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A Gallery of the Richard Matheson Book Covers by Murray Tinkelman

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by John Scoleri


Regular readers of this blog know that two of my (numerous) collecting obsessions are 1) the works of Richard Matheson and 2) paperback book series released in matching cover designs by a single artist.

Berkley Books acquired the rights to eight of Richard Matheson's books to be published throughout 1979, and hired artist Murray Tinkelman to design their covers. Tinkelman's work was recognizable to readers of science fiction and horror thanks to several HP Lovecraft book covers he designed for Ballantine in the mid-70s. On Tinkelman's website, fellow artist Vincent DiFate describes his work on the Lovecraft covers:
"Since the artist used an open crosshatch technique, his illustrations appeared light in tone, reminiscent of an old photograph that had faded with time. Contrasted with the fully rendered paintings of other paperback artists, Tinkelman's drawings looked so unlike traditional book cover art that they had an immediate and significant impact."
The same can be said of Tinkelman's Matheson covers.

The overall cover design would change slightly for the last two books, where the art was no longer presented full bleed and the M and N in Matheson's name do not extend below the other letters. Sharp-eyed readers will notice that Shock III was originally designed to match the earlier books as can be seen on the back of Shock Waves (and reproduced at the top of this article).

Here is a gallery of the Tinkelman covers for the Richard Matheson books Berkley released in 1979 (along with the text copy from the front and back covers of each book):

The Shrinking Man
January 1979
ISBN 0-425-04021-6 $1.95
One of the most incredible Science Fiction classics of all time!

Scott Carey was a normal-sized human when he passed through the chemical fog... 
He was the size of a doll when the basement door slammed—and locked—behind him...
He was the size of a moth when the Black Widow awakened to feed...
THE SHRINKING MAN
The incredible SF classic of a man stranded in a nightmare world of horror—his own cellar!




The Shores of Space (collection)
February 1979
ISBN 0-425-04024-0 $1.75
"Ambidextrous, unpredicatble... always first-rank"—Harlan Ellison

Here are thinking jellies that feed on man, cold dimensions of otherness that lurk in the summer air, eerie encounters with a killer doll... and a visit with Mom on the last day of the world.
Here are provocative and unforgettable stories from a celebrated master of science fiction and fantasy!
BEING
BLOOD SON
THE LAST DAY
THE DOLL THAT DOES EVERYTHING
...and other incredible journeys to
THE SHORES OF SPACE


I Am Legend
April 1979
ISBN 0-425-04053-4 $1.75
One man against a planet of vampires. Neville is the man. The planet is... Earth!
The Nightmare Classic

Daytimes are okay. It's at night that the horror begins...
At night, when the empty streets begin to fill with the lurching, bone-white shapes of the walking dead, creeping toward the fortress-house of the last man alive on Earth, howling for the precious substance they crave...
Blood.
I AM LEGEND
Considered one of the great masterpieces of modern science fiction, I AM LEGEND is the source of the WARNER BROTHERS motion picture THE OMEGA MAN starring CHARLTON HESTON.


Shock I (collection)
May 1979
ISBN 0-425-04095-X $1.95
First in a series from the far side of Strange

Classic Fantasy from the celebrated Discoverer of the far side of Strange
A long night in a too-strange town, a star-voyage on a doomed ship, a visit to the Edge, Berserkers, Fungi, bus rides to Nowhere, phone calls from the Dead and other events uncanny, uncommon... and unforgettable.
THE CHILDREN OF NOAH
THE DISTRIBUTOR
LEMMINGS
THE EDGE
ONE FOR THE BOOKS
THE SPLENDID SOURCE
LONG DISTANCE CALL
DANCE OF THE DEAD
THE CREEPING TERROR
MANTAGE
LEGION OF PLOTTERS
DEATH SHIP and THE HOLIDAY MAN
SHOCK I


A Stir of Echoes
June 1979
ISBN 0-425-04107-7 $1.95
The masterpiece of terror about the man who had an Open Mind

"You will awaken now, with the full power of your mind..."
The party game was over, and the descent into Hell began: a terrifying parade of shapes, seizing Tom Wallace's brain, plunging him into a world of incalculable horror...
All because of an amateur hypnotist's casual mistake. For which of us could live sanely with the full power of the mind?
A STIR OF ECHOES






 Shock II (collection)
July 1979
ISBN 0-425-04158-1 $1.95
Second in a series from the darkside of the Imagination
"Matheson is masterful..."—Harlan Ellison

A visit to the long afternoon of Earth, a one-year-old man, a mind-singing ceremony, a maelstrom, cricket armies, Venus babies for sale... and other apparitions incredible, intriguing and intensely Strange.
THE MAN WHO MADE THE WORLD
DESCENT
DEADLINE
NO SUCH THING AS A VAMPIRE
BROTHER TO THE MACHINE
GRAVEYARD SHIFT

THE LIKENESS OF JULIE
LAZARUS II
MUTE
FROM SHADOWED PLACES
BIG SURPRISE
CRICKETS
A FLOURISH OF STRUMPETS
Classic Fantasy from a Master of Imaginative Fiction


Shock III (collection)
September 1979
ISBN 0-425-04209-X $1.95
Third in a series from the outer edge of unReality.
Matheson is "always first rank!"—Harlan Ellison

A one way trip through Time, the day dreams were money, a killer house and a rain of snakes, the real Mr. Universe, a nuptial corpse, the human from Mars and other unRealities weird, wise and wildly probable.
GIRL OF MY DREAMS
RETURN
THE DISINHERITORS
SHOCK WAVE
WITCH WAR
MISS STARDUST
'TIS THE SEASON TO BE JELLY
THE JAZZ MACHINE
SLAUGHTER HOUSE
WHEN THE WAKER SLEEPS
FIRST ANNIVERSARY
FULL CIRCLE
NIGHTMARE AT 20,000 FEET
Classic Fantasy from a Master of Imaginative Fiction


Shock Waves (collection)
October 1979
ISBN 0-425-04218-9 $1.95
Fourth in a series from a world where Weirdness walks

A look at the ugliest doll ever seen, a selfmurderess, the man who bled oil, a machine that promises never to stop, the lights around the moon and other horrors bizarre, believable and bone-chilling!
SHOCK WAVES
Don't miss these other volumes in the classic SHOCK series by a Master of Imaginative Fiction





 


Do You Dare Enter? Part Forty-Six: April 1974

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The DC Mystery Anthologies 1968-1976
by Peter Enfantino and
Jack Seabrook


Nick Cardy
Ghosts 25

"Three Skulls on the Zambezi"
Story by Leo Dorfman
Art by Alfredo Alcala

"The Specter's Last Stand"
Story Uncredited
Art by Rico Rival and E.R. Cruz

"The Phantom's Invisible Clue"
Story Uncredited
Art by Buddy Gernale

"The Devil's Own"
Story Uncredited
Art by Tony Caravana

Jack: Footloose adventurers Petrus Magden and Mikal Toremi drive through South Africa hunting the treasure of King Lobengula. They pass three skulls mounted on bamboo sticks and, while Mikal thinks the treasure is a legend, Petrus believes it is real. Do the "Three Skulls on the Zambezi" point the way to riches or despair? Their car is damaged when it hits a rock and they must camp for the night. Petrus meets a beautiful young woman who tells him that her name is Liasa and she is hunting for her father's diamonds. He follows her and sees her vanish into the side of a cliff. The next morning, Petrus sees Liasa dive into a dangerous whirlpool. He dives in after her and saves her, so she leads him through the side of the cliff to join her family and enjoy the treasure of Lobengula. Back in reality, Mikal stands over Petrus's corpse, wondering how he managed to drag himself out of the whirlpool after drowning. He also finds an ivory carving that resembles Liasa. Alcala is in his element here, but Dorfman's story is the usual vague stitching together of incidents without a satisfying conclusion.

Peter: Since "Three Skulls" is set in a jungle, we expect great things from Alfredo and he certainly does deliver but the story itself seems half-finished. We know Petrus is the character with the good heart and he dies (and, ostensibly, finds the happiness he was craving) but what happens to greedy SOB Mikal? Last we see of him, he's eyeing that ivory antiquity like a giant Mars bar. He's not headed for a good end, is he?

Jack: In South Vietnam, U.S. soldiers dig up the bodies of their fallen comrades to return them to the U.S. for burial. The ghost of one G.I. protests and makes "The Specter's Last Stand," since he had no family back home and had finally found his place in the Army. He was killed in an ambush and fell to the ground, his dying thought being that he belonged there. Enemy soldiers interrupt the disinterment of the bodies and the soldiers flee, but the Viet Cong mistake the corpses that were left behind for living American fighters and give up their attack. The soldier without a country falls back into his grave, where he will remain. Rival and Cruz provide very smooth art and I'm happy to see a story set in Vietnam, but for me this is just a quickie, five-page ghost tale.

Peter: Surely this is the best and most powerful narrative we've yet seen in 25 issues of (let's face it) mostly disposable and forgettable strips? We've seen a few of these war-torn horror stories here and there on our journey but most of them would be relegated to the pages of Weird War Tales. "The Specter's Last Stand" caught me completely off-guard; a stirring and moving script accentuated by excellent work from Rival and Cruz. Watch for this near the top of my Best of 1974 list later this year.

Jack: George Dahlmar had been jealous of Will Ferguson for years. Will was the star quarterback in high school, he got the best job at the Culver Falls Power Company, and he got Emily, the boss's daughter. George finally brains Will with the butt of a rifle and leaves his body in the snowy woods, setting the scene to make it look like he was killed by a falling tree branch. George courts Emily but is haunted either by Will's ghost or by his own guilt. George goes on a hunting trip with a new colleague named Lew Sayers, but Lew turns out to be the ghost of Will and murders George. George leaves "The Phantom's Invisible Clue," by writing "Lew no shadow" with the knife point on the floor of the hunting lodge. From this, and the fact that the fingerprints on the knife matched those of the late Will, the cops deduce that Lew was Will's ghost. Really? That's some leap of logic for a flatfoot.

Peter: Laughably, Emily is ready to jump back into the wifey role five minutes after her first husband's corpse thaws out but Will's ghost doesn't seem to be too perturbed about that. Oh, and did Will's ghost (aka Lew Sayers, no relation to crooner Leo Sayers, I hasten to add) have to interview for the job at George's office? I'd have rather seen that comic story. Disjointed and deadly dumb with amateurish art by Gernale.

Jack: Thomas Weir ministers to the sick and dying of Edinburgh with his magic stick. What no one realizes is that the angelic face carved into the end of the stick is really "The Devil's Own" and turns demonic when Weir is alone with the invalids and they die of fright. Eventually, folks catch on and burn Weir at the stake, but he and his stick continue to haunt his old home until it is torn down. My favorite moment occurs in the last panel, when a character sees Weir's ghost ride by in a flaming coach and remarks, "Will we never see the last of him?" In the same panel, there is a caption that then reads: "Neither Weir nor his Satan's staff were ever seen again!" I guess that answers that question.

Peter: Tony Caravana's art isn't hideous so much as generic. He's not given much to work with though, is he? I can't find much info on Caravana but it's likely he was another Filipino import, but not one who caught on like Redondo and Alcala. There would be only one more contribution by Tony to the DC mystery line.


Luis Dominguez
The House of Secrets 118

"The Very Last Picture Show"
Story by Michael Fleisher and Russell Carley
Art by George Evans

"Turnabout"
Story by Steve Skeates
Art by Quico Redondo

"Nasty Little Man"
Story by Jack Oleck
Art by Ramona Fradon

Peter: Thirty-five years after the runaway success of his first monster picture, "The Wolfman of Alcatraz," actor D. R. Lansing is set to attend the premiere of his latest fright flick, "Poisoned Strawberries." Musing on his success, he can't help but remember that the true brain and talent behind "Wolfman," his ex-partner  and best friend, Paul Jenkins, would have been the recipient of all the fame and glory had not D.R. tossed the man out of a window. Now, years later, strange notes and a first draft script of "Wolfman" show up at Lansing's house, ostensibly sent by the long-dead Paul. But D.R. overhears his wife, Margo, and his agent plotting more Jenkins-inspired tricks calculated to cause D.R.'s heart to pop. When Lansing arrives for the world premiere of "Strawberries," he's enraged when the first reel rolls and the title "The Night I Was Murdered by Paul Jenkins" unfurls across the screen. He busts down the door of the projection room but, moments later, the audience sees the horrifying image of a hanging man. Lansing's agent arrives moments later to confess to Margo that he was stuck in traffic and never delivered the phony film. Paul Jenkins has truly claimed his pound of flesh. Proof that even the masters stumble now and then, "The Very Last Picture Show" is easily Michael Fleisher's worst script for the DC mystery line since he showed up on the scene. Awful cliche stacks up on awful cliche and the dialogue drips purple. How was this not a Wessler script? George Evans' art is a shadow of what it once was in the EC days, now resembling a bad John Calnan forgery! Groan.

The Obligatory Expository Oratory

Jack: In my ledger, Fleisher + Evans = entertainment! The only demerit I gave this story was for the cliched moment when the agent says he got stuck in traffic and never got to the projection booth. Other than that, I thoroughly enjoyed it. I love the theme of revenge and the plotting by the man and woman against the producer, and Evans's goofy artwork had just enough nostalgia value for me that I was able to laugh with it rather than at it, even including that checkered suit Lansing is wearing!

Peter: Donna murders her adulterous hubby, Doug, and attempts to dispatch his body but, through a couple mishaps and the constant nagging of Doug's ghost, Donna ends up trapped in the trunk of her car in a river. How did she get there? Lucky enough to find a tire iron, she manages to open the trunk and prepares to exit, not knowing that the car is sitting atop a waterfall. Pretty effective final panel to "Turnabout" but, of course, the reader naturally would like to know how Donna got into the trunk and how her car got onto the waterfall in the first place. It can't be her hubby's ghost because, in a rather lame expository panel, Abel explains that, yep, Donna's gonna take a trip on that waterfall but, nope, Doug is not to blame. He's dead. And would his ghost get into the driver's seat and motor that car onto the precipice? Sharp art by Quico Redondo.

Thank you, Abel!

Jack: I couldn't really follow this one, even though I went back and scanned it a second time. Was the husband a serial rapist? A serial killer? When she backs into the open trunk and hits her head, does she fall into the trunk? Does it close itself? Does the car roll along and onto the waterfall? And why can't she escape the waterfall? Come on! I need more than this.

Peter: Patrick Terrence was a "Nasty Little Man" and a nasty little man was he. Coveting the house and wealth of the people on the hill, Patrick swears that, somehow, he'll have everything he wants someday. That someday comes quicker than Patrick figured. On his way home from the village, he runs across a leprechaun and tells him that his heart's desire is to live in a stone house. Being a leprechaun, the little guy must grant his wish. Just then, a runaway horse gallops down the lane and the young lady aboard would be thrown if not for the quick thinking of Patrick (the only good thing he does in his life, I'm sure). Turns out the girl is none other than Kathleen Corcorn, who lives with her father in the big stone house Patrick wants so badly. Naturally, the girl is smitten with her saviour and, after a short courtship, the two are married and Patrick moves into the stone house. Being the greedy sod he is, though, a little wealth isn't enough and Patrick arranges the old man's death. At the reading of the will, the murderer learns that Pop wasn't so rich after all and that they're actually in debt. Moving to humiliating digs turns man on wife and, eventually, wife has enough. Kathleen is institutionalized for murdering her husband but she's allowed to attend his funeral and muses that Patrick got his wish since she spent the last of her father's inheritance on a stone tomb. A witty, surprising twist caps a fun, if overlong, "just desserts" romp. Fradon contributes her usual saucer-eyed characters but they're really not overly annoying. Well, not much anyway.

Jack: What a clever way to kill someone--hit them in the face with a horseshoe nailed to a piece of wood and then blame the horse! I think this is the third time in a row that I've really enjoyed Ramona Fradon's art and Jack Oleck delivers the goods as he so often does. I love it when I get close to the end of a story and I start to suspect the coming surprise ending. This one was fun.


Nick Cardy
The Witching Hour 41

"The Corpse That Lived Twice!"
Story by Carl Wessler
Art by Buddy Gernale and Alfredo Alcala

"Of Greed and the Grave"
Story Uncredited
Art by Rico Rival

"The Killer Eye!"
Story by Carl Wessler
Art by E.R. Cruz

Jack: The Nazis are bombing London in the early days of WWII but Jane Carlton is only interested in how she can increase her wealth and power by manipulating her husband's career. She visits Madam Nadja, a fortune teller, who looks into the distant past and tells the tale of Adrianus who, during the Roman Empire, married a beautiful blond slave girl. Like Jane Carlton, she was ambitious and used her wiles to advance her husband's career until it all came to a crashing halt in the eruption of Mt. Vesuvius. Madam Nadja tells Jane that she is related to the slave woman and Jane asks if her own ambition will guarantee a similar fate. Just then a bomb levels a nearby house.

Jane races home to find her dwelling destroyed and her husband's charred corpse lying among the ruins. Somehow she deduces from this that her husband was a traitor. Mordred the witch explains that Jane was only related to the slave girl by marriage and that her husband was a spy. A twist ending only works when the elements of the plot are all put in place so that the ending, while surprising, is consistent with the story that leads up to it. In the case of "The Corpse That Lived Twice," Carl Wessler fails to lay a foundation for the sudden revelation that it was Jane's husband and not Jane herself who was the doomed party. Is this the first time we've seen Alcala ink such a lesser artist? I would say the inks were laid on with a trowel, since much of this resembles Alcala's work more than Gernale's, if Buddy's work in this month's issue of Ghosts is any indication.

Peter: Man, did my head hurt after reading this swill. It was like doing homework and the last few chapters of the history book are missing.

Jack: Amos Price tells his shrink, Dr. Sharpe, that he missed out on a promotion because his boss said he was too gentle to be a leader. Dr. Sharpe hypnotizes him and discovers that Price had been pirate Captain Roger Drury in a past life. Sharpe consults his encyclopedia and learns that Drury had buried treasure on a Caribbean island, so he puts Price under again and this time the patient physically transforms into the pirate captain. Sharpe makes Drury lead him to the treasure but, when the chest is opened, a booby-trap ensures the doctor's demise. Not so gentle after all, Drury reverts to Price, buries the body, and makes off with the treasure. The author responsible for "Of Greed and the Grave" is uncredited, but I'd put money on Carl Wessler as the culprit, since he wrote the other two stories in this issue.

Peter: I really can't stand hostess Cynthia's hipster lingo captions and sometimes it can take me right out of a decent story. Fortunately, that wasn't a problem this time because the story was, like, awful, man, and that climax was totally a bummer.

Jack: Sidney Stewart's wife Aggie gives him a Polaroid camera for their anniversary and he suggests that they go to the amusement park where they had their first date. He takes a photo of Aggie just as a nearby man falls victim to a pickpocket. When the photo develops, Sidney sees that the pickpocket was Marita, a fortune teller. He alerts the authorities and Marita curses his camera. From then on, whenever he takes a photo, he has power over the object photographed by "The Killer Eye!" of the camera. Once he realizes his new ability, he uses it to gain wealth and power. His evil career comes to an end when a photograph that Aggie took of Sidney and left in her purse accidentally gets a bullet through it during a robbery. Carl Wessler had a long career writing comic books, but 1974 must have been a particularly dry period for his idea factory, judging by this issue of The Witching Hour!

Peter: So much for "kind-hearted" Sidney. The witch Marita angle is dropped rather quickly and all I could think the rest of the story is "if Marita has this incredible power, why is she picking pockets?" The usually bankable ER Cruz delivers rushed, uninspired work this time around but "The Killer Eye" is a perfect cherry on top of a perfectly disposable issue.

Jack: It may be disposable, but according to this issue's circulation statement, it was selling an average of 334,454 copies a month and the most recent issue sold 434,004 copies! Those are staggering numbers, especially considering the fact that the comics industry was in what it considered to be a slump!

In our next TNT-stuffed issue!
On Sale February 23rd!

The Hitchcock Project-Henry Slesar Overview and Updated List of All Episodes Reviewed So Far

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by Jack Seabrook

"A Night With the Boys"
Henry Slesar was born in Brooklyn on June 12, 1927. After graduating from the School of Industrial Art in New York City, he was hired to work at an advertising agency, beginning a career that would last for decades. Slesar served in the U.S. Air Force either during or just after WWII. During his lifetime, he was married three times and had two children.

"The Brat" (1955) was his first published short story and it would be followed by hundreds more. He also wrote six novels, as well as many teleplays, radio plays, and movie scripts. The Gray Flannel Shroud, a 1959 novel set in the world of advertising, won the Edgar Allan Poe Award in 1960 for best first mystery novel.

Four collections of Slesar's short stories were published: Clean Crimes and Neat Murders (1960), A Crime for Mothers and Others (1962), Murders Most Macabre (1986) and Death on Television (1989). He wrote many scripts for the CBS Radio Mystery Theater starting in the 1970s and won a Daytime Emmy Award in 1974 for Best Writing for a Drama Series; the award was given for his work as head writer for the TV soap opera, The Edge of Night.

Writing in Twentieth Century Crime and Mystery Writers, Frances McConachie noted Slesar's "mixture of detection, popular psychology, Gothic horror, and romance," and these themes were evident in his stories and teleplays produced as episodes of Alfred Hitchcock Presents and The Alfred Hitchcock Hour. Slesar was involved, either as the writer of a story, a teleplay, or both, in 47 episodes of the Hitchcock series--37 half hours and ten hours--making him the most frequent contributor among the many writers involved in this classic show.

Henry Slesar's work for Alfred Hitchcock Presents began in the fall of 1957, during the show's third season, with "Heart of Gold," an adaptation by another writer of a Slesar short story. This tough little slice of noir was followed by three more episodes in season three: "Night of the Execution," which features a good cast that includes Pat Hingle and Russell Collins; "On the Nose," a light crime story; and "The Right Kind of House," which has a classic twist and continues to examine mother-son relationships, something that was also the subject of "Heart of Gold."

"Forty Detectives Later"
The fourth season saw four more adaptations of Slesar's short stories by other writers. "The Morning After" is an excellent crime drama directed by Herschel Daugherty that includes an all-star lineup: Jeanette Nolan, Dorothy Provine, Robert Alda and Fay Wray. "The Right Price" is an attempt at comedy that falls flat, while "The Kind Waitress" is a weak crime story. "A Night With the Boys" rounds out the season with a strong noir episode directed by John Brahm.

Slesar was able to break into the business of writing teleplays with his first offering in season five, "Forty Detectives Later," an outstanding homage to (and parody of) classic private investigator films. "Insomnia" is a gritty crime drama with a haunted performance by Dennis Weaver and another teleplay by Slesar. The season's final two episodes were based on stories by Slesar but he did not write the teleplays: "One Grave Too Many" is shadowy and surprising, while "Party Line" lulls the viewer into thinking it is light fare before transforming into a shocking tale of horror with inventive direction by Hilton Green.

The producers of Alfred Hitchcock Presents liked what they had in Henry Slesar and began to rely on him heavily in season six, when he wrote teleplays for ten of his eleven stories that were adapted for the small screen. The sheer number of stories by Slesar this season meant that some of the shows were less successful than others. For every dull and uninspired effort like "Pen Pal," there was a memorable episode like "A Crime for Mothers," cannily directed by Ida Lupino and featuring an outstanding performance by Claire Trevor. Alan Crosland Jr.'s exciting direction enlivened shows like "The Money" and "Servant Problem," while the master himself--Alfred Hitchcock--directed "The Horseplayer," with a memorable star turn by the great Claude Rains. "Incident in a Small Jail" scored an Emmy nomination for film editor Edward Williams and starred John Fiedler in an unexpected role as a serial killer.

Henry Slesar was most productive in season seven, the last season in the half hour format, writing the teleplays for thirteen episodes, eleven of which were based on his stories and one of which was an original. These shows ran the gamut but were, on the whole, of high quality. Alan Crosland, Jr., directed three good shows: "Cop for a Day, a hardboiled effort starring Walter Matthau; "Keep Me Company," in which Anne Francis plays a lonely housewife; and "The Right Kind of Medicine," with Robert Redford as a cop-killer on the run.

"Party Line"
"The Test," with Brian Keith as a clever trial lawyer, prefigures the courtroom dramas Slesar would write for The Alfred Hitchcock Hour, while "The Kerry Blue" paints a portrait of a toxic marriage. "The Matched Pearl" was Slesar's first original teleplay for the series, and is a delightful tale of a trio of con artists who pull off a successful job. Most surprising is "The Opportunity," adapted by Slesar from a J.W. Aaron short story, which seems to be about sex but turns about to be about murder.

Thirty-seven episodes of Alfred Hitchcock Presents were either based on a story by Henry Slesar or featured his teleplay; he quickly grew to become a mainstay of the series. He later commented that he "much preferred writing for the half-hour show," and this may be due to the fact that his work for The Alfred Hitchcock Hour was not as successful as his work for Alfred Hitchcock Presents. Slesar was involved in one way or another in ten episodes of the hour-long series.

The four episodes that Slesar worked on in the first season of The Alfred Hitchcock Hour were, as a group, among his weakest. "I Saw the Whole Thing" was adapted from an entertaining novel by Henry Cecil but, despite direction by Alfred Hitchcock, this courtroom drama fails to come alive on the small screen. "Final Vow" was a Slesar original, and the story of a young nun trying to recover a stolen statue is dragged down by poor acting. "House Guest," with a teleplay by Slesar and Marc Brandel, is based on an exciting book by Andrew Garve but once again is less exciting to watch than to read. Worst of all is "What Really Happened," a confused adaptation of a 1926 novel by Marie Belloc Lowndes that again spends too much time in the courtroom.

Fortunately, the six episodes Slesar had a hand in during the second season of The Alfred Hitchcock Hour include some gems. The first three hours were adapted by Slesar from his own stories: "Blood Bargain" is a hardboiled tale of a hit man who falls for the wrong woman; "Starring the Defense" is his most successful courtroom drama yet; and "Behind the Locked Door" features a great performance by Gloria Swanson and one of the most shattering endings of the series. The last three hours that Slesar worked on were "Who Needs an Enemy?", adapted by Arthur Ross from a short story by Slesar; "The Second Verdict," adapted by Slesar and Alfred Hayes from a short story by Slesar; and "Isabel," adapted by Slesar and William Fay from a novel by S.B. Hough. "Enemy" is the most successful comedy of any episode involving Slesar, "Isabel" is the best transition from novel to small screen of Slesar's hours, and "Verdict" is his best courtroom drama, in large part due to strong performances by Martin Landau and Frank Gorshin.

