Wednesday, 6 November 2019

The Kids From Rec. Road Go Graphite



Ever been a living thumbnail? The Kids From Rec. Road are, this week over at our sister site. While at:


We're again talking How Far Is Too Far? But not in terms of horror this time, but in terms of creator's personal statements. Enthralling peek into the creative process or self-indulgence? Comics Will Eat Itself, at kidsfromrecroad.blogspot.com

Monday, 4 November 2019

Return Of The Claw: The Lektrons!



Been way too long since we last gaped in wonder at the incredible art of Jesus Blasco, so here he is with one of his all-time classics, and an all-time fave of my old pal David Holman's: The Lektrons!
Louis Crandell aka. The Steel Claw had been away from Valiant for a while, following his massively wrong-headed turn as a silver-spangled superhero ( alluded to here ).
Happily, on his return he was back to what passed for normal, though it's noticable that he was much more heroic looking, much less sallow, and now armed with a burgeoning third division footballer haircut & a never ending supply of groovy polo necks.
Regardless, the invisible secret agent was back to doing what he did best, saving the world from alien invasion!
In Blasco's hands, this really does feel a teatime serial they'd put on before Blue Peter, or the kind of b/w film BBC2 used to run on a Sunday afternoon.
Look out! Run! Hide! Only The Steel Claw can save us from... The Lektrons!






Friday, 1 November 2019

Marta Ravenhair



Here's an interesting piece. It's from a done-in-one indie from 1977, Faerie Star, and though obviously heavily influenced by Barry Smith's time on Conan, there's enough skill here to make you want to see more. Plus Marta Ravenhair is a great name for a heroine. It looks like he went into painting, but did Ken Raney ever do anything else in comics, anyone know?








Tuesday, 29 October 2019

The Kids From Rec. Road Return &... How Far Is Too Far...?


Yes, it's the senses-stunning return of those doyens of the Bronze Age, The Kids From Rec. Road, in all-new adventures! But wait, what's happened here?


Where's all the ink gone in comics? It's a mystery only one group of '70's kids can solve! Unfortunately the Scooby-Doo gang aren't available so it's down to us...
While, as it's Halloween....


We're talking Horror comics. And how far is TOO far? Where's your limit? Tell all at kidsfromrecroad.blogspot.com now!


Monday, 28 October 2019

The Witching Hour



Like I've often said, DC mystery titles may not've always had the best stories, but they sure had the best hosts.
Sure, EC were first with The Crypt Keeper, The Vault Keeper and The Old Witch, and from our generation, you gotta love ol' Uncle Creepy and Cousin Eerie, but beyond telling their terrifying tales, you never actually saw them do anything.
By comparison, DC's books always had great framing sequences for their spooky storytellers, like here at The Witching Hour, where old school hags Mildred and Mordred, and their groovy younger sister, go-go sorceress Cynthia, constantly try to out-scare each other with their own spine-chilling stories.
( And isn't 'It's Twelve O'Clock...The Witching Hour!' the greatest come on to a comic ever? Only it's replacement 'It's Midnight...The Witching Hour!' beats it... )


To me, it's kind of irrelevant how good or bad the stories are, I just want to get back to the fun framing story. And not only because most of them are drawn by Alex Toth or Bill Draut, but because they're a lot of fun in and of themselves, like this inaugural piece from ish 1:





Or this one, where an old flame of Cynthia's shows up at the castle:





Or even this one, where the gals try to settle the issue of who's scariest once and for all, by inviting themselves round the neighbours, in much the same way The Munsters used to do:






Later on, Cynthia managed to convince her stick-in-the-mud sisters to leave their moldy old castle, and move to the city, which gave rise to loads more spooky gags, but unfortunately, by this point the gals had been relegated to just one page at the start of each issue, drastically reducing the individuality of the book.
A shame, as I'd read a whole book about these three, as long as it was in this style, and they hadn't been re-jigged into The Dreaming or any nonsense like that.



Saturday, 26 October 2019

Logan's Run: The Movie & Beyond!



I loved Logan's Run, me. Loved the movie, loved the books, adored the TV series, and thrilled to the Official Marvel Comics adaptation. And as I said on the Kids From Rec Road site recently, loved the idea of the story continuing past the film, as it did for only one issue here.
This follows on a couple of hours after the end of the flick, and as you'd expect, now that the computers have stopped working, anarchy reigns and everything's up for grabs.
DAK & George Perez, who did the adaptation, have presumably moved onto bigger and better things, but we have the ace team of Tom Sutton & Klaus Janson here, along with John Warner on script, and I always wished this run had continued.
Warner was a solid, if unspectacular, writer who produced a Son Of Satan series I didn't like, and a Bloodstone one I did, and here he's in full Marvel writing mode. I often say that movie adaptations weren't 'Real' Marvel to me, but with Logan endlessly explaining and vocalising his every thought here, this couldn't be more classic Bronze Age Marvel if it tried. If only it had continued...