Showing posts with label kamandi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label kamandi. Show all posts

Friday, August 28, 2020

Happy Birthday to the King of Comics!

Today is the 103rd anniversary of the birth of Jacob Kurtzberg, better known to us all as Jack Kirby, the absolute King of Comics. I've been absorbing Jack's DC work through my very pores this year, thanks to these collections...


Yeah, I already had tons of the original comics, but re-reading them in tpb form is both handy and a new way to experience old favorites. All that's left are Kamandi (my omnibus, which I ordered for MY birthday, last Wednesday, the 26th)  should be here soon!) and Forever People (which I'll get for Christmas, if not sooner). 

Now I just need this to go back into print...

And for a miracle to happen so these can be collected in their own volumes...

Happy birthday, Jack Kirby! Your legacy still entertains, enthralls, and amazes me! Thank you so very, very much!

Friday, December 1, 2017

Making a Splash: Happy Day After Keith Giffen's Birthday!

Happy birthday to Keith Giffen who just turned 65 yesterday! If you've hung around Groove City for any time at all, then you know the ever-so-talented Mr. Giffen is one of Ol' Groove's fave Groovy Age (and beyond! He still rocks!) artists. You can find samples of his best known Groovy Age series' like JSA (in All Star Comics), Defenders, Challengers of the Unknown, and Claw the Unconquered by doing just a little digging in the sidebar. But there are a few mags that you may not realize KG lent a pencil to, and those are the ones we're focusing on today: Kobra, Kamandi, Super-Villain Team-Up, and even House of Mystery! Happy birthday, Keith Giffen! Keep makin' those amazing comics!






Monday, July 3, 2017

Groovin' Back In the Summertime, 1972

The Summer of 1972! The Godfather, The Poseidon Adventure, Deliverance, The Biscuit Eater (it was out at the drive-in, don'tcha know), and Sounder came out. Of course, Young Groove only got to see a couple of those flicks at the time (can you guess which ones?).

The Olympics, as well as reruns of All In the Family, Mary Tyler-Moore, M*A*S*H*, and best of all, Sonny and Cher kept Young Groove glued to the boob tube.

And when I was drawing (well, actually tracing), playing games, or just chillin', the sounds of The Eagles, Alice Cooper, Dr. Hook, Neil Diamond, and even Sammy Davis Jr. came pouring out of my radio.

It was a magical time for  Young Groove with cousins staying over here and there, a fun vacation (long drives were a great excuse to read a pile of comics) to visit even more family, the ol' swimming pool in the back yard, trolling the grounds of more houses being built in our subdivision for spare lumber to use to build a clubhouse...but still, it's all about the comics, baby! Let's rap about a few faves...

The Avengers (aren't they always at the top of Ol' Groove's lists?). Roy Thomas' Avengers swan song pitting the Awesome Assemblers against the Sentinels wrapped up during that summer. The story was so cool, especially the romantic tension with Scarlet Witch, The Vision, and Hawkeye, Quicksilver stepping into the spotlight (ironically, to end his time in the Avengers), the flashbacks to the Thomas/Neal Adams X-Men era, and haaaave mercy, that gorgeous Rich Buckler/Joe Sinnott art! The summer ended with that new Englehart guy taking over the writing. He wound up being pretty good! (More on him below!)

Batman. Over at DC, the dream team of Denny O'Neil and Neal Adams were wrapping some things up in Batman, too. The final chapters of their massive and immortal Ra's al Ghul saga came out in the Summer of 1972, and man, did they ever make a mark on Young Groove (a lot of us Groove-ophiles, I'm sure)! O'Neil crafted a tale that would have made the producers of the James Bond movies jealous, and Adams' art, inked by Dick Giordano, was just the pinnacle of what The Batman should look like. Modern, slick, sophisticated--and yet, an eight year old like me could totally dig it!









Captain America. Remember "that Englehart guy" I mentioned up there in the Avengers paragraph. Of course I'm rappin' about Steve Englehart. He'd already won me over with the Beast feature in Amazing Adventures, but man, he took over Cap's mag and immediately made it the "must read" mag of the week! He started off with sending Cap on vacation, then, boom, out of left field we got another Cap giving the Falcon fits. This Cap, it turned out, was the "forgotten" Cap of the 1950s--and he was bonkers. Man, Sterling Steve gave us a cracking-good action/adventure story (its magnificence heightened by the equally action-packed art of the great Sal Buscema), but he also managed to give us history lessons in both Cap and real-world history, some social studies, and civics lessons all at the same time. It was the coolest school ever--and it happened in the summer!




