Thursday, January 2, 2014

Teen Confessions #89

Teen Confessions #89 (On Sale: June 1975) has one of my favorite cover paintings by the late, great Don Newton. This is one of Newton's few romance covers ever and it sure is a beaut.

I don't normally buy romance comics; the main attraction for me was the Don Newton cover painting, so I am not an expert on romance stories. This issue's lot seem pretty pedestrian to me but I'm not really one to judge. We begin with  "Let Them All Talk!" a seven-page story penciled and inked by Art Cappello. It is the story of Donna, a 21-year old engaged to Richie Dutton, who falls for her older boss, Jason Clark, who is, gasp, 35 years old. I find it funny how Cappello draws Jason with huge streaks of grey hair at his temples. Anyway, everyone thinks Donna is just a gold digger going after Jason's money, but really she admires her boss who has been widowed for a year. When Richie leaves her she realizes she only feels sorry for Jason and does not love him, but Richie comes back and TALHEA (they all live happily ever after). Art Cappello's artwork is pretty pedestrian at best.

Next is "Please Don't Leave Me" another seven-page story this one drawn by the team of Charles Nicholas and Vince Alascia. This is the story of Claudia who gets engaged to Michael Ross, the most handsome man she has ever seen. Michael has a reputation for having "chased every chick in town" but Claudia says she believes he will be true to her. One night at dinner Michael invites another couple Joy and Jim to join them at a party. Jim and Claudia commiserate at how neither is very happy with this arrangement. At the party Michael spends his time dancing with Joy and later on Claudia  catches them kissing. Jim also sees the kiss and ends up taking Claudia home that night. The next day Michael takes Joy to the beach and Jim comes over and suggests that he and Claudia  go as well. Claudia ends up giving Michael back his engagement ring and starts dating Jim and TALHEA. The Nicholas/Alascia art is pretty standard for that team.

Our last seven-page story is the cover story "Running Wild!!" drawn by Spanish artist Demetrio Sanchez Gomez who worked in the Catalan style popularized in the US by the likes of José González, Esteban Maroto and Ramon Torrents. The work is very good indeed. Rosalie is a seventeen-year-old "good girl" who goes for a ride with biker Pike Roman and has her heart tugged for the first time. However, Pike wants to "share" his girl with fellow biker Chopper. Rosalie resists at first but is soon talked into letting Chopper kiss her. Later Pike says that from now on Rosalie is his "private chick." Rosalie's friend Tim Edwards warns her that Pike is "bad news" but Rosalie thinks Tim is just being a child. Tim tries to intervene again between Pike and Rosalie and Rosalie has to talk Pike and the bikers out of beating him up. Pike, Rosalie, Chopper and his girl all ride out to a lover's lane area and begin making out. This makes Rosalie very uncomfortable. Tim shows up and asks if she wants a ride and Pike and Chopper jump him. Rosalie runs to Tim's car and uses it to run over their motorcycles. Tim jumps in the car, they drive off and TALHEA.

This is not a great book, but the beautiful Don Newton cover and the artwork of Demetrio Sanchez Gomez make it well worth owning.

Edited by George Wildman.

Wednesday, January 1, 2014

Aquaman #53

Aquaman #53 (On Sale: July 1970) has a classic cover by the late, great Nick Cardy. Good lord they don't get much better than this!

It is 1970 and there is a rumor going around that California is going to have a major earthquake and sink into the Pacific. Kind of hard to believe these days, but this rumor got so much traction that then governor, Ronald Reagan found some flimsy excuse to be out of the state the day it was supposed to happen. Just a funny last minute schedule change his people said, but we all knew. "Is California Sinking?" by the SAG team (Steve Skeates, Jim Aparo and Dick Giordano) taps beautifully into this 1970 paranoia as only Steve Skeates could.


It opens on a mundane scene of a secretary typing away in an office, oblivious until the last moment to what is happening around her. From that startling scene we flip the page to one of Jim Aparo's great splash (no pun intended) pages, showing the power of his triple-threat penciling, inking and lettering. IS CALIFORNIA SINKING?


