Archive for the 'Make Mine Marvel' Category



Comic Book Store, 1980

Comic Book Store 1980

Another beautiful interior shot of a Bronze Age comic shop, this one from Flying Colors Comics. Let’s nail down the date. The best look I can get of the nearest comics is the Fantastic Four on the bottom shelf, three in from the far right. It’s FF #226, with a publication date of January, 1981. (Look for the hand of the Samurai Destroyer under the ‘sti’ of ‘Fantastic’.)

FF #226 Jan 1981

The newest book would be in full view, with back issues tucked behind it. Publication dates ran two to three months in advance, so we’re in October or November of 1980. Other than the FF, I spot Defenders #89 (pink cover) and, below it, #91 (yellow cover, same publication date as FF #226). Man, 1980. What a beautiful time to be a kid.

I’m not into DC, so I can’t identify any of the comics on the bottom rack in back of the store, but I do see, just to the right of J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings Coloring Book (more on that in a sec) at the top of the spinner rack, Starlog #39 (October, 1980), with Gil Gerrard on the cover.

Starlog #39 Oct 1980

Now, the spinner rack. The LoTR coloring book was part of the promotional campaign for Ralph Bakshi’s 1978 LoTR adaptation, as you can see in this sweet catalog at Plaid Stallions.

LOTR Catalog 1979

The version seen here (top right, by the weird lady’s head) and in the comic shop was originally published in 1978. An alternate cover version, seen below via eBay, came out in 1979.

LOTR Coloring Book 1979

To the left of the LoTR book you’ll see what’s become a cult item in the pop art world: the Space WARP Space Fantasy Color & Story Book (1978), published by Troubador Press. I want it badly.

We have Philip Reed and Matt Doughty to thank for the pics. See more at Reed’s Flickr.

UPDATE (11/22/13): Malcolm Whyte, who ran Troubador Press for 30 years, spotted more Troubador titles on the rack: Maze Craze 4 is just beneath the LoTR book; Larry Evans’ 3-D Monster Mazes is just beneath that; and two different Evans 3-D Maze Posters volumes (“huge fold-out jobs and complex!” Malcolm notes) are beneath that.

Space Warp 1978

Space Warp 1978-2

Space Warp 1978-3

Space Warp 1978-4

Birthday Party, 1980

Birthday Party, 1980

Is this a birthday party or a funeral? Cheer up, kids! For one thing, your clothes will never again be this awesome.

(Via FotoFraulein/eBay)

Comic Book Store, 1983

Comic Book Store 1983

Published in an unidentified newspaper on August 14, 1983. I see (click to enlarge) The Uncanny X-Men #175, What If #41, Vigilante #1, Thor #336, Thor Annual #11, The Thing #6, Star Wars #77, Frank Miller’s Ronin #2, Rom #48, The New Mutants #10, Moon Knight Special Edition #1, Marvel Universe #11, Marvel Age #8 (Stan Lee and Jim Shooter on the cover).

There’s a Starslayer (“A Celtic barbarian in the far-flung future”) poster on the upper right side of the wall. Next to it is a Jon Sable Freelance poster. Both series were written and drawn by Mike Grell (Warlord) and published by First Comics.

Interior shots of old comic shops are really rare. I’ve got one more here.

Fantastic Films #20 (December, 1980): Thundarr the Barbarian Article

FF CE #20 pg. 40

FF CE #20 pg. 41

FF CE #20 pg. 42

FF CE #20 pg. 43

Thundarr the Barbarian is, hands down, the greatest American cartoon of the 1980s. Here’s why.

(1) In the opening sequence alone, set to the darkest, most epic cartoon theme song of all time, the Moon blows up, the Earth is ravaged by tidal wave, volcanic eruption, and earthquake—“man’s civilization is cast in ruin.” Then, 2000 years later, we see the “reborn” planet, now ruled by “savagery, super science, and sorcery.” (Yeah, super science.) A massive ocean liner, illuminated by the riven moon, sticks lengthwise out of the jungle muck into the fuming, noxious atmosphere. A masked wizard conjures up a slimy, Lovecraftian demon. Thundarr, a barbarian slave, “bursts his bonds” and vows to fight for justice, waving around his “fabulous Sunsword” from the back of a white steed. Ookla the Mok is a giant, foul-tempered raccoon with fangs and a mane. Princess Ariel is a bad-ass, raven-haired sorceress.

This ain’t Super Friends, kids.

