Sunday, 28 April 2024

Cinebook Ltd: BILLY & BUDDY 9 - SYMPHONY IN BUDDY MAJOR

 


Authors: By Christophe Cazenove, illustrated by Jean Bastide
Age: 8 years and up
Size: 21.7 x 28.7 cm
Number of pages: 48 colour pages
Publication: March 2024

ISBN: 9781800441293

£8.99 incl VAT

https://www.cinebook.co.uk/billy-buddy-9-symphony-in-buddy-major-p-4543.html?osCsid=mqqggmbjluu30v75ijoa493j56


Music soothes the wild beast – it’s a well-known fact. Though you have to admit it very much depends on the music. Dad’s bagpipes tend to give people murderous ideas, Billy’s flute is torture on all delicate ears … and as for Buddy’s various artistic forays, they generate far more noise than harmony. When all’s said and done, though, there’s nothing like a family jam session to have jolly good fun!

Well, I saw this and thought "Oh...how long ago was the last book out?!" In fact volume 8 was out in 2022. Then I realised that it doesn't matter. Why? In December 2022 I wrote that:

"With a book like this having to wait between volumes is no problem as they are all self contained stories. The style is close enough to Roba that unless you pay VERY close attention you will not notice the difference.

The art is lively and the colour work of Luc Perdriset and Jean Bastide make it even more so. "Maybe I shouldn't have asked Buddy to help me put my toys away?" sums it all up. This is fun and I think we all need a fun read these days in between checking if the UK has another new Prime Minister yet.  Supposedly for youngsters this series is also a treat for adults of an immature mindset!"  

And I stand by that.  The art is lovely and the colour work by Luc Perdriset and Jean Bastide really makes the art stand out even more and that colour work really "makes the eye smile" as someone once wrote (it sounds so dumb it may well have been me).  It just gives you that buzz of innocence from when you were a kid and picked up a comic and it was all new and escapism from the every day greyness of a working class life (ooh, hark at me getting all artsy!).

But for sheer fun and joy and smiles I do recxommend this book...or series!

Hexagon Comics: Guardian of Senegal

 



 Story: Mouhamadou Moustapha Sy - Art: Narotam

Cover: Narotam

Editor: Jean-Marc Lofficier

7x10 squarebound comic, 

52 pages b&w

ISBN-13: 978-1-64932-269-2. 
$12.95
https://www.hexagoncomics.com/shop-the-guardian-of-senegal.html



Kanta, the Guardian of Senegal, made his first appearance in The Partisans #2, a story that took place in 1942, pitting him against Nazis and emissaries of the evil god Set, and aided by Baroud, the amazon Antales and a young Tanka. However, his origins were not detailed until now.

it took two years to put together the authentic Senegalese writer-artist team who produced this issue. Writer M. M. is the author of Sapiens Vampiris, a novel published in 2021 to critical acclaim. Artist Narotam works as a political cartoonist for the Senegalese newspaper, Le Politicien.

The story spans the period between 1914 and 1938 and features the Senegalese Tirailleurs (“Riflemen”), a corps of infantry created in 1857 who fought courageously during World War I.

The artwork may not be polished Marvel or DC artwork but then even those two companies fail to maintain that standard. This is an art style I have seen before and mainly in Independent comics where creators are given a chance to show off what they can do. As someone who basically draws satirical cartoons for a newspaper Narotam has not done a bad job. The grey tones work and it will be interesting to se how he develops his style.  The story written by Sy works well and it was enjoyable.

To give more background here is the press piece I did back in January:

THE GUARDIAN OF SENEGAL

 

Story: Mouhamadou Moustapha Sy



Art & Cover: Narotam



Adapted into English by Jean-Marc & Randy Lofficier




The Guardian of Senegal, made his first appearance in The Partisans #2, a story that took place in 1942. Jean-Marc Lofficier, EIC of Hexagon Comics, had wanted to include an authentic African hero rising from the ashes of the French Western African colonial empire.

However, Lofficier felt that the degree of authenticity that he sought would be better served if a Senegalese artistic team could craft his origins.

“I should state that I do not agree, in principle, with the notion that only writers of a certain ethnicity or origin can or should write characters of that same ethnicity, etc.” said Lofficier. “I think talent, research and an open mind can be adequate substitutes. Nevertheless, I can see the wisdom of entrusting Black American heroes such as Luke Cage or Black Lightning to talented Black-American creators, and the results have certainly more than justified that choice.