Marvel Feature Presents the Astonishing Ant-Man: Issue #5, where writer Mike Friedrich and artist Herb Trimpe pit our stuck-at-ant-size hero against the evil Egghead just blew Young Groove away. The battle with the hawk that started the comic off was downright scary to me back then. The introduction of Trish Starr (who'd become sort-of important in The Defenders a few years later) and Ant-Man's oh-so-Seventies outfit (white pants, boots, and a red turtleneck!) seemed so cool back then. And this series showed me that the best Herb Trimpe art was when he could ink it himself. I loved him on the Ant-Man strip even more than on Incredible Hulk. Weird personal aside: I'd been looking forward to the new Ant-Man series, but somehow I thought I'd missed MF #4 (the debut ish, natch). I found #5 and, as you can see, loved it. Imagine my surprise when a few weeks later, on the same spinner rack I'd found ish 5--I found ish #4! I was puzzled but very happy!



Those are just a few of the mostly Marvel-ous mags that took my twin dimes that simmering summer. Which ones turned you on? Some of these? These? Or perhaps, these? (Don'tcha just love Mike's Amazing World of Comics' Newsstand?)

Rap about 'em in the comments, okay?



Wednesday, May 31, 2017

Black and White Wednesday: Kirby Covers DC

Hey, hey, hey, Groove-ophiles! Jack Kirby's Groovy Age run at DC is most famous for his Fourth World kreations--and that's the way it should be. But The King konkokted other kool komics during that self-same reign: Kamandi, The Demon, The Losers (in Our Fighting Forces), Sandman, Justice Inc., and Omac, plus some rather unique karakhters for First Issue Special. Ol' Groove thought it would be kinda fun to plant our peepers on some skans of those kool Kirby kovers in their original form...










Thursday, February 2, 2017

Bring On the Back-ups: "The Return of OMAC!" by Starlin and Rubinstein

Dig it, Groove-ophiles! One of the most potentially cool-yet-ultimately-disappointing things about the DC ExImplosion was the glimpse of Jim Starlin's revamp of Jack Kirby's OMAC in the back of Kamandi #59 (June 1978). Potentially cool 'cause, hey, it was Jim-freakin'-Starlin (finished and inked by a young Joe Rubinstein) picking up the dangling threads and cliff-hanger ending from OMAC's long-deceased mag. Ultimately disappointing because that one 8 pager was all we got, 'cause that was the final ish of Kamandi. Sigh. It was a pretty amazing back-up feature, though, don'tcha think...?









Starlin did complete four OMAC back-ups that would eventually see the light of day in Warlord a couple years later (in issues 37-40, to be exact). And yep, Ol' Groove'll have 'em for you over the course of the next few Thursdays. Who loves ya, baby?

Tuesday, August 18, 2015

Random Reads: "The Merchant of Menace" by Conway, Giffen, and Royer

Dig it, Groove-ophiles! Kirby had left DC and Kamandi, heading back to Marvel. Meantime, a young, exciting penciler by the name of Keith Giffen (who does a mean Kirbyeseque style) is making the scene. You flip open the cover of Kamandi #44 (May 1976), and there are Giffen's powerhouse pencils, inked by Mike Royer, himself! Together, they make Gerry Conway's "The Merchant of Menace" look pretty far-out, baby!











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Special thanks to Mike's Amazing World of Comics and Grand Comics Database for being such fantastic resources for covers, dates, creator info, etc. Thou art treasures true!


Note to "The Man": All images are presumed copyright by the respective copyright holders and are presented here as fair use under applicable laws, man! If you hold the copyright to a work I've posted and would like me to remove it, just drop me an e-mail and it's gone, baby, gone.


All other commentary and insanity copyright GroovyAge, Ltd.

As for the rest of ya, the purpose of this blog is to (re)introduce you to the great comics of the 1970s. If you like what you see, do what I do--go to a comics shop, bookstore, e-Bay or whatever and BUY YOUR OWN!