Showing posts with label Jim Stenstrum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jim Stenstrum. Show all posts

14 April 2018

Saturday Matinee - Jet & Joe

This weekend we're doing our semi-regular matinee feature, but we're doing so with old friends - comics we've visited before (and often are likely to visit again). Just because Jet Dream's stories are conveniently short 4 pagers, she'll and her team will be bracketing our main features.

This time out, it's Joe Guy: America's Foremost Hero. We've seen his two previous adventures and are (ever so slowly) leading up to the big confrontation/meeting with his father in the fifth and final episode. In today's tale, he faces Cardinal Synn: Archfiend Of The Universe.

For Jet Dream and her Stunt-Girl Counterspies, it's animal action this time - Tigers and Spiders - Eek!




Next time, the team gets a new tiger.

It's Saturday! Sounds like a good night for a romance feature, eh?
See you then.

Jet Dream's Spider by Dick Wood, Mike Sekowski, & Mike Peppe for The Man From UNCLE #8, Jet Dream's Tiger by ?? & Joe Certa for The Man From UNCLE #9, Joe Guy by Jim Stenstrum & Abel Laxamana for The Rook # 9 (1967, 1981)

24 February 2018

Joe Guy: Matinee Hero

As you may have already noticed, we're overdue for our return to Jim Stenstrum and Abel Laxamana's  too-cool-to-be-forgotten strip, Joe Guy: America's Foremost Hero. So here's the second, and longest, of his five adventures for a Saturday Matinee.
If you missed his Introduction and First Adventure, click on those links to jump back to those posts.


Hey - Wait a minute!
I thought The Clown was Magno's bad guy...

pages by Jim Stenstrum and Abel Laxamana for The Rook #8 (1981)

03 February 2018

Jim Jams (not to be confused with Jim Jam Jr.)

Before we get back to Joe Guy, let us pause to look at our author, Jim Stenstrum.
Jim is an artist as well as a writer, and that's where you'd find much of his work these days. While you might not know his writing from his old comics, odds are you've seen some of his artwork. His character designs have graced such shows as the animated Superman from the 90s to the Scooby-Doo videos of recent years. His artwork appears in many other toons, ranging from Johnny Quest to Fish Police to Freakazoid! to Tom & Jerry.

I know him best from his old stories he did for Warren, and sometimes they stuck with me in the oddest ways. Back in the days before the WWWeb, hunting and collecting music was a much more difficult and time consuming endeavor. I maintained a constant watch list of things for which i was hunting, and the printed copy had a header reading Hard John's Nuclear Hit Parade. That title came from Jim Stenstrum.

Back in the 70s when my first son was gestating, Jim had a short series of stories in Eerie running under that title, starring Hard John Apple, illustrated by Richard Corben. This was right about the time that Den started running in Heavy Metal magazine, bringing a bit more attention to the work he was doing at Warren.

A snippet-


...some time later...


Where Joe Guy played a light-hearted but dark parody of the comics genre, Hard John gave Stenstrum license to turn that twisted lens on modern society of the 60s & 70s. As usual when Jim is spotted driving, i was standing by the road with my thumb out, eager to go along for the ride. Even the short jaunts were usually interesting, like his work with Neal Adams to produce Thrillkill - a story about a public mass shooter written way back in 1975.

In addition to his work in animation, Jim also has a new series of novels featuring Rex Havoc (just two so far - Asskickers Of The Fantastic and Horror Island.)
I've yet to read either, but Rex Havoc & The Asskickers Of The Fantastic was the title of a story he did for Warren's 1984 back in 1978, just to be confusing. I only discovered the existence of these books while writing this piece, but i quite enjoyed the original 10 page comic.
If you go hunting through old issues of Eerie, Creepy and 1984 looking for his work, you should know that Jim also wrote for them under the name of Alabaster Redzone.

Anyway - Yes, we'll come back to Hard John after we wrap up on Joe Guy. In the meantime, here's another taste of Jim Stenstrum's slightly skewed sensibilities as he and John Severin bring us the Super-Abnormal Phenomena Survival Kit -


For younger readers left wondering about that last line, Irwin Allen (who brought us shows like Time Tunnel, Lost In Space and Land Of The Giants) had recently sparked the Disaster Movie genre and was making a new name for himself while altering the Hollywood landscape, influencing movies to this day. The Towering Inferno and Earthquake were huge box office back when this was written.

pages from Creepy #79 and Eerie #83 (1976, 1977)

02 February 2018

Wotta Guy!

If you missed last week's post with the first three pages of today's feature, you might want to read that first.

The answer to our mystery hero's identity:


We already know that Joe Guy is the illegitimate love child of Superboy and Amelia Earhardt (ish), but what can our hero actually do?


Joe Guy is an old favorite character, not a recent discovery from one of my digs. That being the case, you might guess he runs more than a bit on the Odd side, even when hewing to standard formula. The puns may be bad at times, but much is forgiven, in my eyes, by his Wotta-gear. So much mockery built in to a simple pun label.

Rather than attempt to summarize Joe further, let us continue his first story - picking up right after the three page prologue that appear last week (link if you didn't look at the link above and have now changed your mind)
I'll tell you one thing though - if they were somehow to make a movie, i have not the vaguest clue who to cast as Joe. I clipped Jim Stenstrum and Abel Laxamana's names from the first page of the prologue to hide the hints, so they've been inserted into the two page spread below to compensate -


I was thinking that Joe had about 7-9 adventures, but digging back it seems that there were only 5.
This first one appeared in The Rook #7 -


The Rook is another distinctly interesting character, one that we'll look at later. Probably about the same time we finally get back to Aztec Ace.

After spending the focus on introduction in the first tale, we start to learn more of the world in which Joe lives and adventures, including some of the other occupants -


Apparently it's quite the oddly mixed world, eh? And one that likely could never exist again. So we'll be coming back to follow along on Joe's adventures. Including that long-awaited reunion...


...but that's not until his 4th adventure. We'll get there...

Joe Guy: America's Foremost Hero by Jim Stenstrum and Abel Laxamana for Rook #7 (1981)