“However, I confess that I fail to see how the same applies to Black Panther, a character from a fictional Eastern African country. To me, the versions of that character crafted by Don McGregor, Peter Gillis and Jonathan Maberry are just as noteworthy as those produced by Christopher Priest, Ta-Nehisi Coates and Nnedi Okorafor, but still a product of American culture. In my opinion, it would have been more interesting to see what might have happened if Marvel had looked for creators from Kenya, Zimbabwe, Zambia, or South Africa. It took me two years to put together a Senegalese writer-artist team to produce this issue.”

Writer M M Sy is a young Senegalese engineer who first wrote fanfiction before being published professionally. His first novel, Sapiens Vampiris, was published in France in 2021 to critical acclaim. Artist Narotam works as a cartoonist for a Senegalese newspaper.



The story spans a period ranging from 1914 to 1938 and draws on the history of the Senegalese Riflemen who fought during World War I, 30,000 of whom were killed in battle. The keystone is a tragic friendly fire incident that happened at Chateau-Thierry on June 1st ,1918,” explains Lofficier. “American machine gunners mistakenly fired on what they believed to be a night attack by German troops. Instead, they were soldiers of the French 10th Colonial division from Senegal, who had been trying to get back across the river.”

There, now you know as much as I do but...you need to buy the book to catch up with me. 

Wednesday, 24 April 2024

Cinebook Ltd: BEAR'S TOOTH 6 - SILBERVOGEL

 


Authors: Yann & Alain Henriet
Age: 12 years and up
Size: 21.7 x 28.7 cm
Number of pages: 64 colour pages
Publication: January 2024

ISBN: 9781800440883 IN STOCK 

£11.99 inc. VAT

Everything is in place. The radio guidance relays are active, the Silbervogel, the intercontinental bomber, is operational, and Anna is ready to fly it to America – a suicide mission. As for Werner, he seems incapable of fulfilling his mission and killing the beautiful test pilot, in whom he still sees his childhood friend. The arrival of Soviet forces, along with the courage of a handful of prisoners and partisans, will give them both one last chance to do the right thing … Can they seize it?

Seven years ago... That's when this started. I had trouble remembering what had gone on before when it came to volume 5 so volume 1?!  Anyway, I did a deep search on CBO and it took a while since the posts were that far back Blogger will not show them in searches and here are the reviews from volumes 1-5:

2018

vol.1  https://hoopercomicart.blogspot.com/2018/03/cinebook-9th-art-bears-tooth-1-max.html

vol.2  https://hoopercomicart.blogspot.com/2018/10/bears-tooth-2-hanna_32.html

2019

vol. 3  https://hoopercomicart.blogspot.com/2019/02/cinebook-9th-art-bears-tooth-3-werner.html

2023

vol. 4  https://hoopercomicart.blogspot.com/2023/09/cinebook-ltd-bears-tooth-4-amerika.html

2024

vol. 5

https://hoopercomicart.blogspot.com/2024/03/cinebook-ltd-bears-tooth-5-eva.html

I know what you are asking -"How did it end?" You want that big a spoiler?!  Get out of here!! Everything I would want to say about this book is covered in all the other reviews. The art is wonderful and the uniforms, vehicles and settings are all spot on as is the history where it isn't fiction (these days I find it hard to tell them apart). The artwork cannot be faulted.

And the story? Well, as you might expect there are plot twists, things happen you were not expecting and there are some very nice twists that keep you guessing. I did love the touch of a naval diver named  Crabb and if you wonder why that caught my attention then look up the mystery of  Lieutenant-Commander Lionel Kenneth Phillip CrabbOBEGM (28 January 1909 – presumed dead 19 April 1956), known as Buster Crabb,  a Royal Navy frogman and diver who vanished during a reconnaissance mission for MI6 around a Soviet cruiser berthed at Portsmouth Dockyard in 1956.  My past catching up with me memory-wise.

The series ended "well" you might say but it is difficult to give anything away but now that you can buy volume 1-6 completed I would recommend it. Recommended especially if you are into war comics -there are elements here of triple cross agent Zigzag -Edward Arnold Chapman and Operation Crossbow (there was a film with George Peppard based on and titled Operation Crossbow in 1965 and Christopher Plummer played Chapman in the 1966 film Triple Cross).

