Showing posts with label Greg Theakston. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Greg Theakston. Show all posts

Monday, February 9, 2026

Ditko - Edge Of Genius!


I'm not sure but likely the first time I was aware that Steve Ditko delved into the underground world of fetish comics and illustration was in Ditko - Edge of Genius from Paragon Publications, a reprint operation run by Greg Theakston. There are several of these "Edge of Genius" volumes dedicated to the likes of Toth, Eisner, Wood and Ditko. This volume, the only one I own has the early Ditko stories from Charlton and Atlas which have been reprinted several times over the years. But tucked in the back is a surprise. 


"Helga's Search for Slaves" is an illustrated fetish piece credited to Eric Stanton, but a glimpse by any veteran comics fan will see the hand of Ditko. The actual name on the is "John Bee", the pseudonym the team had when they worked together. You can get a glimpse of the work by looking at the bottom panel of the cover of the nineteenth issue of Bizarre Comix. For a full look at this strange "Princess Valiant" fetish tale check out this Internet Archive link

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Wednesday, October 2, 2024

Atlas-Seaboard Magazines - 1975!

Jeff Jones

Boris Vallejo

Ernie Colon

Neal Adams

Pujolar

George Torjussen

In addition to the avalanche of color comics, Atlas-Seaboard rolled out several B&W magazines during that hectic year of 1975. Tales of the Macabre and Devilina were straight up horror books in the tradition of Warren and later Marvel. Thrilling Adventure Stories was a bit different, a book featuring a range of stories as the title suggested of a more broadly adventurous nature. Tiger-Man debuted in TAS before getting his own color comic book. There are good stories by Frank Thorne, Jack Sparling, Jerry Grandenetti, and even a wonderful story by the Manhunter team of Archie Goodwin and Walt Simonson.

The covers for the Atlas-Seaboard comic magazines were a pretty scattershot affair. There is the superb Jeff Jones piece for the debut of Tales of the Macabre followed by a solid Boris effort on issue two, in that early part of his career when his textures were still interesting.


Devilina sported a debut cover by some guy named Pujolar which had later did service as a Vampirella cover some years later (an ironic switch for sure) and then for the second issue a George Torjussen effort that really tore up the expectations. That cover is sexy and weird at the same time. Torjussen has expressed a low regard for this cover, but I think it's fabulous.

Ernie Colon's artwork on the first issue of Thrilling Adventure Stories was decent and necessarily muddled, but Neal Adams really showed up strong on the second issue. There sure is no effort to affect a house style with these covers. I had to gather these up years later, as the magazines slipped by me during the summer of 1975 originally. They are worth the effort.

Harryhausen's Cyclops by Greg Theakston

Doctor Zaius by Greg Theakston


Phantom of the Opera by George Torjussen


The Thing by George Torjussen


I gathered these Atlas-Seaboard gems up many years ago. As Famous Monsters of Filmland knockoffs go, these are really good ones. The first issue bears a December date and might well be the first Atlas-Seaboard publication, though that's suspect.

Greg Theakston, he of Pure Imagination Publishing fame and creator of the process of "Theakstonization" for cleaning up smudge and dirty comic pages, turns in two really evocative images for issues one and two. I especially like the Cyclops, the misbegotten but very memorable monster from Ray Harryhausen's Sinbad epic.

George Torjussen though really knocks it out of the park with his two paintings, especially the final one featuring The Thing from Outer Space. That's a fantastic image, and Torjussen has related how he had to watch the movie on late night television to remember what The Thing looked like. He sure did though, giving us a real insight into the shadowing invader.


I'm closing off my current look back at Atlas-Seaboard with these last two publications, neither of which I have nor have ever seen in person.

Above is Gothic Romances a one-time only magazine that hoped to add women to the Atlas-Seaboard reading audience, despite all the content appealing to boys and men they published otherwise. It features a fantastic painted cover by Elaine Duillo, artwork used again on a novel entitled The Conservatory written by Phyllis Hastings.


