In 1976, I was a depressed sixteen year old comic book geek who loved movies old and new and Beatles music...and I decided to keep a journal. My newest blog, A GEEK'S JOURNAL--1976, debuts tomorrow morning. The forward into the past concept of this endeavor is..."What if there had been blogs in 1976?" I most certainly would have had one and this would probably have been it. Starting tomorrow and for the next year, I will post my journal entries daily as I decipher my ancient handwriting.
Friday, December 31, 2010
A Geek's Journal-1976
In 1976, I was a depressed sixteen year old comic book geek who loved movies old and new and Beatles music...and I decided to keep a journal. My newest blog, A GEEK'S JOURNAL--1976, debuts tomorrow morning. The forward into the past concept of this endeavor is..."What if there had been blogs in 1976?" I most certainly would have had one and this would probably have been it. Starting tomorrow and for the next year, I will post my journal entries daily as I decipher my ancient handwriting.
Thursday, December 30, 2010
Love the Way You Lie-Eminem with Rihanna
Living in the past as I tend to do, I am not a big rap fan nor do i particularly care who is or isn't on the charts or played on the radio these days. The lovely Brittany Rose, however, has programmed my car stereo so that I do on occasion find myself listening to...and perhaps surprisingly enjoying...some modern music. Here's one I heard for the first time yesterday. The message seems a bit mixed but the video has some cool scenes and one can't deny the catchiness and clever wording of the lyrics.
La Cage Aux Folles-Lee Roy Reams-1993
Here we see this year's Kennedy Center honoree Jerry Herman's title song from Broadway's LA CAGE AUX FOLLES, performed wonderfully by Lee Roy Reams, arguably the biggest star ever to come out of Covington, Kentucky. Hometown boy makes good!
Dick Tracy From Pencil to Paper
This video appears to be an early nineties clip from some sort of children's show. We see artist Dick Locher penciling and inking a DICK TRACY Sunday strip and making a color guide, then we see the various stages of coloring and printing required (at that time at least) to get it to the newspaper.
Spike Milligan-1970 Clips
Another definite candidate for the funniest man who ever lived title is Spike Milligan, seen here in a handful of 1970 clips.
Topo Gigio-Strangers in the Night
Looking at him now--especially if you weren't there in the sixties--it's hard to grasp just how amazingly popular this little mouse was around the world in the era of the Beatles!
Wednesday, December 29, 2010
Tuesday, December 28, 2010
Happy Birthday Stan Lee!
Word spreads around the blogosphere that today is once again--as it is every year--the birthday of the one and only Stan the Man Lee. Stan often gets a bad rap from the either/or fanboys who feel compelled to choose Lee or Kirby or Lee or Ditko. The thing is that Lee was working in comics for two whole decades before the Marvel Universe came along. And he has continued to be creative now for more than another three decades after his day to day involvement with comics ended. As Mark Evanier and others have pointed out today, Stan Lee's greatest creation is undoubtedly Stan Lee, the exuberant elder statesman and spokesperson for pop culture as we know it in our world today! Would that we could all have such life as we grow older!
Monday, December 27, 2010
Review: Shazam! by Chip Kidd and Geoff Spear
Well, Shazam! Friend Brittany Rose (see our other blog) got me this well-receieved new book by Chip Kidd and Geoff Spear for Christmas.
Sunday, December 26, 2010
Where's Kip?
Saturday, December 25, 2010
The Funniest Man Who Ever Lived? # 1--Peter Cook
Friday, December 24, 2010
Thursday, December 23, 2010
Wednesday, December 22, 2010
National Lampoon Comics
Time for another random book off the shelf here at the Library. Today's selection is 1974's NATIONAL LAMPOON COMICS. Technically marketed as a magazine at the time, this is, by anyone's definition, in reality a thick, square-bound book gathering together many of the best of the comics, Foto Funnies and other comics-related material that had been published in NatLamp until that point.
Tuesday, December 21, 2010
Black Terror Ad
Monday, December 20, 2010
More Canadian Captain Marvel-1942
Sunday, December 19, 2010
B Westerns
My dad loved westerns and was always talking about them. I got to see the tail end of the TV western boom of the fifties with ZORRO, MAVERICK and SUGARFOOT and was able to keep watching Roy Rogers reruns on Saturday afternoons well into the sixties. Along the way, I enjoyed CIMMARON STRIP, THE HIGH CHAPPERAL and GUNSMOKE (when it wasn’t taking itself too seriously). I grew up watching John Wayne, Randolph Scott and James Stewart movies on Sunday afternoons and we’d still head to the theater at least once a year for a new movie with Duke!