"Servant Problem"
Henry Slesar's contributions to The Alfred Hitchcock Hour end with the show's second season; he was not involved in the third and final season. The 47 episodes of both series on which his name appears include many great half hours and several great hours, and--at least in the sixth and seventh seasons of Alfred Hitchcock Presents--Henry Slesar made significant contributions to the show's continuing success.

An episode guide to Henry Slesar's work on Alfred Hitchcock Presents may be found here.

Henry Slesar on The Alfred Hitchcock Hour Episode Guide

Episode title-“I Saw the Whole Thing” [8.4]
Broadcast date-11 Oct. 1962
Teleplay by-Slesar
Based on-Independent Witness by Henry Cecil
First print appearance-1963 novel
Watch episode-unavailable
Available on DVD?-No

Episode title-“Final Vow” [8.6]
Broadcast date-25 Oct. 1962
Teleplay by-Slesar
Based on-"Hiding Out" by Slesar
First print appearance-Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine March 1976
Available on DVD?-No

Episode title-“House Guest” [8.8]
Broadcast date-8 Nov. 1962
Teleplay by-Slesar and Marc Brandel
Based on-The Golden Deed by Andrew Garve
First print appearance-Toronto Star Weekly 5 Sept. 1959; 1960 novel
Available on DVD?-No

Episode title-“What Really Happened” [8.16]
Broadcast date-11 Jan. 1963
Teleplay by-Slesar
Based on-What Really Happened by Marie Belloc Lowndes
First print appearance-1926 novel
Available on DVD?-No

Episode title-“Blood Bargain” [9.5]
Broadcast date-25 Oct. 1963
Teleplay by-Slesar
Based on-"Blood Bargain" by Slesar
First print appearance-Web Detective Stories Sept. 1961
Watch episode-unavailable
Available on DVD?-No

Episode title-“Starring the Defense” [9.7]
Broadcast date-15 Nov. 1963
Teleplay by-Slesar
Based on-"Starring the Defense" by Slesar
First print appearance-Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine Apr. 1963
Available on DVD?-No

Episode title-“Behind the Locked Door” [9.22]
Broadcast date-27 Mar. 1964
Teleplay by-Slesar and Joel Murcott
Based on-"Starring the Defense" by Slesar (as O.H. Leslie)
First print appearance-Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine Jan. 1961
Available on DVD?-No

Episode title-“Who Needs an Enemy?" [9.29]
Broadcast date-27 Mar. 1964
Teleplay by-Arthur Ross
Based on-"Goodbye Charlie" by Slesar
First print appearance-Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine Jan. 1964
Available on DVD?-No

Episode title-“The Second Verdict" [9.31]
Broadcast date-29 May 1964
Teleplay by-Slesar and Alfred Hayes
Based on-"Second Verdict" by Slesar
First print appearance-Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine Feb. 1964
Available on DVD?-No

Episode title-“Isabel" [9.32]
Broadcast date-5 June 1964
Teleplay by-Slesar and William Fay
Based on-The Bronze Perseus by S.B. Hough
First print appearance-1959 novel
Available on DVD?-No


The Hitchcock Project--Episodes Reviewed So Far:

An introduction to The Hitchcock Project may be found here. The episodes that have been review so far are listed below. Click on any episode name to jump to the post.

"Keep Me Company"
1.18-Shopping for Death
1.20-And So Died Riabouchinska
1.23-Back for Christmas

2.1-Wet Saturday
2.24-The Cream of the Jest
2.31-The Night the World Ended
2.39-The Dangerous People

3.1-The Glass Eye
3.23-The Right Kind of House

"The Right Kind of Medicine"
4.6-Design for Loving
4.14-The Morning After
4.22-The Right Price
4.32-Human Interest Story
4.34-A True Account 

5.6-Anniversary Gift

5.10-Special Delivery
5.17-The Cure
5.24-Madame Mystery
5.26-Mother, May I Go Out To Swim?
5.27-The Cuckoo Clock
5.28-Forty Detectives Later
"The Opportunity"
6.14-The Changing Heart
6.18-The Greatest Monster of Them All
6.19-The Landlady
6.31-The Gloating Place

7.1-The Hatbox
7.3-Maria
7.4-Cop for a Day
7.5-Keep Me Company
"Behind the Locked Door"
7.9-I Spy
7.11-The Right Kind of Medicine
7.14-Bad Actor
7.16-The Case of M.J.H.
7.17-The Faith of Aaron Menefee
7.20-The Test
7.21-Burglar Proof
7.25-The Last Remains
7.37-The Big Kick

S.1-The Sorcerer’s Apprentice (shown only in syndication)

8.4-I Saw the Whole Thing

8.6-Final Vow
8.7-Annabel
8.8-House Guest
"The Jar"
8.16-What Really Happened

9.1-A Home Away From Home
9.5-Blood Bargain
9.7-Starring the Defense
9.13-The Magic Shop
9.17-The Jar
9.22-Behind the Locked Door
9.27-The Sign of Satan
9.29-Who Needs An Enemy?
9.31-The Second Verdict
9.32-Isabel

10.3-Water’s Edge
10.4-The Life Work of Juan Diaz
10.14-Final Performance
10.27-The Second Wife
10.29-Off Season

Sources:
IMDb. IMDb.com, n.d. Web. 2 Feb. 2015.
McConachie,Frances. "Henry Slesar."Twentieth Century Crime and Mystery Writers. 2d ed. Ed. John Reilly. London St. James, 1985. 806-809.
Wikipedia. Wikimedia Foundation, n.d. Web. 2 Feb. 2015.


*In two weeks: a series on Roald Dahl begins with "Lamb to the Slaughter"!

Star Spangled DC War Stories Part 47: April 1963

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The DC War Comics 1959-1976
by Corporals Enfantino and Seabrook


Joe Kubert
Our Army at War 129

"Heroes Need Cowards!"
Story by Robert Kanigher
Art by Joe Kubert

"The Drowned Bomber!"
Story by Bob Haney
Art by Jack Abel

"Undying Ski Fighter!"
Story by Bob Haney
Art by Jack Abel

Jack: When Sgt. Rock overhears a couple of desk soldiers joking around and calling each other cowards, he thinks about how combat vets never use that word. He recalls his own feelings of cowardice the first time he faced a tank in North Africa, though he managed to disable it with a grenade and destroy it with a bazooka. Rock recounts the story of how Ice Cream Soldier got his nickname--he melted like Ice Cream in the sun--but when the temperature grew cold he was a dynamo. The sergeant sees a pair of new soldiers in Easy Co. and their banter earns them the nicknames High Boy and Goldfish. High Boy gets scared crossing a river and Goldfish treats him like a coward afterwards, until Goldfish feels fear of his own when Easy Co. has to climb a narrow mountain pass. High Boy helps him get through it alive and the two realize, like other vets, that "Heroes Need Cowards!" because today's coward is tomorrow's hero. Kanigher tackles a weighty issue this time around and we get the origins of Rock and Ice Cream Soldier's nicknames thrown in for good measure. Kubert is really on his game here, using long, vertical panels in the mountain sequence to give a sense of height and narrow ledges.

"Heroes Need Cowards!"

Peter: A good, solid Rock yarn. Is this the first time we've seen an account of how the Sarge got his nickname? I love that last series of panels where Rock blows a smoke ring--so out of character! Another dynamite cover, by the way. The black borders almost symbolize the danger that's closing in on Rock and his men. Very stylish!

Jack: A pilot and his crew take a new flying fortress over Nazi territory. Their mission: drop a blockbuster bomb on a concrete shelf guarding a Nazi rocket factory. The combination of a storm, Nazi planes, and flak causes the fortress to be shot down and its bomb misses the target. "The Drowned Bomber!" lands in a lake and is pulled out by the Nazis and towed to the rocket factory for destruction along with its crew. What the Nazis don't realize is that a self-destruct button was pushed in the flying fortress before it crash-landed. Being dunked in the lake delayed the explosion but, back at the factory, the sun dries out the plane and boom! The worst thing about this story is that it is narrated by the plane, which insists that "I'll make it! I won't fail!" Jack Abel's art is uninspired.

"The Drowned Bomber!"

Peter: I'm not a fan of the talking equipment stories that pop up now and then. They strike me as silly and take me out of the narrative. This one's no exception.

Jack: A US soldier skis into an Alpine village, his head filled with valuable information on Nazi positions and strength. He sees a statue of another skier and learns the legend of Emile Legrand, who had thwarted Napolean's troops and led them to their deaths when he skied off the edge of a great crevasse. The American skier leads the Nazis on a chase over the mountains until a ghostly figure of a skier appears and the Nazis follow him off the edge of a crevasse to their death. Was it the ghost of Emile Legrand? Must have been! Abel's art is slightly better than in the prior story, mainly due to the snowy backdrop, but the story is a bit light on details and I saw the end coming a mile away.

"Undying Ski Fighter!"

Peter: Like everyone, I like a good ghostly war story now and then (and I'm really looking forward to tackling Weird War Tales if and when we live long enough to enter the 1970s war titles) and this one fits the bill nicely. Nice art by Abel, the standout panel being, of course, that shot of the ghostly Emile skiing by our hero.


Joe Kubert
Our Fighting Forces 75

"Purple Heart Patrol!"
Story by Robert Kanigher
Art by Jerry Grandenetti

"No Target for a Frogman!"
Story by Hank Chapman
Art by Ross Andru and Mike Esposito

Jack: Pooch has a recurring nightmare about having to pull a wounded Gunner and Sarge down a river on a rubber raft while they are being fired on by Japanese soldiers. The first raft they set out with gets shot full of holes by a sniper, while the second is destroyed by a Japanese Zero. They borrow an enemy raft filled with TNT and use the explosives to detonate a bridge, but not before Pooch's nightmare comes true. After the great Kubert cover it's a letdown to open the comic and see Jerry Grandenetti's sketchy art. I am puzzled as to how our trio of heroes manages to avoid sniper fire by hiding beneath a rubber raft. Kanigher must have loved the idea of Pooch pulling the raft, since we get to see it on the cover, the splash page, and three times in the course of the story!

Grandenetti's not so bad as long as
he stays away from human faces!
Peter: I'm not sure why Pooch doesn't use Morse code to communicate with Sarge and Gunner since he can clearly understand everything that's going on in this big war. This series is so ludicrous on so many levels, I find something new to laugh about in each succeeding episode. How is it that an entire bridge full of enemy snipers can't mow down two men and a Pooch in a slow-moving raft?

Jack: Three American frogmen are given the task of sinking a Japanese destroyer. Bill, the strong one, wants to hit it hard and fast, but the destroyer spots the frogmen and fires depth charges at them before escaping. Sam, the crafty one, gets to try to wreck target number two, a Japanese sub, but his attempt to stick TNT on its hull is foiled when he discovers it is wired to repel frogmen. Target number three is a torpedo boat, and Ed, the one with brains, leads a sneak attack but enemy frogmen capture the Americans and bring them aboard the boat. Not giving up, our frogmen manage to fire a torpedo at the destroyer, causing it to fire back and knock all of the Japanese off of the torpedo boat. Bill, Sam and Ed manage to drop depth charges on top of the sub and destroy it, then they ram the torpedo boat into the destroyer, effectively eliminating the last of their targets. This story goes on and on and features terrible writing and art that is barely adequate. Here's an example of the prose: "quicker than you can say suki yaki the sea voomed with scores of man-made volcanoes . . ." Give me Pooch any day!

The Japanese caricatures are bad enough, but blond hair?

Peter: Exciting enough but overlong. Of course, anything, including Superboy and Krypto stories, would seem exciting after a Gunner and Sarge story. I'm amazed that, even on into 1963, Andru and Esposito could get away with the buck-toothed Japanese caricatures but then, in the end, it's all equal since our boys look like The Three Stooges.


Russ Heath
All American Men of War 96

"The Last Flight of Lt. Moon!"
Story by Robert Kanigher
Art by Irv Novick

"Bail-Out Blues!"
Story by Hank Chapman
Art by Jack Abel

"Silent Pilot!"
Story by Robert Kanigher
Art by Jack Abel

Peter: Lt. Johnny Cloud must do everything he can to protect a fort pilot who's found the location of a Nazi terror-rockets site. When Cloud runs out of ammo, he prepares to launch a difficult maneuver that could spell the end of the great Johnny Cloud. While mentally preparing, Cloud flashes back to his meeting with a green lieutenant named Moon, a rookie who idolizes Johnny for all his daring feats. While on their first mission together, Moon gives his life to save Johnny by "splitting the enemy" and taking out two fighter pilots. Now, while readying himself to do just the same, Johnny hopes to pull up the same kind of luck and bravery that Moon once found.

"Lt. Moon"
"The Last Flight of Lt. Moon" is an exciting entry in the Johnny Cloud series but, as with most other Cloud adventures, there's always something just a bit annoying. Did Lt. Moon really have to be such a monumental kiss-ass? Seriously, this guy must have Cloud's picture under his bunk pillow ("Trust me, Lt. Cloud! Think I want to fly with you only once? After dreaming about this moment since ..."). Novick's air battles are nicely choreographed and the sequence at the beginning, where HQ can't get a line on what our beleaguered fort ace is broadcasting, generates legitimate tension. Oh, and let's not forget the biggest surprise of all when our favorite Rock-hard Army sgt. makes a cameo in what must have been the first (but not last) DC war title crossover. That's really cool. Maybe we'll get to see Sarge, Gunner, and Pooch eaten by dinosaurs someday?

Jack: The story starts off well by jumping right into the middle of an air battle, but it quickly sputters and dies with the flashback to the incredibly annoying Lt. Moon. I don't understand why Moon couldn't have bailed out of his plane after crashing into the other planes in mid-air--Johnny managed to do this later on! What bothered me most about this story was that it could have starred any pilot in the DC War Comics universe; there was nothing in particular that made it a Johnny Cloud tale, other than random references to Big-Brother-In-The-Sky or the Navajo Ace.

"Bail-Out Blues!"





















Peter: Pilot Marty's desperately trying to save his GI buddy Rick and his brave band of GIs who are pinned down by enemy fire but Marty's got the "Bail-Out Blues!" Every time Marty gets near the site, he's shot down but three time's the charm and he finally takes out the big guns and saves the day. Another one of those stories that shows one military man defying insane odds. I'm sure stuff like this happened but, when Marty bails out safely twice and then kamikazes his plane into the cave holding the big guns and walks away without a scratch, you really do have to question the odds

Jack: A boring story except for one fabulous panel of our hero getting blown out of his plane that I'll attach below. Now that All American Men of War has settled into a pattern of having three stories in each issue featuring "Battle Aces of 3 Wars," we can expect to get a Johnny Cloud story from WWII and a story from the Korean War with Migs zooming around all over the place. I will bet that the third story has WWI biplanes. I am a little slow on the uptake, but I am beginning to think this comic book is all about planes and stuff. Just a wild guess.

Ouch!

Peter: Doug sees his little brother, Jimmy, join the squadron of WWI pilots that Doug commands but the siblings don't get along much after Doug orders Jimmy to stay out of dogfights. Doug's afraid Jimmy isn't up to battle with German superstar Von Todt just yet and, sure enough, little brother is killed in his first air battle with the deadly ace. Fists clenched, Doug hops in his brother's Nieuport and rides the ace down into the ground, his dead brother Jimmy, a "Silent Pilot" right there in the cockpit with him. Stories like this (the "brothers in arms," oh please!) usually come off as maudlin but "Silent Pilot!" managed to avoid my groans, maybe because there's a sincerity to Robert Kanigher's script or maybe because Jack Abel really steps up with his art here. The panel of the haunted Doug, flying off to destroy Von Todt, is especially powerful.

"Silent Pilot!"

Jack: Whaddya know, a WWI biplane story! Despite captions along the lines of "As I revved up the 300 Hispano-Suiza engine of my Nieuport" (I'm lost already!), Kanigher's writing is noticeably stronger than that of Chapman, who usually writes these back of the book stories. And once again, as you note, Abel's art is above average.

Peter: The annual Postal statement appears this issue and declares that All American Men of War was selling 185,000 copies a month.



What in the World...?
Find Out in Our Next Sin-tillating Issue
On Sale March 2nd!


The Dungeons of Doom!: The Pre-Code Horror Comics Volume Four

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Harvey Comics 
Part Four

By Jose Cruz and
Peter Enfantino


Peter: An old witch stumbles upon three discarded toys (an ape, a clown, and a pretty girl) in an alleyway and gives them life and height so that they will be her servants. First order of business for the trio: to get the girl, christened Madeleine, some eyes! The "Toys of Terror" stalk the streets of the city, murdering innocent men and women and robbing them of their eyeballs until one day they realize the acts they're committing are anti-social and turn on the witch. With the old crone dead, the toys become lifeless and are tossed out with the morning's rubbish.

There's not much sense to the storyline of "The Toys of Terror,"(from Witches Tales #8) in that we never do find out exactly what the old witch wanted from these killer toys; their one mission is to rip eyes from sockets. We should be happy for that; there's no silly revenge motive to weigh down the nasty proceedings and my new rally cry is "Madeleine Shall Have Eyes!" The aftermath of the brutal killings is nasty to say the least: empty sockets and puddles of vivid red. This was definitely pre-code!


Jose: Maurice De Karval is the set designer for a French theater who feels that the fool director and his insipid cast isn't giving his brilliant scenery proper justice. So what's an artiste to do but call on the long-dead spirit of his voodoo-practicing uncle Jean? That's just what Maurice does and Jean's spirit appears in top hat and cloak, a wooden stake sticking out of his still-bleeding chest. Jean shows his nephew the means of creating his own bewitched mini-stage to populate with figures made in the likenesses of the actors, giving the madman the perfect way to exact his vengeance. Maurice's playtime manipulations ensure that the thespians meet with ghastly ends, such as trampling by train and hanging by painters' scaffold. Too bad Uncle Jean didn't mention that voodoo works in reverse too: when the actual theater catches fire, Maurice's little stage sets his house aflame with him and Jean's despairing spirit inside.

Having a background in theater, I have an affection for any stage-bound story. The fact that "Designer of Doom" (WT #9) mixes other elements I'm fond of only sweetens the pot. Palais provides his always reliable and Gothic touch to the proceedings. (Not too much sweat in this one!) I love that Uncle Jean looks like a French variant of Coffin Joe with his diabolical facial hair and sense of fashion. Narratively, Jean doesn't differ all that much from the vindictive mad scientists who littered this batch of issues from Witches Tales, but with me a little artistry and panache go a long way, as it does here.

Peter: In 1871 Munich, genius professor Carl Von Heimer is searching for the secret of life but accidentally creates blob-like creatures that feed on blood. Convinced he's on the right track, Von Heimer ignores such warning signs as the murder and exsanguination of his loyal housekeeper, Greta, and the very unstable characteristics of his new toy, and begins feeding the local townspeople to the ooze. Even though he's proved to himself he's a genius, he craves the acceptance of the fellow professors who booted him out of his university. Von Heimer pleads with them one more time to admit that he's on to something but they only scoff and threaten him with prison if he doesn't vacate the premises pronto. One of the creatures escapes from the professor's laboratory deep "in the bowels of the university" and makes its way out into the snow, dying very quickly; a drawback Von Heimer had not seen coming. Since the remaining blobs need food, the nutty professor lures his former allies down into the dungeon lab and watches with glee as they're quickly drained of blood. Something inside his brain snapping, Von Heimer orders his pets to kill everyone in the building and, very soon, the premises are strewn with bloodless husks. Proving that a good exit plan should be a priority for all mad scientists, Von Heimer is trapped in an upstairs room when the creatures run out of victims and turn to their creator.

At about this time in the Harvey Universe, there are approximately 250 shunned and disgraced professors seeking the secret of life and finding only derision. Top of the crackpot list is Carl Von Heimer, creator of "It!" (from #10) and a man who very quickly forgets that he was initially searching for "the secret of life" rather than a nasty protoplasmic weapon he could use against his academic foes. The sequences where the puddle monsters are absorbing their victims (a full six years before Steve McQueen fought The Blob!) are graphic and unnerving (in particular, the attack on housekeeper Greta) to the reader but, obviously, not to the professor (who stands over Greta's drained corpse and declares a cold  "It has sucked her blood! I had not expected this!"). Bob Powell proves again why he was the master of Harvey Horror.

Jose: Linda is waiting for her fiancee Tom to show up at her father's mansion one dark and stormy night because daddy's been hanging out in the basement and she's so sad. Seems like Mr. Hayes is all a-titter over a gargantuan Egyptian mummy and the procedure he's discovered that blends "science and sorcery" to bestow life upon the dusty corpse. The couple quickly discover there's something to the old coot's theories when Bandages makes a grab for the geezer's throat before Tom and Linda fend it off. Undeterred by assassination attempts, Mr. Hayes insists on inviting his disbelieving colleagues over so he can shove his mummy in their faces. The guests arrive, but Hayes is busy getting his insides sucked out by the mummy so the group is forced to discover his withered remains by themselves. Poking around the mansion, they find the bandaged bowel bandit back in the cellar. The mummy reveals that he is Ra, put to death for his use of magic in the days of old. Using his hypnotic stare, Ra turns some of the old professors into his next meal. Their attempts to battle the mummy with weapons are all for naught. Ra punches Tom out and makes for the basement lab with Linda in tow. Using a handy potion and spell book, Tom splash Ra into submission before leaving the mummy to the flames as he carries Linda to safety.

The mummy has always been a second-tier monster in the horror pantheon at best, so it's always nice to see an earnest attempt made to give the Egyptian shuffler his own spotlight. Bob Powell gives "The Unburied Mummy" (WT #11)--a strange and misleading title--an extra oomph through the benefit of his great pencils, and the writer (likely Powell) was smart to allow Ra to speak, an ability that is crucial in distinguishing the mummy from the run-of-the-mill zombie. Ra's powers of hypnosis are definitely a nice touch, and the gruesome effect of his predations ensures us that Ra is no mere strangler ala Universal's Kharis. Put this guy in an abandoned mansion on the ubiquitous tempestuous night and I'm in heaven.

Peter: Disgraced professor Hugo Durando has been working on a serum that can turn men into giant spiders. Convincing himself that he's conducting these experiments to answer the secrets of life, Hugo injects skid row bums with his elixir and keeps the resulting freaks in his dungeon. Now, believing that the "fluids" from these giant spiders is exactly the key he's been searching for, Hugo drinks a beaker full of his potion and temporarily becomes a huge arachnid. Crazed with power, Hugo kills all the scientists who laughed at his theories and then sets out robbing banks and armored cars. One night, while counting his stash, the nutty professor hears someone at his door and discovers his beautiful lab assistant spying on him. Enraged, he drops her into the giant spider web in the basement and sets to eating the girl alive. At that inopportune time, his potion wears off and he becomes a meal for his eight-legged test subjects.

Another shunned professor simply searching for the secret of life (whatever that may be) is overcome with his own power and greed. What does a man who can become a giant spider at will need with a stack of cash? Who knows, but I enjoyed the panel of Hugo/Arachnid engulfing the armored car (where do you think he kept all that cash on the way back to the lab? And how in the world did he scoop up all those waylaid greenbacks with those hairy legs?). "The Web of the Spider" (from #12) is wild, wacky fun (Hugo dresses like an extra from Game of Thrones while working in his mad lab) but the sequence that elevates it, for me, into Top Five material is the surreal climax when Hugo grabs his blonde bombshell assistant by the roots and tosses her into the giant web. Once Hugo becomes human Hugo and the other spiders close in on him, there's no escape for the girl. Driven insane, she laughs long and loud ("You'll be killed and eaten by your own creations! Ha-Ha! How funny! Ha, ha...") as she awaits her doom. It's a goosebumps moment.

Jose: Our tale is told in the form of a letter from the late Ephraim Harley, former spelunker. Getting a jones to plumb the depths of the Earth after sitting in on a lecture, Ephraim chooses a cave--"I dare not tell you where it is!"-- and begins his journey into its dark, unexplored terrain. Soon he comes to an alcove where he sees the Chucky Cheese barnyard singers a host of giant, demonic critters that are all hanging out and surprisingly not eating each other. He beats a quick path back the way he came when an alien voice infiltrates his thoughts and interrogates Ephraim as to his purpose. Sensing that the human poses no real threat, the creature known as Szenk gives Ephraim a hunk of gold for his troubles and tells him to go on his way, promising that no harm shall come to him so long as he keeps mum about the cave. Ephraim's hair has been shocked white by his travails and, wouldn't you know, a group of explorers spot him with his shiny prize and immediately demand Ephraim show them the loot under threat of death. Beseeching the mighty Szenk, Ephraim is saved when the evil rat from the cave shows up. The explorers are shrunk to doll-size and mauled by the rat who then puts their zombie-like remains in its "torture jar." Ephraim pleads with us to learn from their folly.


Though it promotes the pro-ignorance tract that so many of these cautionary tales do--Ephraim literally tells the reader "And stop all scientific process... for they are watching..." while holding out his doll-friends as legitimate proof--"The Torture Jar" (WT #13) is just weird and unconventional enough to warrant mentioning. Moe Marcus has not been a favorite here in "The Dungeons of Doom," but he does a pretty solid job here, though his boxy faces still tend to jar. In retrospect there isn't an awful lot of creature action that occurs in the story, but Marcus has enough fun with what he does have (including that sick image of the yellow-eyed vermin holding the bleeding corpse in its mouth) to make it memorable. The idea of the "torture jar" is such a throwaway detail, but I'm intrigued by it all the same.

Peter: Dr. Thor is working on a super-secret formula that would make men "impervious to bullets and shrapnel" and create an invincible army. As he and his assistant, Dr. Wilson, are about to mix chemicals, Thor is cautioned to wear a mask lest the noxious fumes overcome him but the genius scoffs at such a distraction: "...I do not fear the unknown, I explore it!" Sure enough, Thor gets a whiff of some powerful fumes and he is overcome. Later, after he has recovered, Thor is heading for his lab when he absent-mindedly walks across an army shooting range and is shot in the head. The soldiers are astonished to find that the bullet bounced off his skull and Thor is not even bleeding! Of course, the power also has a price: the professor's sanity! Obsessed with his new-found power, Thor inhales even more of the potion and loses what few strands of sanity he's clung to. Believing Dr. Wilson is out to steal his secret, Thor murders his assistant, dissolving his body in a handy vat of frenetic acid. Wanting to test his unmatchable strength, Thor jumps down onto the tracks of a subway and demolishes an oncoming car, walking away without a scratch. The next morning, however, the nutty professor begins bleeding profusely; the drug is wearing off. To counteract the fading he whips up another batch but, to no avail, as Thor's body begins showing the evidence of all the abuse it's taken. As an investigating officer notes, upon seeing the wreckage that once was Dr. Thor, "...he looks as if he was hit by a train!"

