Defenders #14 (July, 1974)
Attack of the 50 Year Old Comic Books
by Alan Stewart
3d ago
When we last left the Defenders, back in September, the Defenders themselves were, well, leaving.  Most of them, anyway.  As was the writer who’d been chronicling their adventures since they’d graduated from Marvel Feature into their own title some sixteen months earlier: Steve Englehart. Just in case you missed it, Englehart had concluded his double-title, multi-issue crossover epic, the Avengers/Defenders War (or, if you prefer, the Quest for the Black Knight’s Soul) in Defenders #11 with a scene that saw four of the six heroes who’d carried the banner of the junior team in that cl ..read more
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Captain America #175 (July, 1974)
Attack of the 50 Year Old Comic Books
by Alan Stewart
1w ago
With this 175th issue of Captain America, the “Secret Empire” saga that had dominated the series’ pages for over half a year finally reached its climax.  And as our storytellers picked up their narrative right where the previous month’s episode had left us readers hanging, you could hardly accuse writer Steve Englehart of underselling the occasion in his opening, credits-prefacing caption…  As we’ve mentioned in the past, the Secret Empire had first appeared some eight years prior to the current storyline, in Tales to Astonish #81-85.  But while Gabe Jones’ recap here hits t ..read more
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Savage Tales #4 (May, 1974)
Attack of the 50 Year Old Comic Books
by Alan Stewart
2w ago
As we previously discussed in our post about Savage Tales #3 last October, back in the fall of 1973 it seemed that Marvel’s one-and-only sword-and-sorcery-centric black-and-white comics magazine was about to be cancelled — for the second time.  The first incarnation of Savage Tales had seen but one issue published in January, 1971 before Marvel’s then-publisher Martin Goodman pulled the plug; then, the second iteration, launched in June, 1972 following Goodman’s departure from the company he’d founded, had come under the scrutiny of an auditor for the conglomerate (Cadence Industries) tha ..read more
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Avengers #124 (June, 1974)
Attack of the 50 Year Old Comic Books
by Alan Stewart
3w ago
It’s been a minute since we last checked in what the Avengers were up to half a century ago — since the aftermath of the Avengers/Defenders War, in fact, and we put that multi-issue epic to bed back in September.  Given that consideration — as well as the fact that the issue we’re focusing on today is the second half of a two-part story, which itself has been spun off from the conclusion of the three-issue story arc preceding it — you might guess that we have a good amount of recapping to get through before moving on to our main event.  And you wouldn’t be wrong.  But, as it hap ..read more
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Captain America #174 (June, 1974)
Attack of the 50 Year Old Comic Books
by Alan Stewart
1M ago
When we last saw Captain America and the Falcon at the tail end of last month’s post about CA #173, our heroes had seemingly been successful in their subterfuge against the sinister Secret Empire — the clandestine organization behind both Cap’s recent woes (which include first having his reputation smeared by an ad campaign, then being framed for murder) and the mysterious disappearance of multiple mutants, including several members of Cap and Falc’s newfound allies, the X-Men.  We rejoin them here on page one of issue #174, as they make their descent into the proverbial belly of the beas ..read more
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Dracula Lives #6 (May, 1974)
Attack of the 50 Year Old Comic Books
by Alan Stewart
1M ago
In March, 1974, Marvel Comics’ black-and-white magazine Dracula Lives entered its second year of publication with a format relatively little changed from its first issue — meaning that it featured three all-new stories of the titular vampire (one set in the present, two set in the past), supplemented by illustrated text features and a reprint or two, all packaged behind a color painted cover.  (In this case, the cover was provided by Luis Dominguez, an Argentinian artist who’d been busy of late drawing covers [and occasional stories] for various DC Comics anthology titles; this was his th ..read more
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Marvel Premiere #15 (May, 1974)
Attack of the 50 Year Old Comic Books
by Alan Stewart
1M ago
In early 1974, when a slot for a new continuing feature opened up in Marvel Premiere (due to the previous tenant Dr. Strange having vacated the premises to return to headlining his own title), it must have seemed a virtual no-brainer to offer it to a character who could help Marvel Comics cash in even further on the burgeoning martial arts craze than they were already doing with the Master of Kung Fu series (which had debuted in September, 1973) and its brand-new black-and-white magazine spinoff The Deadly Hands of Kung Fu (which launched in early February, just a couple of weeks prior to the ..read more
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Captain Marvel #32 (May, 1974)
Attack of the 50 Year Old Comic Books
by Alan Stewart
2M ago
Behind a splendid cover pencilled by Jim Starlin and inked by Klaus Janson (and evidently not touched up by Marvel Comics’ art director John Romita, as had sometimes been the case with the covers for this title of late) — the 32nd issue of Captain Marvel picks up right where the 31st had left off:  There have been a couple of changes in the title’s creative lineup since the previous issue that should be noted: one is the presence of Dan Green as solo inker (Green had shared embellishment duties for #31 with Al Milgrom, after having earlier inked #28); another is the return of previous re ..read more
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Swamp Thing #10 (May-Jun., 1974)
Attack of the 50 Year Old Comic Books
by Alan Stewart
2M ago
With the publication of the subject of today’s blog post fifty years ago, the collaboration between writer Len Wein, artist Bernie Wrightson, and editor Joe Orlando on Swamp Thing that had begun with a one-off short story in House of Secrets #92 (Jun.-Jul., 1971) came to a close.  According to an interview Wein gave The Comics Journal in 1979, the trio’s issue-to-issue production of the ongoing Swamp Thing series — which, unusually for DC Comics at the time, regularly began with a joint plotting session between writer, artist, and editor held every couple of months in the latter’s office ..read more
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Captain America #173 (May, 1974)
Attack of the 50 Year Old Comic Books
by Alan Stewart
2M ago
In February, 1974, the X-Men hadn’t appeared in a new story in their own title in over four years — but while gone, they were hardly forgotten.  (Actually, they weren’t even gone, since their book had been resurrected as a reprint title by Marvel’s then-publisher, Martin Goodman, eight months after he’d cancelled the series with issue #66.  But you know what I mean.)  That’s because a number of people working for Marvel just plain liked the characters, regardless of their allegedly limited commercial viability; and, as writer Steve Englehart puts it in his 2009 preface to Marvel ..read more
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