2004) ISBN-10: 1844161331.
Judge Dredd - War Planet by Dave Stone. (Big Finish Productions; 2003).
Judge Dredd - Pre-Emptive Revenge by Jonathan Clements. (Big Finish Productions; 2004).
Judge Dredd - Grud is Dead by James Swallow. (Big Finish Productions; 2004).
Send for a Superhero! by Michael Rosen. (Walker Books Ltd.; 2014) ISBN-13: 9781406327090.
Births:
J.F. (James Francis) Horrabin (1884); Sir Robert Leicester Harmsworth, 1st Baronet (1870); Terence Tenison Cuneo (1907); Graham Coton (1926); Alberto Salinas (1932); Michael Fleisher (1942)
Character Births:
Wilson, the Wonder Athlete (1795)
Notable Events:
Leo Baxendale left IPC – and comics – on discovering his work was being reprinted (without payment) on this day in 1975.
The Revolver Hallowe'en Tour descended on Forbidden Planet, 36 Dawson Street, Dublin, in 1990. Garth Ennis, John McCrea and Will Simpson joined the other creators.
Michael Bennett, editor of the Frontier line of comics, officially left Marvel Comics in 1993.
Mark Millar and John McCrea visited Blue Peter in 2011, where they revealed the first page of a Blue Peter-themed comic strip.
The Daily Mirror included a free promotional copy of The Beano, containing original material, in 2014.
The Leeds Comic Art Festival began in 2016, running until 06 Nov.
The Grandville: Force Majeure exhibition (of Bryan Talbot art) began at Orbital Comics, London, in 2017.
Labels:
Alberto Salinas,
Big Finish,
Denis Gifford,
Doctor Who,
Graham Coton,
J.F. Horrabin,
Judge Dredd,
Kevin O'Neill,
Leo Baxendale,
Mark Millar,
Marshal Law,
Michael Fleisher,
Pat Mills,
The Oldie
Tuesday, October 30, 2018
Monster Fun Comic #1
14 Jun 1975; Cover price 6p.
32 pages. Colour & B&W.
IPC Magazines Ltd.
Edited by Bob Paynter.
Cover by Robert Nixon (uncredited)
Free plate wobbler.
Contents:
Monster Fun Comic is an odd beast. Which is appropriate, really.
Given the treatment doled out to Kid Kong at the beginning of his strip, you would be forgiven for thinking that there would be a rampage of some kind on the cards. You would be wrong. Sort of... No chaos wrought by the banana-obsessed ape is through spite or malice, instead being a series of events which escalated out of control in a manner not unlike that seen in Some Mothers Do 'Ave 'Em. He's called an ugly brute, and horrible, before being thrown a lone banana for his rations.
What would you do if your were in Kid Kong's place? Of course he escapes from his cage. Breaking into a department store in his hunt for nourishment, he discovers a giant school uniform and puts it on. Why, you ask? Well, he can't exactly blend in if he is naked, can he? In his cunning disguise, he approaches the home of Granny Smith, who takes pity on the "poor lad, shaking with cold." When men from the fun fair arrive to reclaim their gorilla, Granny Smith chases them off, chastising them for their cruelty.
There are some beautiful flourishes in Nixon's artwork (the first panel, especially so), and Kong is given real character in his facial expressions - though never losing a essential cartoonish element which allows the comedy to work.
The introduction of the titular item in X-Ray Specs is handled almost as an afterthought, with an optician (named, rather unlikely, I. Squint) walking out of his shop and asking Ray to try them on. Discovering that he can see through items, he uses this ability to read a letter which is in its' envelope, dodges a punch from a jack-in-the-box, and avoids being covered in whitewash perched atop an open door.
Things are taken up a notch (or three) with Ken Reid's exceptional Martha's Monster Make-Up. Martha's father, who works in Mallet Horror Films, finds an old jar of make-up while sweeping out one of the dressing rooms, and decides that it will make a perfectly good gift. Applying her make-up, Martha discovers that it is special "monster" make-up, able to turn her skin "scaley and horrible." Liking the results, she rushes downstairs to show her mother...
Yes, it is a gender-flipped Faceache, but there's more to it than obvious parallels - being a domestic rather than a school setting allows for different kinds of stories to be told, and Ken Reid's art doesn't falter in providing the location with a reality which underpins horror elements. It is very much of its era - the second panel recalls the askance smile Barbara Windsor often gave the camera, and dressing tables with curtains around them are very evocative of seventies sit-coms.
Dough Nut and Rusty is slow to introduces the robotic duo, favouring the Posh family's persistent rodent problem. Dough Nut, the most expensive, exclusive robot ever constructed, and Rusty, neither expensive nor exclusive, both apply for a position on staff. When asked to make tea Dough Nut produces a tray laden with cakes and such, prompting Rusty to leave, dejected at his inability to compete. Squeaking from his rusty joints, however, encourages mice to follow him out of the Posh residence, upon which he is offered a job.
Rivalry between the robots is amusing and (strangely) filled with very human moments. There are some extremely nice designs in the "futuristic" setting (set in 2000). with a hovercar an especially nice touch - if I didn't know this issue had been published in 1975, I would have sworn that it was a subtle homage to Star Wars.
For fans of Jack and the Beanstalk there is Grizzly Bearhug... Giant, which updates the basic concept without introducing much in the way of laughs. It doesn't feel like a strip which has been given enough consideration - the title refers to a character (almost) introduced in the final page, while several gags fall flat, and the appearance of a witch (in traditional garb) feels horribly out of place. I'm not sure I'm on board with this strip.
Utilizing a two-page spread, Art's Gallery opens with young Art inheriting a supposedly-haunted Tudor home, with a distinctive jettied top floor, seemingly located in the countryside. After discovering that he has also inherited his uncle's paintings, Art decides to use the building as an art gallery, but his paintings have other ideas and attempt to make their escape. An art thief arrives attempts to steal one of the paintings, though is soon shown the error of his ways - a police reward for his capture delighting Art, though dismaying the paintings.
A fascinating notion, though one which is only briefly explored. Interaction between the paintings and the thief raises the possibility that people can enter paintings, as in Doctor Who and Night at the Museum, opening up an even greater landscape (pun intended) for the strip's future.
While this strip occupies the majority of the spread, there is an added bonus - below, in a short row, are five visual puns. The kind of thing where halves of a banana say goodbye, and the caption beneath reads "banana split." Readers are asked to send in their suggestions, with a £1 prize on offer for those selected for publication.
The paintings are awfully generic, such as Drake Playing Bowls, Circus Clown, Humpty Dumpty, The Three Musketeers, and Milkmaid being highlighted in this first strip, calling into question the taste of Art's uncle. It isn't what is presented here which is really interesting, as much as the implications for the central idea. The strip is a perfect opportunity to inject a little art history into the title, though there isn't so much as a hint of background to art or collecting.
Looking back on the first issue, it would have been more interesting to have a free gift tying in directly to a strip rather than a generic practical joke. One of the great tragedies of IPC during the seventies is the lack of imagination when it came to promoting their new titles. If art plates had been included in the first three issues, or appropriate tone (Caravaggio, perhaps, or Henry Fuseli), then Monster Fun would have had room to grow and mature as 2000 A.D. did.