Where to begin with the glory that is "The Man with the Iron Face" (#12)? I know my Top Five is loaded down with power-hungry professors this time around but, again, about 75% of the stories in Witches Tales were concerned with science taken too far. Certainly, Dr. Thor begins his journey as a man on a quest for good (well, good for our side of a war, that is) but becomes corrupted by his own experiments and his ensuing power. Rudy Palais perfectly captures Thor's fall from sanity (take for example, the nightmarish panel where Thor first inhales the fumes and screams, "I've breathed flame...!" while his bloodshot eyes weep - WOW!), the gruesome manner in which he kills the faithful Wilson (and kudos to the uncredited writer - Palais? - for omitting such cliches as the scheming assistant and the obligatory bank robbing spree), and that harrowing final vision of Thor, his head cracking and his body almost splitting. It would be fair to ask how the two cops (one of whom appears to be smoking a pipe and wearing a robe) are able to withstand the "noxious fumes" still emanating from the vats around Thor's decimated body. Perhaps "The Men with the Iron Faces" isn't too far behind?

The nightmare-inducing, childhood-warping
finale of "The Man with the Iron Face"

Jose: Pompous and pulchritudinous Bentley Long has just bought a foreclosed Southern plantation and plans on refurbishing the joint and selling it for big bucks. Trouble is, there's an old timer there named Zachariah who's been squatting on the land for time immemorial and plans on doing so till his dying day. Bentley tries persuading the geezer to leave with some good old fashion condescension but, when that doesn't work, the rotund renovator settles for stabbing Zachariah in the heart and burying the body out in the farmland alongside the old man's beloved scarecrow. Bentley notices the scarecrow is missing from its post the next day, unnerved by the glove and bloodstained straw he finds around the house. Finally mad with fear Bentley digs up the corpse to ensure that it's still in its mound. Ol' Zachariah is sure there, but now that he's been dug up he gives chase to his murderer back to the plantation. Bullets pass right through the zombie. Bentley tries to escape his persecutor but takes a dive over the staircase railing to his death. Zachariah brings the body out to the farm and hitches Bentley up on the scarecrow's post. The next morning two farmers arrive on the scene and find not two cadavers, but two scarecrows.

We're tilling pretty conventional soil in "Scarecrow's Revenge" (WT #14), but man is it hard to resist Palais' artwork. We saw him do similar work in the sweaty Southern vein from "The Fruit of Death" (CoC #12), and he shows that his hand is no less adept here. In truth I was wishing that the story was going to go another route with Zachariah's beloved scarecrow acting as protector and avenger, imagining what wonders Palais could have worked with a knobby-kneed, skeletal straw-man, but the ragged revenant we get here is just fine. The story you wish for what might have been, but the pitchers are sure purtty to look at.  

Paging Dr. Wertham!
Peter: Satan's minions have discovered an error in their bookkeeping: they've allowed a shortage of witches on earth.With trepidation, they approach their master, who blows his top and then shows the absent-minded demons how to conjure up more witches. Satan mixes up a potent vial of "greed" and pours it into the "black cauldron," which bubbles over into our atmosphere and settles into the lovely form of Leona Willis, a peasant girl who has always desired a better life for herself and will do anything to acquire that life. That includes spurning the love of handsome (but lower-class) Paul and marrying rotund (but loaded) Count Draska. Now, Leona has everything she wants and she flaunts it every chance she gets, but the newfound luxury comes at a price: the richer and greedier Leona gets, the more wrinkles line her face. Meanwhile, back in hell, Satan adds another vial ingredient to his bubbling cauldron: hate. As Leona's face shows more and more mileage, the Count begins to ignore his wife and spend more time with the guys. Enraged, Leona poisons her husband and smiles as his will declares her the only beneficiary. Now regarded as a witch, Leona is spurned by the villagers and her servants soon desert her. As Robert Palmer once crooned, "There's no tellin' where the money went!" and before she knows it, Leona is broke. Forced to move to a mountain shack, the now ugly old biddy (an old maid at just twenty-three!) settles in to her life as a cauldron-stirring witch, preparing to "join the sisterhood of evil." Ol' Scratch arrives to inform Leona she's passed all the tests and now she's "The Devil's Own!"

How about that? Not one crazed professor! What pushes "The Devil's Own" (#14) into the "Recommended Stratosphere" is the exemplary artwork by Bob Powell and Howard Nostrand and the story's matter-of-fact look behind-the-scenes at hell. The devil (or "Satan Mephisto" as he calls himself) is of the classic variety: pointy ears, forked tail, long flowing cape, goatee, "Bush/Cheney in 2000" button. It's all there but what we also get is a Sparky with a sense of humor. This guy looks like he absolutely loves every minute of schooling the young demons in cauldron toiling. Before she earns her crow's feet, Leona is a gorgeous doll, resplendent in her crimson Vera Wang. Powell obviously knew his way around the female figure. Note Leona's well-placed hand in the final panel, saving any embarrassment for the pre-teens who had Witches Tales #14 hidden under their covers, but adding to the mystery surrounding Mephisto's manhood.


Jose: Count Flume is practicing his fencing with master Daillot, but he doesn't take kindly to the old teacher's words that he will never be more than a mediocre swordsman. Flume has aspirations to being the next Chevalier de Sanson to which Daillot scoffs. "They said his sword was death!" he warns his protege. "That's why they buried it with him..." Far be it for sanctimonious peace to get in the Count's way, as he takes no time at all to desecrate the Chevalier's tomb and comes away with his prized blade in hand. Challenging Daillot to a duel, Flume proves the power of the Chevalier's sword when he easily cuts down his old master. Word spreads of the Count's new skill and as a result he frequently spies a hooded figure dogging his every step. Flume confronts the stranger and proposes a duel. The Count is short of words upon looking at his opponent's skeletal face. Flume drops his sword in his shock. "Take mine," the stranger offers. "I will use yours!" Flume is run through with the blade, his bloodied corpse left to ponder the calling card the stranger had given him: Chevalier de Sanson.


This one's just so clean and elegant that it almost seems incongruous amongst all the mad experimentations and spider-men and tree-men and wolf-men, a ghost story one would expect more from one of the early horror comic prototypes or any of the "safer" post-Code titles like Boris Karloff Tales of Mystery or The Twilight Zone. It pains my heart every time a period setting goes to waste--I'm looking at you, "A Rage to Kill!"--but it gets a solid turn courtesy of the anonymous writer here, delivering a nicely escalating yarn that knows just how to pace its events and, more importantly, frame its panels for maximum effect; the last page is delivered perfectly. And whattaya know, this marks two Moe Marcus stories that have made it into my top five. Is this it? Have I died and left all functioning brain activity behind?

And the "Stinking Zombie Award" goes to...

"Take any one? That is odd!"
Peter: Traveling salesman Dave Barker is rushing to catch his train but somehow manages to jump on the wrong line. He's on the "Midnight Limited!" (from #16). When Dave enters the smoking car, he notices he's the only one aboard and approaches the conductor (a rather thin man but dressed rather dapperly), who tells Dave to take any compartment as they're all alike. Dave scratches his chin in befuddlement (not because the conductor is a skeleton but because he's never been on a train where you could sit anywhere you like!) Before long, the train stops at a station that Dave has never seen before and welcomes more passengers, moving on just as quickly as it stopped. Befuddled by the strange landscape, Dave approaches a pair of men who had just got on board and is shocked and surprised to see that both men are skeletons (and dressed rather dapperly). Immediately realizing something is amiss, Barker again approaches the conductor and tells him he's gotten on the wrong train and must get off immediately. The conductor allows that Dave is not where he should be but since he's on board he must die. Not one to lie down with skeletons, Dave administers a roundhouse kick (showing off a limberness that Shang-Chi, Master of Kung Fu would envy) to his torturer and makes his way to the engine car. He tussles with a pair of skeletons and they toss him from the train. Relieved, Dave picks himself up and walks to the nearest station, where a bony ticket man tells Dave he died in the fall from the train. Dave makes his way back out onto the platform to wait for the next Midnight Limited.

Yep, this is about as dumb as a Brett Ratner box set but much more enjoyable and a hell of a lot shorter. Insanely, when Dave Barker first boards the train, he doesn't seem in the least bit surprised that the conductor is a skeleton almost as though there was a lack of communication between writer and artist. Perhaps the conductor should have been masked by shadows so as to hide the surprise for a bit? GCD lists Rudy Palais as possible penciler (with Joe Certa inking) but the primitive art on display sure doesn't look like the Palais we've become accustomed to so far. Dave Barker's back story is non-existent so we have no idea if he deserves his fate but have other passengers accidentally boarded the "Limited"? Where are these stops along the line? If Dave wasn't dead, how could he have traveled into this world of skeletons? Could it be the writer had no idea where to take this once he'd thought of the really cool image of a train full of skeletons? My head is starting to ache.


Jose: George and Carol are traveling by car on a "dark, deserted country road" when they come across an out-of-the-way antique shop that Carol wants to search for valuables. It's the hubby who's got the shivers from the joint for a change, especially with all the creepy looking figurines hanging about. Carol insists on buying one particularly funky statue of a screaming woman that George thinks has a resemblance to his wife. As the hapless couple drive off, the oily proprietor tells his servant the legend of the statue which states that all members of an historical witch cult are cursed to kill those they love most only to take the statue's place until one of their descendants repeats the crime. Back on the road, Carol's face gets fugly, the car gets a flat tire, Carol chases George off a cliff, turns into a statue, and the old statue becomes human again and goes on her merry way. The police are baffled. The reader is sleeping.

Pictured in the right panel: two women who just finished reading "Curse of the Statue." 
If you felt like you daydreamed your way through this story, don't feel bad; so did the writer. I know I'm getting to sound like a broken record on my "Stinking Zombie" picks, but I can't stress enough how quickly lazy storytelling renders me comatose anytime I run into it. Give me the inept, give me the misguided, give me the utterly foolish but please don't spoon me these shrug-worthy bastardizations. They feel exactly like the last-minute projects cobbled together by the indifferent student that they are. "Curse of the Statue" is all of four pages long and even at that it feels like a slog. From John Giunta and Manny Stallman's coloring book-art to such well thought-out panels like the crammed-in exposition that ends page two, there's not one thing to recommend here. The final lines by the policemen ("Gosh, what a fall!! Wonder how he got down there?""I wonder if we'll ever know that!!") just rub me as so tiresomely condescending that it gives me indigestion.


NOTABLE QUOTABLES

"At last! I'm finished! Here it is -- the proper anti-body I've been looking for... from this last product of my genius! With this serum I can change man to beast and back again--"
-"The Web of the Spider"

"... And to put on a performance more evil than the black mass, attended by howling demon worshippers of Satan..."
-"Invitation to Doom!"

"It's back again... the tree has a vegetable instinct to kill members of the animal kingdom... perhaps, in time, it would become a normal tree, but..."
-"Invitation to Doom!"

"We are alive! We have returned into the world of man! Ohh... this energy disrupts our flesh... this vitality rasps at our decayed brains.." We move! We talk!"
-"Reincarnation"

Dave Barker shows off
his martial arts skills.
"Soon, silent monsters of the deep padded cunningly to all parts of the city, seeking, lurking, waiting for their victims. Waiting to choke, strangled, agonized, frightened breaths from wildly throbbing throats..!"
-"Reincarnation"

"I'm not certain it's perfected yet, but it is the basic fluid for superhuman strength! Man's capacity for accomplishment will be multiplied infinitely! We'll try it on the dog!"
"Splendid!"
-"Elixir of Evil!"




"I... am dying.. Medon... But you haven't seen... the last of... Bozo! AGGGRRAA!"
-"Laugh, Clown, Laugh"

"Tonight-- You die! I will suck the red blood from your shaking body! Then I shall laugh and shout for I will be contented!"
 -"The Fiend of the Nether World"

"Ugh! They're dead... dead men! What kind of train am I on?" - "Midnight Limited"

"The flames kissed her face and embraced the protoplasm of her beauty! The molecules of her features changed! The skin trickled down from her white bones in gleaming gobs of putrid slime -- "
- "Revenge of a Witch"

"Minutes later, in a quiet bedroom, filled with the sounds of one who is asleep…"
-"Revenge of a Witch"

The author of all the mad scientist stories seen in his study.

“Kill! Kill!”
- "Screaming City"

“Alan, I came to apologize. I—Alan—your face! It’s older—it’s older! Like a—a horrible kind of magic had been worked on it!”
“Magic! No! Shut up! Don’t say that word! Shut up, y’hear—shut up!”
- "Fatal Steps"
Poetry in motion.

"A weird fingering of smoke in the light..."
- "Fatal Steps"

"And the road to dreamland proves to be a detour to the dark land of death…"
- "Tank of Corpses"

"A sinister smile plays about the servant’s face like flies about a rotting corpse!!"
- "The Flaming Horror"

"A voice, brittle and incredibly evil, came from the puffed blue lips of that horrible face. There it stood—the mummy from the prehistoric past—towering above them—forceful, dynamic, gorged with life!"
- "The Unburied Mummy"

“She was killed by a skeleton! I’ll never act there again!”
- "Return from the Tomb"

"Fee fi fo fum! I mix a concoction of violence and death!"
- "The Well of Mystery"

"Paul offered the girl employment, and took her to his grim manse which sprawled in the pale moonlight like some deathly fungus on the isolated moor…"
- "Art for Death's Sake"


STORY OF THE WEEK

Peter: I was raised (as I'm sure most of you were) on a steady diet of horror comics when I was a kid. Being that I grew up in the glorious 1970s, there was a lot to choose from on the crowded newsstand and I took advantage of the situation by sampling lots and lots of different packages. I didn't buy every Eerie Publication that showed up on the stand but I bought a good portion. Even back then, I could tell these comics were different than the rest. The covers were so crazed and busy: a werewolf stands in the background, chuckling, as a one-eyed demon feeds a buxom lass into a meat-grinder. Body parts strewn all over the foreground. How did these guys get away with this stuff? The insides were just as nutty with most of the stories making little if no sense at all. Glorious! It wasn't until decades later that I found out that those stories were actually redrawn reprints from the Harvey comics of the 1950s. You'd never guess that fact if you were coming fresh to the Harveys. Yeah, the stories can get a bit loopy but the art is, for the most part, fairly tame and, I'm sure, that's exactly why all the extra gore and heaving breasts were added to the mix. The tame reprints would never have survived in a new age witnessing new levels of violence and sex on the screen and in print. Anyway, it's only in this last batch of Harveys we've read that I've happened on a few stories that might have fit in with Eerie's bulbous-headed freaks and decapitated werewolves and one of them is "Reincarnation" from #12. As a bonus this time around, I'm also including the reworked and retitled version (with "overdubs" by Eerie stalwart Antonio Reynoso) for your comparison.









Jose: I know I've used the "Story of the Week" feature to post some pretty questionable material, and right now is no different, but my God is there anything more hysterically out of touch than "Invitation to Doom" (WT #7)? Shucking all sense of logic, disposing all forms of subtlety, and trampling on reader expectations at every turn of its twisted roots, this story must truly be read to be believed. I would say more, but to describe utter lunacy would be a madman's folly. Please accept this invitation. You won't be sorry you did.










The Comics
Witches Tales #7-16


#7 (January 1952)
Cover Uncredited

“League of the Damned”
Art by Bob Powell and Howard Nostrand

“Curse of the Statue”
Art by John Giunta and Manny Stallman

“Invitation to Doom”
Art by Vic Donohue

“Screaming City”
Art by Rudy Palais







#8 (March 1952)
Cover by Lee Elias

“The Toys of Terror”
Art by Lee Elias

“The Witch Who Wore White”
Art Uncredited

“The Man Who Had No Body”
Art by Rudy Palais

“Demon Flies”
Art by Joe Certa









#9 (April 1952)
Cover Uncredited

“Fatal Steps”
Art by Joe Certa

“The Waiting Grave”
Art by Vic Donohue and Warren Kremer

“Designer of Doom”
Art by Rudy Palais

“Tank of Corpses”
Art by Joe Certa







#10 (May 1952)
Cover by Lee Elias

“It!”
Art by Bob Powell

“The Flash of Doom”
Art by Vic Donohue and Warren Kremer

“The Flaming Horror!”
Art by Joe Certa

“Cloth of Terror”
Art by Manny Stallman








#11 (June 1952)
Cover by Al Avison

“The Unburied Mummy”
Art by Bob Powell

“Monster Maker”
Art by Joe Certa

“Return from the Tomb”
Art by Vic Donohue

“The Battle of the Birdmen”
Art by Abe Simon and Don Perlin







#12 (July 1952)
Cover Uncredited

“Reincarnation”
Art Uncredited

“The Web of the Spider”
Art by Joe Certa

“The Shower of Death”
Art by Manny Stallman

“The Man with the Iron Face”
Art by Rudy Palais







#13 (August 1952)
Cover by Lee Elias

“Elixir of Evil”
Art by Lee Elias

“The Torture Jar”
Art by Moe Marcus

“Laugh, Clown, Laugh!”
Art by Manny Stallman

“Death Lies Ahead”
Art by Warren Kremer and Abe Simon







#14 (September 1952)
Cover Uncredited

“The Devil’s Own”
Art by Bob Powell and Howard Nostrand

“Transformation!”
Art by Vic Donohue

“Devil’s Diamond”
Art by Manny Stallman

“Scarecrow’s Revenge!”
Art by Rudy Palais







#15 (October 1952)
Cover by Joe Simon

“The Well of Mystery”
Art by Joe Certa

“The Fiend of the Nether World”
Art by Manny Stallman

“A Rage to Kill”
Art by Moe Marcus

“Art for Death’s Sake”
Art by Rudy Palais







#16 (November 1952)
Cover by Lee Elias

“Gateway to Death!”
Art by Vic Donohue

“Revenge of a Witch”
Art by Abe Simon

“Midnight Limited!”
Art by Rudy Palais (?) and Joe Certa

“The Duel”
Art by Moe Marcus







In Two Weeks: 
The last chapter of our look at Witches Tales!

In Search of... In Search Of: An Index to the Alan Landsburg Book Series

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by John Scoleri

Growing up in the 1970s, a time when interest in aliens, bigfoot, and strange phenomena seemed to be at an all-time high, one of my favorite TV shows was In Search Of. Hosted by Leonard Nimoy, each episode detailed stories of unexplained mysteries, von Daniken inspired alien influences, and other strange phenomena.

Many years later, I discovered that the producer of the show, Alan Landsburg, had written a series of books for Bantam; each focused on a category of the types of stories that appeared on the show. As the show and the books were so closely related, it's worth providing a brief of history on the origin of the series. It all started with In Search of Ancient Astronauts, an edited version of a 1970 documentary based on Erich von Daniken's 1968 book Chariots of the Gods; re-dubbed by Rod Serling and aired on television in 1973. Landsburg also produced two follow-ups similarly narrated by Serling: In Search of Ancient Mysteries, a 1973 TV movie, and the 1975 documentary, The Outer Space Connection. If not for Serling's death in 1975, one can reasonably assume he would have gone on to host the TV series that aired from 1977 to 1982.

What follows is an index of the eight Bantam volumes and the contents of each. Note: all volumes contain 32 pages of photos.

In Search of Ancient Mysteries
by Alan and Sally Landsburg
Foreword by Rod Serling
Bantam, February 1974

Table of Contents
Foreword by Rod Serling
1 How Did We Start?
2 Spores and Artifacts
3 The Sea in the Mountains
4 Space base One?
5 Who Was Viracocha?
6 The Colossal Charts
7 Something to Make the Gods Weep
8 Voyages into Limbo
9 Who Taught the Egyptians?
10 Secrets in Stone
11 A Feretic at Karnak
12 Back to the Bible
13 Looking Down on Earth
14 How Did Man Get His Brain?
15 Shortcuts in Space-Time?
Bibliography
Index


The Outer Space Connection
by Alan and Sally Landsburg
Foreword by Rod Serling
Bantam, July 1975

Table of Contents
Foreword by Rod Serling
1 The Question We Couldn't Get Out of Our Minds
2 The Mayan Mystery
3 How About the Clone?
4 Engineering the Embryo
5 Neurosurgeons in Peru
6 The House of Death
7 Back to the Pyramids
8 Book of the Dead
9 Myth as History
10 Methuselah Lived to Be 980
11 Old Age: A Curable Disease?
12 Strange Life Forces
13 Afterlife: The Journey to the Heavens
Epilogue


In Search of Lost Civilizations
by Alan Landsburg
Foreword by Leonard Nimoy
Bantam, December 1976

Table of Contents
Foreword by Leonard Nimoy
Prologue
1 Where Did Everyone Go?
2 The Drowned Kingdoms
3 The Wave That Wrecked a Civilization
4 To Meet the Minotaur
5 Into the Maze
6 What the Cyclops Left
7 A Blind Man's Secrets
8 When Death Was Fun
9 Britain's Shadow People
10 Egypt's Black Rival
11 Reach Into Darkness
12 Africa's Tribe of Mystics
13 The City Under the River
14 The First Civilization?
15 The Invisible Machines
16 Old Enemies
Bibliography


In Search of Extraterrestrials
by Alan Landsburg
Foreword by Leonard Nimoy
Bantam, January 1977

Table of Contents
Foreword by Leonard Nimoy
1 The Hunt Begins
2 Beneath the Surface
3 To Witness the Fires
4 The Tainting Problem
5 History Visits in the Deep Past
6 Out There
7 Hello Out There
8 Black Holes
9 Designs of Spaceships
10 Astronomers' Views
11 The Viking Mission
12 Why Bother with Life Out There?
13 Conclusion
Epilogue
Bibliography


In Search of Magic and Witchcraft
by Alan Landsburg
Foreword by Leonard Nimoy*
Bantam, February 1977

Table of Contents
(Foreword by Leonard Nimoy)
Introduction
1 What is Magic?
2 What is Witchcraft?
3 Witchcraft and Christianity
4 What Makes People Want to Be Witches?
5 The Witchcraft Scene Today
6 Talismans, Amulets, and Fetishes
7 Spells, Incantations, and Rituals
8 Mediterranean Magic Cults in Modern America
9 Love Potions, Herbs, and Scents
10 The Kabala, Alchemy, and the Hermetic Orders
11 Curses, Fact or Fantasy?
12 Magic, Witchcraft, and Sex
13 Satanism and Devil Worship
14 Exorcism
15 Voodoo
Bibliography


In Search of Strange Phenomena
by Alan Landsburg
Foreword by Leonard Nimoy*
Bantam, March 1977

Table of Contents
Foreword by Leonard Nimoy
1 What Are Psychic and Other Strange Phenomena?
2 The Nature of Man: The Link With Strange Phenomena
3 Pipeline to the Beyond
4 ESP and its Variations
5 Psychic Dreams and Astral Projection
6 The Case For Reincarnation
7 Ghosts and How to Deal With Them
8 Kirlian Photography and Psychic Photography—Hoax or Fact?
9 Criminal-Detection Work and ESP
10 Psychic Surgery and Healing
11 The Psychic World of Plants
12 Pyramids and Pyramidology
13 Improbable Monuments and Archaeological Puzzles
14 The Bermuda Triangle
15 Mediums and Mediumship and the Strange Case of Uri Geller
Bibliography


In Search of Myths and Monsters
by Alan Landsburg
Foreword by Leonard Nimoy*
Bantam, July 1977

Table of Contents
Foreword by Leonard Nimoy
1 Monsters and I
2 The Reign of Monsters
3 The Great Dying
4 Missing and Presumed Nonexistent
5 The Things in the Loch
6 Dark Worlds Below
7 Sea Giants
8 The Snowman Wants to See You
9 America's Longest Hide-and-Seek Game
10 Monsters Astray?
11 Part-time Monsters
12 Monsters from the Laboratory
Bibliography

In Search of Missing Persons
by Alan Landsburg
Foreword by Leonard Nimoy*
Bantam, February 1978

Table of Contents
Foreword by Leonard Nimoy

Part I - The Adventurers
Prologue
1 Richard Halliburton
2 Percy Fawcett
3 Amelia Earhart
4 Michael Rockefeller

Part II - The Fugitives
Prologue
5 The Romanovs
6 Martin Bormann
7 James Hoffa
8 D.B. Cooper

Part III - Strange Disappearances
Prologue
9 Jesus Christ
10 Aimee Semple Macpherson
11 Dalton Trumbo
12 The Great Gods

Bibliography

*Nimoy wrote different Forewords for the first two volumes in the In Search of series. His Foreword from the second volume was reprinted in each of the remaining volumes.

Fans of the series may be interested to know that in 1979, the Doubleday Book Club released a hardcover condensed compilation of the first five Bantam In Search of paperbacks published in 1977.

In Search Of...
by Alan Landsburg
Doubleday Book Club, 1979
(printed in December 1978 as per T52 gutter code)

Table of Contents
Introuduction

Part One - Lost Civilizations
1 Where Did Everyone Go?
2 Atlantis
3 The Heirs of Minos
4 Britain's Shadow People
5 The Invisible Machines

Part Two - Extraterrestrials
6 The Hunt and the Witnesses
7 The Scientists' DIlemma
8 The Prospects Out There
9 The Visitors

Part Three - Magic and Witchcraft
10 What is Magic?
11 What is Witchcraft?
12 The Witchcraft Scene Today
13 Talismans, Amulets, Potions and Herbs
14 Spells and Curses
15 Witchcraft, Sex, and the Devil
16 Possession, Exorcism, and Voodoo

Part Four - Strange Phemomena
17 ESP
18 Spiritual Survival and Reincarnation
19 Psychic Dreams and Astral Projection
20 Ghosts and How to Deal With Them
21 Psychic Phenomena at Work

Part Five - Myths and Monsters
22 Monsters: Missing and Presumed Nonexistent
23 The Reign of Monsters
24 Dark Worlds Below
25 Monsters Who Walk Like Men
26 Dracula, Vampires, and Werewolves

Bibliography
Index


Fans of the show, and those interested in strange phenomena, will be thrilled to know the entire series (including the original two pilot films and two follow-on series) has been released in a complete series set on DVD. You can order the complete series of In Search Of on Amazon (and keep an eye out for sale prices - it has been offered for less than $50 in the past!).



