Monday, February 28, 2011
Sunday, February 27, 2011
Silver Age Sub-Mariner Splash Page Sundays # 2
Saturday, February 26, 2011
Uncensored 007 Article-1963
Friday, February 25, 2011
Rare Cowboy Actor Interviews!
Thursday, February 24, 2011
Review: My '70s Book by Darryll Sherman
Memory is a weird and wonderful gift...but a treacherous one. I recently became reacquainted with a friend from my teenage years. We sat around remembering the good old days...only his memories didn't always jibe with mine. I was so SURE of mine, however. He, too, was so sure of his.
Wednesday, February 23, 2011
Great Moments in Thor History # 1
Updatestuff 2011
It's February, 2011. I've been having a tough time recovering from a cold I caught in early January and the lingering cough and drainage has been keeping me up nights. When I do sleep during the day I'm having to sleep sitting up in a chair. I often awake with my feet and ankles swollen.
Tuesday, February 22, 2011
RIP-Dwayne McDuffie
I never met him but I saw him at a Convention once around the time of the formation of Milestone and he spoke quite impressively. In recent years, his name on animated product with DCU characters has been a definite sign of quality to me. His ALL-STAR SUPERMAN animated film was released just today.
Archie Radio Ad-Frizz
Monday, February 21, 2011
Lenny Henry is Green Lantern
Sunday, February 20, 2011
Silver Age Sub-Mariner Splash Page Sundays # 1
Here we start a new feature. This one a brief weekly look at Marvel's SUB-MARINER comic of the sixties and seventies, appropriately enough through its "splash" pages. I've always been fascinated by Prince Namor even though I can't swim. I first met him in his TALES TO ASTONISH strip in the mid-sixties, then backtracked to find him as a villain in FANTASTIC FOUR and AVENGERS. Soon enough, I latched onto his Golden Age reprints. In 1968's Marvel expansion, Subby, as he is affectionately called, got his own comic again. It ran 72 issues but was decidedly a second-string book. Doesn't mean it didn't have it's moments, though. Let's just jump in, shall we? It's 1968 and Namor is about to meet...his Destiny!
Saturday, February 19, 2011
Lost In Space Reunion-2011
I believe that this photo was taken at last weekend's controversial celebrity autograph show. I've seen it in half a dozen places already but I hope the photographer doesn't mind my posting it yet again. It's such a great picture--the surviving cast of LOST IN SPACE reunited some 46 years after that initial episode. And they all look great. L-R, in case you can't tell, that's Bill Mumy, Angela Cartwright, June Lockhart, Marta Kristen and Mark Goddard.
Friday, February 18, 2011
Thursday, February 17, 2011
Random Panels of Comic Book Weirdness # 85
Wednesday, February 16, 2011
The Case of Batton Lash and MSNBC
You may have seen Lawrence O'Donnell on MSNBC on Tuesday evening as he made a mountain out of the proverbial molehill regarding a political cartoon by Batton Lash (seen in the photo at right) and James Hudnall. O'Donnell spent long minutes earnestly telling his viewers what a vile and evil, RACIST cartoon this was...and then refused to actually show it (or even put it on MSNBC's website) so that people could make up their mind for themselves. It gets worse.
Tuesday, February 15, 2011
Creem Does Marvel-1973
Monday, February 14, 2011
Sunday, February 13, 2011
The 1975 Warren Awards
Saturday, February 12, 2011
RIP Christa Helm-34 Years Ago Today
Friday, February 11, 2011
Abbey Road Live Cam
http://abbeyroad.com/visit/
Thursday, February 10, 2011
Random Panels of Comic Book Weirdness # 84
Shame of the Jungle
Wednesday, February 09, 2011
The I Love Comix Project
Our old friend Steve Cottle of the I LOVE COMIX site and archives has latched onto a major opportunity for comics (and even non-comics) historians and he needs our help!