I sincerely doubt that anyone with a passing interest in comics will be entirely unaware of the Badtime Bedtime Book pull-out section, and it is redundant to extol the virtues of Leo Baxendale's superior material endlessly, but this is something special. whether encountered within the pages of Monster Fun itself, or purchased separately (as they often are), the stories evoke a timeless joy which brings back childhood delights in a way that seems effortless.
'Jack The Nipper's Schooldays' isn't perfect - the paper stock it is printed on is adequate, but the repro is patchy in places in my copy. The strip is so far ahead of its companions (I'm looking at you, Grizzly Bearhug... Giant) that it really stands out as a creator operating at the height of his abilities.
Fully embracing the conceit of the title, Draculass - Daughter of Dracula is - after Kid Kong and Martha's Monster Make-Up - only the third strip to truly take advantage of the comic's theme. X-Ray Specs owes more to soft SF (of X: The Man with the X-Ray Eyes calibre), Dough Nut and Rusty is SF, while Grizzly Bearhug... Giant, Art's Gallery and the Badtime Bedtime Book are fantasy. For a title with a unifying theme, there is precious little horror on display.
As I mentioned, the title really is an odd concoction of strips.
Young Maisie is introduced to her cousin Draculass from Transylvania, who is going to be staying with the family. Informed that dinner will be steak and garlic, Draculass leaps into Maisie's arms, terrified. To calm her cousin down, Maisie takes her to see Madame Threeswords Waxworks, where Draculass attempts to bite the neck of a model Cavalier, angering the exhibition's attendant. In chasing them out of the waxworks, a robber posing as a waxwork is discovered, and they receive a reward.
All is concluded happily ever after, and Draculass retires to bed contentedly. In a coffin.
Much like the Sprouto fertiliser in Shiver and Shake's Sample Simon, Brainy and his Monster Maker features a MacGuffin which enlarges items, though in this case in the form of a ray-gun of the kind Buck Rogers would recognise. Challenged to prove his Monster Maker works, Brainy enlarges an apple - which promptly crushes his friend Curly. The apple isn't the only thing which to be made of massive proportion, as a maggot (within the apple) quickly makes its presence known before escaping over the garden fence. Curly's short-sighted grandmother mistakes the maggot for her pet sausage dog, and takes it for a walk.
March of the Mighty Ones, the sole adventure strip within the comic, begins with a dinosaur stomping around an English village, crushing cars underfoot. It is, however, a film set, and the dinosaur is an animatronic, made for an Anvil Films production by John and Jenny Byrd's father. He shows the computer which controls his monsters to a local reporter, who is impressed with the lifelike quality of the creations - and a tad nervous.
He has reason to be scared, as there is more than a touch of the cinematic Frankenstein in play. To hammer home the connection, a bolt of lightning strikes down from the heavens onto the computer, bringing the abominable creatures to life. John and Jenny barely manage to get out of the way when the dinosaurs, by the miracle of divine plotting powers, come to life and go on the march.
However implausible the concept, the handling is superb. For a two-page opening, this is easily the equal of anything similar in a traditional adventure title, and the art is excellent.
Cosmo Crumpet applies for an advertisement asking for a willing lad as an assistant, and so begins Major Jump, Horror Hunter, a strip in which the titular character is attempting to create a monster menagerie. He's a very British chap, with walrus moustache and pith helmet, and his intention is to capture large animals rather than actual monsters. Insisting that there are no such things, Jump is shocked to discover that Meredith, Crumpet's "pet," is indeed such a thing. This prompt him to alter his plans by including real monsters.
While the Major's first appearance is all about laying the groundwork for the series, instead of any actual hunting, there is a likability to him which allows for some leeway in how far it can stray from the designated purpose of the strip. I can't be alone in hearing the sonorous tones of Windsor Davies when reading Jump's dialogue.
The wonderfully named Massacre Street School, which is perfectly awful in every regard for sane, responsible teachers, is the setting for Creature Teacher. Pitiful cries echo from the building, but it is screams of terrified teachers rather than pupils. Mr. Gimble, blindfolded and led out on a diving board, is urged by the pupils to provide an example of a dive - into a pool, it must be added, from which they have drained the water. Fleeing the school, Mr. Gimble is not seen again. And really, who can blame the poor man?
The headmaster is informed that pupils have refilled the pool, and are reenacting the Battle of Trafalgar. His mind is on more important matters: finding a replacement for Gimble, who only lasted two days in charge of 3X despite being paid £500 a week. The school has gone through 97 teachers, with Mr. Strong the worst affected - so traumatised by his experience that he has developed a pathological fear of children. Mr. Gringe is little better, having become an astronaut to get as far away from 3X as is possible to get.
Mr. Fume, the science master has a plan to whip the lads into shape, and escorts the head through an underground tunnel to his laboratory. What greets them is... Well, it is a creature. A Creature Teacher, to be precise. Able to face off against the worst 3X have to offer, designed to withstand any manner of rambunctiousness without cracking, and with enough tentacles to cane five pupils at once. The cry is raised among the class as one: Creature Teacher has got to go.
Tom Thumbscrew, the Torturer's Apprentice! is a decidedly strange strip. Outraged that his basketball team have lost, the King sends for his torturer, Tom Thumbscrew, who uses the rack to stretch the team out. Not horror, per se, but implications should be obvious to older readers.
Cyril and his colleague are minding their own business, tending to their lighthouse (okay, Cyril is reading a book on monsters, but still), when an invisible monster rears out of the sea and snatches up the lighthouse to use as a torch. Once the monster has found its' way to London, it deposits the lighthouse (next to Nelson's Column no less) and goes off on its merry way. A very subdued story with which to introduce the character.
Sid Burgon's artwork is, as always, highly professional and filled with incident, but the writing doesn't gel. The notion is a fine one, but without some hint as to physical presence of the monster there is no sense of danger. Out of sight, out of mind. Had dotted lines been adopted as a shorthand for the invisibility (thus spoiling the reader feedback on what the monster looks like) there might have been more comedy present, but when your main character is so absent from the strip it is extremely difficult to care.
A bold knight out to slay himself a dragon comes face-to-face (or face-to-reflection) with Cinders, the love-struck dragon - which is the entire plot, in case you were wondering. If only the comic had ended on a better note...
A work of undisputed genius, some real gems, a couple of mediocre strips, and then there's Grizzly Bearhug... Giant. This could have been an instant classic, but even with the presence of weaker material this is still a solid beginning. There's fantastic potential here, begging to be nurtured, and even the strips which I'm not completely sold on have things working in their favour.
32 pages. Colour & B&W.
IPC Magazines Ltd.
Edited by Bob Paynter.
Cover by Robert Nixon (uncredited)
Free plate wobbler.
