A cascading cornucopia of cool comics, crazy cartoons, & classic collectables - plus other completely captivating & occasionally controversial contents. With nostalgic notions, sentimental sighings, wistful wonderings, remorseful ruminations, melancholy musings, rueful reflections, poignant ponderings, & yearnings for yesteryear. (And a few profound perplexities, puzzling paradoxes, & a bevy of big, beautiful, bedazzling, buxom Babes to round it all off.)
Tuesday, 27 April 2021
TRULY SCRUMPTIOUS...
Monday, 26 April 2021
A KING'S REACH SHOULD ALWAYS EXCEED HIS GRASP...
Copyright REBELLION (and JOHN SANDERS, presumably) |
Sunday, 25 April 2021
BATMAN, AGENT OF S.H.I.E.L.D. ?
Copyright MARVEL COMICS |
PART FOUR OF KLASSIC KIRBY KOMIC KOVERS - THE FABULOUS FF (WITH BONUS)...
Saturday, 24 April 2021
BABE OF THE DAY - PAIGE SPIRANAC...
KLASSIC KIRBY KOMIC KOVERS PART THREE - THE FABULOUS FF...
Thursday, 22 April 2021
CRIVENS' BOMBASTIC BUSCEMA COVERS - THE FABULOUS FF...
Copyright MARVEL COMICS |
Just because we're only halfway through our Jack Kirby FF cover gallery doesn't mean we can't start another one featuring the legendary John Buscema, so here's a few to get us started. I think I enjoyed Big John's take on the Fantastic Four every bit as much as Jack's, and by this time, with Jack over at the Distinguished Competition, John's art had reset the Marvel 'style'. Having said that, John would likely have eventually supplanted Jack as Marvel's premier artist anyway (if he hadn't already), as JK's art was beginning to look not quite as dynamic, or as fluid, or as well-composed as it had once been. Still great of course, but one could see the 'erosion' setting in.
Anyway, marvel (yup, pun intended) at how John handled the cover duties on ''The World's Greatest Comic Magazine!' (or 'comix' as it became for a while). Incidentally, some of the comics below weren't cut 'straight' at the time of publication, but rather than waste time and effort (and my life) trying to compensate, I've displayed them just as they are, squinty warts and all. I can assure you that they were placed on my scanner with utmost precision. Anyway, if you've got a favourite, then say so, effendi.
PART TWO OF KLASSIC KIRBY KOVERS - THE FABULOUS FF...
Wednesday, 21 April 2021
KLASSIC KIRBY KOMIC KOVERS - THE FABULOUS FF - PART ONE...
Monday, 19 April 2021
BABE OF THE DAY - PAIGE SPIRANAC...
Saturday, 17 April 2021
THE TWO FACES OF JACK KIRBY'S SUPERMAN - WHO'S TO BLAME?
One of the things that disappointed (if not infuriated) a great many Jack Kirby fans was when DC Comics had Al Plastino redraw most of Kirby's versions of Superman and Clark Kent in Forever People #1. Why hire Jack to draw Supes and then make him look nothing like a JK drawing? It was certainly a step too far in that instance, but I think they made the right call when they got Murphy Anderson to ink the Man of Steel's (and Clark's and Jimmy Olsen's) head and face in subsequent issues of Jack's Fourth World series. The figures were as Jack pencilled them, but the characters faces looked as how they appeared in other DC mags, which was okay in my book.
Jack's main failing was in the way he drew Kent's/Supes' hair; it was seldom consistent from panel-to-panel and sometimes looked like a bad combover - or even a toupee! Also, he tended to draw character's eyes on an uneven level, though this could've been rectified at the inking stage, and I bet Mike Royer fixed that quite a few times when he took on the task of rendering Jack's pencils in indelible black, just as he did with the the hair and the 'S' emblem on Superman's costume. (Jack drew the 'S' in an 'abstract' way, which Alex Ross repeated a few years down the line when he drew Superman in the four-issue series Kingdom Come)
Apparently, Jack wasn't exactly happy with the way his drawings were being altered (when alerted by assistants Mark Evanier and Steve Sherman), but didn't complain to DC about it, preferring to keep schtum on the matter. Anyway, the matter wasn't an issue once Royer came on board, as he made whatever fixes were necessary to keep characters 'on-model' while retaining the distinctive Kirby style. However, to all those who resent Murphy Anderson's 'fixes', I feel bound to say that it was Jack's own fault that they were considered necessary.
Was it really beyond his abilities as an artist to take note of how Curt Swan drew Superman's hair and replicate it? (The same might be said when it came to drawing Spider-Man - just look at what Ditko's doing, for crying out loud.) He was capable of rendering good likenesses of TV and movie stars, as witnessed by the several cameo appearances at SM Studios in FF #9, so all he had to do was observe how Superman's hair and shield were meant to look and draw them like that. So then why didn't he, instead of inwardly resenting the changes that DC instituted? Give them what they want, Jack, and then they wouldn't have to change things. It's not as if he didn't know what DC wanted, as they asked Evanier and Sherman more than once to remind him.