Recommended

Monday, 22 April 2024

Cinebook Ltd: YOKO TSUNO 19 - THE ASTROLOGIST OF BRUGES

 



Author: Roger Leloup
Age: 8 years and up
Size: 21.7 x 28.7 cm
Number of pages: 48 colour pages
Publication: April 2024

£8.99 incl VAT

ISBN: 9781800441309

Yoko goes to Bruges, Belgium. She’s been invited there by a local artist, Van Laet, who wants to show the portrait of her he supposedly painted. Taking in the sights before their appointment, the young woman learns that the man has an unpleasant reputation – it is said he made a deal with the devil. 

When they finally meet, the painter produces the portrait and claims that Yoko posed for it … in the 16th century! 

Whooh!  "Come and see your portrait I painted -do you mind syringes or guns?"  We have all been there (or is it just me?)  Yes, Yoko and her pals go back in time to sort out the mystery and as you might expect get into other trouble. But with time travel there are consequences despite what you might see on Dr Who.

The art as always is lovely and detailed and the architecture in particular is finely detailed and well worth checking out panels individually. I believe it was Gil Kane (I know it was) who when asked why he never put backgrounds in the early Green Lantern comics responded that no one was interested in backgrounds just the fights. Well I am glad Leloup never had that attitude!

For a series I started out thinking was going to be a "kiddies comic" I soon found out that it is good story-telling, action and adventure with plenty of science fiction. Always recommended.

Sunday, 21 April 2024

Hexagon Comics: STRANGERS 11: FINALLY... ZEMBLA!

 


7x10 squarebound trade paperback, 

94 p. 

b&w

ISBN-13: 978-1-64932-267-8. - 
US$12.95

by Jean-Marc Lofficier; art by José Luis Ruiz Pérez, Nestor Vargas Campo; cover by José Luis Ruiz Pérez.

Contents:
- Foreword by J.-M. Lofficier
- CHAOS IN KARUNDA by Jean-Marc Lofficier; art by José Luis Ruiz Pérez
- ZEMBLA VS YATAN! by Jean-Marc Lofficier; art by José Luis Ruiz Pérez
- FRANCE UNDER FIRE! by Jean-Marc Lofficier; art by Nestor Vargas Campo
- RETURN OF THE ATTATURKEY by Jean-Marc Lofficier; art by Nestor Vargas Campo


HOMICRON, a NASA scientist whose body is possessed by a mysterious alien from planet Alpha. 

STARLOCK, a servant of the Towers, supremely powerful cosmic entities. 

FUTURA, a mysterious woman from a parallel dimension. 

JAYDEE, a teenage, alien metamorph, abandoned on Earth as a baby, and who may well be the deadliest killing machine in the universe... 

These characters, all “strangers” to Earth, are brought together by TANKA, a former jungle lord who has been recruited by entities from our planet’s farthest future to be their “time agent” and is now empowered to protect our world from extra-terrestrial menaces.

In this eleventh volume of Strangers, the heroes clash with the renegade Salamandrite known only as Mr. 17, to prevent the return of his alien masters, the Wan Lords, whom Kabur once defeated in the distant past...

First, they travel to the African jungle of Karunda, and then to a secret research facility in the South of France, to stop Mr. 17 from using dimensional gateways to bring the space vampires to Earth.

Special guest-stars: The Guardian of the Republic! Zembla! And the amazing Attaturkey!

Strangers always reminds me to a degree of John Byrne's Alpha Flight. Though more correctly I suppose it was more like the Bronze Age Avengers where there were regular members and gust stars. "Season 4" helps you sort out your volumes for reading and once you get a nice stack of Hexagon books that helps.

With Lofficier writing the stories and maintaining the continuity he has created (before Hexagon Comics (Cool French Comics has not been updated since 2017 but is full of information and recommended https://www.coolfrenchcomics.com/  The knowledge of these characters and the continuity he has established makes for some excellent cross-overs and here we see a story with some twists and a dark secret held by Yatan.

All a good fun read but then we have the art. The first two parts drawn by the late Jose Luis Ruiz Perez that cannot be faulted. Wonderful to see and sad that we will see no more of his work.  Nestor Vargas Campo illustrates the next two parts and his artwork is a different style to Perez but equally as distinctive with solid blacks, grey toning and cross-hatching  which really suits black and white comic strips.

I do recommend Hexagon Comics and particularly Strangers and these are good comics that remind me of what Marvel used to be in the 1970s and 1980s before 1990s rot set in. Check out their web site and remember: this is the age of the Hexagon!