Contents:
.2 UNTITLED [Hiya, readers ... I'm Frankie Stein]; illustrated by Robert Nixon. / This Week's Free Gift / Next Week's Freaky Free Gift / Indicia
.3 Kid Kong UNTITLED ["Roll up! Roll up! Come and see the biggest gorilla in the world-"] w: UNKNOWN; a: Robert Nixon.
.6 X-Ray Specs UNTITLED [An Unusual Pair of Specs] w: UNKNOWN; a: Mike Lacey.
.7 Martha's Monster Make-Up UNTITLED [Special Monster Make-Up] w: UNKNOWN; a: Ken Reid.
.8 Dough Nut and Rusty UNTITLED [The Posh Family and Servants Back in the Year 1900] w: UNKNOWN; a: Trevor Metcalfe.
10 Grizzly Bearhug... Giant UNTITLED [Broken Down, Miles from Anywhere] w: UNKNOWN; a: Andy Christine.
13 Monster Fun Comic presents THE CONTEST TO END ALL CONTESTS! (half page) competition. / How to put together your Badtime Bedtime story book (quarter page) / We don't give the orders-YOU DO! (quarter page) subscription form.
14 Art's Gallery UNTITLED [Calling Art Lovers Everywhere - Here's Your New Hero!] w: UNKNOWN; a: Mike Lacey. / Art's Prize Potty Pictures
15 Badtime Bedtime Book 'Jack The Nipper's Schooldays' w:/a: Leo Baxendale.
20 Draculass - Daughter of Dracula UNTITLED [Draculass from Transylvania] w: UNKNOWN; a: Terry Bave.
21 Brainy and his Monster Maker UNTITLED [The World's First Monster-Making Ray Gun] w: UNKNOWN; a: Vic Neill.
22 March of the Mighty Ones UNTITLED [It Began One Day] w: UNKNOWN; a: Mike White.
24 Monster Hits - Top 10 Gags UNTITLED [Here's a Real Gas] w: UNKNOWN; a: Artie Jackson.
25 Major Jump, Horror Hunter UNTITLED [Wanted: Willing Lad as Assistant] w: UNKNOWN; a: Ian Knox.
26 Creature Teacher UNTITLED [The Little Monsters of 3X] w: UNKNOWN; a: Tom Williams.
29 Tom Thumbscrew, the Torturer's Apprentice! UNTITLED [The King's Basketball Team] w: UNKNOWN; a: Trevor Metcalfe.
30 The Invisible Monster UNTITLED [The Monster from the Deep] w: UNKNOWN; a: Sid Burgon.
32 Cinders - She's Hot Stuff UNTITLED [In Days of Old, When Knights Were Bold] w: UNKNOWN; a: Norman Mansbridge.
Monster Fun Comic is an odd beast. Which is appropriate, really.
Given the treatment doled out to Kid Kong at the beginning of his strip, you would be forgiven for thinking that there would be a rampage of some kind on the cards. You would be wrong. Sort of... No chaos wrought by the banana-obsessed ape is through spite or malice, instead being a series of events which escalated out of control in a manner not unlike that seen in Some Mothers Do 'Ave 'Em. He's called an ugly brute, and horrible, before being thrown a lone banana for his rations.
What would you do if your were in Kid Kong's place? Of course he escapes from his cage. Breaking into a department store in his hunt for nourishment, he discovers a giant school uniform and puts it on. Why, you ask? Well, he can't exactly blend in if he is naked, can he? In his cunning disguise, he approaches the home of Granny Smith, who takes pity on the "poor lad, shaking with cold." When men from the fun fair arrive to reclaim their gorilla, Granny Smith chases them off, chastising them for their cruelty.
There are some beautiful flourishes in Nixon's artwork (the first panel, especially so), and Kong is given real character in his facial expressions - though never losing a essential cartoonish element which allows the comedy to work.
The introduction of the titular item in X-Ray Specs is handled almost as an afterthought, with an optician (named, rather unlikely, I. Squint) walking out of his shop and asking Ray to try them on. Discovering that he can see through items, he uses this ability to read a letter which is in its' envelope, dodges a punch from a jack-in-the-box, and avoids being covered in whitewash perched atop an open door.
Things are taken up a notch (or three) with Ken Reid's exceptional Martha's Monster Make-Up. Martha's father, who works in Mallet Horror Films, finds an old jar of make-up while sweeping out one of the dressing rooms, and decides that it will make a perfectly good gift. Applying her make-up, Martha discovers that it is special "monster" make-up, able to turn her skin "scaley and horrible." Liking the results, she rushes downstairs to show her mother...
Yes, it is a gender-flipped Faceache, but there's more to it than obvious parallels - being a domestic rather than a school setting allows for different kinds of stories to be told, and Ken Reid's art doesn't falter in providing the location with a reality which underpins horror elements. It is very much of its era - the second panel recalls the askance smile Barbara Windsor often gave the camera, and dressing tables with curtains around them are very evocative of seventies sit-coms.
Dough Nut and Rusty is slow to introduces the robotic duo, favouring the Posh family's persistent rodent problem. Dough Nut, the most expensive, exclusive robot ever constructed, and Rusty, neither expensive nor exclusive, both apply for a position on staff. When asked to make tea Dough Nut produces a tray laden with cakes and such, prompting Rusty to leave, dejected at his inability to compete. Squeaking from his rusty joints, however, encourages mice to follow him out of the Posh residence, upon which he is offered a job.
Rivalry between the robots is amusing and (strangely) filled with very human moments. There are some extremely nice designs in the "futuristic" setting (set in 2000). with a hovercar an especially nice touch - if I didn't know this issue had been published in 1975, I would have sworn that it was a subtle homage to Star Wars.
For fans of Jack and the Beanstalk there is Grizzly Bearhug... Giant, which updates the basic concept without introducing much in the way of laughs. It doesn't feel like a strip which has been given enough consideration - the title refers to a character (almost) introduced in the final page, while several gags fall flat, and the appearance of a witch (in traditional garb) feels horribly out of place. I'm not sure I'm on board with this strip.
Utilizing a two-page spread, Art's Gallery opens with young Art inheriting a supposedly-haunted Tudor home, with a distinctive jettied top floor, seemingly located in the countryside. After discovering that he has also inherited his uncle's paintings, Art decides to use the building as an art gallery, but his paintings have other ideas and attempt to make their escape. An art thief arrives attempts to steal one of the paintings, though is soon shown the error of his ways - a police reward for his capture delighting Art, though dismaying the paintings.
A fascinating notion, though one which is only briefly explored. Interaction between the paintings and the thief raises the possibility that people can enter paintings, as in Doctor Who and Night at the Museum, opening up an even greater landscape (pun intended) for the strip's future.
While this strip occupies the majority of the spread, there is an added bonus - below, in a short row, are five visual puns. The kind of thing where halves of a banana say goodbye, and the caption beneath reads "banana split." Readers are asked to send in their suggestions, with a £1 prize on offer for those selected for publication.
The paintings are awfully generic, such as Drake Playing Bowls, Circus Clown, Humpty Dumpty, The Three Musketeers, and Milkmaid being highlighted in this first strip, calling into question the taste of Art's uncle. It isn't what is presented here which is really interesting, as much as the implications for the central idea. The strip is a perfect opportunity to inject a little art history into the title, though there isn't so much as a hint of background to art or collecting.
