Showing posts with label Buck Rogers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Buck Rogers. Show all posts

01 August 2018

Moon Madness With Buck & Wilma

We haven't seen nearly enough of Gray Morrow's works around here as yet. Let's use our recent look at Flash Gordon and Buck Rogers parodies as an excuse to fix that a little bit. (Actually, if i could have found my frelling copy of his Amora, we could have slipped him into the parodies proper.)

This tale from Heavy Metal magazine, written by Jim Lawrence with art by Morrow, isn't a parody, but it is an odd piece that feels like a distorted reflection in some ways, due to the weird world in which they find themselves...



page art from Heavy Metal (Sept 1979)

31 July 2018

More Flash For Your Buck

One last batch of Flash Gordon parodies, and we'll leave this topic alone for a bit.

Let's open up with a team-up from a classic comedy duo - Ross Andru and Mike Esposito. (If you're not used to thinking of them that way, take a look at Get Lost, Up Your Nose And Out Your Ear, Arrgh!, Nuts!, etc.,.)


Sometimes, it just got odd in concept, perhaps especially when you've got Wally Wood doing the artwork...


Frank Cho offers a bit of love for the original comic in his Liberty Meadows -


Bonus Flash!
In our adult content 'back room', we've got three Flash Gordon Tijuana Bibles / 8-pagers:
To check them out, visit the sister post over on The Other Voice Of ODD!

Meanwhile... if one looks hard enough, Buck Rogers parodies can be found, though few they may be by comparison...


...as previously noted, most of them focus on the Gil Gerard/Erin Gray tv show version...


But people forget!
While Flash Gordon may have famously Conquered The Universe, it was Rogers who Pacified it...


...um, okay....

maybe i got a little confused.

page art from Get Lost #1 (1954), Mad #57 (1960), Liberty Meadows #7 (1999), Myron Moose Funnies #2 (1987), and Crazy #65 (1980)

04 April 2018

More Than Monster Times

Though a lot of the early work i've shown from The Monster Times was dated 1971, the cover date of the premiere issue wasn't until 26 January 1972. While we generally presume that comic books were published 2-3 months before the cover date, that's likely not the case with a purported newspaper. I'm inclined to think that it did ship to the stands on that date, or at least the week of that date.

A Note: Due to the larger size of The Monster Times, typical image size has been increased by 50% in width (125% in area) to help keep text readable.
Continuing on...

Let's bring back that first issue cover from our previous post:


King Kong and Frankenstein (yes, that's his name. He's Adam, not Victor, but he's the created son of Victor Frankenstein, so he shares the name) was not a radically new combo, but it was always cool to geeks back in those days. Didn't know yet who this Gray Morrow guy was drawing the cover, but could definitely dig it.
Mushroom Monsters? Sure - we knew that one!
End of the World? Pick One!
But Frankenstein a "fake"? What was that about?
Monster-Sized Color Poster Inside? Well, this thing is folded in half... what's it look like if we check the interior of the fold...?


Okay - decision made. Gimme! Gimme!
Again - no clue at the time who this Wrightson guy was, but gimme more!

And that's before we even opened up to the table of contents.


Let's pause and take a closer look at that credits box bottoming the Almighty Editorial (which i trust you read?) -


That's a pretty damned impressive line-up, and only the first issue. The list of contributors would grow only more distinguished over time, and it wasn't uncommon to see early work from future stars in multiple industries.

It was immediately clear that The Monster Times was going to be about more than just monsters. The editorial promise a slew of science fiction features and the comics influence was very evident, with both old comic coverage and comic stylings sprinkled throughout the issue. As we proceed, i'm going to run the first page of several articles to give a better feel of the overall publication.

First up was Nosferatu... What Ever Happened To The Vampyr?


That's a question fans often ask almost a half century later, eh?
Even from the first article, they had a comic sidebar:


The Nosferatu comic from Izzo & Wrightson that ran yesterday was also from this issue.

Der Golem told of Rabbi Loew's* Golem and the influence on Victor Frankenstein's flesh golem -



The Men Who Saved King Kong spoke of how King Kong was almost never made -


The Mushroom Monsters on the cover blurb turned out to not be Matango (AKA Attack Of The Mushroom People) as we were thinking, but a generic term to refer to creatures created by the mushroom cloud of the Atomic bomb. This inaugurated an ongoing series, as was the book review section sharing the spread -


Back in those days before home video, The Shape Of Things To Come was a movie that existed mostly in legend. This was one of the first looks i go of the film -


Again, the comic sensibilities arise with a photo-comic from the movie -


We skipped past the biggest comic highlight from the first issue. It dovetails nicely with The Shape Of Things To Come, being science fiction from the first half of the 20th Century - the classic Buck Rogers comics. Here's the full article -


That first issue was enough to hook young me. The second issue only increased the allure of The Monster Times - an all Star Trek special, including an interview with William Shatner -


Inside was a variety of features on the show...


...Trek parody photo-comics...


...and a bit on the cool UK Star Trek comics we've seen here before -


The first half dozen issues did a fine job of feeding a young comic junkie's addictions, making sure i'd be back for more. Issue 3 brought us an article on insect themed characters in the comics -


The 4th issue gave us an article on the new "relevant" comics -


For an ERBophile, issue 5's piece on Joe Kubert & Tarzan was pure delight -


Zombies were all the rage back then, too, and issue 6 looked at zombies in the comics -


Yeah, it was The Monster Times - but that wasn't all it was.

Sadly, the bi-weekly publication schedule didn't last. After a little over half a year, it switched to monthly and then eventually to bi-monthly. The last few issues were published on an erratic schedule and distribution seemed poor on them. Issue 44 was the last i had, though another 4-5 issues were released.

Not quite 50 issues, but a whole lot of geeky goodness packed into them.

pages from The Monster Times #s 1-6 (1972)


===
*(Yes, i know they spell Loew as Leow in the article. 2 + 2 ≠ 5.)