Was Jack perversely refusing to draw on-model in order to inconvenience DC, who had to take extra time and effort to make things 'right' before publication? Frankly, I doubt it, because then he wouldn't have felt justified in resenting such changes to begin with. So, as big a fan of Jack that I am, the blame for any alterations that many of his fans objected to lay at Jack's own door, not DC's. And let's not forget that Jack often made changes or corrections to other artists' work at Marvel, so he was hardly being singled out at DC, who only altered Jack's pencils when he continually failed to give them what they were paying him to give them - it's not as if they were doing it simply out of spite.
So if you're one of the fans who'd have preferred to see Jack's DC work untouched, just remember that the reason you didn't was mainly down to Jack, not his employers. Agree or disagree? The comments section awaits your worthy input.
Friday, 16 April 2021
VON HOFFMAN'S INVASION...
Copyright REBELLION |
Okay, hands up all those who remember Jet. (I think there was also an iced lolly by the same name at some stage, but it's the comic I'm referring to today.) Like Thunder before it, it also lasted for only 22 issues, but in memory it seems it was around for longer. You see, I have a distinct recollection of reading it at the dining table before before going to school (having bought it from the shops across the road first thing in the morning) on quite a few occasions, but perhaps I've merely been remembering the same one or two instances innumerable times over since then. Leaves me wondering how many other times I might've done that, giving me the impression that some things happened more often than they did.
Be that as it may, I thought I'd belatedly direct your attention to the first collected edition of Von Hoffman's Invasion, a strip which appeared in Jet in 1971, and continued in the pages of Buster when the two comics were merged at the conclusion of Jet's short span. I only received my copy today (dragged my heels a bit there), but it takes me right back to the house and neighbourhood where I was living at the time - and, of course, Eric Bradbury's art is always wonderful to behold. I was lucky enough to letter his art on a few occasions during my freelance comics career, and it was a thrill to 'connect' with an artist who's drawn so many strips I'd read as a boy.
You may think I'm doing a 'Stan Lee' here, but a good while before Rebellion acquired the rights to so many UK classic comics characters from yesteryear, I lamented here on Crivens that publishers didn't seem to view the vast archives of British strips from the past as being worth anything in the way that US strips are, and suggested that it would be nice if such treasures (and I used that very word) were made available in handsome collected editions. Then arose Treasury Of British Comics and the very thing I wished for came true. Naturally, I like to think that they got the idea from me. (Well, it's not totally impossible that I helped plant the seed. Shut up - I prefer my version.)
Anyway, if you remember Jet, you might want to consider adding this volume to your collection - it's still available.
COMIC MEMORIES - HAPPY OR HORRIBLE...?
Copyright MARVEL COMICS |
The Fantastic Four #150 is a comic that conjures up memories of me sitting reading it on my grandparents' itchy red bed settee on one of my family's weekly Sunday visits. By this time we were living just 5 minutes round the corner from them, as opposed to the adjoining neighbourhood we'd stayed in for almost 7 years up until June of 1972. Not that such a snippet of information is important to you, but it's relevant to me.
Anyway, it turns out that regular readers CJ and McS also have personal associations with this very same issue, and it reminded me of how comics and their covers can often be gateways to pleasanter times in our past, and the guardians of cherished memories of people, places, and events that are dear to us.
However, it just occurred to me that some comics must surely have sad or even unpleasant associations that we'd probably prefer to forget, though I can't think of any in my own particular case. So here's a question for all you Crivvies to ponder, and answer if it's not an 'ordeal' for you to remember. Are there any comics in your past that conjure up unhappy occasions, and that you can't look at or think of without being saddened by the recollections that they summon?
Or can comics only connect us to halcyon days of yore, as opposed to horrible days? What say ye all, Crivvies? Let your voices be heard.
Thursday, 15 April 2021
LET'S JUST TAKE A MOMENT...
Maybe it's not really the case, but the world seems like a far noisier and busier place these days, what with people playing radios for all to hear in their front and back gardens, kids screaming their lungs out at completely unnecessary levels, and the sound of increased traffic permeating the air, so that rare moment of peace and tranquillity was very welcome and, as I said, a nice reminder of simpler, less hectic times. I almost felt like digging out a back issue from the '70s and extending the moment by burying my nose in its contents.
When was the last time you had such a moment, fellow Crivvies, and, like me, were reminded of a distant age, when the simplest and best of pleasures could be found within the enchanting pages of a weekly or monthly comic? And if any particular periodical conjures up memories of the type I've just described, when you likewise thought that forever lay in front of you, which one was it and what made it so special? Revive your past in the comments section before your recollections dissipate like morning mist in the rays of the summer sun.