Looking back on the first issue, it would have been more interesting to have a free gift tying in directly to a strip rather than a generic practical joke. One of the great tragedies of IPC during the seventies is the lack of imagination when it came to promoting their new titles. If art plates had been included in the first three issues, or appropriate tone (Caravaggio, perhaps, or Henry Fuseli), then Monster Fun would have had room to grow and mature as 2000 A.D. did.
I sincerely doubt that anyone with a passing interest in comics will be entirely unaware of the Badtime Bedtime Book pull-out section, and it is redundant to extol the virtues of Leo Baxendale's superior material endlessly, but this is something special. whether encountered within the pages of Monster Fun itself, or purchased separately (as they often are), the stories evoke a timeless joy which brings back childhood delights in a way that seems effortless.
'Jack The Nipper's Schooldays' isn't perfect - the paper stock it is printed on is adequate, but the repro is patchy in places in my copy. The strip is so far ahead of its companions (I'm looking at you, Grizzly Bearhug... Giant) that it really stands out as a creator operating at the height of his abilities.
Fully embracing the conceit of the title, Draculass - Daughter of Dracula is - after Kid Kong and Martha's Monster Make-Up - only the third strip to truly take advantage of the comic's theme. X-Ray Specs owes more to soft SF (of X: The Man with the X-Ray Eyes calibre), Dough Nut and Rusty is SF, while Grizzly Bearhug... Giant, Art's Gallery and the Badtime Bedtime Book are fantasy. For a title with a unifying theme, there is precious little horror on display.
As I mentioned, the title really is an odd concoction of strips.
Young Maisie is introduced to her cousin Draculass from Transylvania, who is going to be staying with the family. Informed that dinner will be steak and garlic, Draculass leaps into Maisie's arms, terrified. To calm her cousin down, Maisie takes her to see Madame Threeswords Waxworks, where Draculass attempts to bite the neck of a model Cavalier, angering the exhibition's attendant. In chasing them out of the waxworks, a robber posing as a waxwork is discovered, and they receive a reward.
All is concluded happily ever after, and Draculass retires to bed contentedly. In a coffin.
Much like the Sprouto fertiliser in Shiver and Shake's Sample Simon, Brainy and his Monster Maker features a MacGuffin which enlarges items, though in this case in the form of a ray-gun of the kind Buck Rogers would recognise. Challenged to prove his Monster Maker works, Brainy enlarges an apple - which promptly crushes his friend Curly. The apple isn't the only thing which to be made of massive proportion, as a maggot (within the apple) quickly makes its presence known before escaping over the garden fence. Curly's short-sighted grandmother mistakes the maggot for her pet sausage dog, and takes it for a walk.
March of the Mighty Ones, the sole adventure strip within the comic, begins with a dinosaur stomping around an English village, crushing cars underfoot. It is, however, a film set, and the dinosaur is an animatronic, made for an Anvil Films production by John and Jenny Byrd's father. He shows the computer which controls his monsters to a local reporter, who is impressed with the lifelike quality of the creations - and a tad nervous.
He has reason to be scared, as there is more than a touch of the cinematic Frankenstein in play. To hammer home the connection, a bolt of lightning strikes down from the heavens onto the computer, bringing the abominable creatures to life. John and Jenny barely manage to get out of the way when the dinosaurs, by the miracle of divine plotting powers, come to life and go on the march.
However implausible the concept, the handling is superb. For a two-page opening, this is easily the equal of anything similar in a traditional adventure title, and the art is excellent.
Cosmo Crumpet applies for an advertisement asking for a willing lad as an assistant, and so begins Major Jump, Horror Hunter, a strip in which the titular character is attempting to create a monster menagerie. He's a very British chap, with walrus moustache and pith helmet, and his intention is to capture large animals rather than actual monsters. Insisting that there are no such things, Jump is shocked to discover that Meredith, Crumpet's "pet," is indeed such a thing. This prompt him to alter his plans by including real monsters.
While the Major's first appearance is all about laying the groundwork for the series, instead of any actual hunting, there is a likability to him which allows for some leeway in how far it can stray from the designated purpose of the strip. I can't be alone in hearing the sonorous tones of Windsor Davies when reading Jump's dialogue.
The wonderfully named Massacre Street School, which is perfectly awful in every regard for sane, responsible teachers, is the setting for Creature Teacher. Pitiful cries echo from the building, but it is screams of terrified teachers rather than pupils. Mr. Gimble, blindfolded and led out on a diving board, is urged by the pupils to provide an example of a dive - into a pool, it must be added, from which they have drained the water. Fleeing the school, Mr. Gimble is not seen again. And really, who can blame the poor man?
The headmaster is informed that pupils have refilled the pool, and are reenacting the Battle of Trafalgar. His mind is on more important matters: finding a replacement for Gimble, who only lasted two days in charge of 3X despite being paid £500 a week. The school has gone through 97 teachers, with Mr. Strong the worst affected - so traumatised by his experience that he has developed a pathological fear of children. Mr. Gringe is little better, having become an astronaut to get as far away from 3X as is possible to get.
Mr. Fume, the science master has a plan to whip the lads into shape, and escorts the head through an underground tunnel to his laboratory. What greets them is... Well, it is a creature. A Creature Teacher, to be precise. Able to face off against the worst 3X have to offer, designed to withstand any manner of rambunctiousness without cracking, and with enough tentacles to cane five pupils at once. The cry is raised among the class as one: Creature Teacher has got to go.
Tom Thumbscrew, the Torturer's Apprentice! is a decidedly strange strip. Outraged that his basketball team have lost, the King sends for his torturer, Tom Thumbscrew, who uses the rack to stretch the team out. Not horror, per se, but implications should be obvious to older readers.
Cyril and his colleague are minding their own business, tending to their lighthouse (okay, Cyril is reading a book on monsters, but still), when an invisible monster rears out of the sea and snatches up the lighthouse to use as a torch. Once the monster has found its' way to London, it deposits the lighthouse (next to Nelson's Column no less) and goes off on its merry way. A very subdued story with which to introduce the character.
Sid Burgon's artwork is, as always, highly professional and filled with incident, but the writing doesn't gel. The notion is a fine one, but without some hint as to physical presence of the monster there is no sense of danger. Out of sight, out of mind. Had dotted lines been adopted as a shorthand for the invisibility (thus spoiling the reader feedback on what the monster looks like) there might have been more comedy present, but when your main character is so absent from the strip it is extremely difficult to care.
A bold knight out to slay himself a dragon comes face-to-face (or face-to-reflection) with Cinders, the love-struck dragon - which is the entire plot, in case you were wondering. If only the comic had ended on a better note...
A work of undisputed genius, some real gems, a couple of mediocre strips, and then there's Grizzly Bearhug... Giant. This could have been an instant classic, but even with the presence of weaker material this is still a solid beginning. There's fantastic potential here, begging to be nurtured, and even the strips which I'm not completely sold on have things working in their favour.