Hello Comic Enthusiasts,
www.ilovecomixarchive.com is trying to purchase an 8,000 lbs collection of vintage newspapers located in West Virginia. There are over 220 consecutive volumes of full newsprint, plus stacks and stacks of comic dailies (mostly full and partial pages) and boxes of Sunday comics pages. The ratio is 90% dailies to Sundays. The newspapers collected are pulled from the following; The Cleveland Daily Press, the Cleveland Plain Dealer, The Atlanta Georgian, and The Seattle times and many others. The dates collected range from the early 1930's to the late 1970's.
The ilovecomix archive's goal is to scan the material and save it for it's historical value.
All funds received from this project will help pay for the material, transportation fees, and cost to ship all items to our location in Alabama.
Tuesday, February 08, 2011
Monday, February 07, 2011
Review: The Dangerous Years/The Thousand Dollar Book
When I was a teenager running the streets of Cincinnati(and for many years afterwards), there was a place called King's News. It was literally a dirty little hole in the wall store run by a grumpy old lady from an elevated cashwrap in the center of the store. Inside was dark and dingy and the walls were lined with ancient looking novelty items and cheap city souvenirs that you just knew hadn't sold for decades. Toward the front of the store was a small candy and snack rack as well as a selection of news and general interest mags on one side and a big selection of comics on the other. The biggest in town in fact! Needless to say, that's why I started going there in spite of the otherwise permeable sense of decay. There was, however, a line halfway through the store and no one under the age of 21 was allowed to cross that line! Only once did I risk it and what I saw was a selection of PLAYBOY and similar mags but also a huge wall display of odd looking adult mags and hundreds of old looking paperbacks with sleazy covers...and yet more novelty items, this time with an adult slant. I was not impressed.
Sunday, February 06, 2011
Brian Epstein Interview-1964
The always-fascinating Brian Epstein, the true Fifth Beatle, the man without whose guidance the group would at best have been a minor European success.
1950's TV Show Openings
Not all classics. In fact, many of these are trivia questions at best but you do get the ubiquitous Betty White appearance (two of them actually!) and perennial Cincinnati OTR Convention guest Rosemary Rice with I REMEMBER MAMA.
Soviet Animation-1940's
Here is some quite good Soviet animation from the World War II era in anti-Nazi propaganda.
Captain America Trailer-1990
This so should have worked. Instead it wasn't really released at all. Turned up on bootleg video and soon enough was brought out on VHS. If only the costume (ears and all) hadn't been rubber. If only the Skull hadn't been Italian. If only the Skull hadn't had plastic surgery! If only the President of the United States hadn't saved the day instead of Cap! This COULD have worked, people!!!
Coconut Grove-The Lovin' Spoonful
Normally I don't do these audios to homemade video tracks but I've had this haunting song stuck in my head ever since doing my BUCK JONES post on FOUR-COLOR SHADOWS earlier today.
Saturday, February 05, 2011
Alfred as Sherlock
We've added some new disks at BOOKSTEVE RARITIES for the month of February with the most intriguing to me being a volume three of rare Sherlock Holmes shorts. Along with a 1955 TV appearance of Boris Karloff as Mycroft Holmes, we also get the 1949 appearance of Alan Napier, Batman's butler Alfred in 1966, as the great consulting detective. The world's greatest detective's butler as the world's greatest detective! All for seven bucks plus postage! Check out all of the great new stuff we offer through the courtesy of Martin Grams at http://oldtimeradiotapes.homestead.com/StevenSiteNew.html .
Friday, February 04, 2011
Musings on the New Captain America Poster
Seriously. This is the best they could do to entice the average filmgoer who doesn't know Cap from Batman? No mask/helmet. Are we really selling Chris Evans here over the character of Captain America...whose name isn't even mentioned except to plug the website? A scarred and scratched up shield, a brown, white and blue outfit. And the word..."Avenge." Avenge what, exactly? As a design it's well-made. As a marketing tool, this is virtually useless in my opinion.