There are a few bits of spot artwork by Howie Chaykin, Ernie Colon, and Neal Adams in this book, but it's really not a comic book, though a collectible for diehard Atlas-Seaboard fans for sure.


My Secret is another magazine, more recently identified as part of the Atlas-Seaboard cache, but this despite its evocative Marvelesque cover image has no comics content whatsoever according to reports.

And that wraps up my year long look back at the summer of 1975, when a new kid showed up on the block, but who quickly got knocked down because of a combination of poor management and a weak economy. Though the Atlas-Seaboard material shows up in foreign formats sometimes, the rights to it still remain locked up as far as I know.

The stuff is still pretty cheap on the back issue market, save for a few gems like those above. But this material like the stuff from Tower Comics and Skywald Comics would make for some great reprints, and I suspect might well find an audience today.  

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Saturday, September 24, 2022

Jack Kirby's Super Powers!

 
Among the many reasons DC saw fit to bring Jack Kirby back one final time in the mid 80's was not only to finally complete his epic "Fourth World" saga but to do so in such a way as to leave the characters available for future storytelling. Some of that new storytelling happened simultaneously with the development of Kirby's finale and some immediately after. And it weirdly blended the "Fourth World" with the classic Super Friends format to create something which is to my mind still surprisingly entertaining.


The Super Powers was an attempt by DC and Kenner to make the DC heroes successful as a toy line akin to the then wildly successful Star Wars and G.I.Joe toys among many others. To that end Jack Kirby gets to do what he'd sort of wanted to do with the Fourth World heroes so long ago, write a story another artist would draw, though Kirby supplied the action-filled covers. The artist chosen was Adrian Gonzales who is inked variously by Pablo Marcos, Alan Kupperberg, and himself. Joey Cavaleri gives Kirby a scripting hand in this series.

It's typical Bronze Age artwork, sturdy and straightforward which tries to evoke that Kirby mojo, but alas falls short. The story is an oddball one which has a hidden Darkseid (Gonzales does not actually draw any of the classic Fourth World characters in any way that they can be immediately identified) who sends his four "Emissaries of Doom" (four rather bland Apokolyptian warriors sad to say) to go attack the Earth by using four super-villains (Lex Luthor, Joker, Penguin, Brainiac) to battle the Justice League across the world, all of which is ruse to hide the proper invasion of Earth led by Darkseid himself in the fifth and final issue which is vigorously drawn by "King" Kirby himself.

It's solid superhero action, but it doesn't have any of the philosophical depth of the original series. Aside from some hints about the extras-special nature of Superman, this seems mostly to be a rockem' sockem' adventure, diverting but little else.

But there's more after a look at some action-filled Kirby covers.






The next year, after the appearance of "The Hunger Dogs" graphic novel, the storyline properly continues in the second series of Super Powers books, this time a six-issue limited. Jack is tapped not only to write, but draw this series, his final full-blown professional work. And while this is not Kirby at the peak of his powers, it is nonetheless better than most other comics of its time. Kirby supported Greg Theakston is tapped to finish the art.

The story begins with the revolting Hunger Dogs having driven Darkseid from power on Apokolips. This leaves the despot having to take his things and find a new place to conquer. He chooses Earth and rounds up his henchmen the resurrected and slightly altered Desaad, Kalibak, Mantis, Steppenwolf, and assorted Para-Demons to help with that end. The plan is to send five "Seeds of Doom" to Earth, each powered by some part of Darkseid's "Omega Effect" and allow the weird seeds to send their roots down into the core of the Earth, eventually tapping that power and demolishing the planet as we know it making a proper Apokoliptian landscape for Darkseid's purposes. But there's a secret.

The Justice League gathers and in a fantastic shout-out to classic DC super-team dynamics break up into teams of two and three to battle the"Seeds" across the globe. But in another clever allusion to the seventh issue of Forever People, the "Seeds of Doom" powered by the Omega Effect send our heroes through time where they have to confront a nicely wide assortment of threats and villains from many sources. It's a nicely drawn, rich, and classic superhero adventure with a few surprises, some great Kirby action and a pretty neat finale.