Labels:
Andy Christine,
Artie Jackson,
first issue,
Ian Knox,
IPC Magazines,
Ken Reid,
Leo Baxendale,
Mike Lacey,
Mike White,
Norman Mansbridge,
Robert Nixon,
Sid Burgon,
Terry Bave,
Tom Williams,
Trevor Metcalfe,
Vic Neill
Monday, October 29, 2018
Shiver and Shake #1
10 Mar 1973; Cover price 4p.
36 pages. Colour & B&W.
IPC Magazines Ltd.
Cover by Mike Lacey (uncredited).
Free practical joke.
Contents:
The two-comics-in-one gimmick works well here, with slight reservations. A comic which features a ghost and an elephant seems to lend itself to two distinct halves: horror-comedy resising with a ghost (Shiver), and comedy of other stripes residing with an elephant (Shake). However, Moana Lisa is in Shake's section. Such considerations aren't, by any stretch of the imagination, a deal-breaker, but these minor quirks do tend to display decisions made in concern to the title's layout, and indicate the journey from conception to print wasn't a smooth and easy one.
IPC's first horror-comedy comic gets rolling with an introductory cover, establishing the two hosts effects on their environments. While the logo works fine with a two-panel cover used here, it is extremely unwieldy - having such a busy title also means that attention is drawn away from the art, which I'm sure must have gone down well with creators. There's also a free gift (because IPC loved free gifts with first issues), but Shiver and Shake goes one better by having four. Okay, so there may only be one in each copy, but there are four practical jokes to collect.
Frankie Stein uses a tried and tested plot of a monster going to school. Of course, when it comes to Frankie doing anything, there is going to be a serious amount of destruction left in his wake. Predictable? Yes. Funny? Very much so. The character may have been softened, but the humour is as sharp as ever. Professor Cube's face in the final panel is priceless.
There's nice handling of social dynamics between Shiver and Grimes the Butler in The Duke's Spook, with Shiver desperate to frighten off Grimes, who is intruding on his lifestyle. Grimes is nonplussed by Shiver's antics, thanks to working in many haunted buildings previously. There isn't anything exceptional thus far, but it works perfectly - it is obvious that the rivalry isn't going to be resolved, but much appeal lies in seeing who is able to get the upper hand.
Webster is a bit of a let-down. Spiders can make for great horror stories, and (as with the BBC's Spider) can provide much entertainment, but this strip isn't quite as inventive or as funny as it should be. Terry Bave's artwork is superb as always.
Scream Inn (We're only here for the FEAR) is a very attractive strip, with a boxer and his manager arriving one night and seeing a sign offering a reward: a million pounds for anyone brave enough to spend a full night in the haunted bedroom. His manager sends Champ in to claim the prize (while he remains safely outside), kicking off a sequence of ghosts and ghouls doing their best to frighten Champ away. As dawn approaches it appears that he has bested the worst the haunted bedroom has to offer.
Everything about Scream Inn is excellent - a highlight of the issue, living up to Shiver and Shake's promise.
There have been numerous mobile, intelligent plants in fiction, but Biddy's Beastly Bloomers is a great step down from Day of the Triffids. As Biddy rests on her way home from Bosco Stores, plants attempt to eat sausages she has bought. She pulls the sausages away from the plants, uprooting them, but they follow her home. It is a comedy strip desperately crying out for a straight retelling, playing up horror elements, as it doesn't quite work as a humerous one.
A great idea whose handling is fumbled. So slowly paced that Robin is likely to come of age before the strip gets to a point. Like a cut-price Zip Nolan, Robin has to spot each clue (one a week) in order to uncover the identity of his would-be killer, with reader participation in the form of a cut-out-and-keep clue tab at the end of each installment.
I would be prepared to put up with glacial pace and ridiculously flat characters if we actually got something approaching real violence attempted against Robin, but the great, unforgivable crime which must be solved is... a death threat. It is written in block letters, rather than cursive, so the cad probably deserves everything coming to him. If, indeed, our culprit is a man...
The most puzzling thing about Who'd Kill Cockney Robin isn't in the writing, but the core idea. If this strip (inexplicably) turned out to be very popular, how was it meant to progress? His death threat comes from inheriting the factory, with clear motivations for antagonist(s). Having a completely new group of people introduced every fifteen or so issues, with their prime characteristic being a hatred of poor Robin, plotting would soon wear very thin indeed. The only possible way to sustain a story of that kind is with farce, thus eliminating tension.
There's something unlikeable about Shake, whose attempts to "help" a man seem more like sustained and deliberate unprovoked violence.
Lolly Pop begins as it would go on and on, with an act of miserliness which kicks off a sequence of events resulting in a catastrophe costing much more to resolve in the long run. This first installment of the series revolves around Archie asking for money to purchase a football, but receiving a penny in order to get a ping pong ball... Which Pop haggles down to a ha'penny as it has a dent in it. In blowing out the dent a bingo game is disrupted, whereupon events rapidly escalate.
It isn't immediately obvious how many children, in 1973, would have known who Erwin Rommel was, nor why having a bunch of soldiers hunting an actual fox, in The Desert Fox, is a rather funny joke. Which is precisely the problem with this strip. The Desert Fox's sense of comedy is rooted in a bygone age, not helped by the fact that the strip merely ends rather than receives a conclusion. There's no clever punch-line, nor a complex twist, with its denouement arriving due to lack of space for more incident.
There is another "witty" title in Gal Capone, whose titular character is basically a larger Minnie the Minx with no redeeming features. At least a semblance of plot is present, and is rendered in fine style by Murray Ball, but it is hard to feel much more than mild apathy for a character who is so basic in motivation.
The Fixer feels like it is a knock-off of something from early 70s pop-cultural landscape rather than a completely original strip. Fixer, for he has no name, sets out to help others get what they want. Not for money, but to see if he can. His altruism rings somewhat hollow, as when the plan fails (as it must for maximum comic effect) he doesn't seem to care about any consequences resulting from his actions.
As per IPC tradition, Match of the Week is the mandatory sports inclusion. It doesn't work for me, but I don't know much about football. Damsel in Distress, as nice as Trevor Metcalfe's artwork is, doesn't even raise a hint of a smile.
Tough Nutt and Softy Centre is an "opposites" strip, much like Fit Fred and Sick Sid from a few years later, but much more extreme in depicting the two main characters' behaviours. Nutt cracks reinforced stairs as he makes his way to breakfast, which is fried tree roots and nail sauce. Softy aks to be carried down the stairs in case he trips and falls, whereupon he has to have his soggy, mushy cereal at just the right temperature - half a degree hotter will prompt an outburst.
Nutt hates Softy as he is "the weediest little twerp I know," and the draught from one of his punches is enough to knock his fragile neighbour over. It is a well-drawn strip with clearly defined characters, an obvious antagonism, portrays appropriate comeuppance for the aggressor, and runs through the entire story in two pages. But a certain spark is missing, and both characters come across as annoying in their own ways.