(2) The show was and is a pretty sophisticated combination of literary (When Worlds Collide, Robert E. Howard’s Conan and Solomon Kane stories, Jack Kirby’s Kamandi) and cinematic/television (Star Wars, Planet of the Apes, Seven Samurai, Kung Fu, The Lone Ranger) sources. It also predates Escape from New York and The Road Warrior, two brilliantly realized post-apocalyptic visions that have been imitated (but never bested) ever since.

(3) Alex Toth (Space Ghost, The Herculoids) designed the three main characters, while Jack Kirby (‘Nuff said) designed the secondary characters, many of the sets and backgrounds, and the Sunsword.

(4) Like the early marvel creations of Stan Lee, Jack Kirby, and Steve Ditko, Thundarr is grounded in the Western mythic tradition. The idea of the wandering hero goes back to Odysseus and especially the knight-errant (errant, from the Latin itinerant, means “traveling”) of the Medieval romance. I don’t want to overstate the importance of a cartoon about a barbarian wearing a fur monokini, but there is something of the heroic in the series, as Thundarr and his friends somberly wander the festering ruins of America seeking out the dispossessed and persecuted. Nothing lasts forever, they know, and danger is everywhere, but they choose to do what good they can with the time they’ve got.

The article above features some dazzling pre-production art from Kirby and Toth, and Thundarr co-creator (with Joe Ruby) Steve Gerber comes off as a really intelligent, quick-witted guy who is struggling to overcome serious creative restrictions. I didn’t know just how strict the censors were at the time, so I’ll quote him on it:

The Program Practices will still not allow our main character to throw a punch or to hit anybody… The criteria seems to be what children can emulate. If Thundarr sticks out his foot and trips a couple of werewolves, that’s emulable… If, on the other hand, Thundarr picks up a boulder and throws it in the path of the werewolves, thereby tripping them up, that’s not emulable, and we’re allowed to do that…

The big thing that we’ve had to overcome is that the censors tend to treat children as if they’re not just morons, but lunatics, potentially dangerous creatures.

And Thundarr’s sword posed a problem, since “knives and other sharp objects are outlawed on Saturday morning.” (The last drawing on the first page shows our hero holding a metal sword.) They couldn’t do a laser sword because of Star Wars, so they went with a “lightning sword.” I had just assumed all these years that they were trying to emulate the lightsaber.

Marvel Superheroes Fun Book (1976)

Marvel Superheroes Fun Book 1976

Marvel Superheroes Fun Book 1976-2

Marvel SFB-1

Marvel SFB-2

I got this for a few bucks last year and will post more pages when I can. If you know the answers, feel free to post them in the comments. If you want the answers, let me know. I got all but one (#9) on the crossword. The second puzzle makes my brain hurt.

What about that Toys “R” Us sticker? I saw a few of those in my day.

The Occult World of Doctor Strange Marvel Comics Calendar (1980)

Doc Strange Calendar 1980

Marvel Calendar 1980 Jan

Marvel Calendar 1980 Jan-2

Marvel Calendar 1980 Feb

Marvel Calendar 1980 Feb-2

Marvel Calendar 1980 March

Marvel Calendar 1980 March-2

Doc Strange Calendar 1980 April

Doc Strange Calendar 1980 April-2

marvel calendar 1980 bc

The calendar cover art is by Dave Cockrum and Tom Palmer. The second illustration, from the month of April, is by Gene Colan and Tom Palmer. Colan had an amazing run on Doctor Strange (vol. 2) with writer Steve Englehart. That was my introduction to Marvel’s trippiest character, and I still remember those books.

This is about the time I was really getting into comics. I wasn’t full-on collecting yet, but reading as many as I could get and trading them back and forth at school.

I saw the calendar originally at The Marvel Project. See the whole thing at Sanctum Sanctorum Comix, a Doc Strange fan site.

Hell Demon Reading Comic Book, 1979

Grim Reaper Reading Comic

Miamicon, April 6, 1979

Warlord #23

(First image via Seattle Washington Archive/eBay)

Clown Reading Comic Book, 1972

Clown Reading Comic 11-24-72

Press photo: November 24, 1972

Marvel Premiere #6

(First image via Vintage Photos 2012/eBay)

Boy Reading Comic Book, 1963

ASM #1

This gave me a little chill. He’s not reading any old comic book. He’s reading The Amazing Spider-Man #1 from 1963! It looks like it’s one of the kid’s birthday presents, and I see other comics underneath Spidey.

ASM #1 today, in off the rack condition, would be worth over $50,000. God knows what else is in that pile.

Images (except the last one) are of a found photo that sold on eBay.

Girls Reading Comic Books, 1982

I love it. That’s Captain America #268.

(Source: Lexibell Vintage Photos)


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