Sunday, 24 May 2026

2000 AD - April 1988.

Thanks to Charlie Horse 47 and Killdumpster for their sponsorship of this post, via the magic of Patreon
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So eventful was April 1988 that it's a miracle we didn't all come out of it requiring more tranquillisers than Bruce Banner.

Not only did the Geneva Accords see the Soviet Union agree to withdraw all forces from Afghanistan, the USS Samuel B. Roberts struck a naval mine in the Persian Gulf, thanks to the Tanker War phase of the Iran–Iraq War, prompting retaliation against Iran by the United States.

And the world's longest skyjacking came to a close when the remaining passengers of Kuwait Airways Flight 422 were released by their captors.

But aviation wasn't finished with us yet. It was a month in which Aloha Airlines Flight 243 managed to land after losing its roof in mid-air. An event that killed a flight attendant and injured 65 people.

Fortunately, not all was melodrama and, in a far more sedate frame of mind, World Expo 88 opened in Brisbane.

When it came to movies, April saw the unleashing of such ne'er-to-be-forgotten classics as Bright Lights, Big City, The Seventh Sign, Appointment with Death, Brain Damage, Colors, The Blue Iguana, Lady in White, Return of the Killer Tomatoes, Two Moon Junction, White Mischief, Critters 2 and Powaqqatsi.

I believe that Critters 2 and White Mischief are the only ones of those that I've actually seen. Therefore, I shall nominate Critters 2 as my Steve Does Comics Film of the Month.

But what of music?

The spell kicked off with the Pet Shop Boys' Heart at Number One on the UK singles chart before that was forced to make way for Theme from S-Express by S-Express.

On the accompanying album chart, April was ushered in with Now That's What I Call Music! 11 ruling the roost before that was barged aside by Iron Maiden's Seventh Son of a Seventh Son. But, then, even the mighty Maidens were forced to subside by the arrival of Erasure's The Innocents.

But what news of the galaxy's greatest comic?

Possibly to no one's surprise, it continued to feed us a diet of Rogue Trooper, Strontium Dog, Judge Dredd, Tharg's Future-Shocks and Tyranny Rex.

But there was innovation to be found in the form of Prog 571 introducing us to Summer Magic, a brand new strip by Alan McKenzie and John Ridgway.

Fandom informs me that it involved a boy called Luke Kirby who, in the summer of 1962, is sent to stay in the countryside with his Uncle Elias. A man he's never before met. Luke soon discovers the man is a practitioner of alchemy and, when a mysterious beast begins stalking the woods around the village, Elias announces the boy must learn magic, in order to defend himself!

2000 AD #568, Rogue Trooper

2000 AD #569

2000 AD #570

2000 AD #571, Judge Dredd

2000 AD #572, Judge Dredd

15 comments:

Anonymous said...

Charlie and missus are in Prague in a british sport bar watching the games. The bar is called “Brit Sports Bar Prague” (clever that!)

There are like 75 guys and three girls. The guy next to me is wearing a pink skin tight top and skirt and sitting with his 5 buddies.

In one room is the Tottenham game. In the other is the Westham game.

Westham has just scored and the whole place has erupted cheering! Charlie and Missus think Tottenham is not anyones fav team here!

That said, the guy in the pink skirt, big and burly at that, did not start screaming when Westham scored a goal. So, Charlie stayed muted.

Anonymous said...

Prague - the "City of A Hundred Spires" - maybe Charlie should be watching Chesterfield ( the "Spireites" ! ) Just a bit of UK wordplay!

Phillip



Matthew McKinnon said...

Just come out of the cinema at Finsbury Park and it’s like a war zone. But a cheerful one, if you can imagine that.

The only one of those movies I’ve seen is Brain Damage, and that has one terrific scene surrounded by 70 minutes of dross. Luckily it existed in isolation on YouTube so I was able to rip that.

Those covers are a parade of 2nd league (at the time) talent - 2 Dillons, 2 Baikies and a Higgins!

I remember that Summer Magic story vaguely. It’s still quite well-liked to this day, I think?

Anonymous said...

Matthew - The only one I've seen is "colors" ! Not contemporaneously, but on one of those Alex Cox (or Alex Cox-type) 90s movie nights.

Phillip

Anonymous said...

The fun and interesting thing about “Now that’s what I call music” 11 is that Joe le Taxi, sung by a 14 y.o. Vanessa Paradis, is on it. Vive le France! Vive le Joe!

Joe (le Taxi)

Colin Jones said...

Charlie/Joe, foreign-language songs are rare in the UK chart so Joe Le Taxi was very memorable!

Today (May 25th) is five years since I last used cash.

Anonymous said...

Today is Memorial day in the USA. Since Charlie is in Prague he will invoke the memory of the czech parachute commandos who killed SS General Heydrich in 1942 and met their end at St Cyril’s church. Charlie highly reccomends the film ANTHROPOID. Very accurate and grim.

The irish actors Dornan and Murphy do a respectable job.

Anonymous said...

Charlie - Cheese rolling day has arrived! A large cheese, lobbed at Heydrich, would easily have done the job!

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/live/c626nq7wx76t

Phillip

Colin Jones said...

Charlie/Joe, today is a holiday in the UK too. The final Monday in May has been a British holiday for decades and we used to call it "Whitsun" but nowadays it's called "Spring Bank Holiday".

Anonymous said...

Charlie - Appropriate for cheese-rolling day, the Beatles are bigger than cheeses! - Harry & Paul:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AsVKlOxacIM

Phillip

Anonymous said...

I certainly liked Summer Magic, Matthew.

It was fairly low key, but that was part of the appeal - it felt like the kind of series you'd get in a pre-Action IPC comic, but with a more developed sensibility. Which - in between the arrival of Zenith in 2000AD, and New Statesmen (Crisis) later in the year - was the kind of thing that I thought Tharg should have been doing, rather than jumping on the post-Watchmen 'grown up super-heroes' bandwagon.

Imagine an alternative universe where it was Misty rather than 2000AD that had survived the cull of weekly comics - in the 70s girls comics generally sold better apparently - and in the late 80s they decided to do a series about a token boy...
(What actually happened, as I understand it, is that Alan McKenzie wrote a Summer Magic outline and sample script as a submission for the 80s incarnation of Eagle, but Tharg blagged it for the progs)

Having said that, it was John Ridgway who really made it work, with a perfect evocation of early '60s England. His old skool style, and background as an artist having just previously worked on Hellblazer and er, The Famous Five -

https://downthetubes.net/give-me-five-john-ridgway-recalls-his-time-drawing-enid-blytons-famous-teen-adventurers/

- made him the perfect artist for the series.

-sean

Anonymous said...

PHILLIP that is actually pretty funny! But help me out with the last line (my brit-speak failed me). “Where does John Lennon buy cheeses…?”

Anonymous said...

Charlie - "Insanesburies" is a play on 'in Sainsbury's'. Sainsbury's is a UK supermarket! (Used to be considered high-end, but not anymore! )

Phillip

Anonymous said...

Thanks amigo! CH

Anonymous said...

'Colors' is the one with Robert Duvall, and Sean Penn, right? Its ok if you like that kind of thing, but cop flicks don't really do it for me.
The only other one of those films I've seen is 'Powaqqatsi', which is pretty good, although it was the first one - from 1982 - 'Koyaanisqatsi' that really made an impression -

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i4MXPIpj5sA

Great Phillip Glass soundtrack.

Poor aul' West Ham, eh? And they did so well against Leeds...
Personally I blame Everton, the useless gits.

-sean