A good comparison would be Ivor Lott and Tony Broke, which follows much the same formula of diametrically opposed characters. Within the established framework of such stories were moments of (temporary) redemption, allowing for both the positives and negatives of their personalities to be explored. In Tough Nutt and Softy Centre both characters are shorn of any positive aspects, resulting in a lack of empathy for their fates.
Jail Birds is exactly what it suggests in the title. Two budgies in a cage, being fattened up for a cat's Christmas dinner. Their escape attempts are the focus of the strip, but where Tom and Jerry made light of a cat's hunger for flesh through comedy violence, this feels crueler - the birds have already been caged, and their lives depend of fleeing from the cage in which they are trapped.
There's a possible explanation for the origin of Biddy's Beastly Bloomers in Sample Simon (not that such cross-overs really occurred on anything like a regular basis), as a packet of Sprouto fertiliser causes immense growth in several plants he tests the sample on. Unfortunately the fertiliser makes caterpillars grow just as much as his plants. An old gag, but well handled.
Perpetually scowling, Moana Lisa is only happy when she is miserable - as readers are likely to become after reading the strip. Characters with personalities which deviate hugely from social norms ought to have wilder things to be (for example) miserable about. An afternoon off school seems too tame for an introduction, whereas being miserable because she has won something significant in a raffle would offer more of a contrast.
For a strip about a disembodied body part, The Hand is very amusing. Flipping a coin to decide whether to scare people or help them, then causing mischief regardless (we only have Hand's word for which side his coin landed), the floating, ghostly hand is a classic strip straight from its first outing. It may have all sorts of unanswered questions behind the concept, but the visual strength of Hand (rendered with utmost skill by Reg Parlett) surmounts such thoughts.
Soggy the Sea Monster has a distinctive look, while conforming to the generic look, but despite strong visuals the script feels like a checklist of "funny" moments being ticked off a list rather than an organic development of events.
Arguably the most important strip in the first issue, Leo Baxendale's Sweeny Toddler gets off to a strong start, with the violent baby causing enough mayhem for three strips by anyone else. Deceptively simple artwork plays with details (Sweeny bending the bars on his pram, a stack of knocked-over tins paying off a comment from the second panel) which work to heighten the comedy.
Horrornation St. plays off the title of Coronation Street, though (thankfully) doesn't require knowledge of the series to make sense of events. A series of monsters live together in an odd community, and interact with a series of puns, bad jokes, and strange behaviour. It feels like an adaptation of an old sit-com series with a creaky laugh track. I love it, obviously, especially as it doesn't rely on a "normal" cast reacting to events.
Reading Horrornation St. with hindsight shines light on some choices made - Sir Headley Deadly brings to mind Deadly Hedley, and looks like many of the ghosts which would populate IPC titles. It is much better than Adrian's Wall, which struggles to fill a single page with jokes, and it is clear even from the introduction of the walking wall that it is an idea with a finite lifespan.
Ye Haunted Lake, much like The Haunted Wood in Knockout, is a simple notion - if you take something from the lake then bad things will happen. In this case, little Sebastian's tiddler (safely ensconced in an empty jam jar) grows to incredible size during the journey home from the lake, with an accompanying increase in water. It shows that even simple ideas, when done well, can provide much entertainment. The issue is rounded off with a Ken Reid Creepy Creations illustration.
Not a perfect beginning, but with enough top-drawer material to make up for weaker strips.
36 pages. Colour & B&W.
IPC Magazines Ltd.
Cover by Mike Lacey (uncredited).
Free practical joke.
Contents:
.2 Frankie Stein UNTITLED [Monday Morning at Mildew Manor] w: UNKNOWN; a: Robert Nixon (uncredited).
.3 Cackles from the Cave (half page) jokes.
.4 The Duke's Spook UNTITLED [Butler Wanted - Apply Within] w: UNKNOWN; a: Arthur Martin (uncredited).
.5 Webster UNTITLED [Sentry Box] w: UNKNOWN; a: Terry Bave (uncredited).
.6 Scream Inn UNTITLED [The Champ] w: UNKNOWN; a: Brian Walker (uncredited).
.8 Biddy's Beastly Bloomers UNTITLED [Rooted in the Garden] w: UNKNOWN; a: Sid Burgon (uncredited).
.9 Who'd Kill Cockney Robin, part one, w: UNKNOWN; a: Tom Kerr (uncredited).
11 Shake UNTITLED ["The wind's blown off my best bowler!"] w: UNKNOWN; a: Mike Lacey (uncredited).
12 Lolly Pop UNTITLED [Meet Lolly Pop ... Richest Dad in the World!] w: UNKNOWN; a: Reg Parlett (uncredited).
14 The Desert Fox UNTITLED [North Africa 1942] w: UNKNOWN; a: Terry Bave (uncredited).
15 Free in Next Week's Shiver and Shake
16 Gal Capone UNTITLED [A Super Go-Kart] w: UNKNOWN; a: Murray Ball (uncredited).
17 The Fixer UNTITLED [The Rich Kid's Birthday Party] w: UNKNOWN; a: Peter Davidson (uncredited).
18 Match of the Week Cowboys versus Indians w: UNKNOWN; a: Mike Lacey (uncredited).
20 Damsel in Distress UNTITLED [Knight on a Kite] w: UNKNOWN; a: Trevor Metcalfe (uncredited).
21 Mirth-Shaking Inventions / Shake a Leg
22 Tough Nutt and Softy Centre UNTITLED [Meet Tough Nutt...] w: UNKNOWN; a: Norman Mansbridge (uncredited).
24 Jail Birds UNTITLED ["Only nine more months budgies..."] w: UNKNOWN; a: UNKNOWN.
25 Sample Simon UNTITLED [Sprouto the Wonder Fertiliser] w: UNKNOWN; a: UNKNOWN.
26 Moana Lisa UNTITLED [An afternoon off school] w: UNKNOWN; a: Peter Davidson (uncredited).
27 Who'd Kill Cockney Robin, part one (cont.)
29 The Hand UNTITLED [Heads or Tails] w: UNKNOWN; a: Reg Parlett (uncredited).
30 Soggy the Sea Monster UNTITLED ["Fifteen years I've been stuck on this desert island!"] w: UNKNOWN; a: Robert Nixon (uncredited).
31 Sweeny Toddler UNTITLED [Banned from the Supermarket] w: UNKNOWN; a: Leo Baxendale (uncredited).
32 Horrornation St. UNTITLED [Tootin Common, the Egyptian Mummy, Slept Soundly] w: UNKNOWN; a: Tom Williams (uncredited).
34 Adrian's Wall UNTITLED [A Walking Wall with Ghostly Legs] w: UNKNOWN; a: UNKNOWN.
35 Ye Haunted Lake UNTITLED [Little Sebastian's Tiddler] w: UNKNOWN; a: UNKNOWN.
36 Creepy Creations The One-Eyed Wonk of Wigan a: Ken Reid (uncredited).
The two-comics-in-one gimmick works well here, with slight reservations. A comic which features a ghost and an elephant seems to lend itself to two distinct halves: horror-comedy resising with a ghost (Shiver), and comedy of other stripes residing with an elephant (Shake). However, Moana Lisa is in Shake's section. Such considerations aren't, by any stretch of the imagination, a deal-breaker, but these minor quirks do tend to display decisions made in concern to the title's layout, and indicate the journey from conception to print wasn't a smooth and easy one.