But there were others he spoke of that I never saw--Buck Jones, Col Tim McCoy, the Three Mesquiteers, Johnny Mack Brown, Tim Holt, Bob Steele, Allan “Rocky” Lane, Bill Boyd, Rex Bell, Rex Allen, Monte Hale, Whip Wilson, Lash LaRue and Gene Autry.
Finally, in the mid-seventies, a local TV station bought a movie package that introduced me to many of these Saturday matinee heroes of the past! Tim Holt and Buck Jones became my all-time favorites quickly but the station also ran George O’Brien and Tom Keene. Later on, due to popular demand, they picked up the Rough Riders series and the Three Mesquiteers…even some of John Wayne’s musical westerns as “Singin’ Sandy!” Seriously!
Maybe B westerns are an acquired taste in this world today. After all, if you’ve seen any four, you’ve probably seen them all. Only the personalities carry the films—the stalwart heroes, the comic relief sidekicks and all the great character actors (like Tris Coffin and Clayton Moore—yes, THAT Clayton Moore) who played the bad guys. Oh, and there were girls, too…but never mind them, there were HORSES! Not JUST horses, mind you but WONDER horses! Every cowboy hero somehow had the best horse EVER!
If you have never yet sampled B westerns, I envy you. Go into it with an open mind and they are a LOT of fun...even the C Westerns! If you’re an old-style cowboy buff, you can find a whole range (pun intended) you can order from us at very inexpensive prices including some RARE Roy Rogers and silent westerns! A portion of every sale goes to support this blog.
http://oldtimeradiotapes.homestead.com/StevenSiteWesterns.html
Flip and Curly Meet the Vampire
Here we have yet another of of my unrealized projects. Dating from the 1980's, this would have been a radio series that parodied classic radio and other adventure plots. The focus would have been on 1940's teenagers Flip Flinch and Curly Temple, both of the "Golly gee whiz!" type, who were constantly getting into trouble in their small town with spies, monsters, aliens, etc. Chance Drake was their next door neighbor and adult mentor, a classic archetype but somewhat clueless when it came to what was really going on around town. Margo Street was his faithful companion. Flip and Curly, meanwhile, lived with their eccentric grandfather, Gramps, a scientist who claimed he had invented a time machine. No one believed him, of course, but around that same time, an odd young man with long hair, bright clothes and an anachronistically groovy style of speech moved in to the spare room in the Flinch attic. He described himself as a "cool cat" and his name was Felix so Flip starts calling him "Felix the Cat."Meanwhile, in the old abandoned castle at the edge of town...strange doings were afoot.
Saturday, December 18, 2010
Captain Hero Pin-up-1967
Friday, December 17, 2010
Thursday, December 16, 2010
Movies That Fell Through the Cracks # 64
Seriously, can you imagine a group of actors in 1974 that could be as bland as Charles Grodin, Candice Bergen, James Mason and John Gielgud? Seriously. I ask you! 11 HARROWHOUSE brought them all together that year in a British adaptation of a suspense thriller by author Gerald Browne. I never read the book but since it was fairly popular, I'm going to presume the characters weren't as dull in the original.
Tuesday, December 14, 2010
Captain Marvel and the Lie Detector-Canada-1942
Apologies for the few tears and blurs and the illegible panels on page two which were apparently that way in the original printing. Hope you enjoyed it. I have a few more if anyone's interested. Let me know.
Monday, December 13, 2010
Review-Wanted Undead or Alive
This is a tough review because WANTED UNDEAD OR ALIVE by Jonathan Maberry and Janice Gable Bashman isn't a bad book. It isn't a good book either, though. It just isn't really much of a book at all. It certainly isn't the book I was led to believe it would be.
Sunday, December 12, 2010
Brenda Starr Trailer-1986/1992
The BRENDA STARR comic strip is in the news this week with the announcement of its retirement after 7 decades. Here's the horribly camped up trailer for the Brooke Shields/Timothy Dalton film version (as opposed to the Jill St John TV pilot of the seventies). Apparently shot in 1986, it was six years later before the picture was released and then barely at that.