Well, is it? Californian millionaire Elliot Harlanson (gotta love that name!) has just been told that it will and what that means to him is his beautiful home will sink with it. And Elliot is having none of that. But he is being told that he can save his home, and California in the bargain, if he just buys an atomic bomb and blows up Atlantis. Because, you see, it is the rising of Atlantis that will cause the sinking of California and if Atlantis does not rise, well then, California does not sink! Or at least that is the story being peddled by Elliot's visitor, a mysterious "scientist" who we shortly learn is actually an agent of O.G.R.E. (Organization for General Revenge and Enslavement), who can't afford to buy an a-bomb of their own. They plan on seeing that Aquaman is in Atlantis when Elliot's bomb goes off.

It is now two weeks later and, on the east coast, Elliot and his ever-present girl-friend meet the "scientists" from O.G.R.E. on a dock, where Elliot's submarine, atomic bomb inside, await. We find out that O.G.R.E. has enlisted the help of Black Manta to keep Aquaman by Atlantis and preoccupied. They have given Manta a gun that scrambles brain waves and Manta uses it to thwart an attack of sea creatures on him orchestrated by Aquaman. As Aquaman leaves Atlantis to confront Manta, the sub leaves the Florida coast heading for Atlantis.

When Manta uses the gun on Aquaman, the Sea King is able to counteract the gun's affects by concentrating on getting Manta. While Aquaman takes care of Black Manta, Aqualad and some Atlantian police take care of Manta's men. When Manta mumbles something about "They said I'd have nothing to worry about," Aquaman wants to know who "they" are and sort of, well, beats the information out of Manta. When Manta confesses that he got the gun from O.G.R.E., Aquaman knows something bigger than Manta and a gun is going on and he begins scouring the area around Atlantis looking for danger.

Meanwhile on the shore the O.G.R.E. "scientists" have a run in with the feds. who take them down only to be told that they are too late to save Atlantis or Aquaman.

Back at Atlantis, Aquaman sees the sub coming in close and sends a giant squid to capture it. Caught in the squid's grasp, Elliot freaks out, "You act like you don't care what happens to my beautiful, spacious home!" and accidentally whacks a lever. The lever that releases the bomb! Learning what he has done a distraught Elliot proclaims, "I'm too rich to die! Do something!" But there is nothing they can do while caught in the squid's grasp.

Aquaman sees the bomb however and races toward it at speeds only the King of the Sea could muster. Alas, he is still to slow and the bomb hit the sea floor!

And bounces harmlessly away. It is a dud! Inside the sub, Elliot is furious! "Wait till I get my hands on the rat who sold me that bomb!" His girl-friend tells him to, "Just cool it!"

In the epilogue a few days later the feds tell Aquaman the O.G.R.E. are being taken care of by them and not to worry. They also tell him that they have let Harlanson go, as he was duped; he actually thought he was saving California from destruction and had no idea that Atlantis was populated. When Aquaman talks about the act a fate that resulted in a dud atomic bomb the feds reveal that they actually took care of that, or rather their agent on the inside did. That is when Elliot's girl-friend, in reality Agent 03, Honey James, shows up.

Aquaman says that he let Manta go, as the revelation that Manta was being duped by O.G.R.E. was more than enough punishment. After they leave the feds and head back for Atlantis, Aqualad wonders what will happen to Atlantis's people should it rise from the ocean depths. Aquaman says not to worry as that would not happen till well past the year 2000, so they have plenty of time to figure it out.

"And so our story ends. Yet, once question remains unanswered..." Shots of the secretary going under water... "Is California Sinking?" Shamefully, shamefully never reprinted.

Edited by Dick Giordano.

Panel Love

Panel Love; the name says it all. Love of the panel, that holder of comic book magic, that piece of time held suspended for us to enjoy and learn from. In the hands of the greats, the panel tells volumes, takes us to another place and maybe another time. It is a place where words and pictures join together to tell us something that neither alone could tell as well. The words tell you something the art does not and the art amplifies and adds nuance to the words, taking us deeper into the story.

I've had a jones for panels for a very long time and now it is time to share that love with you all.

Welcome!