IPC's first horror-comedy comic gets rolling with an introductory cover, establishing the two hosts effects on their environments. While the logo works fine with a two-panel cover used here, it is extremely unwieldy - having such a busy title also means that attention is drawn away from the art, which I'm sure must have gone down well with creators. There's also a free gift (because IPC loved free gifts with first issues), but Shiver and Shake goes one better by having four. Okay, so there may only be one in each copy, but there are four practical jokes to collect.
Frankie Stein uses a tried and tested plot of a monster going to school. Of course, when it comes to Frankie doing anything, there is going to be a serious amount of destruction left in his wake. Predictable? Yes. Funny? Very much so. The character may have been softened, but the humour is as sharp as ever. Professor Cube's face in the final panel is priceless.
There's nice handling of social dynamics between Shiver and Grimes the Butler in The Duke's Spook, with Shiver desperate to frighten off Grimes, who is intruding on his lifestyle. Grimes is nonplussed by Shiver's antics, thanks to working in many haunted buildings previously. There isn't anything exceptional thus far, but it works perfectly - it is obvious that the rivalry isn't going to be resolved, but much appeal lies in seeing who is able to get the upper hand.
Webster is a bit of a let-down. Spiders can make for great horror stories, and (as with the BBC's Spider) can provide much entertainment, but this strip isn't quite as inventive or as funny as it should be. Terry Bave's artwork is superb as always.
Scream Inn (We're only here for the FEAR) is a very attractive strip, with a boxer and his manager arriving one night and seeing a sign offering a reward: a million pounds for anyone brave enough to spend a full night in the haunted bedroom. His manager sends Champ in to claim the prize (while he remains safely outside), kicking off a sequence of ghosts and ghouls doing their best to frighten Champ away. As dawn approaches it appears that he has bested the worst the haunted bedroom has to offer.
Everything about Scream Inn is excellent - a highlight of the issue, living up to Shiver and Shake's promise.
There have been numerous mobile, intelligent plants in fiction, but Biddy's Beastly Bloomers is a great step down from Day of the Triffids. As Biddy rests on her way home from Bosco Stores, plants attempt to eat sausages she has bought. She pulls the sausages away from the plants, uprooting them, but they follow her home. It is a comedy strip desperately crying out for a straight retelling, playing up horror elements, as it doesn't quite work as a humerous one.
The Yorkshire town of Gnarlford ...and amid the modern industrial blocks, one old building stood out like a sore thumb - the tiny factory that made Bollsbottam's Bullseyes!The sole drama strip, Who'd Kill Cockney Robin lays out a lot of background before it really gets going. Employees of Bollsbottam's Bullseyes are outlined, and the reading of Barty's will (held up by the late arrival of Robin Radford) is the primary push of the story's first installment. To everyone's astonishment (save for astute readers), young Cockney Robin is bequeathed everything. Locked in the house, Robin discovers a note threatening his life, and must discover which employee wants him dead.
Famous throughout the land, Bollsbottam's Bullseyes were huge, crunchy and round! Gobstoppers of true goodness!
For eighty years, the factory had been owned by one Bartholomew Bollsbottam... A Bullseye Millionaire!
But now, alas, poor Barty was no more!
A great idea whose handling is fumbled. So slowly paced that Robin is likely to come of age before the strip gets to a point. Like a cut-price Zip Nolan, Robin has to spot each clue (one a week) in order to uncover the identity of his would-be killer, with reader participation in the form of a cut-out-and-keep clue tab at the end of each installment.
I would be prepared to put up with glacial pace and ridiculously flat characters if we actually got something approaching real violence attempted against Robin, but the great, unforgivable crime which must be solved is... a death threat. It is written in block letters, rather than cursive, so the cad probably deserves everything coming to him. If, indeed, our culprit is a man...
The most puzzling thing about Who'd Kill Cockney Robin isn't in the writing, but the core idea. If this strip (inexplicably) turned out to be very popular, how was it meant to progress? His death threat comes from inheriting the factory, with clear motivations for antagonist(s). Having a completely new group of people introduced every fifteen or so issues, with their prime characteristic being a hatred of poor Robin, plotting would soon wear very thin indeed. The only possible way to sustain a story of that kind is with farce, thus eliminating tension.
There's something unlikeable about Shake, whose attempts to "help" a man seem more like sustained and deliberate unprovoked violence.
Lolly Pop begins as it would go on and on, with an act of miserliness which kicks off a sequence of events resulting in a catastrophe costing much more to resolve in the long run. This first installment of the series revolves around Archie asking for money to purchase a football, but receiving a penny in order to get a ping pong ball... Which Pop haggles down to a ha'penny as it has a dent in it. In blowing out the dent a bingo game is disrupted, whereupon events rapidly escalate.
It isn't immediately obvious how many children, in 1973, would have known who Erwin Rommel was, nor why having a bunch of soldiers hunting an actual fox, in The Desert Fox, is a rather funny joke. Which is precisely the problem with this strip. The Desert Fox's sense of comedy is rooted in a bygone age, not helped by the fact that the strip merely ends rather than receives a conclusion. There's no clever punch-line, nor a complex twist, with its denouement arriving due to lack of space for more incident.
There is another "witty" title in Gal Capone, whose titular character is basically a larger Minnie the Minx with no redeeming features. At least a semblance of plot is present, and is rendered in fine style by Murray Ball, but it is hard to feel much more than mild apathy for a character who is so basic in motivation.
The Fixer feels like it is a knock-off of something from early 70s pop-cultural landscape rather than a completely original strip. Fixer, for he has no name, sets out to help others get what they want. Not for money, but to see if he can. His altruism rings somewhat hollow, as when the plan fails (as it must for maximum comic effect) he doesn't seem to care about any consequences resulting from his actions.
As per IPC tradition, Match of the Week is the mandatory sports inclusion. It doesn't work for me, but I don't know much about football. Damsel in Distress, as nice as Trevor Metcalfe's artwork is, doesn't even raise a hint of a smile.
Tough Nutt and Softy Centre is an "opposites" strip, much like Fit Fred and Sick Sid from a few years later, but much more extreme in depicting the two main characters' behaviours. Nutt cracks reinforced stairs as he makes his way to breakfast, which is fried tree roots and nail sauce. Softy aks to be carried down the stairs in case he trips and falls, whereupon he has to have his soggy, mushy cereal at just the right temperature - half a degree hotter will prompt an outburst.
Nutt hates Softy as he is "the weediest little twerp I know," and the draught from one of his punches is enough to knock his fragile neighbour over. It is a well-drawn strip with clearly defined characters, an obvious antagonism, portrays appropriate comeuppance for the aggressor, and runs through the entire story in two pages. But a certain spark is missing, and both characters come across as annoying in their own ways.