Burger Chef Commercial-1976
I rarely ate at McDonalds and literally had never eaten at Burger King in the seventies. One reason for this was that there was a Burger Chef just a block away at the end of the alley by my house. Their mascots were Burger Chef and Jeff. the former being voiced in TV ads by the great voice actor, Paul Winchell, probably best remembered as the voice of Tigger!
Ultraman Zero-Trailer
Here's a brief teaser trailer for ULTRAMAN ZERO, the 2010 deluxe ULTRAMAN feature film that reunites all the various Ultramen as well as darn near every monster they ever fought! It's a fun movie with great spfx and an obviously good-sized budget but one does have to learn to accept the traditional conceit of rubber suited heroes and monsters. For those of us who grew up on this stuff, that part's easy.
The Mad Russian/The Two Jackies/The Ghost and the Guest
A trio of B movie trailers from the 1940's includes radio comic Bert Gordon's silly mystery vehicle as THE MAD RUSSIAN, a comedy starring two former child actors often confused with each other--Jackie Coogan and Jackie Cooper--and a third low budget spook comedy entitled THE GHOST AND THE GUEST. I love these cheap, short features and wish they would turn up much more often than they do!
Jack Benny Meets Isaac Hayes-1973
From JACK BENNY'S FIRST FAREWELL SPECIAL in 1973, here's a truncated version of the "Theme From Shaft" by the cooler than cool Isaac Hayes, followed by some typical variety show clowning that juxtaposes oddly the great, iconic comedian with the then modern day musician. He'd come a long way since Phil Harris and Bob Crosby.
Saturday, December 11, 2010
Yoe Books-For Your Holiday Consideration
As many of you may know, I have been unofficially associated with author Craig Yoe over the past year or so as a member of his International Team of Comics Historians. During this period, Craig and his partner in crime, Clizia Guzzoni, also established their own imprint through IDW and have turned out a number of worthy collections of comics reprints and history, a number of which I’ve actually enjoyed the privilege of working on. Although my involvement on some went only as far as to make sure the pages were in the right order, on others I did some writing, research and more. It’s easy to look at these books and say there’s nothing new here—it’s all been done before. But seriously, with Craig’s design background, has it ever been done so well?
With Christmas nipping at our doorsteps even as we speak, let’s take a look back at Yoe Books’ prolific first year for some gift ideas, shall we?
The first book to bear the Yoe Books imprint was THE ART OF DITKO. Following on the heels of Blake Bell’s unauthorized Ditko biography, THE ART OF DITKO offers a selection of rarely seen but endlessly creative and inventive stories from the man who (okay, I’ll say it) created SPIDER-MAN. There’s some original art, some annotation and some fascinating insights on the artist from others including Stan Lee and Craig himself, for whom Ditko once did some work. All of the stories are shot sharply from the original comics as is a Yoe trademark, giving it, in my opinion, a much more archival feel than bleached out, retouched reprints.
Next came what must be called the gem of the collection thus far—THE COMPLETE MILT GROSS COMIC BOOKS AND LIFE STORY. An important but neglected figure in the history of Jews in 20th Century pop culture and humor, the innovative cartoonist is here given his due with reprints of his later comic book work and, more importantly, a well researched and heavily illustrated biography. Touted by everyone from PLAYBOY to BOING-BOING and appearing in the background just this week on CONAN, this is an important addition to comics research as well as to Jewish history…but let’s not forget, Milt Gross was damn funny! While the comics collected here may be well past his newspaper prime, they are still laugh out loud funny. If you have yet to discover the joys of banana oil, this is where you need to start!
TIGER TEA is a small, gifty collection of George Herriman’s KRAZY KAT, that beloved yet incomprehensible comic strip that thrived in the early part of the 20th Century, particularly amongst the cognoscenti. The book was criticized for not being a complete reprint but it was never intended to be. Craig has edited together months and months of individual strips pertaining to an ongoing storyline in which Krazy discovers “tiger tea,” a metaphorical marijuana. In what I thought an exceedingly clever move, the book is printed on hemp paper. I have never been a big fan of the Kat, Ignatz mouse and Offisa Pupp but you’ll find them all here and quite frankly, this was the most enjoyment I’ve ever gotten out of the Kokonino County gang.