Now it must be said, that despite his direct involvement with this series, this again is a story which lacks the depth of the original Fourth World material. The Darkseid here, while properly evil lacks the subtlety of characterization which makes him so calmly malignant in the original series. He's more the cliche cackling villain here, he is full of anger more often than the cold disdain for others which gave him such a frosty menace before in Kirby's treatments. The henchmen too are just classic baddies, but they might be forgiven since they are literally mere shadows of their former selves.

Again, Kirby does some interesting things with Superman, and it makes me wish he'd been able to do more with the classic hero. Clearly, he had insights into the character which were colorful and interesting.

A final word after a very handsome cover gallery.







All in all, Super Powers is an above-average story told in a DCU which at the time was undergoing its infamous "Crisis". So, it's easy to understand why this yarn got lost among all that transforming hubbub, but every Kirby fan needs to check these stories out, and any Fourth World fan owes it to themselves to see the "King's" last fling with these wild evocative characters before he once and for all time left the building.

 NOTE: This is a Revised Dojo Classic Post. 

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Friday, August 25, 2017

100 Days Of The King - Day 97



The Super Powers series by DC in combination with Kenner Toys was Jack "King" Kirby's final comics work as a regular contributor. His skills had diminished from those halcyon days of his youth in the Golden Age when his pages bristled with so energy the panels could barely contain it, and sometimes did not. His mature storytelling of the Atomic Age is somewhat lost in the melee of bodies which overrun this title, which admittedly had the hybrid mission to sell merchandise and so had to display same as much as possible. And even his later mature style evident in his later Silver Age work and his Bronze Age work is less than it was, as his figures feel less mighty and somehow weirdly stunted. Still it's Kirby and it's Kirby drawing the Justice League of America no less, though I don't think they are ever called that in this series. And they are fighting the denizens of the Fourth World.  That's something to take note of, something indeed!



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Wednesday, June 14, 2017

100 Days Of The King - Day 25


For Flag Day here is a strapping figure. This might be (emphasis on the "might") a redesign of the classic Captain America look which Simon and Kirby configured some decades before this image was rendered.


Here is what Greg Theakston says about it when the image was revealed in a special comic celebrating Simon and Kirby's famous WWII creation.

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Friday, January 2, 2015

OMAC #0 - The One-Man Army Corp!


January is a big month for OMAC at the Dojo. Every Saturday and Sunday this month look for two reviews of vintage Jack Kirby OMAC comics. Produced at the end of Kirby's contract with DC, the comics nonetheless bristle with the energy and inventiveness we always associate "The King".


Here is OMAC's Who's Who entry featuring the artwork of Jack Kirby inked by Greg Theakston.


Be here next time for the kick off of OMAC weekends at the Dojo.

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Monday, July 26, 2010

Atlas-Seaboard Movie Monsters Mags!

Harryhausen's Cyclops by Greg Theakston

Doctor Zaius by Greg Theakston

Phantom of the Opera by George Torjussen

The Thing by George Torjussen


I gathered these Atlas-Seaboard gems up many years ago. As Famous Monsters of Filmland knockoffs go, these are really good ones. The first issue bears a December date and might well be the first Atlas-Seaboard publication, though that's suspect.

Greg Theakston, he of Pure Imagination Publishing fame and creator of the process of "Theakstonization" for cleaning up smudge and dirty comic pages, turns in two really evocative images for issues one and two. I especially like the Cyclops, the misbegotten but very memorable monster from Ray Harryhausen's Sinbad epic.

George Torjussen though really knocks it out of the park with his two paintings, especially the final one featuring The Thing from Outer Space. That's a fantastic image, and Torjussen has related how he had to watch the movie on late night television to remember what The Thing looked like. He sure did though, giving us a real insight into the shadowing invader.

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