A good comparison would be Ivor Lott and Tony Broke, which follows much the same formula of diametrically opposed characters. Within the established framework of such stories were moments of (temporary) redemption, allowing for both the positives and negatives of their personalities to be explored. In Tough Nutt and Softy Centre both characters are shorn of any positive aspects, resulting in a lack of empathy for their fates.
Jail Birds is exactly what it suggests in the title. Two budgies in a cage, being fattened up for a cat's Christmas dinner. Their escape attempts are the focus of the strip, but where Tom and Jerry made light of a cat's hunger for flesh through comedy violence, this feels crueler - the birds have already been caged, and their lives depend of fleeing from the cage in which they are trapped.
There's a possible explanation for the origin of Biddy's Beastly Bloomers in Sample Simon (not that such cross-overs really occurred on anything like a regular basis), as a packet of Sprouto fertiliser causes immense growth in several plants he tests the sample on. Unfortunately the fertiliser makes caterpillars grow just as much as his plants. An old gag, but well handled.
Perpetually scowling, Moana Lisa is only happy when she is miserable - as readers are likely to become after reading the strip. Characters with personalities which deviate hugely from social norms ought to have wilder things to be (for example) miserable about. An afternoon off school seems too tame for an introduction, whereas being miserable because she has won something significant in a raffle would offer more of a contrast.
For a strip about a disembodied body part, The Hand is very amusing. Flipping a coin to decide whether to scare people or help them, then causing mischief regardless (we only have Hand's word for which side his coin landed), the floating, ghostly hand is a classic strip straight from its first outing. It may have all sorts of unanswered questions behind the concept, but the visual strength of Hand (rendered with utmost skill by Reg Parlett) surmounts such thoughts.
Soggy the Sea Monster has a distinctive look, while conforming to the generic look, but despite strong visuals the script feels like a checklist of "funny" moments being ticked off a list rather than an organic development of events.
Arguably the most important strip in the first issue, Leo Baxendale's Sweeny Toddler gets off to a strong start, with the violent baby causing enough mayhem for three strips by anyone else. Deceptively simple artwork plays with details (Sweeny bending the bars on his pram, a stack of knocked-over tins paying off a comment from the second panel) which work to heighten the comedy.
Horrornation St. plays off the title of Coronation Street, though (thankfully) doesn't require knowledge of the series to make sense of events. A series of monsters live together in an odd community, and interact with a series of puns, bad jokes, and strange behaviour. It feels like an adaptation of an old sit-com series with a creaky laugh track. I love it, obviously, especially as it doesn't rely on a "normal" cast reacting to events.
Reading Horrornation St. with hindsight shines light on some choices made - Sir Headley Deadly brings to mind Deadly Hedley, and looks like many of the ghosts which would populate IPC titles. It is much better than Adrian's Wall, which struggles to fill a single page with jokes, and it is clear even from the introduction of the walking wall that it is an idea with a finite lifespan.
Ye Haunted Lake, much like The Haunted Wood in Knockout, is a simple notion - if you take something from the lake then bad things will happen. In this case, little Sebastian's tiddler (safely ensconced in an empty jam jar) grows to incredible size during the journey home from the lake, with an accompanying increase in water. It shows that even simple ideas, when done well, can provide much entertainment. The issue is rounded off with a Ken Reid Creepy Creations illustration.
Not a perfect beginning, but with enough top-drawer material to make up for weaker strips.
Labels:
Arthur Martin,
Brian Walker,
Ken Reid,
Leo Baxendale,
Mike Lacey,
Murray Ball,
Norman Mansbridge,
Peter Davidson,
Reg Parlett,
Robert Nixon,
Sid Burgon,
Terry Bave,
Tom Williams
Saturday, October 27, 2018
On This Day: 27 Oct
Tiger and Speed (IPC Magazines Ltd.) #[??] (01 Nov 1980).
Battle Action Force (IPC Magazines Ltd.) #[440] (29 Oct 1983).
The Dandy (D.C. Thomson & Co., Ltd.) #3508 (30 Oct 2010).
The Thrill Electric (Channel 4) webcomic
It's Ghastly! (Hibernia; Oct 2016)
Births:
Florence Anderson (1893); Leo Baxendale (1930); Patrick Woodroffe (1940); Bernie Wrightson (1948)
Notable Events:
Spider-Man made a personal appearance on Central ITV's Saturday Starship magazine show in 1984. He also made personal appearances at Tesco in Gateshead and Birmingham, as well as Carrefour at Boroughbridge.
The Revolver Hallowe'en Tour descended on SF Bookshop, 42 West Crosscauseway, Edinburgh, in 1990, before making headway to Forbidden Planet, 168 Buchannon Street, Glasgow.
The Comic pull-out section began in The Guardian in 2007, with Robotgirl by John Aggs taking the front cover.
The first episode of Dead Set, written by former Oink! contributor Charlie Brooker, broadcast on Channel 4 in 2008.
The Dandy was relaunched in 2010, after the hybrid Dandy Xtreme experiment. Nigel Parkinson drew caricatures of the hosts of ITV chat show Loose Women, which appeared during that show's discussion of the news. With 18 new strips included in the line-up of the title, various other TV and radio shows made note of the developments, the most controversial of which was Harry Hill's prominent place on the cover.
Wallace and Gromit newspaper strip ended in 2013.
The official Beano YouTube channel launched in 2014 with the Dennis And Gnasher - Stink Bomb Prank short.
Battle Action Force (IPC Magazines Ltd.) #[440] (29 Oct 1983).
The Dandy (D.C. Thomson & Co., Ltd.) #3508 (30 Oct 2010).
The Thrill Electric (Channel 4) webcomic
It's Ghastly! (Hibernia; Oct 2016)
Births:
Florence Anderson (1893); Leo Baxendale (1930); Patrick Woodroffe (1940); Bernie Wrightson (1948)
Notable Events:
Spider-Man made a personal appearance on Central ITV's Saturday Starship magazine show in 1984. He also made personal appearances at Tesco in Gateshead and Birmingham, as well as Carrefour at Boroughbridge.
The Revolver Hallowe'en Tour descended on SF Bookshop, 42 West Crosscauseway, Edinburgh, in 1990, before making headway to Forbidden Planet, 168 Buchannon Street, Glasgow.
The Comic pull-out section began in The Guardian in 2007, with Robotgirl by John Aggs taking the front cover.
The first episode of Dead Set, written by former Oink! contributor Charlie Brooker, broadcast on Channel 4 in 2008.
The Dandy was relaunched in 2010, after the hybrid Dandy Xtreme experiment. Nigel Parkinson drew caricatures of the hosts of ITV chat show Loose Women, which appeared during that show's discussion of the news. With 18 new strips included in the line-up of the title, various other TV and radio shows made note of the developments, the most controversial of which was Harry Hill's prominent place on the cover.
Wallace and Gromit newspaper strip ended in 2013.
The official Beano YouTube channel launched in 2014 with the Dennis And Gnasher - Stink Bomb Prank short.
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