Saturday 11 February 2017

FABULOUS FLASHBACKS: FANTASTIC AT FIFTY...


Images copyright MARVEL COMICS

Launched on Saturday, February 11th 1967, it's been 50 years since Fantastic #1 first appeared on newsagents' counters all across the country.  Published by Odhams Press, it was the next stage in the evolution of comic titles like Wham!, Smash!, and Pow!, which featured U.K. humour strips among Marvel reprints.  (Or vice versa.)  Unlike its companion papers though, the contents of Fantastic weren't resized to fit a British comic's page, instead being granted the privilege of appearing (more or less) in their original format - albeit in a slightly larger size and in black and white.

Credit boxes were omitted, and U.S. spellings, references, and speech patterns were routinely altered ("I ain't" to "I'm not" for example), but just seeing the artwork of Jack KirbyDon Heck, and Steve Ditko in all its crisp, cataclysmic glory, was what mattered to young readers back in the day.  Not forgetting, of course, the power-packed scripting of Stan (The Man) LeeLarry Lieber, and also Roy Thomas.

The  periodical was edited by Alfred Wallace and Robert Bartholomew, aka Alf & Bart.  Along with Albert Cosser (Cos), they oversaw the five weekly Power Comics until, like the song's ten green bottles sitting on the wall, there were none left.  Fantastic contained some home-grown produce in the form of an occasional humour page, as well as The Missing Link/Johnny Future strip that appeared for 51 issues, drawn by Spanish artist Luis Bermejo.
 
It lasted only 89 issues, a Summer Special and 3 Annuals, but Fantastic remains one of the more fondly-recalled comics of the '60s by those who were fortunate (and discerning) enough to have bought and relished it at the time.  Tell you what - let's now take a look at why it was just so... Fantastic!

******

(I obtained my first replacement of this ish towards the end of 1980, just over 13 years after it was first published.  Amazing to think that more than 36 years have passed since then.)
  







The MISSING LINK copyright relevant owners

And if you'd like to read the complete episode, click here.


The free pennant-wallet

Below, trade and newspaper ads for the comic's launch. Note that the first one says the comic comes out on Monday 13th February, whereas the second 'says' it's Saturday 11th.  No wonder kids often missed a new comic, if they were looking for it two days after it first went on sale.  The comic came out on a Saturday, not a Monday - despite what the cover said.


(This is a slightly revised post of one first published on February 1st 2011.)

6 comments:

Paul McScotty Muir said...

I never bought "Fantastic" (or Terrific for that matter) as I recall it was a bit pricey at that time for a comic and the strips were not really what I liked as a 6 or 7 year old (preferring UK humour and adventure such as Buster Lion etc). However' like most kids at that time we did get the first 3 issues of "Fantastic" for the free gifts - I clearly remember the free transfers in issue 2 (had no idea what the heck you were to do with the free pennants in issue 1) were not liked by my parents (normally ok with comics etc) - My abiding memory of Fantastic at the time was it was a lot of reading and pretty drab (of course now it looks great to me)

Kid said...

I was 8 when Fantastic first came out, PM, but I didn't buy it 'til #7. Considering you later liked MWOM, I'm a bit surprised that Fantastic didn't appeal to you at the time, but as you say, it was a bit pricey. I did have the chance of buying #3 in Glasgow when it first came out, but decided not to because of the disgusting free gift, which was anathema to me. Sometimes I lay all 89 issues out on the carpet just so I can see all the covers at the same time.

John Pitt said...

Well , 50 years ago today ( well, it was a Saturday anyway ), I went to Walsall market with our Uncle Albert, ( who incidentally never once started a sentence with ".... During the war...." ) and I was glancing through a copy of this to see what all the fuss was about, after seeing it heavily publicised in Smash and Pow. Uncle Albert immediately bought it for me and once we got back to my Granny's house and I read it, well I just HAD to get this every week!
Anyway, in recent times I have looked for the other 3 Power comics' pennants on the net and found these on EBay and bookmarked the page, if anyone's curious to see what they looked like?
http://www.ebay.co.uk/gds/Power-Comics-Fantastic-Pow-Smash-Wham-Pennants-/10000000011703423/g.html

Kid said...

And I've got all of them, JP. I just couldn't be bothered digging out the comics to scan. Maybe I'll add them later.

paul Mcscotty said...

I think it was the format on Fantastic etc , there was a heck of a lot of reading in the comic and added to that it was black and white so was not that appealing to me (at least) as a 7 year old. I much preferred the short sports/ adventure etc type stories in UK comics at the time and the humour strips. Added to that I wasn’t that aware of Marvels characters then and was more into the simple colour strips in the DC US comics with mostly simpler storylines. Whams format (and Pow and Smash) were much more to my liking with a mix of superheroes, humour and adventure tales. By the time MWOM came on the scene I had just started high school and was a sophisticated man of the world with a wider pallet of tastes, rather than the impudent imp of child I had been in the “Fantastic” days 

Kid said...

You missed a treat, PM, by not being into Fantastic and Terrific, especially as the former had Luis Bermejo's Johnny Future. However, as far as the Marvel stories go, it was only a delayed treat, as the stories were later reprinted in the Marvel U.K. line. I'm surprised to read that you thought there was a lot of reading in Fantastic 'though, as, despite the higher page count, the pages of Wham!, Smash!, and Pow! were far more packed (on account of there being more panels per page) with content than F and T.



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