In memory of 
Leonard Nimoy
March 26, 1931 - February 27, 2015

Alan Landsburg
May 10, 1933 - August 14, 2014

Do You Dare Enter? Part Forty-Seven: May 1974

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The DC Mystery Anthologies 1968-1976
by Peter Enfantino and
Jack Seabrook


Luis Dominguez
The House of Secrets 119

"A Carnival of Dwarfs"
Story by Michael Fleisher and Russell Carley
Art by Arthur Suydam

"Imitation Monster!"
Story by Mike Pellowski and George Kashdan
Art by Alfredo Alcala

Peter: In 19th Century Europe, carnival co-owners Hans Grettel and Fritz Koosman, happen upon a small band of unusually small people in the woods. The men decide these oddities would be the perfect freaks for their carnival sideshow and force the head of the group at gunpoint to go along with their wretched plan. With "A Carnival of Dwarfs," Hans and Fritz quickly become rich but an odd thing begins happening in the towns they frequent: corpses are found, drained of blood. Immediately suspecting the leader of the little people to be a vampire, they kill him and prepare to bury his body in the woods before their new employees find out what they've done. Too late, the evil men discover it wasn't just the old man who was vampiric. Our first good look at the work of future fan favorite Arthur Suydam, whose art will blossom into something special one day. At this time, in early 1974, it just looks like early Wrightson to me (with heaping helpings of Winsor McCay and Al Williamson). Many of Suydam's figures look painfully arthritic (Fritz, in particular, looks like he could use a good chiropractor as his spine bends in ways no human should). It's tough to make out what's going on in a lot of the sequences. It's unique but it's not necessarily good storytelling. Hans Grettel?

And it's off to the chiropractor he goes!

Jack: It looks like Suydam became famous after I quit reading comics on a regular basis, but the Comic Book Database says this was his first published story, and it's definitely something different. Fleisher's story is nothing special. In addition to the artists you mention, I also see a Graham Ingels influence in some places, especially at the end. I suspect that the oddly-named character "Fritz Koosman" was a mashup of Fritz Peterson and Jerry Koosman, pitchers at the time for the NY Yankees and Mets.

Peter: The sadistic Professor Hargrove believes his mission, to bring back "a good picture-feature for World Geographica" is more important than the beliefs and lives of superstitious natives. Observing the natives bowing before the statue of an ape-like God, Hargrove admits to the rest of the expedition he'd done a bit of studying and crafted a suit resembling the ape monster. Whipping it out, he dons it and goes into action. When the natives flee in terror from the "Imitation Monster!" the power goes to Hargrove's head and he decides he likes the role of a God. Unfortunately for the newly crowned King of the Jungle, he slips up and the natives get wise to him. The rest of the men abandon him and Hargrove is left to hoof it deep into the jungle. There, he's rescued... by the real ape-god, who believes Hargrove is the son he never had. If the professor strips, it'll be the end of him. Hilarious script made even better by Alfredo's goofy depiction of a proper ape-god. Love that panel of Hargrove busting in on the natives. Either his suit granted him three extra feet to his stature or the jungle is filled with dwarfs. A very funny climax but I think it might have been funnier (and a bit saucier) if the professor was mistaken for The Bride of the Ape-God.

Jack: I'm surprised that you liked a Kashdan script. I thought it was just weird and the ending was a disappointment. Why are we getting Kashdan in House of Secrets? I thought he was usually relegated to the lesser titles. And what was the "idea" contributed by Pellowski, whom we've seen contribute ideas before? A gorilla monster falls for a guy in a suit? Not terribly original.


Gerry Talaoc, Bill Draut,
& Alfredo Alcala
The House of Mystery 224

"Night Stalker in Slim City"
Story by David Michelinie
Art by Frank Robbins

"The House of Endless Years"
(reprinted from House of Secrets #83, January 1970)

"The Dead Man's Lucky Scarf"
Story by David Izzo and Michael Fleisher
Art by Alfredo Alcala

"The Reluctant Sorcerer"
Story Uncredited
Art by Howard Purcell
(reprinted from House of Secrets #49, October 1961)

"Abraca-Doom!"
Story by Denny O'Neil
Art by Berni Wrightson
(reprinted from The Spectre #9, April 1969)

"The One and Only, Fully Guaranteed, Super-Permanent, 100%?"
(reprinted from House of Secrets #82, November 1969)

"The Gift that Wiped Out Time"
Story Uncredited
Art by Mort Meskin and George Roussos
(reprinted from House of Mystery #120, March 1962)

"Sheer Fear!"
Story by Sheldon Mayer
Art by Gerry Talaoc

"The Claws of Death!"
Story by George Kashdan
Art by Alex Nino

"Mystery in Miniature!"
Story Uncredited
Art by Frank Giacoia
(reprinted from The Phantom Stranger #6, July 1953)

"Photo Finish!
Story by Steve Skeates
Art by Mike Sekowsky

Peter: Tyrone Flex and Neil Silver have been partners in the "Slim City" gym; Neil's the brains and Tyrone's... well, not the brains. In his spare time, Neil has been working on an exercise machine he feels will revolutionize the industry: an exo-skeleton that literally vibrates the fat from your body. Ty is a bit peeved though, since Neil's research has kept him from his real job of balancing the books and now the gym is in financial straits. Just in the nick of time, a manufacturer offers Neil a fortune for the patent to the exoskeleton and Ty decides that 50% is too big of a cut. He murders Neil and reaps the benefits of the exo-skeleton. Soon after though, Ty barely manages to survive some hairy events and, at each one, the original exo-skeleton seems to make an odd appearance. The cauldron bubbles over finally when Ty is catching a swim and he's confronted by the haunted gizmo. The next morning, the custodian finds Flex, his body now destroyed, within the still-vibrating exo. It says David Michelinie on the credits but "Night Stalker in Slim City" sure feels like a Fleisher fabrication with its truly sick last panel and hateful lead character. I can't stand Frank Robbins' art (I hated his Batman art more than anything else we covered during our 1970s Dark Knight journey) but, ya know what?, it works here for some crazy reason. Some panels have an almost surreal aspect to them (a word I'd only apply to Robbins' other work in a negative fashion) and we're blissfully free of any of Frank's rubbery limb images. I'm supposing that when Ty was young he decided he had to go into the muscle business after being tagged with a surname like "Flex."

Jack: If the machine works so well to melt away pounds and inches, as demonstrated by that final panel, why does Neil look just as chubby every time he gets out of it after a demonstration? While I'll agree with you that Robbins's art sort of fits this story, I still find myself squinting at it much of the time to try to figure out what he was trying to accomplish. It always seems to be somehow unfinished to me, with too many black blotches.

Peter: In the Old West, Deadman's Gulch is plagued by a series of brutal wolf attacks, leaving several dead and an entire town gripped in fear. Amblin' into town, a gambler buys into a game with a handful of locals but when he loses his stake he's more than a little angry at the big winner, a likable old-timer named Ferdie. When the saloon closes up and the game is finished, the stranger follows Ferdie back to his cabin, where he robs and murders the old man. Seizing upon a genius idea, the man uses a wolf pelt on the wall to mutilate the corpse and throw the blame on the killer wolves. Unfortunately for our murderous protagonist, a trio of Ferdie's friends happen upon the crime and, in an attempt to coerce a confession of murder, tie the man to a tree and tell him the wolves will tear him to shreds before they get back. The wolves appear shortly after but the harried stranger manages to fight them off, only to face the real menace: a werewolf, wearing Ferdie's tell-tale scarf. An interesting depiction of a werewolf in "Dead Man's Lucky Scarf": more caveman with a hairy mid-section and gigantic wolf head. The panel depicting the attacking Ferdie elicits gasps as well as guffaws; Alcala draws one mean werewolf but that pink scarf is a hoot. I'll accept that a werewolf can't die unless he's killed by a silver bullet, so that explains why Ferdie didn't expire when the stranger "killed" him. What I can't accept is that, upon reviving transformed, the lupine version of  Ferdie grabbed his pink scarf, tied it around his neck, and headed out for vengeance. The other aspect that makes no sense is that the friends who hunt for Ferdie's death should also be the ones hunting for the murderer of five of their fellow townsfolk. When they realize, in the end, that their buddy was the killing monster, they pert near sigh and wonder out loud that Ferdie was such a good guy he'd never hurt his friends. None of this makes sense but it shore looks purty.

Jack: I had no problem with the scarf because we saw Ferdie's dead body lying in the cabin with the scarf still tied around his neck. I assumed it stayed there when he revived and transformed into a werewolf. I was more puzzled by Ferdie's strange way of speaking that makes him sound like Yoda. Cain mentions in the final panel that Ferdie was a Transylvanian immigrant, which I guess explains it all.

"Sheer Nonsense"
Peter: Molly DeHaven is plagued by a horrifying vision: a rotting hand reaching through the wall for her. Seems Molly has reason for her "Sheer Fear!" Years before, she had witnessed an employee of her vacuum cleaner business, Brock, use a ring to persuade several housewives to purchase his wares. Determined to gain possession of that power, Molly stole the ring and murdered the former possessor. Now, convinced that Brock is still alive, she hires a private dick to track him down. Turns out the PI is actually the dead man in disguise. His unveiling is disturbing to say the least and Molly spends the rest of her days in an asylum. It's shown early that the ring's power is in exploiting the person's deepest fear. How would exploiting fear get a housewife to buy a vacuum cleaner? I'm a little hazy on that and why a ghost would go to all the trouble of impersonating a detective for the benefit of Molly when he intends to unmask at their first meeting anyway? I just don't understand tossing in these useless plot contrivances.

Jack: "Sheer Nonsense" is right. Gerry Talaoc is one of my favorite artists working in the DC horror line and, as usual, he doesn't disappoint, but Shelly Mayer's story doesn't make a lot of sense. That's odd, because Mayer's stories in these comics are usually above average.

"Claws of Death"
Peter: During World War II, mysterious and brutal killings point to the possibility of a werewolf among the ranks of American GIs. Lieutenant Collins believes that Captain Blake, a man who seems to disappear right around the time of every slaughter, may be the culprit. Actually, it's the Lt. himself who wields "The Claws of Death!" There's always reason to celebrate when Alex Nino is responsible for the visuals but Kashdan's script is a near-total mess (you've heard that one before). Did Collins have some sort of amnesia every time he transformed back into his human form? Maybe. I'll give Kashdan that one but why is it that Collins' uniform is bloodless and untattered? The final twist, though, is a really good one: after beating Collins to death with his silver-handled firearm, Blake is found guilty of murder by the Army and put to death before a firing squad. The final four panels of "Claws of Death" could just be the best Kashdan I've read.

Jack: How did that last panel get by the Comics Code? I was VERY surprised to see that in a DC comic. I know I sound like a broken record, but I love Alex Nino's art. Even though it sometimes can seem a bit sketchy and unfocused, it almost always elevates the story it illustrates. In this case, it is gritty and gruesome. It's neat to be able to compare werewolf stories in the same issue by Alcala and Nino. I think Nino comes out on top this time.

Wrightson!
Peter: That leaves the three-pager by Steve Skeates ("Photo Finish"), which is a really dumb inside-joke about a murderer who's photographed and ends up on a billboard advertising the latest issue of House of Mystery. Any laughs are sedated by the truly awful Mike Sekowsky "art." The reprints are a mixed-bag as usual. I found the Spectre and Phantom Stranger tales annoying as I have no idea what's going on in those worlds. "The Reluctant Sorcerer" sees little Timmy helping a retiring wizard and gaining super-powers. Timmy can save trains and planes but he also lifts tall buildings right off their foundations. I'm hoping Timmy's powers extend to plumbing and electrical maintenance. "The Gift That Wiped Out Time" overextends its welcome by several pages. This sorry bunch of reprints hammers home the fact that Marvel had tons of gritty, effective pre-code horror and science fiction stories to draw from for their reprint titles in the 1970s while DC's similar output in the 1950s was the same kind of unremarkable pap they would churn out a decade later. Some of it was fun, I'll grant you that, but none of it was cutting-edge or offensive.

"The Reluctant Sorcerer"

Jack: Howard Purcell's art was the best thing about "The Reluctant Sorcerer," which barely qualifies for inclusion in a horror comic. The Spectre story is excellent, mainly for the fabulous Wrightson art; this is one of his first published comic stories. The reprint from 1969 was a way of promoting the new Fleisher-scripted Spectre series that had just started running in Adventure Comics. I liked "Photo Finish!" due to the funny ending. By the way, the circulation report is in this issue and House of Mystery was selling about 178,000 copies a month, if I understand the somewhat confusing wording of the report. Of that number, about 300 were mail subscriptions. No wonder they put a billboard in the last story trying to drum up subscriptions! The circulation report is signed by Bernard Kashdan, Business Manager--George's brother.

Peter: As a kid, I loved these 100-pagers and wished the similar plan had come to fruition over at Marvel. These packages just felt special in that stack you took up to the counter at Pronto Pup. Now they represent lots of reading and writing, but I'm hoping the reprint selection in the future will be more interesting. In all, there would be 12 100-page "Super Spectaculars" evenly divided between the House of Mystery and Unexpected titles.

Jack: I loved them, too, though I bought mostly the super-hero titles--Batman, JLA, etc. It's unusual that the new material in this issue is better than the reprints, with the exception of the Wrightson Spectre story. Usually, in the DC giant-size comics, we complain that the reprints are better than the new stuff.


Nick Cardy
The Witching Hour 42

"The Freaked-Out Wheel of Fortune"
Story by Carl Wessler
Art by Bernard Bailey

"Blood of Our Fathers"
Story by George Kashdan
Art by Ruben Yandoc

"The Head That Haunted Gerald Hess"
Story by Carl Wessler
Art by Frank Redondo

Jack: At a carnival, Marsha Thomas spins "The Freaked-Out Wheel of Fortune," which guarantees a date and eventual marriage. Her first date is Jarvis Frink, who is nice and gentle, just what the swinging chick does not want. Her second date is the dashing Roald Von Donner, M.D. Marsha is taken with the exciting Von Donner but M.D. stands for Master of Diabolics! He takes Marsha to a Black Mass and she splits the scene, but Satan commands Von Donner to find her and shut her up. She races back to Jarvis Frink, anxious to wed him quickly and get Von Donner out of her hair, but it turns out that Frink is really Von Donner. Marsha also has a surprise, and at midnight she transforms into an old hag! Satan performs the marriage ceremony, though Marsha seems more pleased with the match than Roald. Wow! That was awful. At least there are pretty colors. Carl Wessler manages to jam a lot of plot into five pages, even if it doesn't all make much sense.

"The Freaked-Out Wheel of Fortune"

Peter: Carl Wessler's laughingly bad script and Bernard Bailey's achingly dull visuals combine to make this an early contender for Worst Story of the Year. Who couldn't predict the reveal at the climax? Oh Marsha, Marsha, Marsha.

Jack: Good looks and wealth can't overcome a family curse, as Janos learns in "Blood of Our Fathers." A giant bat kills a caretaker's dog and old Magda tells Janos that he carries the curse that guarantees he will turn into a giant bat each time there is a full moon. Janos convinces himself that his jealous cousin Ferenc is setting him up, but when a giant bat attacks Janos's bride-to-be Lili on the eve of their wedding, Janos turns out to be cursed after all, and Ferenc saves the day by stabbing him to death. Definitely a step up from the story before it, and Yandoc's art is great, as always, but the need for stories with a surprise twist ending sometimes makes these writers stretch a point.

Don't you hate when that happens?

Peter: Great Rubeny art can't save a cliched story. A few too many twists in the end ruin what little suspense might have been built up.

Jack: Ambitious D.A. Gerald Hess fails to convict Walter Magnus on a murder charge, and Magnus rubs salt in the lawyer's wounds by confessing privately to him after the verdict that he was really guilty. Hess becomes obsessed with making Magnus pay and ends up framing the man for murder, securing a conviction, and sending him to the electric chair. Magnus vows revenge beyond the grave and his pate becomes "The Head That Haunted Gerald Hess!" Hess sees Magnus everywhere and ends up confessing to the frame up, only to learn that Magnus is really a police detective with a very lifelike mask. This is twice in this issue that Carl Wessler has written a mixed up story where the wrapup is sudden and outlandish. The art by Redondo and Lofamia is better than what Baily put down on paper in the first story, but overall this is another dud.

"The Head That Haunted Gerald Hess!"

Peter: That final expository is a doozie. So, Frank believed the accused killer, set up all kinds of coincidental appearances as Magnus for Gerald, and then convinced the cops to set up an elaborate trap for the real murderer. Yeah, happens all the time. Well, one only has one's self to blame when beginning a story written by either Wessler or Kashdan is my motto.

An actual letter from The Witching Hour 42


Luis Dominguez
Weird Mystery Tales 11

"Island of the Damned"
Story by Jack Oleck
Art by Abe Ocampo

"The Child is the Father of the Man"
Story by Steve Skeates
Art by Frank Redondo

"The Root of This Evil Curse"
Story by Steve Skeates
Art by ER Cruz

Peter: Desiring a life of comfort, gorgeous gypsy Irena plots, with her lover Corvio, to marry the hunchbacked (but extremely wealthy) Count Phillipe. Irena travels to the "Island of the Damned" where Phillipe lives with several very loyal outcasts and convinces the Count that she loves him and they should be married. Irena asks only that Phillipe drive away his merry band of monsters. Though it hurts him to do so, he sends his subjects off the island and prepares for a happy life of wedded bliss with the village babe. That happiness lasts about ten minutes, until Corvio arrives on the island and strangles the Count. The two lovers then head to Phillipe's castle to raid the pantry. En route, Corvio is murdered by a shadowy figure that resembles Phillipe. Enraged, Irena heads to the castle for a showdown where she finds the Count upon his throne. The befuddled girl asks her husband how he could have survived his throttling and he unveils his secret: he has two heads. Another right out of left field climax (well, to be fair, the guy was supposed to be a hunchback and that's how he hid his other dome but how did the other head breathe under all that fabric?) kind of works and kinda doesn't. There's real edge of your seat suspense here and that reveal just can't cap the build-up. If you live on an island of freaks, why hide the second head?


Jack: Ocampo draws quite a gallery of grotesques, some with a single eye, more than two arms, and so on. I was enjoying the story up till the end, though it did seem a bit padded, until I got to that big reveal and did a double-take--no pun intended. I flipped back through the earlier pages and, what do you know, Philippe was drawn so that there could have been a second head under the cloth. But as you point out, why bother?

Peter: John kills his wife Marsha because she's constantly nagging him and closing the door on her corpse reminds him of his childhood. When he was young, John believed a giant creature was out to get him. Later, when he prepares for disposing of Martha's body, he's a bit surprised to find the childhood fear standing over his wife's dead body. A silly bit of three-page nonsense with a clever, very-Skeates-ian finale. As far as these short-short shockers go, "The Child is the Father of the Man" is fairly good.

"The Child is the Father of the Man"

Jack: Skeates's title quotes Blood, Sweat & Tears, who were quoting Wordsworth, but the story is predictable and uninvolving. I'd rather listen to Stan Freberg's record, "John and Marsha."

Peter: Bank thief Rigby is stupid enough to tell two of his friends about his latest heist and the couple head him off at the pass and steal the briefcase full of dough. But soon after, the pair begin seeing the dead Rigby walking along the side of the road, no matter what path they turn down or how fast they drive. Deciding to put an end to the haunt, they drive straight at him but pass through him and over a cliff. A passing motorist stops, sees the briefcase full of money, and leaves the two to die. Heading back into town, the man is stopped by the police, who arrest him for murder and robbery. As the arresting officer hefts the case full of money, he dies of a heart attack. Is the money "The Root of This Evil Curse" or is it just a strange sequence of coincidences? Could it be the low-grade briefcase the dough is stashed in? Fairly dull and routine. The tradition of illustrating the splash with an expository scene found further on in the narrative not only ruins any surprise these things may hold in store but it also proves confusing for the poor synopsis writer. One other aspect of "The Root..." that proves confounding is ER Cruz's decision to make Rigby and his male betrayer almost identical in appearance. It almost appears that Rigby is in the car driving while he's also out having his desert stroll.

So who's driving and who's walking?

Jack: Terrible! Steve Skeates was hanging around with Carl Wessler and George Kashdan, from the looks of it. He wrote two below-average stories in one issue. The highlight of the issue for me is the letters column, in which Eve has taken over from Destiny and the battle is being waged to see which host the readers prefer. Elliott Hudes of Ontario, CA, thinks Eve is a hack who does not belong in this comic, while Paul Edwards of Bellmore, NY, is ready for Destiny to meet his doom! Now, THAT's entertainment.


Nick Cardy
Secrets of Sinister House 17

"Death's Last Rattle"
Story by George Kashdan
Art by Ramona Fradon

"Death Has Five Guesses!"
Story by Robert Kanigher
Art by Frank Giacoia and Sy Barry
(reprinted from Sensation Mystery #112, December 1952)

Jack: Lawyer Claud comes up with a novel theory when defending his partner Jeremy, accused of murdering their partner Hiram. Suggesting that the coroner might have reached the wrong conclusion about the cause of death, Claud convinces the judge to march everyone in the courtroom over to the graveyard for an exhumation of the victim's body. But when the coffin is dug up and opened, the body is gone! That night, Hiram's ghost visits Claud and takes him to the place where the body is now buried. Claud digs it up and sets fire to it, confessing to the ghost that he was the real killer and now he can dispose of the only evidence that could point his way! The trial reaches its conclusion and Jeremy is found guilty, but wait--the ghost appears in court and, with "Death's Last Rattle," testifies to the identity of the real killer, who left a telltale footprint next to the charred corpse. Lots of fun, and I'm really enjoying Ramona Fradon's art lately. This is a very lenient judge to move the trial to the graveyard and let a ghost testify post-verdict.

"Death's Last Rattle"

Peter: Of course it's incredibly silly but at least it's a bit original and there's the Fradon artwork to entertain. Her bug-eyed characters never fail to amuse me.

Jack: Driving down a deserted road one foggy evening, Johnny Peril comes upon a pretty young woman who tells him that she left her purse inside a spooky mansion and needs his help to go and fetch it. Inside the mansion, they encounter all manner of strange things, from scary wax figures to a giant spider web to a murderous hatchet man. It turns out that everything is part of a plan by the Eternal Man, who wants Johnny's body as his latest host. After an apparent body switch, Johnny discovers that the man is a big phony and a wrestling match ensues, during which Eternal Man--really actor Karl Kandor--falls to his death. Johnny reports the incident to the local police, only to learn that Kandor died in an insane asylum ten years ago. "Death Has Five Guesses!" is long, involved, entertaining, and makes absolutely no sense if you devote a single brain cell to it. Giacoia and Barry combine to do a decent Alex Toth imitation and Kanigher must have been getting paid by the word.

"Death Has Five Guesses!"

Peter: I love Johnny Peril, can't get enough of him, but this is an overly long tale and Bob Kanigher seems to want to throw everything at the wall and make it stick with that climax. It's odd that DC would choose to run a reprint in this title but it may be that the writing was already on the wall. #18 (the final issue) will feature reprints as well.


Nick Cardy
Ghosts 26

"The Freaky Phantom of Watkins Glen"
Story by Leo Dorfman
Art by Don Perlin

"Dark Destiny"
Story by Leo Dorfman
Art by ER CRuz

"The Specter in the Flames"
Story by Leo Dorfman
Art by Ernesto Patricio

Jack: Karen and Sue are a couple of swinging young chicks on their way to the big music festival at Watkins Glen in the summer of '73. The traffic is so bad that they decide to hoof it the last bit of the way, but when it gets dark they lay down to sleep in the great outdoors. Karen is frightened by "The Freaky Phantom of Watkins Glen," so they seek refuge in a cave, but a local hick farmer with a scythe threatens to kill them if they don't go along with his kidnap and ransom scheme. With the help of the phantom, they trick the farmer into thinking he's been poisoned and they escape and head to hear some groovy tunes. This story will be in the running for worst of '74 when we get to the end of the year list. I think the panel reproduced here gives a good sense of the dialogue and atmosphere created by Dorfman and Perlin.

Yes, this is where it's at.

Peter: Truly bottom-of-the-barrel dreadful. Take out the scythe and the threats of death and you've the perfect script for a Scooby-Doo adventure. You have to laugh out loud in the scene where Karen's trick works and the hillbilly hoofs it to the water. The two dumb blondes (I have to believe the redhead has golden roots) settle back down for a rest rather than hightailing it. Don Perlin's art is about as primitive as it gets.

Compare this to Cardy's cover
Jack: Young Edgar Allan Poe isn't having much success as a writer until a mysterious man named Thanatos comes along and promises to put him on the road to fame. But is it really his "Dark Destiny" that he is hurtling toward? Poe finds himself thrown into various unusual situations and he mines them for his great stories. His health declines as his renown grows, until the day when Thanatos comes to collect the fee for Poe's fame--death! ER Cruz really shines in this story, with accurate representations of Poe and scenes from some of his most famous stories, but Leo Dorfman's problems with storytelling make the conclusion something of a letdown. Anyone who knows the real story of Poe's death won't be satisfied.

Peter: A horror writer like Poe wouldn't be even the least bit suspicious of a stranger named Thanatos? Not a very bright guy. The climax makes no sense. Death makes a bargain with Poe and then comes to collect? When does Death make bargains? Interesting concept, bad delivery.

Patricio was not quite at the
level of Alcala or Nino
Jack: Vic Shannon, a soldier who spied on his friends and country and betrayed them to the enemy, is on the run when he comes across an old Indian named Kahuna Joe. Joe lets Vic sleep in his hut for the night, but when the Indian senses that Vic is a spy on the run, Vic murders him. The dying Indian tells Vic that he will die as if by the fires of a volcano. Vic chooses to return to his ship and serve time for being AWOL rather than face a murder rap on shore, but on his way to the ship he is killed by an exploding torpedo. It turns out to be December 7, 1941, and Vic is a casualty of the attack on Pearl Harbor. I was surprised by the twist in the tail of "The Specter in the Flames," but were there torpedoes being fired in the attack? I thought it was an air attack! The art is poor.