Thursday, 18 April 2024

Cinebook Ltd: THE BLUECOATS 17 - THE DRAFT RIOTS

 


Authors: Lambil & Cauvin
Age: 8 years and up
Size: 21.7 x 28.7 cm
Number of pages: 48 colour pages

ISBN: 9781800441248

£8.99 incl VAT

Publication: January 2024

https://www.cinebook.co.uk/the-bluecoats-17-the-draft-riots-p-4538.html

The Civil War rages on. Despite some much-needed victories, losses have been harrowing on the Union side, and volunteers are getting scarce. That leaves conscription, but it’s an extremely unpopular measure – especially because of the possibility to avoid it by paying a sum of money only the rich can afford. Yet the North has little choice but to maintain it … and this is how, in July 1863 in New York City, simmering resentment turns into bloody rioting – with Blutch and Chesterfield caught in the tragic events.

The one thing I like about The Blue Coats is that it could just have been another American Civil War series but they have chosen to delve into some little known aspects of the conflict -with Blutch and Chesterfield added of course. The Draft Riots may come as a surprise to many because people think a military draft is more modern era when in fact it is quite ancient. I have not seen any films based in this period where there is talk of military draft. In fact most films portray it as a volunteers only fighting for one supposed cause or another. Normal human beings do not really want to kill other human beings -sadly they are not in the majority.

To call the art "cartoony" is a little insulting because although the people are not really cartoony they do have that style used by European artists even in very serious stories. Look at the details in the cover -the buildings and cobblestones are quite detailed. Inside the backgrounds and scenes are equally detailed and it all works well together.   The colour work (by Leonardo who I will probably find is a digital service) really adds more to this book. I have seen printings in French as well as the original German (😂) and I have to say Cinebook's is probably the best quality I have seen -no surprise since printing technology has moved on over the last couple decades.

I think that this series is okay for younger and older readers and the books have so far not disappointed.

Wednesday, 17 April 2024

HEXAGON SPOTLIGHT ON... JOSÉ LUIS RUIZ

 


7x10 squarebound comic, 
48 pages
 color. 
ISBN-13: 978-1-64932-261-6. 
US$12.95.
https://www.hexagoncomics.com/shop-hexagon-spotlight-on-jose-luis-ruiz.html
 

José Luis Ruiz Pérez was a tremendously gifted artist and it is my greatest honor to have been able to work with him for these past eight years. It was Manuel Martín Peniche who introduced him to me, and I will be eternally grateful to him for that. Not only was his work superb, reminiscent of the great American artists of the 1960s, such as Dick Giordano or Carmine Infantino, but he was also a very kind and friendly man, judging from our correspondence.


He will be greatly missed, not only by us here at Hexagon, but by many, many devoted fans of his.

Perez died after a long battle with cancer in 2023 and this book is a fitting showcase of some of his work -pencilled, inked and full colour and just to give you a taster look at these:




This type of book is a real treat -no story just great artwork and from an artist not unknown to Hexagon comic fans so a fitting tribute.

Oh, please order directly from the Hexagon site if you are interested in this and other titles as that means the publisher gets the profit not the big selling companies.

Hexagon Comics: KABUR #6: THE FIRES OF FORALUME

 


 by Jean-Marc Lofficier; art by Luciano Bernasconi; Roberto Castro, José Luis Ruiz Pérez; cover by Roberto Castro.

7x10 squarebound comic, 

96 pages 

b&w
ISBN-13: 978-1-64932-256-2. 

US$14.95.   GBP 12.99

https://www.hexagoncomics.com/shop-kabur-6-the-fires-of-foralume.html

ARIANROD: THE SCOURGE OF THE TSUNABI by Jean-Marc Lofficier; art by Roberto Castro

24. SHANGA KHOUR by Jean-Marc Lofficier (based on a plot by Claude J. Legrand) art by Luciano Bernasconi

25. THE FIRES OF FORALUME by Jean-Marc Lofficier; art by José Luis Ruiz Pérez

The SAGA OF KABUR continues!
 
After defeating the evil Ghool, Kabur and Arianrod suddenly find themselves pitted against the diabolical schemes of the witch SHANGA KHOUR and the mysterious TIME RIDER. To defeat them, Kabur will have to overcome the lethal traps of the ghostly town of N’THALEK...
 
