Showing posts with label Winslow Mortimer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Winslow Mortimer. Show all posts

Monday, September 3, 2018

Calling Night Nurse!


I never bought Night Nurse. I regret it, but alas, there are only so many comics a kid can get on a limited budget and such a clearly "girly" comic just is not going to make the cut. But I do regret it now as a mature adult who can see the value in such real-life dramas.


Night Nurse was part of three-comic push by Mighty Marvel to break the choke hold that men had on the comic marketplace. They offered up The Cat, Shanna the She-Devil and Night Nurse, all written by women and in the case of The Cat drawn by a woman -- Marie Severin. It was a worthy effort, if in typical Marvel style a tad ham-handed.


None of the three found a lasting audience. The Cat lasted four issues, Shanna lasted five, and Night Nurse left the stands after a mere quartet of appearances. The Cat went on to become Tigra and found a measure of success in that role, blending Marvel's feminist push and monster mash in a single character. Shanna found romance in the arms of Ka-Zar and eventually found an audience there for her nigh-naked jungle antics. But Night Nurse disappeared into the...ahem...night.




Apparently she's turned up time from time in the background of various Marvel comics of the modern day, and as a consequence her four individual comics found a reprint berth in 2015. I missed it and so once again Night Nurse trod her rounds with diligence and verve, but I was not privy to the nobleness of the lovely lady in white -- my loss.


I'd love to find this reprint volume somewhere, but so far no luck. The search goes on. On a brighter note, these three comics were featured in the latest issue of Alter Ego, so get that one if you want. 

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Friday, October 2, 2015

Vampire Tales #1 - First Blood!


Vampire Tales Volume 1 Number 1 is dated August 1973. This title along with Dracula Lives, Tales of the Zombie, and Monsters Unleashed formed a wave of magazines Marvel produced in the early 70's to tap the somewhat more adult market for comics outside the confines of the four-color world still ruled by the Comics Code. It was a chance to extend some horror characters and create others which challenged the status quo of what a Marvel character had long been. The first issue featured a very atmospheric cover by Esteban Maroto.


First among equals in Vampire Tales is Morbius the Living Vampire created by Roy Thomas and Gil Kane in the pages of The Amazing Spider-Man a few years before. In the debut story by Steve Gerber and Pablo Marcos Morbius is operating in Los Angeles and falls in with a group of hippie satanists who take him to see an alluring psychic who causes him all manner of trouble when her spells unleash a demon. To read this one go to this very groovy link.

In an article titled "Blood Is Thicker..." the editors set up the premise of the magazine and state its mission to follow the exploits of life suckers of all sorts.


Next up is a reprint story from 1954's Menace #9 with art by Bill Everett titled "To Kill a Werewolf" and it's pretty much what you'd expect. Marvel made use of vintage 50's material quite a bit early on in these hefty magazines to fill out the page counts.


"The Vampire - His Kith and Kin" by Chris Claremont is a five-part look at the history and lore of vampires from a 1928 book by Montague Summers. This initial installment discusses general tropes of the monstrous undead bloodsuckers.


"The Vampyre" by writers Roy Thomas and Ron Goulart and artist Winslow Mortimer adapts what is arguably the first vampire story by John Polidori, a tale concocted at the same party which gave the world Frankenstein by Mary Shelley. It's a journeyman effort which records the events of the yarn without much damage and sadly with little excitement.


Next up is another 1954 tale from Journey Into Mystery #15 titled "Satan Can Wait" with Paul Reinman artwork. All the 50's material in this issue is very handsome to look at, though the stories themselves are pretty tame.

"The Worst (No Kidding) Vampire Films Ever Made" mocks some of Hollywood's lesser cinematic efforts. I'm not sure I agree with all the movies included on the list as the vampire western Curse of the Undead is included and I rather like that genre-blending effort. Others mentioned are Billy the Kid Meets Dracula, Blood of Dracula, and Atomic Vampire, all deserving I suppose, but to my mind many still fun in their own hapless ways.


The magazine closes with a story by Gardner Fox titled "Revenge of the Unliving" featuring very handsome and moody art by Bernet. The story of an ancient vampire who rises once more to find her treacherous lover has some classic twists and turns.


The debut issue of Vampire Tales feels a little bit like what it is, a somewhat rushed effort to get something under two covers and onto the stands for the little bloodsucking audience to gobble up. The lead Morbius story feels like it was done very swiftly and lacks much of the atmosphere that Marcos often brought to his best work. Likewise the Polidori adaptation seems rather staid and lackluster, not the least of which is owing to Mortimer's tried and true but very humdrum artwork. Gardner Fox was fresh to the Marvel Bullpen at the time and he cranked out a lot of these horror yarns, this one of the better ones for sure.

There is a breeziness to the text articles which frankly reminds me of the relaxed and conversational tone often used in blogs like this one. Clearly the writers felt they were talking shop to a close-knit group who would get many of the offbeat references.

The series will really connect, fulfill more of its undead promise in the second issue. More on that next time.

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