Peter: It strikes me once again, while reading this issue, that either DC head honcho Carmine Infantino really liked Joe Orlando and sent all the good stuff his way or Ghosts/Unexpected editor Murray Boltinoff was just a lousy editor and Leo Dorfman was able to slide all his submissions under the door late at night just before the deadline. An argument could be made that Ghosts was a kiddie book whereas House of Mystery and House of Secrets catered to an older crowd. The scripts for this title sure bear that theory out.


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The Hitchcock Project-Roald Dahl Part One: "Lamb to the Slaughter" [3.28]

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by Jack Seabrook

In case you have spent your life living in a cave with no light or electricity, let me tell you about "Lamb to the Slaughter." Said to be "Hitchcock's favorite achievement in television," the episode is so well known that even those who have not actually seen it will nod in agreement when someone mentions the TV show where the wife kills her husband with a leg of lamb and then feeds it to the investigating policemen.

Before it was an episode of Alfred Hitchcock Presents, "Lamb to the Slaughter" was a short story by Roald Dahl (1916-1990). Born in Wales, Dahl was a British pilot in the early days of World War Two who was appointed to a diplomatic post in the United States in 1942. He began to write and his first short story was published in 1943, followed by his first collection of stories, Over to You, which was published in 1946, and his second collection, Someone Like You, which was published in 1953 and which won an Edgar Award. Dahl won a second Edgar in 1960 for his short story, "The Landlady," and in that year his third collection of short stories, Kiss Kiss, was published, as was his first children's novel, James and the Giant Peach. Having achieved fame as a writer of adult fiction, he gained even greater notice as a writer of books for young people, including Charlie and the Chocolate Factory in 1964. In 1979, he began hosting a television anthology series called Tales of the Unexpected, with many episodes based on his own stories, and he died in 1990, one of the most well-known and popular authors in the English language.

Harper's, September 1953
"Lamb to the Slaughter" was submitted for publication in December 1952 and, though The New Yorker rejected it, it was published in the September 1953 issue of Harper's magazine. The tale begins as Mary Maloney sits, happy and tranquil in her home, six months' pregnant, waiting for her husband Patrick to come home from work. After he arrives, she fixes drinks and they sit in their usual chairs: "For her, this was always a blissful time of day." Deeply in love, she tries to engage him in conversation about his job as a policeman. She offers to make supper even though they usually dine out on Thursdays, but he is gruff and uncommunicative, at last telling her that he is going to leave her. She watches him "with a kind of dazed horror."

Deciding to make supper, she walks down the stairs to the cellar, takes a leg of lamb from the deep freeze, and carries it, "holding the thin bone-end of it with both of her hands," back upstairs, where he tells her he is going out. She walks up behind him and brings the frozen leg of lamb down on the back of his head: "She might just as well have hit him with a steel club." With a sudden clarity of mind, she puts the frozen meat in the oven to roast, touches up her makeup, and walks to the grocery shop, where she buys potatoes and peas for dinner. Returning home, she sees her husband lying dead on the floor and begins to cry. Mary calls the police and two officers whom she knows arrive at the house, soon joined by other police, investigating the scene and treating her with kindness.

Barbara Bel Geddes as Mary in the final shot
The police ask Mary if she would like to leave but she chooses to remain in a chair while they search for clues, especially the murder weapon. She asks for a drink of whisky and convinces the policemen to have one too, then turns off the oven and insists that the officers eat the lamb, since it is now long past supper time and she cannot eat a thing. The men hesitate and then dig in, all the while speculating as to the whereabouts of the murder weapon. "Probably right under our very noses," says one, and "in the other room, Mary Maloney began to giggle."

Today, "Lamb to the Slaughter" is often read in school, and a quick search online will reveal numerous discussions about the story. In the 1950s, however, it was just one of the short stories collected in Someone Like You, which was published November 1, 1953, two months after the story had appeared in Harper's. Alfred Hitchcock was one of the people to take notice of this story, later saying that he had been thinking about adapting it for television ever since the beginning of Alfred Hitchcock Presents in 1955. In 1957, Roald Dahl negotiated the TV rights for several of his stories to the Hitchcock TV show and on November 14, 1957, near the end of filming Vertigo, Hitchcock took that film's co-star Barbara Bel Geddes to lunch and offered her the role of Mary Maloney. Patrick McGilligan writes that this leading lady part on television was likely a reward for her having played a thankless role in the classic film.

Allan Lane as Patrick Maloney
Soon after Hitchcock finished filming Vertigo, he rehearsed and filmed "Lamb to the Slaughter" in two days (one short of the usual three allotted for a half-hour episode of Alfred Hitchcock Presents), on February 18 and 19, 1958. The episode was first broadcast on CBS on Sunday, April 13, 1958, and has become a staple of television reruns and highlight shows ever since.

Road Dahl adapted his own story for television and subtly changed its focus. In the opening scene, Mary establishes the fact that she is pregnant by telling Patrick that a friend dangled a ring over her belly that day and determined that their baby will be a boy. Mary's animated chatter is in contrast to Patrick's absolute silence; he is large and looming in a big black policeman's overcoat and a light glows ominously from a lamp behind him. Patrick tells Mary that he wants a divorce because he is in love with another woman and wants to marry her; this is not spelled out in the story, where Dahl simply writes that "he told her," leaving it to the reader to figure out just what he told her.

Heartbroken at the news
Mary's face shows shock and heartbreak yet she insists on getting his supper, as if in denial of his words. After she brings in the frozen leg of lamb, they argue, and when she says she will not let him leave he replies, "Try and stop me." Her walk across the room holding the blunt instrument is filmed so that the object is mostly below the frame; the subsequent blow to the head seems violent and graphic, though there is a cut just at the moment of impact. We think we have seen the deed because our imagination fills in the blank space.

Does Mary even realize what she is doing when she puts the meat into the oven moments later? She appears to be in a daze, as if she is just going about preparing the main course out of habit. After making sure Patrick is dead, she sits at the kitchen table, eats some grapes and begins to think; she checks the roast and turns up the oven temperature before telephoning her friend Molly to beg off dinner due to Patrick's exhaustion--her planning and cover up have begun. Mary's trip to the store is brief and wordless, unlike the story, where her conversation with the grocer suggests the creation of an alibi. At home, she stages a crime scene, overturning furniture and emptying drawers onto the floor.

The camera at floor level
From this point on, the TV version of "Lamb to the Slaughter" takes a different path than the print version: this Mary Maloney is more careful and determined than the one in the story. Lt. Jack Noonan, a detective, interviews her in the living room, where they sit on a sofa only a few feet away from where the corpse lies on the floor. Dahl's teleplay expands and dramatizes the police investigation, adding dialogue and action to open up that which was presented in the story through narration. In this scene, Hitchcock's camera is placed near the floor, looking up at the scene in order to keep the mess on the floor and the dead body in the forefront and the actors at a slight distance. Mary sits through most of the investigation, quietly observing the police at their work: a doctor checks the corpse's head wound, another man dusts for fingerprints.

Noonan appears dominant
but Mary holds all the cards
Noonan asks Mary what she is cooking and suddenly we realize that the focus of the show has shifted from the irony of the story to suspense about whether Mary will be caught. As in so many Hitchcock films, the viewer's sympathies are with the murderer, causing us to assume some of her guilt and to provide a rationale for her violent act. Mary is pregnant, kind, gentle! Patrick was a cad who was going to leave her! And he announced it so heartlessly! Can we forgive her rash act of murder? Of course not! Yet we watch as the police circle around her, gradually figuring out virtually every aspect of what happened but never suspecting the dead man's wife and never realizing what was used to commit the act.

Staging the crime scene
The doctor describes the murder weapon "like a large club of some sort," outlining a leg of lamb in the air with his hands as the camera pans over to the listening Mary Maloney. Lt. Noonan continues to question Mary, deducing that Patrick must have been preoccupied because he drank a glass of neat whisky before even removing his overcoat. Noonan guesses that the murder was a sudden act resulting from a quarrel, where the killer grabbed something close at hand. Suspense builds as he pieces together what happened and tells his colleague that "there's something fishy about this case," believing that the room was staged to look like there had been a fight. Dahl and Hitchcock walk a fine line between suspense and satire, as the police come to all the right conclusions but miss the obvious.

The dissolve from Mary's face to the platter
After Mary tells the policemen to eat the lamb, there is a dissolve to a platter on the kitchen table with a large bone on it, nearly all of the meat removed. One policeman even plans to take the bone home to his dog, removing the last shred of the murder weapon. The camera pulls back to show four detectives seated around the table, ravenously eating lamb, while two more uniformed policeman sit on the stairs just beyond the kitchen door, digging into their own plates of meat. The famous last shot shows Mary sitting on a wooden chair, alone in the next room, hands in her lap, ankles crossed demurely, as we hear the policeman talk in the kitchen. The camera slowly moves in on her, ending in a medium close up as she giggles.

Another low angle shot, as the
investigation goes on all around Mary
In "Lamb to the Slaughter," Hitchcock looks back to one of his greatest films and forward to another, as well as hinting at a third to come years later. By casting Barbara Bel Geddes as Mary, he shows the flip side of Midge, her character in Vertigo, who loved James Stewart's character Scottie not wisely but too well. In the film, she drives him away by failing to appreciate the depth of his obsession with another woman; there, she is always the bridesmaid and never the bride, while in the TV show she becomes a woman in charge of her own life, murdering her faithless husband. Patrick McGilligan noted that Bel Geddes played the role with "comedic perfection," and commented on her "wounded innocence' in both Vertigo and "Lamb to the Slaughter."

The beginning of the famous final shot,
before the camera tracks in on Mary
The final shot of the TV show, where Mary sits alone in a chair and the camera moves in on her face, looks forward to the final shot of Norman Bates in Psycho, where he sits in a similar chair and smiles to himself, thinking--in the persona of his mother--that her son would never hurt a fly. This comparison has been made before, by Donald Spoto and Ulrich Rudel, but it is worth noting since such a similar shot concludes two of Hitchcock's most famous works. Spoto added that the TV show concludes with "the stare of madness, the gaze of one immobilized within the prison of his own flesh or sin or emotional constriction."

Hitchcock seems to have seen things differently, describing the final smile and giggle not as evidence of madness but rather the character's realization "that she has changed, she starts to emanate joy, as of endless gratitude and filled with love."

The third film prefigured in "Lamb to the Slaughter" is Torn Curtain (1966), in which the famous murder scene involves a kitchen stove; the role of the stove in the TV show is likewise significant in connection with a murder, and the camera focuses on the over door more than once, reminding the viewer that the object hidden inside was used to kill a man.

The policemen devour the evidence
The teleplay for "Lamb to the Slaughter" was Roald Dahl's first for television and it was the only time he would write the script for any of the six stories of his to be adapted for Alfred Hitchcock Presents. Alfred Hitchcock personally directed four of the six Dahl episodes, suggesting that he had an affinity for the author's work.

"Lamb to the Slaughter" was a hit from the moment it aired. It received two Emmy nominations: Dahl for the script and Hitchcock for the direction, though neither won. Commenting on the show's suspense, Charlotte Chandler reports that Hitchcock said:

The 'ticking lamb'
"I call that one my 'ticking lamb' story, which is a variation on my 'ticking bomb' theory.

"The idea is that you want to let the audience in on everything so they know that a ticking bomb is there while the characters don't know it. That is the suspense, waiting for the bomb to explode, only they are waiting for the leg of lamb to be discovered as the murder weapon."

That is the central difference between the story and the TV show: the story is ironic while the TV show adds suspense. It is the irony of the situation and especially the conclusion of the show that sticks in the viewer's mind, however; the suspense is of secondary importance.

Barbara Bel Geddes (1922-2005) started as a stage actress in 1941, moved into film in 1947 and then into TV in 1950. In addition to her role in Vertigo she appeared in four episodes of Alfred Hitchcock Presents and later starred in the television series Dallas from 1978 to 1990, winning an Emmy in 1980. A website devoted to her career may be found here.

Harold J. Stone
Lt. Noonan, the detective who leads the investigation, is played by Harold J. Stone (1913-2005), a familiar character actor who started on TV in 1949 and in film in 1956. He had a part in Hitchcock's The Wrong Man (1956) and another in House of Numbers (1957), based on the novel by Jack Finney. He was in three episodes of Alfred Hitchcock Presents, including "The Night the World Ended," based on a story by Fredric Brown, as well as an episode of The Twilight Zone and two episodes of The Alfred Hitchcock Hour, including Henry Slesar's "The Second Verdict." Stone also appeared in two Roger Corman films in the 1960s: X--The Man With the X-Ray Eyes (1963) and The St. Valentine's Day Massacre (1967). He appeared in many TV episodes well into the 1980s.

Ken Clark
The unfortunate Patrick Maloney was played by Allan "Rocky" Lane (1909-1973), who had starred in countless western films and whose career ended with him playing the voice of the title character in the TV series Mister Ed from 1958 to 1966. Lane's career is detailed here. This was the only episode of the Hitchcock show in which he appeared. It may have been ironic to viewers in 1958 to see Lane, who had played so may heroic roles on film, laid low by a much smaller woman wielding a piece of frozen meat.

Finally, the second detective, Mike, is played by Ken Clark (1927-2009), who worked on TV and in the movies from the mid-1950s until the late 1990s. He was on the Hitchcock show four times, including Fredric Brown's "The Dangerous People" and Henry Slesar's "Insomnia." He had a key role in South Pacific (1958) and his career is explored here.

Susan George checks the deep freeze
"Lamb to the Slaughter" was remade as an episode of Tales of the Unexpected  (aka Roald Dahl's Tales of the Unexpected), which first aired on April 14, 1979, and which starred Susan George as Mary. The most interesting thing about this production is Dahl's introduction, in which he admits that fellow author Ian Fleming gave him the idea for the story at a dinner when they were served a very tough leg of lamb. Dahl had become friends with Fleming when both were members of the British secret service during World War Two.

The story was also adapted for video in 2002 (watch it here) and a brief animated film was also created to advertise the Penguin editions of Dahl's books (watch it here).

The story is easily found online (here, for example) and in many collections. The 1958 TV show is on DVD or may be viewed online here. The 1979 version may be seen here.

Sources:
Chandler, Charlotte. It's Only a Movie: Alfred Hitchcock, a Personal Biography. New York:  
Simon & Schuster, 2005. Print.
Dahl, Roald, and Jeremy Treglown. Roald Dahl Collected Stories. New York: Everyman's Library, 2006. Print.
Dahl, Roald. "Lamb to the Slaughter." 1953. Roald Dahl: Collected Stories. New York: Knopf, 2006. 403-12. Print.
Grams, Martin, and Patrik Wikstrom. The Alfred Hitchcock Presents Companion. Churchville, MD: OTR Pub., 2001. Print.
IMDb. IMDb.com, n.d. Web. 21 Feb. 2015.
"Lamb to the Slaughter."Alfred Hitchcock Presents. CBS. 13 Apr. 1958. Television.
McGilligan, Patrick. Alfred Hitchcock: A Life in Darkness and Light. New York: Regan, 2003. Print.
Rudel, Ulrich. "The Telefilms of Alfred Hitchcock."The Alfred Hitchcock Presents Companion. Ed. Martin Grams and Patrik Wikstrom. Churchville, MD: OTR Pub., 2001. 97-108. Print.
"Someone Like You."Goodreads. N.p., n.d. Web. 21 Feb. 2015.
Spoto, Donald. The Life of Alfred Hitchcock: The Dark Side of Genius. London: Collins, 1983. Print.
Wikipedia. Wikimedia Foundation, n.d. Web. 21 Feb. 2015.

  • ME TV continues to show The Alfred Hitchcock Hour six nights a week at 3 A.M. Eastern time.

  • In two weeks: "Dip in the Pool," starring Keenan Wynn and Fay Wray!


Star Spangled DC War Stories Part 48: May 1963

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The DC War Comics 1959-1976
by Corporals Enfantino and Seabrook

Joe Kubert
Our Army at War 130

"No Hill for Easy!"
Story by Robert Kanigher
Art by Joe Kubert

"Sink Your Own Flattop!"
Story by Bob Haney
Art by Jack Abel

Jack: Sgt. Rock and Easy Co. see another company up ahead being blasted by artillery and manage to avoid being wiped out by a Nazi air attack. After killing more Nazis who are hiding in a battered American tank they come upon the shell-shocked major of Dog Company, which has been wiped out. The major does not realize that he is the last one alive and so Rock and his men follow him, assuming the mantle of Dog Company. Though unsteady on his feet, the major marches forward relentlessly toward the enemy, with Easy Co. at his heels, protecting him and following him into enemy fire. Rock and the men of Easy destroy an attacking enemy tank and, though the major is wounded in the battle, he smiles when he hears Rock report in to base by radio that Dog Company has triumphed. "No Hill for Easy!" will be tough to top for best of the year. The art is as good as it gets from Kubert; the battle scenes are filled with excitement and the old major is beautifully drawn. Kanigher's story is gripping as well.

"No Hill for Easy!"

Peter: This was one very tense tale from beginning to end. I couldn't help thinking Apocalypse Now even though that was a different war. The look in the "haunted" major's eyes is chilling. Keep telling yourself that this is the same Bob Kanigher who writes Gunner and Sarge and War That Time Forgot.

"Sink Your Own Flattop!"
Jack: Andy is a young pilot whose father is the flight officer on an aircraft carrier where Andy has been assigned. Things don't get off to a great start when Andy botches his first landing and his plane lands in the drink. He is sent up in a new plane as part of a squadron told to find and destroy Takaru, a deadly Japanese aircraft carrier. Andy survives a second battle but wrecks a second plane when he crash lands on his own carrier. During his next mission, he crash lands on an island, where a downed Japanese pilot forces him at gunpoint to take to the skies and orders him to "Sink Your Own Flattop!" Andy fires on his dad's ship and the ship's guns return fire. Andy manages to lose the Japanese pilot and avoids being gunned down by his fellow soldiers by flying into a cloud. When he emerges, he sees Takaru, lands on it, and manages to blow it up. He is rescued from the ocean by his own ship, and this time they are happy with him for losing another plane, since it meant the destruction of Takaru. Despite fairly standard art by Abel, this story gets pretty exciting, especially when Andy has to avoid being shot down by his own ship.

Peter: "Sink Your Own Flattop" contains a competent script and pretty good art and manages to throw in every DC war cliche ever catalogued. The military father that no son could ever live up to, the seemingly endless series of blunders which only serve to strengthen our hero's resolve and allow him to come out on top in the end, the doubting comrades who will sing his praises someday. Oh, and don't forget our hero's incredible dive off an exploding battleship. It's easy on the eyes but it sure ain't "No Hill for Easy," is it?


Russ Heath & Jack Adler
G.I. Combat 99

"Battle of the Thirsty Tanks!"
Story by Robert Kanigher
Art by Joe Kubert

"Frogman on a String!"
Story by Bob Haney
Art by Jack Abel

Peter: Having enraged their C.O. with their awful acting (as women in an onboard talent show), the men of the Jeb Stuart are assigned to guard a desert oasis and keep the Nazis from filling up on the precious water found there. Running out of water quickly, our heroes realize that they're depending on the oasis even more than the Germans. When the Haunted Tank reaches the oasis, the men are stunned to find it a dried up sand pit. The Nazis approach, not realizing the well's run dry, and so starts "The Battle of the Thirsty Tanks." Jeb and his men must act as though the oasis is worth guarding in order to force the Nazis to surrender. Just as the surrender seems imminent, a German fighter pilot tears up the sand around the tank. Luck is with our heroes, though, as they shoot the plane out of the sky and the ensuing explosion brings water up from under the dry oasis. The men fill their cups and then march their German prisoners back to base. Kubert's art, as usual, is vibrant but I miss my Russ Heath fix. The guys from the Haunted Tank look like the boys in Easy Company. I know it's foolish to complain about gorgeous art but this is the month where we swim in Kubert and just a bit of Heath would have been great. The story's a doozy: funny, exciting, suspenseful. Heck, we can even forgive Bob forgetting this is a series about a ghost and a Haunted Tank (we get one really quick reminder at the opening and then -poof- no more supernatural presence. The stand-off at the oasis is one of the most gripping sequences we've seen this year and, Heath or no Heath, this one will wind up near the Top of my Ten for 1963.

"Battle of the Thirsty Tanks"

Jack: I can't remember a better Haunted Tank story, and I have to think it's mostly due to Kubert. Yes, Heath is great, but this story shows who the real boss of the DC War Comics universe was. I did not think the soldiers looked like members of Easy Co.--in fact, I thought as I was reading this how much they differed from the combat happy Joes of Easy Co.

Peter: While ridding the bottom of the English Channel of dangerous explosives, an Allied diver becomes a "Frogman on a String" when he's entangled in a paravane (the equipment used by ships to sweep for mines). Captured by the Nazis and tied to a mine onboard their sub, our hero becomes a dead duck when the mine falls overboard and drags him with it. Using good American know-how, the frogman is able to cut his bonds and direct the mine towards the enemy sub, single-handedly destroying the Nazis and ensuring safe passage for the good guys. Another exciting tale that makes you doubt the laws of physics and averages. How can a man survive when a sub explodes right above him? I love when our hero falls overboard, hands chained behind his back, and manages to somehow affix his scuba gear before drowning (all performed off-panel, unfortunately).

"Harry Houdini on a String"

Jack: Dear Sgt. Rock: in your story "Frogman on a String!" how did the frogman put on his mask and scuba gear when he was pulled into the water with his hands tied behind his back?--Jack Seabrook, Hopewell, NJ

Dear Jack: I don't have the slightest idea. I have to get back to fightin' Nazis now!--Your pal, Sgt. Rock.


Joe Kubert
Our Fighting Forces 76

"The T.N.T. Seat!"
Story by Robert Kanigher
Art by Jerry Grandenetti

"No Place for a PT Boat!"
Story by Hank Chapman
Art by Joe Kubert

Jack: Col. Hakawa's latest plan to get the marines off the beach is to attack them nonstop until they run out of ammunition from fighting back. He has a hidden supply of ammunition of his own that is right under the noses of the marines. Gunner, Sarge and Pooch repel attacks from sky and sea until they are down to their last bit of ammo. After they blow up a Japanese mini-sub they come face to face with Hakawa but manage to escape by means of a well-thrown grenade. On the run from Hakawa and his men, they take refuge in an abandoned U.S. tank and discover a trap door beneath it that covers the hidden Japanese ammunition supply. Gunner and Sarge use the newfound ammo to drive back Hakawa before the ammo dump blows sky high during the firefight. A terrible splash page is only the beginning of this artistic mess, which foreshadows the sort of bigfooted art that Grandenetti would specialize in in the early '70s for DC's horror comics. Col. Hakawa is not much of a practical joker this time around. Kanigher's script isn't half bad but, just as Kubert elevates his stories in Our Army at War and G.I. Combat this month, Jerry drags him down into the muck with his scribbling.

Now where could that hidden ammo dump be?

Peter: Though I'll admit that this entry in the Gunner, Sarge, and Pooch saga is a little more serious than any of the previous yuck (or is that yecch?) fests, "The TNT Seat" still suffers from terminal cuteness and stupidity. I still want to know how a dog knows to hold its breath before diving to the bottom of the ocean.

Jack: Ray is frustrated to be assigned commander of a small PT boat instead of a bigger vessel like his brother and his father. But when a Japanese boat is sheltered beneath a narrow slot of rock that allows it to fire at oncoming planes and ships, the only boat small enough to attack with any chance of success is Ray's PT boat. Things don't go according to plan and the plane bringing Ray's boat to the slot is shot down, leading Ray and his men to drag the boat by hand into position. After the PT boat careens down the edge of the rocky cliff and crashes, it's up to Ray to do some prodigious underwater breathing and fire a torpedo to destroy the enemy ship. Kubert's art is a bit flat this time around, perhaps because of his unusual workload this month. The last couple of panels are confusing, suggesting that PT boat commander Ray could be president some day. Is the point here that a PT boat hero could end up in that role, since JFK did it?

The Dept. of Future Presidential Confusion

Peter: I really liked this one, which reminded me a lot of the kind of stories that would fill the old Adventure pulp. Kubert's art sure doesn't hurt. Our hero can hold his breath almost as long as Pooch!



Ross Andru & Mike Esposito
Star Spangled War Stories 108

"Dinosaur D-Day!"
Story by Robert Kanigher
Art by Ross Andru and Mike Esposito

"Jump Into Two Wars!"
Story by Bob Haney
Art by Joe Kubert

Peter: Left to clean up a Pacific island after a major battle, a group of sad sacks must contend with a nightmare from the prehistoric age when a fleet of missing LSTs shows up on their beach and promptly opens to unveil a pack of dinosaurs! The men must use leftover armaments from the battle to take the giants down one by one in a "Dinosaur D-Day!" As ludicrous as this series can get (and that's mighty ludicrous, I must say) nothing comes close to this silly entry. It might have been wiser on Bob's part to leave it a mystery how these dinosaurs got into a horde of vessels, closed the doors, and sailed (as a fleet) to the island. Never mind that there's no proof T-Rex or Bronto could swim; how the heck did they pull themselves up into the LSTs? At least now the army can't ignore they've got a problem in the Pacific.

Dino-bagos
Jack: You have to admit that that's a fantastic cover! The story inside is terrible, with not one but two recurring gimmicks. The first is the fact that the soldiers keep finding that they're down to the last bullet, or the last grenade, or the last whatever. The second, and worse, is the soldier who keeps responding "That figures" whenever anything goes wrong. It's a function of how busy and versatile Bob Kanigher was that he could churn out two classic lead stories and two clunkers in the same month.

Peter: On the night before D-Day, Lt. Link is preparing to parachute down with his men to stop the Nazis from advancing to the beach. As they wait, a Frenchman named Andre tells Link the story of how Charles Martel defeated the Moors centuries before to save France in just the spot they're to jump to. Jump time arrives but, as he's leaping from the plane, Link is conked on the head and falls from the plane unconscious. While out, he dreams that he helps Martel defeat the Moors by blowing up a dam and stopping their advance. Just before he splatters, Link regains consciousness and lands near the dam. As the Nazis advance over the dam, Link gets a strange sense of deja vu and blows the dam a second time. "Jump Into Two Wars" is a delightful fantasy tale (or maybe not so much a fantasy as a "dream"). I somehow thought Haney would throw in the cliched "...or was it a dream?" climax by having Link pull an ancient sword out of his pocket, or something along those lines but, no, we leave it as merely a vivid dream starring Prince Valiant and his merry men. Four stories by Joe Kubert this month. We could get spoiled by this kind of treatment!