KABUR and ARIANROD then reach the great harbor city of FORALUME, where Lagrid was once sold as a slave. Still on the trail of SELINOR PSAH, the powerful sultan-sorcerer who kidnapped LAGRID, they find themselves caught up in a deadly plot hatched by the SHAIKORTIN Reavers who seek to take over FORALUME…
 
In a third bonus story, the beautiful Fomore princess ARIANROD, after having left her home, unmasks a murderer and confronts the PLAGUE OF THE TSUNABI...

That cover is a poster or trading card in the making!  It's good to see Arianrod on the cover and in action since she has become as important a character in this book as Kabur.  The stories are pure sword and sandals barbarian goodness and some nice back history being established for the future., In this, as noted, Arianrod is the equal of Kabur rather as Red Sonja was to Conan. 

The lovely clean black and white artwork and whether in a city, dungeon or witches lair, spell-casting or sword play it all looks great and when you see the name of the artists involved it is bound to be. Lofficier keeps his steady hand on the stories as well as continuityu and what Roy Thomas was to Marvel Comics in its creative Bronze Age so Lofficier is to Hexagon in its age of power!

A must for barbarian comic fans or anyone liking a good set of action stories.

Cinebook Ltd: A Homage To Morris's Lonesome Cowboy Untamed!

 



48pp

colour

A4 comic album

UK  £8.99

US $12.95


Lucky Luke enters a small town to drop off at the sheriff's office a young man who tried to steal Jolly Jumper. A few miles down the road, in the middle of nowhere, he suddenly finds himself threatened... by a little girl! Young Rose and her brother are currently alone in their cabin after the mysterious disappearance of their parents. Luke will have to investigate, but also take care of two particularly wild and undisciplined children!

Well this is why reviewing can be a pain in the bum. This album dos not appear on Cinebook's webpage so I cannot give a link to order from there. So I spend an hour scouring the internet and find details on Amazon -a company I prefer not to give any publicity to. However, it does state: "This title will be released on July 1, 2024."  I see what you did there, Cinebook....

Anyway, first thing I noticed was the cover and my first thought was "That is Lucky Luke?" 

Blutch, pen name of Christian Hincker (born 27th December, 1967 in Strasbourg) is a French comic book author. He is considered one of the main authors of French comics since the early 1990s. After studying at the Ã‰cole supérieure des arts décoratifs de Strasbourg, Blutch was discovered through a competition organized by the monthly magazine Fluide Glacial. He got his nickname from a classmate due to his physical resemblance to Corporal Blutch, one of the characters of the comic series Les Tuniques Bleues (or The Blue Coats if you read Cinebook's UK reprints).

Seeing another artist take over from one you already know is a little jarring but this book is not part of the regular Lucky Luke series but "A HomageTo Morris's Lonesome Cowboy" and once that is clear the old man with a beard can sit back and breath easily!
There is a good script with lots of comic bar fighting, gunplay and this crosses over to the always present visual gags and, to be honest the sheriff in Rubbish Gulch is not up to the job...or any kind of job other than...being held prisoner?

The gun-slinger having to take care of two troublesome kids is straight out of a 1960s Western movie (just substitute James Garner or Glenn Ford for Lucky Luke). It was an enjoyable read and a new style that worked so no complaints from me. The reader -you- well, you gotta wait til July😛

Recommended.

Review: My First Big Book of Utter (C)RAP

 

  •  US Letter, 8.5×11 in, 22×28 cm
    Pages: 20

£5.00

https://www.blurb.co.uk/b/11910794-first-big-book-of-utter-c-rap?fbclid=IwZXh0bgNhZW0CMTAAAR11wCNsZS29dm4UmM93SWpML_bQMNHdK0nj3WoypFS0GDRAlMLjt4_Wo54_aem_ATv8BppvDEGO4pcpAJm9HTYoG7vpBkP_eYTxyP-TJvuwAqEBsz80_f2Vdd7dgxPDfEwzroAoUiKzFUmeFBDWbhmX

Underground comic legend Richard Pester brings us a new magazine featuring his groundbreaking graphic novel Trials of the Cosmic Oddity, also featuring material from over three decades of art.

Just to explain (though it should be obvious) the title is a humorous play on the creator's initials -RAP- and (c) so "CRAP".  Some of our non-English readers might have wondered about that!

That does not tell you much but when I received this along with issue 2 the first thing that hit me were the covers -the image here does not do it justice at all. Then I did what I always do and that is look at the production quality from paper to printing and binding (old habits die hard). It is very nicely put together and the colour reproduction is as good as you'll get with, say, Cinebook Ltd.