DAN DECARLO’S JETTA came next, reviving a little known sci-fi teenager from the artist’s pre-Archie days of the early fifties. DeCarlo is enjoying a revival all around these days as more and more fans come to realize that his now ubiquitous style is one of THE classic comic art styles…and no one did it better, of course, than DeCarlo himself. The book reprints the entire original run of the comics along with the cover to an unpublished final issue. There are also a series of pin-up style portraits by modern artists that round out the futuristic nostalgia nicely.
THE GOLDEN COLLECTION OF KRAZY KOOL KIDS KOMICS is a favorite of mine. It’s an eclectic collection of children’s stories from the 1940’s onward with art by an amazing selection of legends that includes Frank Frazetta, Wally Wood, Walt Kelly, Jack Kirby, Steve Ditko, Dr. Seuss, Syd Hoff, Jules Feiffer, Harvey Kurtzman, Dave Berg, John Stanley and Howie Post. This thick volume is fun for adults both as nostalgia and just as a selection of rare and fun stories. It would be even more fun to read to children just like back in the old days. As always, the packaging is also quite impressive.
After this came more kids komics with FELIX-THE GREAT COMIC BOOK TAILS, bringing back long forgotten comic book stories of the feline who was once the most famous cartoon character in the entire world! Gathered from various companies in the forties and fifties, these are fun, inventive and often surreal adventures, augmented by one of Craig’s heavily illustrated historical essays.
I wish I could tell you something in particular about Craig’s BARNEY GOOGLE book—especially since it was one of the ones I helped on—but I haven’t seen a copy! Obviously, it deals with Billy DeBeck and his highly influential strip starring the man with the goo-goo-googly eyes. I have every reason to believe that it lives up to the high standards of the rest of the Yoe Books.
Just in time for Halloween came DICK BRIEFER’S FRANKENSTEIN, another favorite. Briefer is one of those artists whose work was clearly better than most and yet has been nearly forgotten over time. Although he worked in various genres, his crowning achievement was FRANKENSTEIN—both versions. Briefer originally depicted the monster as villain in a series of sometimes gory stories that saw him fighting superheroes and killing people. Along the way, however, he morphed the series into FRANKENSTEIN, THE MERRY MONSTER, a Jack Cole style humorous run that set a precedent for all of the subsequent monster comedies of later years including TV’s MUNSTERS. Then, during the fifties horror boom, he returned the character to his monstrous roots only now with better-written stories. Yoe’s book, again with a nice behind-the-scenes look at Briefer and his pet monster, has a nice selection from both versions of the classic monster.
Just out is THE GREAT TREASURY OF CHRISTMAS COMIC BOOK STORIES, more-or-less a holiday continuation of the Kids Komics book. The usual suspects are all here—Walt Kelly, John Stanley, etc. The unexpected treats are some rare comics from prolific children’s book author and illustrator Richard Scarry and some surprisingly delightful and notable holiday presents drawn by Eisner protégé Klaus Nordling.
Not bad for a first year, eh? And there are still more to come. Next up should be ARCHIE: SEVEN DECADES OF AMERICA’S FAVORITE TEENAGERS AND BEYOND. This is one where I did quite a bit of work to the point where I share a “Produced by” credit. I’ve seen a mock-up and although it’s been sadly delayed at the last minute and won’t make the Christmas season, this is one that—if I dare say it myself—is worth the wait!
Then there’s POPEYE: THE GREAT COMIC BOOK TALES OF BUD SAGENDORF, another enjoyable collection I’ve seen already in mock-up. Yoe Books still in the pipeline include an anthology from ARCHIE’S MAD HOUSE, a celebration of 3-D comics and a collection of BARNEY BEAR stories by the great duck artist, Carl Barks.
All of the Yoe Books volumes are attractively designed and packaged and make a not only essential but also aesthetically pleasing addition to the bookshelves of any serious comics fan. Order your copies from the links on this page. Thanks, Craig and Clizia! Keep ‘em coming!
If you're on Facebook and would like to keep up with Yoe Books and its ITCH blog, join the brand new Yoe Books page at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Yoe-Books/157174217659112?ref=ts