"Jump Into Two Wars"

Jack: Kubert is really on his game this month. This is an entertaining story that shows his ability to draw soldiers of the modern era and soldiers of centuries ago, and Haney throws in just enough twists and turns to make it suspenseful. The panels of the soldier falling through the black night sky are excellent.

Peter: Interestingly enough, all four of our titles this month feature two stories each rather than the regular three. Ostensibly, this was initiated in order to give the writers more space in which to develop character. I'm a glass half full type guy (as opposed to curmudgeon Seabrook), so I choose to go with that explanation rather than the fact that page count will begin to shrink in the near future.







In our next marrow-chilling issue
On Sale March 16!



The Dungeons of Doom!: The Pre-Code Horror Comics Volume Five

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Harvey Comics
Part Five

By Jose Cruz and 
Peter Enfantino


Getting a Woody
Peter: On his way out the company door to vacation, millionaire Jim Trent notices his employees loitering around his secretary's desk. When he approaches and quizzes them as to what they're up to, they claim they were on their way to wish him a happy vacation and a happy birthday as well. Touched by the kindness of his staff, Jim heads home to collect his wife, Madeline, and hit the road to the family cabin. Once on the road, Jim realizes the guy driving the car is not the regular driver but his old business partner, Carl Andro. Fifteen years before, Andro had supposedly been gunned down by mobsters but managed to escape. Now, he's back for a tasty revenge on the man he believes set him up for the hit: Jim Trent. Carl wants lots of money to make up for his lost years and Jim tells him he has some green stashed at the cabin. Madeline whispers to Jim that, no matter what it takes, she wants her husband to get rid of this nuisance pronto. When they get to the lodge, Madeline distracts Andro long enough for Jim to sneak up and throttle his old partner to death. They decide the cellar would be the best place to bury the body so they open the cabin door, only to find Jim's employees shouting "Happy Birthday, Jim!"

When we're first introduced to Jim Trent, the protagonist of "Dead End" (from Witches Tales #21)we have an inkling the guy might be a jerk but he quickly rebounds, in our eyes, by being grateful for his employees' interest in him. So, when Andro shows up, we're doubtful Trent could have been shifty enough to have arranged a mob hit. Any doubts fly right through the window when he and his wife begin plotting the blackmailer's murder in the back seat of the limo ("I don't know what you've done in your past, Jim -- but you must get rid of him! He'll suck us dry! Remember -- you have a position in this world!"). Madeline couldn't care less, really, if her husband had this shadowy past as long as it doesn't interfere with the lifestyle she's become comfortable in. I love how the writer (thought to be artist Howard Nostrand) pushes our buttons and keeps us completely in the dark, right up to that fabulous final panel. We don't talk much about the colorist's role in these ancient funny books but whoever had the job here added enormously to Nostrand's chameleonic art (aping not only Jack Davis but Wally Wood). The sickly green shadows used to give the limo interior almost a noirish tone are brilliant eye catchers.


Jose: Carl is up to his arched eyebrows in hatred for his pushy boss Mr. Kaffner, the resident clockmaker of their unnamed Mittel-European hamlet. All Carl wants to do is join his demon friends on a rampage of carnage on Walpurgis Night; can’t a guy catch a break? Hearing his wicked desires, the imps prod Carl on until he finally knifes old Kaffner to death in a fit. The old boy wisely uses his dying breath to utter a curse on Carl and all the clocks in the land: they shall cease their motions until the unruly assistant himself dies, thus consigning his fellow citizens to an eternal night of Walpurgis! The skeletons and devils rejoice at this stroke of good luck and dutifully proceed to terrorize the peasantry at Carl’s command. Soon it starts to rain and, since the night will go on forever, so will the downpour. (Hey, just go with it!) The monsters don’t take kindly to getting wet though, and once they catch wind that they’ll be able to get on to a drier existence once Carl kicks the bucket he doesn't remain much longer for this world. With the traitorous assistant strangled in the graveyard, the clocks resume their course and the demons retreat into the night for another year.

When I was compiling the story credits for this post and saw there was a tale titled “Walpurgis” (WT #18) and penciled by no less than copycat and artiste extraordinaire Howard Nostrand, I perked right up. Visions of “Night on Bald Mountain”-styled shenanigans with gabled churches shuddering in the wake of shadowy daemons and long-leggity beasties danced in my head, so it was almost predestined that the actual story couldn’t quite live up to my grandiose expectations. But even in that light, this one is easily a keeper. I appreciate how the old “kill the boss” routine was given a unique supernatural twist, and it gets a payoff with a nicely eerie final panel that marries the triumphant (the “merry” chimes of the clocks) with a portent of doom (“…ticking closer and closer to another Walpurgis Night!”) in the same sentence.

Peter: When a mountain lion begins killing a farmer's livestock, he becomes "The Hunter" (#22), stalking the big cat over treacherous icy mountain tops until, finally, he catches up to the cat and puts his final bullet in it. Gloating over the corpse, he hears a noise from behind and realizes, too late, he's actually been tracking two cats!


No, there's not much to the story, I'll grant you, but what's there is lean and mean and has a payoff that'll kick you in the teeth. Unlike a similar story might have been portrayed over at EC (where Bill Gaines and co. sometimes seemed to put the morals in front of the shocks), this farmer is, for the most part, a sympathetic character. He's not hunting the cat because he wants to hang its pelt on his wall or any other macho reason; he's making the trek out of necessity. Without his livestock, he can't eat. It's only towards the climax that the dark side emerges and he begins to enjoy the hunt and, ultimately, the kill. The final panels, with the second cat approaching the now-defenseless man, are genuinely terrifying. Yet another winner by Bob Powell.

Jose: Wakely and Finch are a pair of shuttered buzzards who toil away the midnight hour by using arcane rites and dark science to summon the signs of the Zodiac into fleshy reality. When two suits who’ve bought the place up try to give the boys the heave-ho, Wakely and Finch decide that there’s no time like the present to give their experiment a shot. They each conjure up their respective signs, a menacing scarlet scorpion for Finch and the goldilocked, strapping archer Sagittarius for Wakely. They send their pets out to administer proper punishment to the businessmen. The sorcerers gloat over their victory, but soon Finch is abusing Sagittarius by constantly sending him on murderous grocery runs to bring back human flesh for his hungry scorpion, much to Wakely’s chagrin. When Wakely confronts Finch, he gets a face full of hot scorpion tail for his troubles. Finch’s brutal torture of Sagittarius backfires when the brute breaks loose from his chains and tears Finch's stingy critter to pieces, thus sentencing Finch (and all the other unfortunate Scorpios of the world) to a rotting death.

Wow. Where do you start with this one? “Zodiac” (from #18) is a breath of fresh air; after being inundated with so many brain-dead mad scientist tales from the last batch of issues, I mentally exclaimed “At last: imagination!” after finishing this story. “Zodiac” gets big points for taking time to think outside the box and explore all the implications of its fantastic premise. This approach didn’t always work well (see “What’s Happening at 8:30 P.M.?”) but here it's pulled off with seeming ease and grace by steadfast Nostrand. 

And what a big arrow he has.
Not only is it creative, but it’s subversive as hell. It’s nearly impossible not to pick up on the homosexual connotation of Wakely and Finch’s “experimentations." Sagittarius’ rugged good looks seem to predate that similar golden child of male desire Rocky from the same-named The Rocky Horror Picture Show (1975). When Nostrand (or whoever) writes lines like “No, the other didn’t escape either. Sagittarius has a way with men…” the story is practically begging us to take note of its queerness. Being a product of its time, “Zodiac” equates homosexuality with masochism, as seen in Finch’s fevered flaying of the studly archer, but the whole drama is shockingly frank in its entendre. One wonders how Wertham could have picked up on Batman and Robin’s "unhealthy" relationship and totally missed the boat on this one! 

"Ivan's Woe"
Peter: Sir Ivan Gwaine is the finest jouster in Camelot and has already proclaimed to all that his heart belongs to the King's daughter, Lady Elizabeth. Sir Hugo, the King's executioner holds that he's the best knight of all and that, despite his ugly scarred face, Elizabeth should be his wife. Hugo challenges Ivan to a "trial by mortal combat" and the next morning, the two engage in a long and bloody battle, with neither man having the clear upper hand. Just as it looks like Hugo will smash his enemy's skull with a mace, Ivan runs him through with his sword. Ivan is given the King's highest commendation and acknowledged as the finest knight in the land. Two months later, the King also makes Ivan his executioner since the job was vacant and Elizabeth has called off their engagement. Ivan Gwaine was so badly mauled in the battle that the girl can't bear to look at him.

"Ivan's Woe" (from #23) ran under the "Boo of the Month" banner, a label for classic stories given the Harvey Horror twist. According to the late, great Bhob Stewart, "Howard Nostrand conceived of "Ivan's Woe" as a parody of Wally Wood's "Trial by Arms" (from EC's  Two-Fisted Tales #34, July-August 1953). Before one cries "Fowl!", Stewart and, indeed, Wally Wood himself (who admired the job Nostrand had done on "Ivan's Woe") noted that, though the battle scenes were laid out in a similar manner (nine small panels per page), the battle itself was choreographed differently and, of course, there's that final panel: the reveal of Sir Ivan's ugly puss! The great chameleon, Nostrand here not only apes Wally Wood and Jack Davis but manages to throw in some Hal Foster as well. Chameleon, indeed!

And Wally Wood's "Trial by Arms"
Jose:“You’re fat, elderly, and an eccentric recluse” named Hubert. (Story’s words, not mine!) You have a beautiful, loving, young wife and all the comfort one in your position could ask for. That is until your hearing aid falls out of your ear and shatters on the floor, rendering you completely deaf. No matter, your wife Dorothy and handsome caretaker Jed are here to take care of you until they can get a replacement. But when you taste rat poison in your soup—an accident purportedly committed by the house cat—you can’t help but feel uneasy, especially with the looks that Dorothy and Jed seem to give each other. When you’re nearly brained by a falling brick from Jed’s roofing repairs, your greatest fears are confirmed. Your heart is broken but you know what must be done. When you see Jed and Dorothy bring in a package carrying their murder weapon, you beat them to the punch (and to death) with a fireplace poker. You open up the package expecting to see the gun, but all that's inside is your new hearing aid.


“Shock” (from #20) aces the competition by having a winning concept: once Hubert loses his hearing aid, the story must rely entirely on its images and Hubert’s captioned thoughts to communicate his confusion and suspicion. Were his affliction blindness, it’d never work in the comic medium (but I’d love to be proven wrong). This in turn cuts out 90% of the dialogue which, if I’m being honest, is probably in the story’s best favor. No need for those exhausted lines of cured ham (“I know what you’re planning! You and that harlot! Well, I’ll fix you!” etc.); we cut right to the bone of the matter. This allows the equally tired spousal murder plot (the Spam of the horror/mystery genres) to appear at least a little fresher, and though the “twist” can be seen from a mile off this is one of those stories where the inevitability of the final reveal is in service of the suspense.

Peter: The son of an overbearing "Undertaker" (from #24), Doxy only wants to get out and experience life but his father preaches fire and brimstone and "finality." Now, Doxy has hatched the perfect plot to get out from under his father's thumb: he'll hide in one of the outgoing coffins and break free when the hearse arrives at the cemetery. Unfortunately, Doxy's plan goes haywire when the coffin is delivered to the crematorium.

There are certainly some nits to pick with "Undertaker" (if Doxy's plan was to break out at the cemetery, then why couldn't he save himself before the casket reached the flames?) but here's a classic case of "style and substance." Five pages isn't a lot of room to build characterization, we all know, but Howard Nostrand (let's assume the writer is Nostrand) does his best to pack as much detail into the little room he's given. The classic overbearing parent is given an almost crazed religious bent, something I'd think was frowned upon in "entertainment for children" of the 1950s. Certainly a far cry from some of the laughable quotes we've assembled further below, Nostrand's prose reads like an Edgar Allan Poe short story when Doxy details the hell his homebound life has become:

"My whole world was confined to an undertaking parlor! Can you imagine such a world? Age-worn carpets... continual silence... dead bodies... swathed in rigor mortis...being rolled to a waiting coffin... dressed in Sunday's finest... hands clasped angelically... reposing on a bed of wood... soft satin ruffled to caress its face... then the lid slamming shut... tightly shut... What a life! What a decrepid (sic)... no-good... germ-eaten... stagnant... mute life!"

Nostrand once again provides a stable of characters obviously inspired by Jack Davis but surprises us with panel arrangement and design straight out of Will Eisner's The Spirit (see that evocative splash above). Was Nostrand the Rich Little of 1950s comic books? Derivative but undeniably original at the same time.

The final panels of "Undertaker"
Jose: Captain William Blah rules over the crew of the HMS Boundary “with an iron fist and a black soul,” ceaselessly driving them to work with no regard for exhaustion or basic human dignity. His first mate Mr. Gobble abides most of Blah’s torturous tactics but even he can’t stand the captain’s merciless ways for much longer. When Blah has one deckhand strung up by his wrists and shoots another objecting lackey, the crew begins to stir with mutterings of mutiny. When they reach their destination of Tahiti and the generous natives bestow them with gifts of fruit and other bounty, Blah demands that the crew toss it over the side so that they may adhere to their original shipment orders. After setting sail again Blah starts blabbing about his boots not being properly polished and this is the final offense that breaks the collective back of the crew. Cornering him with knives, the sailors promise Blah that they won’t be mutinying and will still be following his orders. And that they do until they return to their port in England. When confronted by a diplomat who has heard rumors of the mutiny, the boys show him that Captain Blah’s been with them for the whole ride back: silent, stuck to the mast, and decaying excessively!

“Mutiny on the Boundary” (from #24) was the second “Boo of the Month” feature following “Ivan’s-Woe” from the previous issue. This story finds mighty, mighty Bob Powell at the pencils; he would go on to draw the two remaining “Boo of the Month” stories for the last two issues of Witches Tales. Like those other yarns, “Mutiny” has a humorous streak and a dash of the ghastly that colors it as one of stories to come closest to being a genuine E.C. clone. (Powell seemed to be the one writer/artist who had his finger on that company’s pulse the most consistently.) Blah is an obvious caricature of Charles Laughton and sports a ridiculous lisp that gets exploited at almost every turn (he calls the crew “tchum” but somehow the word “answer” remains unaffected!) and I found myself giggling like a little kid every time he’d call out to his put-upon first mate (“Mither Gobble! Mither Gobble!”). I can’t resist a well-told tale of a tyrannical asshole getting his just desserts and even though Blah’s punishment isn’t particularly elaborate it still as stinging and refreshing as a burst of ocean spray.

Peter: Maurice Shmeerz is one of the world’s most respected mountain climbers. So, then, why is Maurice rotting away in a sanitarium after climbing Lanapurna, “the most dangerous of the Rimolya Chain”? Let’s start at the beginning, shall we? After two months of preparation, Maurice and his three associates leave France and head for Lanapurna and, they hope, the history books. The mountain proves to be treacherous, with severe shifts in the climate, deadly cliffs, and avalanches. Half way up the mountain, there is dissension and two of the climbers opt to head back down the hill while Maurice and Marius plod on through the snow.The next morning, while attempting to make a dangerous ascent, Marius’ rope snaps and he falls to his death, leaving Maurice alone to continue. At last, the climber reaches the peak of Lanapurna where he finds something so bizarre that it makes his mind snap. Maurice whips out his movie camera and takes footage of the scene. Later, back in civilization, three professors analyze the film and witness what drove Maurice slightly mad.

Far from horrifying, “Up There” (from #26) is an odd job, a story that begins with intrigue, sets a suspenseful pace, and then delivers a final panel that can’t fail to elicit a chuckle or two (and then a “hmmm”). I’m not sure why the uncredited writer chose not to use the Annapurna (according to Wikipedia, the "tenth highest mountain in the world" and one of the most dangerous) as Maurice's mountain of choice, rather than concoct the wholly mythical Lanapurna, except maybe to avoid homework. Joe Certa perfectly illustrates the perils the men must endure for no other reason than to say they did it. The writer of "Up There" (could it be artist Joe Certa?) gets extra points from me for not falling back on yet another Abominable Snowman fable and, instead, delivering a clever twist no one could see coming. One part Witches Tales, one part Mad Magazine, this tale is "Up There" on my list of Favorite Harvey Stories.


Jose: There’s no doubt about it; even Sweeney Todd’s customers never complained about the service as much as Ali Barber’s clientele does. And they have ample reason to: the jittery barber can’t apply a towel without burning a gent’s face or cut a hair without turning a chap’s scalp into a mess. “You’ve ruined me!” utters one horrified customer. But it’s Ali who’s really ruined. The decline in patrons has led to dwindling funds, so much so that his wife’s request for money to buy a new dress sends him into an impotent rage. He can’t just give up his job either. Ali sees himself as an artist and as such feels he should only work harder at his craft. But try as he might he’s met with more curses, more denials, and more condemnations than he can handle. His landlord’s threats of eviction and the prosperity of his neighbors only sinks him lower. Providence seems to come in the form of an advertisement he spots for a “businessman’s dinner” being held at a nearby hotel. Ali thinks he’ll be able to offer his services to the whole gathering for some quick cash, but an accidental case of eavesdropping reveals that these “businessmen” are really members of the Mafioso. Ali hatches a scheme to turn in each head for the reward money… literally. With a manic gleam in his eye, Ali sets to visiting each room and gets busy with his slicing razors. Weighty, grim cargo in tow, Ali makes for the exit when he notices that the “businessman dinner” was cancelled… and a policeman’s ball has been scheduled in its place.


Like “The Choir Master” (CoC #21) before it, “Ali Barber and the Forty Thieves” is an affecting portrait of a man who just cannot catch a break. Mr. Furelli and Barber are both basically good people, wanting to do right by their professions and passions to make something of themselves, driven by hardships and unsympathetic conditions to sanity’s breaking point. Furelli is on the way out and Barber’s trying to make his start but this is the desire that binds them both. Bob Powell authored the two stories and they both seem to further solidify the notion that some people were just born losers. The horrific element doesn’t come into play until the very end in "Ali Barber", but what we’ve seen already has been squirm-inducing enough; the mordant punchline that Ali has, yet again, really stepped in it is just grim garnish on the watery soup that has been his life. The panel of him knocking on the door of his first customer is perfect: Powell draws Ali with a smile that he’s got frozen on his face to keep himself from crying. Or screaming. It’s beautiful, and one of the most emotionally striking depictions I’ve ever seen in a comic of this vintage. 


NOTABLE QUOTABLES

“I will relish your body!”
- "Dimension IV"

“This is the shop of Frederick Kaffner… a master clockmaker… and a man who would master his maker!”
- "Walpurgis"

“As he speaks, the air becomes foul and fetid with the sudden appearance of the demons of evil—ghastly beings and animals dripping gore—shocking embodiments of depraved minds!”
- "Star of Doom"

"You are doomed to a deathless eternity of frozen life!"
- "Mannequin of Murder!"

Just so you know that we're not making it up.
“Die! Die! You deserve to die!! You have too much money! Die!!!”
- "Bird of Prey"

“And that night the boy’s head—and mouth—were put to good use!”
- "Jungle"

“But what seemed like a palace of pleasure was really a yawning pit of hell!!”
- "Kiss and Kill"

“Then have at it, my jealous cock!”
- "Ivan’s-Woe"

“Who ya calling ‘Hey?’ Hay is for horses!”
- "So What Next"

“Every artist has his bad day. But for Ali Barber that day didn’t end until he became an artist at something else—murder with a touch of face lotion!”
- "Ali Barber and the Forty Thieves"

"All through the day Stevens lay dead..."
- "Mannequin of Murder!"

                                          And the "Stinking Zombie Award" goes to...

Peter: A vampire gives a pep talk to his son after the young man comes home from Vampire U., not knowing what he wants to make of his (un)life. The usual vampire antics (snacking on the necks of good-looking girls, for instance) hold no interest for the intelligent young blood-sucker but pop seems to think he can turn that disinterest around by showing the kid a trick or two. Alas, the field trip doesn't go the old man's way and, if anything, a botched attack on a helpless girl puts the final nail in the coffin. Junior explains to his father that a different mentality has pervaded Vampire U. He tears off his wings, blunts his pointy ears and emerges from a darkened alleyway a changed... creature. "Vampire U told me how to become...a... ghoul!"

Here's the flip side of "Up There!", a very silly and deadly dull story with a really dumb climax. "Go, Vampire" (from #26) is designed to draw out the guffaws but there's nothing here to smile about. With its Archie-esque artwork, this is the kind of story that would feel safe in the pages of a post-code comic book but thoroughly out of place in the swan song of Witches Tales.

Jose: Stevens works at Crane Enterprises as a “dummy designer,” his eyes are two different colors, and he smokes his pipe upside down. Right from the first two panels we are told that this man is a psycho. In a bid to make his displays more life-like, Stevens concocts a serum that instills permanent catatonia in its recipients, so it isn’t long before he starts targeting humans for his shop window. Once rendered into frozen statues, the victims are arranged in a panorama of murder that shocks the crowds who come to gawk. When one model stirs to life and strangles Stevens, everyone thinks it’s part of the act and just leave his body unattended on the ground. Now with the power to move but driven insane by the serum (sure why not), the mannequins dump ol’ Stevens down an elevator shaft and scare the night watchman out of his wits. When he tries explaining what he saw to Mr. Crane, the old coot is taken away by the men in white and all the mannequins are shipped out to all of the Crane Enterprises across the country.


When good stories have a long history behind them, they’re called classic or timeless. When old plots resurface in bad stories, they’re called tired, exhausted, done-to-death. “Mannequin to Murder” (from #17) is far past its shelf life and Manny Stallman’s art is a big ol’ gulp of sour milk. I’m not generally a stickler for logic, but why in the name of Vincent Price do the models start moving? It’s like the story is trying to have its cake and eat it too: yes, the victims are frozen into living statues… except when they have to murder! “Mannequin” is equally indecisive about Stevens’ motives; his experiments start out as a rebuke against his boss but then his chosen victims are apparently critics who disregarded his work. Maybe? I don’t think the story planned on us caring at all. In this whole set of ten issues, I can confidently say that I could recall the details of each story upon reviewing the titles… except “Mannequin of Murder.” I had totally erased it from my mind after completing it, and it was only in going back to it to refresh my memory that I was reminded it was the worst one from the lot. So I guess Stevens’ real vengeance was on me.


STORY OF THE WEEK

Peter: By early 1954, the writing was on the wall: comics were going to go through some major changes mighty quick. One of the most popular (and copied) successes of that period was EC's parodic Mad, a funny book that had taken everyone by surprise and become a runaway hit with its sardonic humor and sly sarcasm. Naturally, the "other guys" would follow suit. "Eye Eye, Sir" is one of Harvey's initial entries in that sweepstakes. The same month this story appeared in Witches Tales #22, Harvey debuted Flip!, a title stocked with the same kind of film and culture parodies that had made Mad a newsstand grabber. Even though Flip! featured contributions from the same bullpen that was responsible for the horror titles, it never found an audience (or, more likely, was buried under the deluge of Mad imitators) and was nipped in the bud after only two issues. Sid Check's "Eye Eye, Sir" would have fit very comfortably between the covers of Flip!






Jose: Color me the most surprised to have chosen a football tale for my Story of the Week. If you had told me that I’d be waxing over a sports yarn with nary a crumbly ghoul or act of bloodshed to be seen, I would’ve thought you were plumb crazy. But here I am and here’s “Monumental Feat” from WT #24 right at my side. There was a really exemplary batch of selections this time out, and while I could’ve just as easily selected other alternatives like Bob Powell’s sassy shocker “So What Next?” or a manic monsterama like “Star of Doom,” “Monumental Feat” takes home the gold for one aspect alone: it is unremittingly grim without an ounce of humor. From the mournful splash page to the cruel twist, this stone-faced parable shows us that simple human dreams and the fervor with which we pursue them can eventually lead us right into the pit of our own folly.







NOTES

Jose: Just a couple of observations this time around.

I'm was wondering if Harvey Comics developed their "Boo of the Month" feature in a fashion similar to how E.C. started openly acknowledging and adapting Ray Bradbury's short stories after they passed a few of them off as their own product. If you look at the issues immediately preceding the first "Boo," ("Ivan's-Woe" from #23), the writers were "freely" adapting several literary works without giving any kind of credit or attribution. "I'll String Along" (#20) is a clear variation of Ambrose Bierce's "An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge;" Ambrose can rest easy (wherever he is) knowing that his legacy still remains intact. "Revenge" (#22) is a total copy of the immensely popular Samuel Blas story of the same name; it would later be adapted, illegitimately and legitimately, for E.C.'s Crime Suspenstories as "Murder May Boomerang" and as the first episode of Alfred Hitchcock Presents. And "The Hunter," lest I'm mistaken, is a play on Walter Van Tilburg Clark's 1949 novel The Track of the Cat

Is it possible that there was legal action implied or threatened that prompted Harvey to adopt the "Boo of the Month" moniker to show that they were consciously sourcing ideas from literature? The fact that the four stories written under this banner were essentially parodies makes this appear unlikely, but it is a curious series of events nonetheless. I wonder if any of our readers know of or spotted other plots that were mined from the book rack.

No "Chilly Chamber Music" this time around; in Witches Tales we have the appropriately-named "Mother Mongoose's Nursery Crimes." These are, for the most part, pretty forgettable. Some of them abandon any preconceptions of horror altogether and just go for cheap jokes and gags in the style of a raunchy limerick. In one, a hot-blooded plumber eyeing his foxy customer's legs gets smacked in the face with a pipe. The end. Definitely nowhere near the traumatizing serenades from "Chilly Chamber Music," but this perversion of Georgie Porgie offers a close approximation of the seeming "sweetness" quickly transitioning to the ghastly that that feature was notable for.