Having seen the original Cosmic Oddity (all three parts) I was hoping that it might get combined into one book -it would be the British equivalent to Harvey Pekar's American Splendor. What I want and what I get are two different things, however -so my mother always said. In this abbreviated form it still works and this time in colour and that I was not expecting.

There is a text piece about The Cosmic Oddity and two pages of Pester's other character Derna and tracing her history.  Plus there is a homage to Saphire and Steel -possibly one of the best ever supernatural/sci fi ITV serials of the 1970-1980s. 

For me this was a breath of fresh air and at £5 well worth it. I have seen the second issue and it's just as good and will review it once the ordering details are to hand.


Above: Derna in colour along with Joanna Lumley and David McCallum as Saphire and Steel


Above left: The Cosmic Oddity has words with...The Cosmic Oddity and a little (above and below) slice of life in full colour.


Give yourself a treat and maybe some inspiration and try a copy because £5 these days is not a lot to spend on a comic especially one as unique as this.

Monday, 15 April 2024

Chilling Ghoulish Tales Of Terror And How The (dumb) "Kid" Bought Some Rights

 This post from 2014 highlighted a lot of the problems in "the old days" when the UK still had publishing houses. The post later received a comment that I'll add at the end!


Enjoy.

I was going through old posts the other day when I found this one. I read through it and realised I had made a HUGE error!
So, to correct that, here is an up-dated, better illustrated posting!

Above: Myron Fass (by Jeff Goodman) and his shirt and, yes, I believe that is the famous gun under his vest!

Back in the 1970s I was young,foolish and so desperately wanted to be a comic book publisher.  One day a friend working at BBC TV Pebble Mill phoned me and said:”Stan Lee is going to be on Pebble Mill At One-can you get to Birmingham?”

Pebble Mill At One was a chat/features show that went out at 1p.m. each day and Stan Lee was only “guaranteed” for that show’s duration.  Could I get there?  Yes!

Well,that was the plan.  There used to be an old newsagents/tobacconist on Newfoundland Road before it became part of the motorway into Bristol.  The owner at the time,Reg,didn’t like distributors of magazines and comics for reasons I never learned.  When I asked I was told,in amongst the coughing,”Theyz all a buncha bastids”.

Anyway,I got a good few of my Charlton Comics in there and Reg loved horror comics.  I mentioned going to Pebble Mill and Reg told me he had to “pop up to” Leicester on that day to pick up new issues of a comic -he could drop me by Pebble Mill?




Above: A Myron Fass publication that I submitted articles for -no idea if they were published!

Now, up to this point my original article was correct but I then found my notes and I realised the huge error I had made. T & P were distributors and someone there -I have "Mar" in my notes so it could be Martin?- gave me the number of some contacts. These were at Moore Harness Ltd and Portman Distribution Ltd.

Time for some more about the UKs very, uh, "murky", comics going ons.

Castle of Terror and Tales Of Terror caught my eye because they were UK comic magazine format and were both in 1978 and published by Croydon based Portman Distribution. A number of Marvel comic weeklies had been cancelled -Dracula Lives!, Planet Of The Apes, etc.. So my assumption was, since they seemed to utilise a fair bit of that material, that these were somehow Marvel sanctioned and legit.

But in later conversations with Marvel UK folk (oh, if only I'd done that years before!) it seems the deal to publish this material was agreed upon between Portman and Marvel in the United States, totally bypassing the new Marvel UK.  Marvel UK complained to head office and the deal was scrapped. I think both titles only got as far as issues 4 or 5.  Monster Monthly was Marvel UKs response but that didn't last very long.


Now, Portman I spoke to and I, uh, purchased two titles...but no content! Obviously I had not realised that at the time because I was told "We don't really feel comfortable publishing comics".  Yes, I was a ***** idiot.

But Moore Harness, a Surrey based company, were publishing less high quality titles such as Chilling Tales Of Horror and Ghoul Tales and, it seems, they wanted to shift them along to someone else. Me.

I shook hands. I paid the money.

I was in a cold sweat.  By today’s standards £100 isn’t much but in the 1970s it was a small fortune.  I sold loads of items and duly got the rights.  However, printers then asked for more and more money as they claimed this-and-that had to be “tweaked in house”.  So, I was there with comics but it would be too expensive to print.

I asked Alan Class about his printers and he gave me the details.  Their rates were very reasonable.  Then, out of the blue, I heard from Portman and then Moore Harness: it seemed I’d have to also negotiate with the original publisher in the United States.  This was a shock to me.  I thought all the work belonged to those companies and no one ever mentioned a US publisher.  Apparently, one of those notorious oversights that happened in UK comics.