The Comics
Witches Tales #17-26


#17 (February 1953)
Cover by Lee Elias

“Bridge of Death”
Art by Warren Kremer and Howard Nostrand

“Dimension IV”
Art by Rudy Palais

“Creatures of the Bomb”
Art by Moe Marcus

“Mannequin of Murder”
Art by Manny Stallman







#18 (April 1953)
Cover by Lee Elias

“Walpurgis!”
Art by Howard Nostrand

“Bird of Prey”
Art by Abe Simon

“Star of Doom”
Art Uncredited

“Zodiac”
Art by Warren Kremer







#19 (June 1953)
Cover by Lee Elias

“The Pact”
Art by Bob Powell

“Jungle”
Art by Howard Nostrand

“Honeymoon”
Art by Lee Elias

“A Matter of Taste”
Art by Jack Sparling







#20 (August 1953)
Cover by Warren Kremer

“Jazz!”
Art by Lee Elias

“Kiss and Kill”
Art by Bob Powell

“Shock!”
Art by Howard Nostrand

“I’ll String Along”
Art by Jack Sparling







#21 (October 1953)
Cover by Lee Elias

“The Invasion”
Art by Bob Powell

“Revenge”
Art by Manny Stallman

“The Chase”
Art by Jack Sparling

“Dead End”
Art by Howard Nostrand







#22 (December 1953)
Cover by Lee Elias

“Day of Panic”
Art by Howard Nostrand

“Chain Reaction”
Art by Pete Riss

“The Hunter”
Art by Bob Powell

“Double Crossed”
Art by Jack Sparling







#23 (February 1954)
Cover by Lee Elias

“Henry Small… Huckster”
Art by Bill Benulis and Jack Abel

“Ivan’s-Woe”
Art by Howard Nostrand

“The Wig-Maker”
Art by Joe Certa and Jack Abel

“So What Next”
Art by Bob Powell







#24 (April 1954)
Cover by Lee Elias

“Undertaker”
Art by Howard Nostrand

“Mutiny on the Boundary”
Art by Bob Powell

“Eye Eye, Sir”
Art by Sid Check

“Monumental Feat”
Art by Manny Stallman and Joe Certa







#25 (June 1954)
Cover by Howard Nostrand

“The Ticket”
Art by Manny Stallman

“Ali Barber and the Forty Thieves”
Art by Bob Powell

“What’s Happening at—8:30 P. M.”
Art by Howard Nostrand

“Monopoly”
Art by Manny Stallman







#26 (August 1954)
Cover by Lee Elias

“Long Shot”
Art by Manny Stallman and Ross Andru

“Withering Heights”
Art by Bob Powell and Howard Nostrand

“Go Vampire”
Art Uncredited

“Up There”
Art by Joe Certa







#27 (August 1954)
Cover by Lee Elias

(A complete reprinting of WT #6)



#28 (December 1954)
Cover Uncredited

(A complete reprinting of WT #8)



















In four weeks, our first startling look at Black Cat Mystery!

Do You Dare Enter? Part Forty-Eight: June 1974

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The DC Mystery Anthologies 1968-1976
by Peter Enfantino and
Jack Seabrook


Nick Cardy
Unexpected 157

"The House of the Executioner"
Story by Leo Dorfman
Art by ER Cruz

"The Corpse in the Dead Letter Office"
Story Uncredited
Art by John Calnan

"Something's Alive in Volcano 13!"
Story Uncredited
Art by Jim Mooney
(reprinted from House of Mystery #83, February 1959)

"The Man Who Cheated Death"
Story Uncredited
Art by Bill Ely
(reprinted from House of Mystery #101, August 1960)

"The Mystery of the Sorcerer's Squad"
Story Uncredited
Art by Ruben Moreira
(reprinted from House of Mystery #118, January 1962)

"The Phantom Duel"
Story Uncredited
Art by Bill Ely
(reprinted from House of Secrets #1, December 1956)

"Beware, I Can Read Your Mind"
Story Uncredited
Art by Sheldon Moldoff
(reprinted from Tales of the Unexpected #7, November 1956)

"I Battled the Abominable Snowman"
Story Uncredited
Art by John Prentice
(reprinted from My Greatest Adventure #10, August 1956)

"Born Loser!"
Story by Carl Wessler
Art by Sonny Trinidad

"The Mystery of the Teen-Age Swami"
Story Uncredited
Art by Mort Meskin
(reprinted from House of Mystery #92, November 1959)

"Body Snatcher!"
Story by Carl Wessler
Art by Rich Buckler

"Who Will Kill Gigantus?"
Story by George Kashdan
Art by Alfredo Alcala

Peter Enfantino's dream girl
Jack: Sheldon Sutton, reporter for The Dispatch, shows up late one evening at "The House of the Executioner" to interview Loren Grue, the pretty, young woman who is the last of a long line of executioners. The building is haunted by the ghosts of her ancestors, including Uncle Jonah, who died a frustrated man. He only got to use his hangman's noose on one criminal before the state changed to the electric chair and then outlawed capital punishment. His last victim was Sheldon Sutton's brother! Sutton believes his late sibling was innocent and pulls a gun on Ms. Grue, but before he can shoot he is electrocuted when he yanks the phone cord from the wall and it comes in contact with a fully functional electric chair that Uncle Jonah had left behind. This reads like a story that was slotted for Ghosts and Leo Dorfman never met a tale he couldn't monotonize. Cruz's art is nice to look at but the story goes nowhere fast.

Peter: Another 100-page Super Spectacular! and, judging by the first two stories, the same will hold true of this one that held for the others: the old stuff is better than the new. "The House of the Executioner" is a nicely illustrated bit of mindless fluff. Why would anyone live in a house haunted by dead executioners? Sutton being unmasked as the brother of the final victim of Uncle Jonah is a tad... um... shocking?

Click here for the music
Jack: When Margaret Poe and Luanne Lowry decided to tour the old ghost town of Copperton, they did not suspect that one of them would end up "The Corpse in the Dead Letter Office"! Margaret finds a yellowed newspaper from a hundred years ago and reads an ad from Sam Harrison, a man looking to correspond with a woman. She mails him a letter and becomes possessed. A seance reveals that ghosts are after her and she disappears, only to turn up dead. There is no mystery as to why the writer of this muck did not sign his work. John Calnan also neglected to put his name on the art, but the GCD confirmed what we all suspected about who was responsible for the bizarre poses of the two young women.

Peter: The much "beloved" (at least around these parts) art of John Calnan continues to confound. I'm pretty sure that Madge is supposed to be terrified in the panel at the bottom of page 3 so why does she look like she's attempting the twist? Has Calnan ever filled in his backgrounds with anything but a solid color? And I'm really confused by that climax. Why did the spirits murder Marge?

"Born Loser!"
Jack: Lou Lowry is a "Born Loser!" who wants to get himself arrested and thrown in jail so that he can take advantage of free room and board for the weekend. His plans are interrupted by various good deeds that endear him to the police but, when a man offers him a job, he finds himself thrown in the pokey for trying to sneak through the turnstiles on the subway for lack of a token. Wessler's story makes sense for a change and Trinidad's art isn't half-bad, but praising something like this really shows how low our expectations are.

Peter: I'll take what I can get, Jack! "Born Loser" is something not only Unexpected but perhaps Unprecedented... a really good story (with a satisfyingly ironic climax) courtesy of Carl Wessler. Someone ring the dinner gong!

Jack: Morgue attendant Roy Cabal becomes a "Body Snatcher!" when he starts selling corpses to the local medical school so that he can spend money on his new girlfriend. He murders his partner when the man threatens to tell the cops, but the act causes a near-fatal heart attack and Roy is rushed into surgery. The heart surgeon gives him a new ticker but Roy won't get to enjoy it for long, since he's headed for the electric chair for murder. This is some fairly rough, early work by Rich Buckler, who seems not to have discovered the Kirby swipe file quite yet.

"Body Snatcher!"
Peter: It's not just the out-of-whack linear storytelling that makes "Body Snatcher" a stinker (welcome home, Carl Wessler!), it's the dreadful Buckler artwork. Even though these DC titles never listed inkers, I have to believe it's the embellisher's fault that Rich's art is so bad here. For proof, one only has to jump over to Marvel's Fantastic Four #147 (on sale the same month as this issue of Unexpected) to see what the right inker can do for Buckler (in the case of FF, it was Joltin' Joe Sinnott). The artist's work there is dynamic and cutting-edge (and would become even more so by the time he helped create Deathlok the Demolisher for Astonishing Tales a couple months later), arguably the best FF artwork since The King jumped ship. You can't convince me Buckler did his own inks here, as "Body Snatcher" is just too muddy and pedestrian.

"Who Will Kill Gigantus?"
Jack: Calvert and Boehme discover a T-Rex in the jungle and bring it back to Washington, D.C., but the natives who came with it set it off on a path of destruction. The horrified public wonders "Who Will Kill Gigantus?" and the native chief says he can tame the monster if he is allowed to return him to the jungle. Calvert sees his profits evaporating and puts up a fight, but soon finds himself dead and plugging a hole in Gigantus's noggin, keeping the beast calm on the trip home. Even Alcala can't save this sloppy mess.

Peter: George Kashdan's take on King Kong benefits greatly from the art of "He Who Knows No Peer" but suffers from a super-silly climax wherein an inspector evidently doesn't even check the top of the dinosaur's head and thus misses the fact that there's a human being stuck inside Gigantus' blowhole! Oh well, who reads these things anyway? I like the pitchers!

Jack: Reprint time! "Something's Alive in Volcano 13!" and it turns out to be Prof. Fielding, who was transformed into a giant caveman by mysterious gases. Can the intrepid team of explorers get out alive before they start to grow and get hairy? The Mole, a tank with a drill for a nose, got them down below easily enough but getting back up is not as easy.

"The Mystery of the
Sorcerer's Squad"
Lucky Lorman is "The Man Who Cheated Death" by means of a magical painting given to him by a dying hobo. His success at beating the reaper helps him climb to the pinnacle of the crime world, but he forgets that being on top means someone will come gunning for you.

"The Mystery of the Sorcerer's Squad" has to do with three ancient magic wands that appear to have real power--or do they? My favorite bit in this one comes when an antique dealer asks "Lt. Jed Conway of the Bunko Squad" to verify the antiquity of the artifacts, because he knows about such things.

In "The Phantom Duel," a suitor wins his lady's hand by defeating his rival in a duel, but the ghost of the loser finds a way to exact his revenge a year later.

"Beware, I Can Read Your Mind," warns Tello the Great. He should have waited a few years and become a Marvel superhero! As a boy, Tello was exposed to radiation and, as a result, he found that he could hear the thoughts of others. He becomes a carnival mind reader but has to flee society when all of the thoughts he hears start to overwhelm him. An intriguing story with fun art by an unknown artist.

"Beware, I Can Read Your Mind"
Frank Martin is able to boast that "I Battled the Abominable Snowman" after a trip to the Himalayas to capture a wild mountain goat. But was the snowman real or was it just a trick performed by another man in the party?

Finally, "The Mystery of the Teen-Age Swami" turns out to rest with a camera from the future, yet safecracker Ray Weede runs into trouble when he tries to profit from the strange device. The reprints range from good to really good this time around, though I could do without the final panel revisions to have a character say something along the lines of "That was so UNEXPECTED!"

"Something's Alive
in Volcano 13!"
Peter: Seven reprints this issue and not a horrendous one in the bunch. Despite a whole lot of silliness and naiveté, there's also a big bunch of imagination and wonder on display; as I've remarked before, the writers of the 1950s and 1960s DC fantasy tales just seem to have had a lot more respect for their readership than those pumping out swill like the first two "original" tales in this issue. "Something's Alive" is a fun time-waster that won't tax your brain much (in the best tradition of DC sci-fi). Think of all the fabulous things you could do with a "mole"! The best of the oldies, "The Phantom Duel" has a few Unexpected twists and turns I didn't see coming (like the otherwise respectable lead protagonist cheating while dueling and his ultimate death by uprooted tree!) and some nice Bill Ely artwork. "Sorcerer's Squad!" relies on some pretty questionable sleights of hand to get its message across (my favorite roll-your-eyes moment being the revelation that the staggered crew of pranksters were actually attached to a hook!) but still retains a heaping helping of charm.

Jack: The annual sales report in this issue tells us that Unexpected was selling an average of 164,102 copies a month. Not bad!


Luis Dominguez
House of Secrets 120

"To Never Grow Old"
Story by Virgil North
Art by Tony DeZuniga

"The Right Demon Could Do It!"
Story by Sheldon Mayer
Art by Paul Kirchner and Tex Blaisdell

"The Lion's Share"
Story by Steve Skeates
Art by Alfredo Alcala

Peter: Scientist Harry Jungmann is hoping "To Never Grow Old" by inventing a machine that not only stops the aging process but reverses it! After several false starts, Harry is trying the patience of his business partner, Max. During the latest experiment, an aged skid row bum is transformed into a young man but, after only a few minutes, the derelict dies. Seeing this as his golden opportunity, Max conks Harry over the head, steals the way-back machine, and calls the police to report a homicide. Harry gets twenty to life but, happily for him, the prison has a fabulous laboratory and Harry gets back to work. Since he's been a model prisoner, Harry is released after only fifteen years and looks up his old partner, Max. But this is a completely different Harry, a younger version of his old self, and Max is impressed  enough to offer his backing once again to finance Harry's machine. The professor tells Max that he wants everything in the past to be forgotten and, to prove it, he'll make Max young again as well. Professor Jungmann zaps his partner with his youth ray and Max becomes a crying baby. The House of Secrets prison is just as well-stocked and utilized as the one on the old Batman TV show (where they used to let Penguin and Riddler lounge around in their uniforms!), letting its inmates have the run of the place. And this was a nutty professor who got sent up the river for conducting dangerous experiments in the first place. Rehabilitation, indeed! The climax is a good zinger but the journey there is a bit tired. At least we have the art of Tony DeZuniga to keep us awake.

"To Never Grow Old"

Jack: DeZuniga's art is always good but I think it worked better on the Batman comic around this time. I have to admit I did not see that ending coming, which is always a plus. However, the story seems like it could have had a little more meat to it--there is no real horror here, just a twist ending.

Where is John Calnan now that we need him?
Peter: Harrison Quimby goes through life cursing people right and left, never knowing he's being watched by a demon who's taking notes. Eventually, said demon approaches Quimby with a proposition: he'll make Quimby the ruler of the world and that will solve the man's general dislike of everything and everyone. Quimby agrees but, in the grand tradition of deals with the devil, the world he's left to lord over is not to his liking either. "The Right Demon Could Do It!"is a decent "Demonic Bargain" tale that is rendered virtually unreadable by the absolutely ugly and cartoonish artwork. At least the backgrounds are filled in (smiley face emoticon inserted here). Blaisdell spent several years as the primary on the daily Little Orphan Annie strip.

Jack: I went from thinking this was terrible to loving it. Paul Kirchner also drew for High Times and Heavy Metal and his pencils here are so stylized that they look like something out of an underground comic. Some panels remind me of Sam Glanzman or Robert Crumb. The demon is wonderful and it grows bigger and bigger until it fills entire frames. The buxom Miss Fox and the downbeat ending, where the demon gives Quimby a noose, are unlike much else we've seen in the DC horror line.

Peter: Big game hunter Michael Hoover is a right old nasty sod but adept with a rifle in the African wilderness. When Hoover kills a sacred lion, he makes enemies of the local voodoo-practicing natives. Despite my obvious thumbs-up for the art, "The Lion's Share" hammers the nail in the coffin of the sub-genre of "treacherous, unfeeling, unthinking, and selfish hunter who's eventually brought down by black magic." Mr. Skeates... perhaps it's time to investigate another old warhorse?

"The Lion's Share"

Jack: Alcala is always worth a look but this is a tired story, as you note. Did Alfredo spend time in the jungle observing native rituals? He sure seems to have them down pat.


Nick Cardy
The Witching Hour 43

"Village of the Vile"
Story by George Kashdan
Art by Alfredo Alcala

"The Gun That Couldn't Stop Killing"
Story by Carl Wessler
Art by Ruben Yandoc

"When Time Went Mad"
Story by George Kashdan
Art by Jerry Grandenetti

Jack: Sandy and Inga are two pretty young women on a cycling tour who happen upon the "Village of the Vile," where everyone is nasty and the inhabitants await the arrival of an important visitor at midnight. The only spark of kindness comes from a small boy, who offers Sandy his handkerchief to use as a bandage when she hurts her ankle in a fall. At midnight the Devil arrives, but the boy's single act of kindness disqualifies the village from joining Satan's kingdom. The women ride off and the townsfolk are angry that all of their nastiness went for naught, but when the boy kicks a cat they decide that perhaps the Devil will return and reconsider letting them join him. The story starts off a bit shakily, in part due to Alcala's trouble drawing normal people, but when the Devil shows up it improves, and the downbeat ending is of interest.

"Village of the Vile"
 Peter: Funny that the cover claims this is a "Village of Evil" but Kashdan plays Scrabble with the title on the inside. Either spelling, "Vile/Evil" is one very dumb story. Are these the same two witless dames we've seen traveling through these stories lately or do they all look and act alike? Just remember that editor Murray Botinoff had a big sign over his office door: "throw whatever you can at the wall and hope something sticks!"

Jack: Lucius Howton is so upset at being passed over for the top job at Yorktown College that he hypnotizes a gun-toting stranger and tells him to kill the school's president. The deed is done and Lucius is next in line, but he didn't reckon with "The Gun That Couldn't Stop Killing." The man remains hypnotized and stalks Howton, the new president. Howton demands police protection and eventually gets his own gun, but when the stranger appears on the scene the police mistake Howton for the killer and shoot him in the back. As Howton dies, his trigger finger contracts and the gun fires, killing the stranger. Yandoc is a second-tier member of the Filipino artist group, in my opinion, but his talent is far greater than that of Carl Wessler ca. 1974, since this story is a one-note joke that goes on too long.

"The Gun That Couldn't Stop Killing"

Peter: The cop never found out he'd shot the wrong man? 1974: The Year Before Ballistics!

"When Time Went Mad"
Jack: Horst is a rotten young man whose dying father gives him three bottles with a liquid that, when consumed, will send him into the past, present or future. He robs a jewelry store and uses a drink to escape into the past, only to find himself in a worse situation. Another drink sends him into the future, where things are no better. Drinking from the third bottle sends him back to the present, where he is again at the scene of the robbery. Desperate to escape, he recalls his father's instruction to take a drink from all three bottles to escape trouble. This lands him in limbo, where he will remain for eternity. At least, I think that's what happened in "When Time Went Mad." The crazy moves back and forth through time are illustrated in the usual slapdash Grandenetti style, so who can be certain?

Peter: "When Time Went Mad" is way too disjointed to make heads or tails of and welcome back, Bad Jerry!


Nick Cardy
Ghosts 27

"House of 1,000 Ghosts"
Story by Leo Dorfman
Art by Gerry Talaoc

"Conversation with a Corpse!"
Story by Leo Dorfman
Art by Bob Brown and Frank McLaughlin

"The Haunted Hotel"
Story by Leo Dorfman
Art by Ernie Chan

"Welcome to Your Tomb"
Story by Leo Dorfman
Art by John Calnan

Jack: Sarah Winchester, wife of the man who invented the Winchester rifle, is tormented by the ghost of her husband, who insists that she build a home for the specters of all those who were killed by the gun. She spends a fortune to build a massive mansion where the ghosts take up residence and she and a team of servants wait on them. One night, a terrible calamity occurs and Sarah and the servants flee the house, only to witness the servants' wing collapse in the 1906 San Francisco earthquake. Sarah is convinced that the ghosts created an uproar to save the lives of all the living inhabitants of the "House of 1,000 Ghosts." It feels like we don't get enough of Gerry Talaoc's art lately in these comics, so I'm happy to see it, but the story is flat.

"House of 1,000 Ghosts"

Peter: Having grown up ten miles north of the Winchester Mystery House in San Jose, California, and having toured the landmark a few times, I can attest to most of what transpires in "House of 1,000 Ghosts." Well, most of what happens. The "true-life" foundation of Leo Dorfman's short stories always drowns out any decent narrative; it's a lazy way of writing when all you do is connect dots.

"Conversation with a Corpse!"
Jack: Lt. Harry Burger is a bombardier flying over Berlin in late 1944 when his plane is attacked and nearly everyone but him is killed. He sees the ghost of a German plane from WWI and realizes it's the same plane whose pilot his father had saved. He follows the plane to safety, guided by whispered instructions from his badly wounded captain. Landing in England, he is told that what he thought was a ghost plane was really the reflection of his own plane on a cloud. Worse still is the news that the captain was shot through the heart and Harry had been having a "Conversation with a Corpse!" Not a bad little story from Leo Dorfman, though it mines familiar territory. Brown and McLaughlin turn in serviceable art.

Peter: Nice art by Bob Brown (who was about to take over Marvel's Daredevil at the time and save that title from the doldrums) but I can't help feeling I've read this story... more than a few times. Dorfman makes things overly confusing by involving not one but two ghosts in the narrative.

Ghosts check in, but they don't check out
Jack: Ronald Morton spends a chilling night in "The Haunted Hotel" as a spook repeatedly stabs at a ghostly figure in the bed. Next morning, he learns that a murder took place there a century ago and he and the manager discover the skeleton of the murderer behind a hidden door inside the room's closet. A three-page quickie, this tale is enlivened by Ernie Chua's facility at drawing ghosts and skeletons. The last panel is especially nice.

Peter: Well, at least it was only three pages long but how did Ronald Morton know so much about the skeleton when, obviously, no one else did?

Jack: One rainy night in 1972, Sam Edwards, foreman of a wrecking crew that will knock down a brownstone in midtown Manhattan the next day, sees human figures inside the soon to be demolished building. He goes in and discovers the funeral of a young woman being held by a witches' coven! They lock him in a closet but he escapes by picking the lock with a button he finds on the floor. Sam races to the police station, only to be told that the event he witnessed happened 20 years ago and the button he holds is a campaign button for Ike from 1952. He heads back to the brownstone and again sees the figures through the window, causing him to wonder if he will kill living people when he razes the building the next day. Sam is quite handy with the pin on that button and he manages to jump out of a window without getting hurt due to some conveniently placed sandbags.

Another hot babe sacrificed to Satan

Peter: What's worse: a credit at the beginning of a story that reads Art by John Calnan or getting to the climax of a story only to realize Leo decided not to write an ending to the story? And starring Ed Asner as the disbelieving Sergeant.



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The Hitchcock Project-Roald Dahl Part Two: "Dip in the Pool" [3.35]

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by Jack Seabrook

The second story by Roald Dahl to be adapted for Alfred Hitchcock Presents was "Dip in the Pool," written in the fall of 1951 and first published in the January 19, 1952 issue of The New Yorker. William Botibol, an American on a British ship cruising across the Atlantic, dines with the ship's purser and asks him when the captain usually estimates the distance the ship will cover in the twenty-four hours that began that noon. After a calm start to the day, the sea had grown unexpectedly rough around dinner time, and Botibol imagines that the distance traveled will be less than the captain's estimate. Each evening, the ship's passengers bid at auction on numbers estimating how far the ship will travel in a day, and Botibol thinks that he can win a large sum of money if he secures the "low field' estimate. He uses all the money in his savings to win the low field but awakens the next morning to find that the sea has calmed and the ship is moving fast to make up lost time.

"Dip in the Pool" was first
published in this issue
Botibol decides to leap off the side of the ship and into the ocean, figuring that his rescue will slow the vessel's progress and he will win the money. He finds a solitary woman on deck to witness his plight and call for help, but when he leaps into the water the woman is silent. Unfortunately for Mr. Botibol, the woman's nurse does not believe her story of a man who dived overboard, and he is left to drown as the ship continues on its voyage.

Dahl's story is a witty piece of understated English irony, where the pool of the title represents both the betting pool and the enormous pool of the Atlantic Ocean. Botibol takes a dip in both pools; dip is also slang for a pickpocket, and he tries to pick the pockets of his fellow passengers by attempting to ensure his own victory. Botibol is also a bit of a dip himself, or a loser. The ending is clever, for as the ship moves away from Botibol, a "bobbing black speck," Dahl ignores his plight and focuses instead on the nameless "woman with the fat ankles" who tells her attendant, "Such a nice man . . . he waved to me." The wave, of course, was a desperate signal for help, but to the poor woman it was a sign of friendship.

Once again, Dahl mixes horror and humor in a compact tale. Does Botibol deserve his fate? Of course not, but it does represent an amusing comeuppance for a know it all.

Keenan Wynn as Botibol
The story has been adapted for television three times. The first was for the CBS series Danger; Albert Hubbell wrote the teleplay and Harry Townes starred in a program broadcast on March 21, 1954. Robert C. Dennis next adapted it for Alfred Hitchcock Presents in 1958; the episode was directed by Alfred Hitchcock and starred Keenan Wynn as William Botibol. It was rehearsed and filmed on April 15 and 16, 1958, and it aired on CBS on Sunday, June 1, 1958. During filming, Hitchcock's wife Alma was undergoing experimental treatment for cervical cancer and, though the director was an emotional wreck off set, he maintained a calm demeanor during production.

From the introduction to the show
The television show is a triumph of light entertainment, where Dennis's script expands the story and the cast performs to perfection. In the framing sequence, Hitchcock lounges on a deck chair on the S.S. Hitchcock, reading a copy of what close inspection reveals to be the February 1958 issue of Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine! During the episode, a character named Renshaw sits at a table in the ship's lounge, reading the very same issue of Hitchcock's magazine. Some writers have called this an example of Hitchcock making a cameo appearance in the episode, much like his famous cameo in Lifeboat in a newspaper ad for weight loss, but I think it is more in the nature of a not so subtle plug for the periodical, which had begun publication with an issue dated December 1956.

Close up
While Botibol travels alone in the story, the show opens with a scene in the cabin shared by him and his wife, Ethel. She reads excitedly from a travel guide about sites to see in Florence while he preens before a mirror; his idea of fun involves gambling casinos, bistros and dancing girls. Ethel remarks that her aunt left the money to her, yet Botibol is brash and boorish, over tipping a steward who brings a cocktail and a bottle of seasickness pills. He wears a loud, plaid dinner jacket that displays his lack of refined taste.

What Alfred is reading
On his way to the lounge, Botibol runs into Emily, a middle-aged woman who finds him charming and tells her companion so; she is the same woman who will fail to raise the alarm in the episode's final scene. Botibol arrives in the lounge and joins Renshaw, another character new to the story; he is a refined Englishman, wealthy and somewhat older than Botibol, who finds the American to be amusing company. Botibol continues to demonstrate his lack of class, over tipping again and pretending to be a seasoned European traveler. Renshaw invites Botibol to the pool after dinner, explaining what it is and how it works for both his companion and the viewer. Renshaw unfavorably compares betting in the pool to investing in the stock market, which represents an investment based on careful research--or, as Botibol understands it, "inside information."