If I was in a sweat before.... 




I wrote a long letter to MF Enterprises and I sat back nervously awaiting a reply.  One week turned into two and then three.  I really thought I’d sold a great many things and paid out money for nothing.  It was a depressing month.

On the fourth week the telephone rang at 2 a.m. -either someone was ill or had died [no one ever calls that time of night about anything else!].  I’m assuming that it was a loud New York [?] voice that greeted my nervous “hello?”.  Apparently, I was talking to Myron Fass who told me he’d gotten my letter and read it through and told me I’d gotten a “shitty deal” (and I AM toning down the exact words).  I was regaled by talk of pulp SF publishing and how he’d made a good $4 million dollars on a magazine about the Kennedy Assassination and how he was making "fast bucks with porn books."

At this point I ought to point out that I was wondering why he was telling me all of this and was he impressing me before telling me to take a hike?

Then came the crunch.  Mr Fass said he’d read what I’d sent him (a proposal of how I intended to use the strips and so forth) and it looked good –a brief moment of thinking he was going to offer to publish the title was soon dashed.  He said he’d noted I was going to add a super hero strip into the comic to draw in fans of that genre (a bad idea that I'd never try today!) and asked if I had a super hero comic strip?  I said I was still looking.  There was a laugh and a “Kid, yer ****** lucky!” ["kid"??].

He then told me how he had a super hero that had been a hit in the 1960s called Captain Marvel.
Here I immediately thought of Fawcett’s Captain Marvel.  I asked if he meant that character?  I was told that the Captain Marvel he’d published was far more popular and original.  After five minutes of talking from him I had agreed to pay a sum for the horror strip rights in the UK and Captain Marvel.

The money was sent and then I hit the major snag.  I was told Marvel Comics would sue if I used the name Captain Marvel.  In fact, when I tried to clarify the position I learned that DC comics owned Captain Marvel [Fawcett's] and they would sue.
I was young,inexperienced and out of money and in it deep.

So,I still have the horror pages and I have the Captain Marvel pages [though issue #1 pages are missing after 30 years] but never used them.

Oh, and just to point two things out regarding murkiness...Moore Harness and Portman seem to have shared a similar cover artist on their titles (?) AND both companies (supposedly unconnected) had their titles edited by a Theodore S. Hecht.
Intriguing, no? 

 Captain Marvel (1966) 2-A by M.F. Enterprises

Of course, I only learned in the 1990s about the man known as Myron Fass.  The business partner beating, gun-toting, wheeler-dealer.  I have to say, though, at the time he was very nice but loud, as I expected Americans to be.

I was in awe.

In fact,I wonder whether I had a lucky escape.  I was typing this and wondered whether there was anything on the internet about him.  There is!  So,to learn more of the legend visit:

http://www.badmags.com/bmmyronfass.html

Oh,youth!

Below: Myron Fass: "YAHOO! That dumb kid bought it!"


So I saw a comment appear one day and this is it:

"Jack Crandall" was Myron's pseudonym when he did not want to be identified. I'm Jeff Goodman, former editor for Myron, who was randomly Googling Myron and found this website. Actually, Myron DID own the rights to "Captain Marvel" and you could have successfully published it."

I checked with HM Copyright Office and, yes, I could and still can publish the material I bought.  So if I ever get back to publishing new stuff you know what will be top of the list!

SPLIT! The "Other" Captain Marvel (Or "CM" as he's become known)

 



Captain Marvel no. 1


Somewhere around 1967/1968, either at Jarman's newsagents in Mina Road, St. Werburgh's or the newsagents at the top of Grosvenor Road, near to Cheltenham Road, where I bought comics and Plastacine -it was my secondary "go-to" location.  Hey, I was ten years old -I had comic locations, okay?  Anyway, I purchased a copy of Captain Marvel no. 2, 1966.

Thinking about it, I'm sure it was at Jarman's but we're going back a, uh, few years now.

Before Multicoloured Swap Shop and Tiswas destroyed kids Saturday mornings, it pushed out the cartoons and serials like Zorro, I used to be downstairs in front of the Telly watching Rocket Robin Hood, Gigantor or Marine Boy and I'd look through my Captain Marvel.

Ten years or so later I would be, uh, "persuaded" into buying the rights to publish Captain Marvel and that is all explained in another posting

 Captain Marvel no. 2

The character has been much aligned by people who, obviously, have either not read the comics or are part of that head-up-their-arses crowd who think a super hero comic has to conform to their high standards -those of modern DC or Marvel comics.  Sad to say the comics of today have very little fun in them.
 Captain Marvel no.3

In fact, when I receive Jon Morris' The League Of Regrettable Super Heroes for review I noted that Captain Marvel was in it.  I opened up the entry and...the character was matter-of-factly dealt with. I could only mutter "wow".

http://hoopercomicart.blogspot.co.uk/2015/05/the-league-of-regrettable-superheroes_16.html
Captain Marvel no. 4 -the last issue in the run

M. F. Enterprises was owned by 1970s pulp magazine entrepreneur Myron Fass, who also owned the rights to black and white horror comics under the banner of Eerie Publications.  See my first link above regarding that in the UK.

M.F. Enterprises best comic was based on a concept by the creator of the Golden Age (Timely) Human Torch. Art Carl Hubbel and written by Leon August In fact, the credit for script is given to Roger Elwood with art by "Francho". No other credits on the other stories so I assume it was the same writer-artist team throughout.  Issue 2 has no credits but the art style is similar and the writing. issue 3 has story and inking by Carl Hubbell but no penciller credit but this may have been done by Hubbell.

The character of The Bat returns in the final issue but due to concerns over any Batman similaries leading to National (DC) lawsuits, he was now the Ray. Stories are by Leo August and art is credited to Carl Hubbell which seems to back up the idea that he drew everything in no. 3.

In the first issue we learn that Captain Marvel is in fact an alien android (rather like Burgos' Human Torch who was an android) and arriving on Earth he suffers some bouts of amnesia and even forgets meeting the lad who will become his side-kick, Billy Braxton.


Above. No, I just don't see a domini mask hiding CMs alter ego.


Now Billy keeps referring to him as "Captain Marvel" and we learn that with the boy's help CM secured his first job as a reporter. That gets him in some interesting situations but later CM decides to try time travel to the past and computer controlled future. There are also aliens mixed in. And in the final issue we learn CM now has an alter ego.  Suddenly he is Professor Roger Winkle. Then comes the donning of a domino mask while in costume....let's just not think too long and hard on that one.

Enter....The Bat!....or The Ray....

This MFE Captain Marvel could fly and had other abilities but the main one everyone focusses in on is the ability to seperate, move and control every part of his body -fingers, hands, feet, legs, head (NO if you are going to think of other childish items of the body go away!) which he could do by simply calling out "Split!" and for the body units to reassemble "Xam!" (pronounced "Zam!").

 The title, sadly,  lasted only four issues but....
 Captain Marvel Presents The Terrible 5 no.1

The character was to return -not that he ever went since all the titles carried the year "1966" on the cover, with the "1967" exception on the cover of  Captain Marvel Presents The Terrible 5 no. 2, which was the final issue of that. Dr Fate, Atom Jaw, Elasticman, Tiny Man and Dr Doom were the bad guys.  Tinyman had gone from villain to DA to villain and was almost a side-kick to Elasticman when...well, remember I mentioned that the domino mask CM wore to disguise himself?  Elasticman is watching an item on TV with Tinyman and sees Prof. Winkle  "Put a mask on him and he's Captain Marvel!"

I did write that it seemed a pointless disguise.

There were some cracking fun stories with some little twists that still stand out today -Atom Jaw going from bad guy to reforming for one.


  Captain Marvel Presents The Terrible 5 no. 2 -the final issue.

 But you cannot keep a good android down. The MFE version of Captain Marvel later made a cameo appearance, along with a whole bunch of other alternate versions of (the now DC Fawcett) Captain Marvel, in 1997 in issue #27 of The Power of Shazam! . The MFE character is shown performing his body splitting but while wearing a traditional Fawcett Captain Marvel thunderbolt costume. No. Just no.

Myron Fass jumped in on the super hero money wagon that went "BOOM!" and 1966-1967 was it. Fass then moved on but did continue with his Eerie Publications line until 1981.



I believe Bill Black's AC Comics republished some of the MFE material back in the 1990s but I've never seen it and whether he, too, purchased rights I have no idea.

But the inspiration has continued in a way because Black Tower Comics has featured Canada's own android body-splitter "CM" ( a former University teacher who moved to Canada) for a good while -he featured in Return of the Gods. And I have me plans to use those rights I bought some time!

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