This failure to grasp the difference between a wager and an investment based on detailed research turns out to be Botibol's undoing. He sits with the purser at dinner and grills him about the captain's estimate, in a scene that mirrors the first scene in the short story, then asks a crew member on deck about the ship's speed before turning up at the auction and asking Renshaw for his opinion. Botibol thinks he has done the research needed to make a wise investment, yet--like his over tipping and loud dinner jacket--his actions betray his lack of knowledge. The auction is held and the details are spelled out much more explicitly than in the story. Next morning, Botibol and Ethel greet the calm day in their twin beds (1950s TV at its most censored); he admits to her that he lost money gambling but conceals the real amount, almost $1000 of their $1500 travel budget.

Renshaw is reading it too!
Later that morning, Botibol sees Mr. and Mrs. Renshaw relaxing in deck chairs; Mrs. Renshaw finds him unbearable and quickly excuses herself, allowing the gambler to replace her in the chair next to Renshaw. After Renshaw offers a few less than helpful suggestions of ways that Botibol might still win his bet, he leaves, and Botibol plans his final, desperate leap, his thoughts conveyed in voice over. The voice over continues in his cabin as he dresses and formulates his plan; on deck, he finds Emily, the woman whom he had met earlier, and converses with her. Once again, he is making a feeble attempt to do research and gather information. His brief chat with the woman leads him to conclude: "Hearing good. Eyesight adequate. You're it, lady." As he did the evening before, he thinks that he has gathered enough intelligence to turn a bet into an investment; he believes that his leap into the ocean will result in predictable behavior on the woman's part. However, his shallow investigation failed to reveal that she was not of sound mind, and the lack of that key piece of information means that he loses his bet and his life.

Close up
A vacant-eyed Emily speaks the final lines, as she did in the story, with the camera close up on her face. Donald Spoto noted that, like "Lamb to the Slaughter,""Dip in the Pool" ends with "the stare of madness." Robert C. Dennis's adaptation of Dahl's short story is brilliant; by adding new characters and focusing on Botibol's attempts to turn a bet into an investment, he deepens the meaning of the story without changing its central plot points.

Robert C. Dennis (1915-1983) wrote for radio before moving into TV in 1950. He penned many episodes for TV series over the next 35 years, including 30 episodes of Alfred Hitchcock Presents and four episodes of The Outer Limits. Hitchcock teleplays include adapting Henry Slesar's "The Right Kind of House" and co-writing "A True Account" with Fredric Brown.

Keenan Wynn and Louise Platt
Keenan Wynn (1916-1986) stars as Botibol and gives an outstanding, comic performance. The son of vaudeville comic Ed Wynn, he was born Francis Xavier Aloysius James Jeremiah Keenan Wynn! A great character actor on radio, he appeared in movies from the early 1940s to the 1980s and on TV from the mid 1950s till his death. Notable roles included parts in Rod Serling's TV drama Requiem for a Heavyweight (1956), Stanley Kubrick's Dr. Strangelove (1964), an episode of The Twilight Zone, two episodes of Night Gallery, and two episodes of Alfred Hitchcock Presents, including Henry Slesar's "The Last Escape."

Philip Bourneuf and Fay Wray
The role of Renshaw is played by Philip Bourneuf (1908-1979), a founding member of the Actors Studio who appeared in movies and on TV from the 1940s through the 1970s. He was on the Hitchcock show three times, appeared on Thriller once, and had a role in Fritz Lang's Beyond a Reasonable Doubt (1956).

Mrs. Renshaw is played by Fay Wray (1907-2004), who starred in King Kong (1933) and many other classic films. This was one of her two appearances on Alfred Hitchcock Presents; the other was in Henry Slesar's "The Morning After." An impressive website dedicated to Ms. Wray may be found here.

"He waved to me!"
Ethel Botibol, William's long-suffering wife, is played by Louise Platt (1915-2003), who is best known for a part in John Ford's Stagecoach (1939). She had a handful of parts in movies and on TV, including two episodes of Alfred Hitchcock Presents, but was mostly a stage actress.

Emily, the woman who watches Botibol dive off the side of the ship, is played by Doreen Lang (1915-1999); while this was her only appearance on the Hitchcock TV show, she did have small parts in three Hitchcock films: The Wrong Man (1956), North By Northwest (1959) and The Birds (1963).

That speck in the water is Botibol
I was not able to find a source to watch the 1954 adaptation (titled "A Dip in the Pool") on the TV series Danger, but the 1979 adaptation for Roald Dahl's Tales of the Unexpected is available for free online viewing here. The teleplay is by Ronald Harwood and Jack Weston stars as Botibol. In his introduction to the show, Dahl admits to being a "mad gambler" and says that he enjoys writing stories about gamblers because he is interested in how people behave when they make a big wager. This version retains the Renshaw character but leaves out Botibol's wife. It is much more faithful to the original story than was the Alfred Hitchcock Presents version and the half-hour is quite entertaining, mainly due to Weston's performance; he has a much different interpretation of Botibol than does Keenan Wynn. This version aired on May 12, 1979.

Dahls' original story may be read for free here. The Hitchcock version is available on DVD but is not currently available for online viewing.

Sources:

Dahl, Roald. "Dip in the Pool." 1952. Roald Dahl Collected Stories. Ed. Jeremy Treglown. New York: Everyman's Library, 2006. 284-94. Print.

"Dip in the Pool."Alfred Hitchcock Presents. CBS. 1 June 1958. Television.

"A Dip in the Pool."Roald Dahl's Tales of the Unexpected. 12 May 1979. Television.

Grams, Martin, and Patrik Wikstrom. The Alfred Hitchcock Presents Companion. Churchville, MD: OTR Pub., 2001. Print.

IMDb. IMDb.com, n.d. Web. 10 Mar. 2015.

McGilligan, Patrick. Alfred Hitchcock: A Life in Darkness and Light. New York: Regan, 2003. Print.

Spoto, Donald. The Life of Alfred Hitchcock: The Dark Side of Genius. London: Collins, 1983. Print.

Treglown, Jeremy. "Appendix."Roald Dahl Collected Stories. New York: Everyman's Library, 2006. 850. Print.

Wikipedia. Wikimedia Foundation, n.d. Web. 10 Mar. 2015.

William and Ethel in their cabin

William meets Emily in the corridor
Renshaw is so dapper
The auction
Renshaw has traded in his
magazine for a book
Checking out Emily
Over the side he goes!
She doesn't believe a word of it.

Star Spangled DC War Stories Part 49: June 1963

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The DC War Comics 1959-1976
by Corporals Enfantino and Seabrook


Joe Kubert
Our Army at War 131

"One Pair of Dogtags--For Sale!"
Story by Robert Kanigher
Art by Joe Kubert

"Desert Hotfoot"
Story by Bob Haney
Art by Jack Abel

"Everybody Makes It In Dog Co.!"
Story by Robert Kanigher
Art by Jack Abel

Jack: When Easy Co. is given the task of taking the French village of L'Oisseau, it looks deserted, but Sgt. Rock goes on ahead alone to make sure. He finds a Nazi machine gun nest hidden in the wreckage and manages to destroy it with some well-thrown grenades. Giving the all-clear sign to the rest of Easy Co. turns out to be a mistake, as the weapon from a second Nazi machine gun pins down the men of Easy and knocks Rock off his feet. The sergeant doesn't give up, though, and manages to crawl up under fire and disarm the gun using his helmet. Rock is critically wounded and, when Easy Co. gets him to a doctor in a nearby camp, no one can find a donor with AB negative blood to save the fading hero. Luckily, a nurse lying on a stretcher has the necessary blood type and, one transfusion later, Rock is saved.

As Easy Co. moves on, Rock is troubled by not knowing the name of the nurse who saved him and whom he was not able to thank. He asks after her everywhere but is unable to locate her until she turns up in the middle of another battle. This time, she is wounded, and Rock is able to repay the favor at last with a blood donation of his own. When Kanigher and Kubert are firing on all cylinders, it makes me glad I read comic books. "One Pair of Dogtags--For Sale!" is a terrific story that will be in my top ten of 1963.

Sgt. Rock hallucinates that
Bulldozer is a cute blonde

Peter: A bit of a lightweight entry compared to some of the heavy lifters we've read lately but, make no mistake, still a good read. For some reason, the happy ending doesn't come off as sappy to me. Far from lightweight, though, is the standout sequence where Rock has to improvise or watch his men die; he manages to craft an oven mitt from his tin pot to deflect a cannon from taking out his guys. Fabulously gritty stuff, that!

Not so much
Jack: A soldier with aching feet gets a "Desert Hotfoot!" when his sarge tells him to walk across the desert and bring back a prisoner. He trades his watch for a passing Arab's camel but is quickly thrown from the beast's back. He hitches a ride on a U.S. tank but finds it has been hijacked by Nazis. Finally, he forces a Nazi commander at gunpoint to give him a piggyback ride back to camp. It's discouraging to see such a poor story follow such a great Sgt. Rock story, but at least it was short.

Peter:  Lucky for our lazy soldier that the Nazi tank men speak English and they speak it loud enough to hear through inches of steel! So, the only amusing scene in this tedium was the one you weren't supposed to laugh at.  Nothing worse than a comedy that's not funny.

Jack: A soldier trying to take Dead End Hill is determined not to die and let his dog tags become part of the sergeant's growing collection. He rushes a tank and destroys it by shooting into its view slit, thus saving his company from further carnage. His sarge plants a rifle in the ground at the top of the hill and hangs the dog tags of the men who didn't make it from the butt end, announcing that "Everyone Makes it in Dog Co!" To the top of the hill, that is--eventually. A gritty little four-pager from Kanigher that shows that death and despair are not always the end of the story.


Peter: Write this down: "You're not getting my dog tags, Sarge!" There, you've just written a DC war story.


Irv Novick
All American Men of War 97

"The Ship That Fought In Three Wars!"
Story by Robert Kanigher
Art by Irv Novick

"A 'Target' Called Johnny!"
Story by Robert Kanigher
Art by Irv Novick

Peter: A World War I pilot suddenly finds himself in "The Ship That Fought in Three Wars!" Unable to impress the British pilots he's been detailed with, Leftenant Brooks, a young American pilot, attempts to win their attention and respect with air tricks but the seasoned aces aren't buying. They want victories, not stunts. So, determined to score a few kills before the sun rises, our hero hits the skies in search of prey and finds a helpless German zeppelin. Shooting the giant balloon down, the pilot heads home convinced he's taken the first step, only to be shot down (pun intended) by his seniors, who demand proof of the victory. Undeterred, our boy heads back out with his comrades but manages to lose himself in a heavy cloud bank. When he comes out the other end, he's attacked by a lone Messerschmitt, a plane that won't even exist for over two decades! Though Brooks shoots the German from the sky, the men are still not convinced and Brooks heads back out the next day with his young mechanic, Albert, in tow. Emerging from the same strange cloud bank, they are fired upon by a commie jet over Korean skies. While filming the phantom jet, Albert takes a bullet for the team just before Brooks blasts it from the sky. Once on the ground, the film is shown to be blank but, just as he's receiving another dressing-down from his Major, a doctor rushes into the viewing room to announce he's just dug a bullet out of young Albert; a bullet of unknown caliber! Enjoyable enough romp, but don't look for any explanations from Bob. How did this pilot fly into a cloud and end up in MIG Alley? Who knows? Another five pages and Leftenant Brooks might have landed on one of those uncharted islands in the Pacific. I'm more interested in why the film was blank.


Jack: H'I found bucktoothed, red-headed H'Albert rather annoying, Guv'nor! Haven't we seen this story before, where an American pilot has to prove himself as the first Yank to fight with the RAF? Like you, I was waiting for him to fly over some dinosaurs after he passed through that cloud, but I guess they're limited to the Pacific Ocean. And how handy is that time-warp cloud? He flies through it unintentionally the first time, yet it's always there when he needs to fly back to 1917. And why is Johnny Cloud relegated to the backup slot in his own book?

Peter: In his 16th adventure, Johnny Cloud is having a tough time convincing a hard-nosed tank sergeant that pilots and tank men can work together to win the war. It's only after Cloud makes himself "A Target Called Johnny" and draws the fire of the enemy that the tank sergeant comes around to our hero's way of thinking. The bottom of the bill in our Kanigher/Novick Double Feature isn't much better than the "prestige picture," but it's not bad for a Johnny Cloud starrer. There's a bit in this story where the tank guys admit they have no idea how to use the clock face to identify where an enemy is. That's hard to imagine, isn't it? There's one word to describe Irv Novick's usually dependable artwork in "A Target Called Johnny": cluttered. Way too much activity going on in every panel to focus; it's as if Novick decided each and every panel had to be filled with military vehicles and gunfire. We get one of those typically sappy climaxes where the antagonist comes around to the way our hero thinks in the space of two or three panels and acknowledges what we already know: Johnny Cloud is a genius. Groan.


Jack: Novick's splash page is exciting, but you're right about the cluttered look to the rest of the story. This tale is nearly non-stop battle with little letup and the premise that tank guys don't know how to direct planes is an interesting one. More interesting than this issue's lead feature, but I think that at this point in the run of All American Bob Kanigher was focused on getting three wars into the mag one way or another.


In Our Next Shape-Changing Issue!
On Sale March 30!

COLD PRINT: William Sansom's "A Smell of Fear" and "The Little Room"

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by Jose Cruz

The tricky thing about anthologies is that you're never entirely sure what you're going to get with them. Being that individualized reviews for the book's diverse contents are hardly if ever written, this only increases the unpredictability of each story. When I picked up my copy of The Seventh Pan Book of Horror Stories (1966), what I had expected were tales of gangrenous aberrations and loathsome creatures of the night. The collection certainly had given me my share of this with the likes of R. Chetwynd-Hayes'"The Thing" and David Grant's "The Bats" and Martin Waddell's "Cannibals." But when I arrived at the pair of tales written by William Sansom (1912 - 1976), “A Smell of Fear” and "The Little Room," the last thing I imagined I would find was actual horror.

Like many, I'm attracted to the various trappings and aesthetics of the horror genre, even down to the hoariest of settings. Give me a lonely graveyard or a cobweb-strewn hallway and I'll manage to get my buzz. Vampire crawling out of a casket? Even better. Throw in some fog and a waxy full moon and I'll be good until the morning. But I'll be the first to admit that these elements are empty calories. They're fairly useless unless the writer working with them has imbued them with true dread and vibrancy. Of course, one does not need to rely on these conventions to stir up fearful sensations in the reader's mind. Sometimes the most affecting of horror tales have nary a tombstone in sight.

“A Smell of Fear” and “The Little Room” are two such stories. A former firefighter during the London Blitz, Sansom turned to writing everything from romances to supernatural horror after the Second World War, making his biggest impression with collections published in the 40s and 50s. “The Little Room” debuted in his premier anthology, Something Terrible, Something Lovely (1948) while “A Smell of Fear” was an original to Herbert van Thal’s seventh Pan omnibus. Another tale, “The Vertical Ladder,” had been seen in Pan’s second volume of shuddersome stories while what is perhaps his most famous story, “A Woman Seldom Found,” made the paperback anthology rounds, first cropping up in Alfred Hitchcock’s Stories They Wouldn’t Let Me Do on TV (1957) and hopping around Fontana and Hamlyn books before finding its most recent host in the Vandermeer’s doorstopper volume The Weird (2012). A sold-out collection of Sansom's macabre writings from Tartarus Press was released in 2002.

2nd printing, 1980
“A Smell of Fear” is a portrait of urban paranoia that would likely gain the sympathies of Ramsey Campbell. Diana Craig is a young woman living by herself in London, going through the motions of a dreamless existence interrupted only by Diana’s sharp bursts of fear and apprehension at the most innocuous of situations. Sansom displays his canny eye for descriptive detail both mundane and extraordinary in the opening scene that finds Diana cutting her nails over her bathtub. A moment as thunderingly ordinary as this is imbued with slightly sinister portent, as Diana fancies her cut cuticles resembling shellfish:

However white such nails looked on her fingers, they gleamed yellowish against the white enamel. They just looked curled, and wet, like shrimps or sandfleas. And the surface tension of the water gave them a greyish blur of legs and feelers.

Now a big dark drop of blood splashed down among the shrimp pairings, it washed out pale pink and brought her abruptly to her proper senses.

Sansom pairs the wandering mind of the dreamer, imagining pieces of his character’s body taking on animalistic characteristics, with a kitchen-sink, everyday realism that strikes a primal chord in the reader no matter how much we may differ from Diana. Haven’t we all caught ourselves with one of these funny ideas in our heads?

Funny isn’t exactly what Diana makes of it. She scolds herself for her imagination, just like she does when she believes she’s being methodically followed by a limping man with an ugly birthmark on his face. Is he really breathing down her neck in the fish monger’s shop? Does he actually follow her in the streets as she tries to elude him?

Sansom is both delicate and blunt in his depiction of Diana, laying all her insecurities bare for the scrutiny of the reader. His heartbreaking description of Diana's opinion of her looks demonstrates a knowledge of the way that loneliness and the sound of one's own voice can have on our minds:

Sometimes in a double mirror she had caught sight of her profile and had noticed a tone of placidity in the face, as though this profiled stranger were a little too heavy or pallid or something, shapely but overdone, like a Roman bust. Lips – not enough color? Pale eyelashes? Cheeks too full and flat? It could not be exactly said – and she avoided saying it. A mixture of vanity and humility told her that she was a good-looking, unattractive girl. 

The veracity of the narrative is appropriately muddied by Diana’s neuroses. Like the female protagonists of Shirley Jackson, Sansom’s character is one not to be entirely trusted but she is nonetheless someone who inspires our sympathies. Unlike her male counterparts, Diana feels no need or desire to investigate her apprehensions and “get to the bottom of things.” Her womanly intuition tells her everything; she knows that she’s being followed for a fact, no matter how much she chides herself in the other direction. She is the archetype of the “hysterical woman,” but if anything this shows her (and all her other literary ancestors right down from the madwoman in “The Yellow Wallpaper”) to be the more emotionally intelligent of the sexes. When faced with darkness, men are compelled to probe it while woman instinctively know it for what it is. Fittingly in the horror genre neither gender comes out the better in the end.

And that is exactly how Sansom ends it. Diana finds herself walking along the lonely streets at night with her strange watcher tagging behind and, with that growing fear stirring inside her, the one that can be smelt by dogs (and wolves), she contemplates seeking shelter in a bustling pub before she heads off again because of old anxieties cropping back up. What follows is a startling altercation wherein we discover that Diana’s suspicions were right—but for the wrong reasons—and that good deeds performed in the face of mortal danger lead to punishment. Sansom doesn’t resort to a Blochian twist to unsettle our nerves (she was a werewolf the whole time!), but the frankness with which he confronts the final events of the story grimly reinforce that old adage of the genre we mentioned before: no one goes free.

Though the ending of “A Smell of Fear” is retained to allow the reader to have their first-time frissons with the story, the nature of the discussion for Sansom’s second tale under review entails a precise detailing of its climax and aftermath. Consider this ye only warning.

Hogarth Press, 1948
The titular location of “The Little Room” is the apartment of Sister Margherita, a nun who has just been punished by her convent’s order for an unknown offense. Whatever this woman's crime is, her sentence is clear: death. But the sister will not be facing a firing squad or the gallows. She is to be sealed inside her cubicle, bricked in and cut off from any supply of oxygen so that she will eventually--very eventually--perish from asphyxiation.

And that's it. Margherita's last moments on this earth are described in poignant and unflinching detail by Samson. The story is completely at odds with the reputation that the paperback Pan Horror series garnered with their depictions of stinking flesh and human depravity. Not one drop of blood is spilled and yet it completely succeeds in chilling ours.

One of Samson's great assets as a writer is his sharp insight into the workings of the human mind, a trait that is used to devastating effect here. We initially see Margherita accepting her fate with all the patience and open-heartedness of the truly devoted; she holds no anger or fear for what is to come. She even begins to become bothered by the presence of the female artisans who busy themselves with creating her artificial tomb. It's a purely human tic that finds expression even in the face of permanent isolation. We wish everyone would just go away until they finally do. Then, like a touch of cold, the loneliness begins to seep in.

Not only that, but Margherita's judges have seen it fit to have a barometer installed in the room so that the prosecuted may see the actual decrease in air as time goes by, a most effective means in promoting penance in the criminal's heart. The barometer is surrounded by a mesh of brass, so that the guilty may clearly see its measurements but refrain from, as Sansom puts it, "injur[ing] the instrument in the belief, perhaps, that it was the agent of death rather than its mentor."

Although Margherita initially takes her sentence in stride, it isn't long before the inevitability of her situation begins to crawl into her mind. The monotony of the room itself, the lack of the ceremonial bread and water the order provides as a final courtesy, the ever-teasing and never-wavering needle of the barometer; all of these begin to impress upon her that most incomprehensible of thoughts that she will not be long for this world.

"This person, this 'me,' that I am, this familiarity of hands and memories and close wishes and dry disgusts, this well-shaped shadow lying about my inner thoughts--all this is going to die. It will cease to be. There will be nothing more of it."

How do you comprehend that? How do you deal with the notion that the very thoughts running through your mind will not exist in the next second? Sansom of course doesn't have any answers. And that's what's so damn terrifying about it. And with the doubt and the terror there comes the regret that we have not fulfilled all the potential dreams of our sorry existence:

Whatever it was, she had left it undone. However much she might have done, she could have done more. However much she had seen, she had not felt deeply enough. However much she had felt, she had not stored those feelings deeply enough.

I don't recall just how I was imagining "The Little Room" would pan out upon my initial reading of it, but for whatever reason I hadn't thought that Sansom would deliver on exactly what he had promised. In a way I became like Margherita, a small flame of hope quivering in my heart for some kind of last-minute intervention or redemption. But it never came, for me or for her. Margherita was sentenced to her fate and no other would be supplied. The throat that had been choked with tears now gasped for air while the barometer--cold, dispassionate, mechanical--reached its final destination.

For a story featured in a series infamous for its gruesomeness, "The Little Room" is the cruelest of the entire lot. It gets to the heart of fear and never blinks an eye the entire time. Death will not sneak in and destroy us in gaudy violence. We'll see it, advancing slowly and assuredly, its course definite and unchanging. It will come and claim us and we won't be able to do a thing about it and, like Margherita, we will eventually stop moving.

Read "A Woman Seldom Found"here.

Read "Various Temptations"here.

NEXT CHAPTER: Poppy Z. Brite

Do You Dare Enter? Part Forty-Nine: July 1974

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The DC Mystery Anthologies 1968-1976
by Peter Enfantino and
Jack Seabrook


Cover by Luis Dominguez, Alfredo Alcala,
ER Cruz, Murphy Anderson & Joe Giella
The House of Mystery 225

"The Man Who Died Twice"
Story by Jack Oleck
Art by Alfredo Alcala

"Master of the Unknown"
Story Uncredited
Art by Jack Kirby
(reprinted from House of Secrets #4, June 1957)

"Fireman, Burn My Child!"
Story by Michael Fleisher and Russell Carley
Art by Frank Thorne

"The Curse of the MacIntyres"
Story by Mary Skrenes
Art by Don Heck
(reprinted from The Sinister House of Secret Love #1, November 1971)

"See No Evil"
Story by Jack Oleck
Art by Alex Nino

"The Hairy Shadows"
Story by John Broome
Art by Murphy Anderson and Joe Giella
(reprinted from The Phantom Stranger #4, March 1953)

"Shadow Show"
Story by Mark Hanerfeld
Art by Jack Sparling
(reprinted from The Spectre #9, April 1969)

"This One'll Scare You to Death!"
Story by George Kashdan and David Kasakove
Art by E.R. Cruz

Peter: Cobbler Giles Mornay has never been happy with his lot in life; he's convinced he was born to be an aristocrat. He tries on the shoes of a nobleman and buys fancy clothes, but his wife mocks him and tells him to get back to his peasant's life. When Giles attempts to contact Satan through a black arts book he's attained, his wife hits the roof and burns the book. Tired of her constant berating, Giles murders the woman in a fit of anger. Up pops Satan, finally, to tell Giles he's done a great job and maybe they can come to an agreement. If Giles will hand over his soul, Satan will give him the life of an aristocrat he so desires. Giles agrees and Satan lays out the rules: Giles must cop to the murder and take his punishment. One year after his execution, his corpse will rise and Satan will find him a new body/home. Though wary of the bad rep Ol' Sparky has netted in the past, Giles agrees and, sure enough, one year later, his skeleton rises from the grave to seek out Satan. The devil, true to his word, transports Giles into his new body. Unfortunately, while Giles was moldering in his grave, France underwent a revolution and his new vessel is the Marquis de La Marre, an aristocrat about to be beheaded by the same peasants Mornay despised so much. Incredible Alcala art (in particular, Giles' rise from the grave) and a sly Oleck script combine to make "The Man Who Died Twice" one of 1974's high points so far. "Deal with the Devil" stories are a dime a dozen (or a quarter a dozen, thanks to 1974 funny book inflation) but Oleck manages to squeeze just one more surprise twist out of the formula. It's a reveal I never saw coming!

Jack: The extended opening sequence with the skeleton clad in decaying clothes is a tour de force by Alcala. It's a very intriguing set up that made me wonder if the payoff would live up to the opening. Surprisingly, it did, and the clue to the ending was fairly planted early on in the story when a date was provided. Unlike so many stories in Ghosts, where the date is just a historical footnote, it is a key element in this story, also one of my favorites so far for 1974.

"Fireman..."
Peter: A small Kansas town called Wheatsville finds itself without a fire department but local
businessman Bob Stadtler offers to buy a fire truck and charge a small fee for services. The town happily agrees but then, once Bob gets his truck, he has his hired goons starting fires all over town and he charges the victims exorbitant fees for putting the infernos out. When Bob shows up to a house fire and refuses to extinguish the flames because the owner doesn't have five grand, a little girl dies and the town turns violent. Bob murders his henchmen and then races out of town but doesn't get far when his car smashes into a hill. He's taken to a local hospital and stitched up and presented with the bill once he's recovered. When Bob tells the doctors he can't pay, they reclaim all their work. The next day, two surveyors stand on the hospital site (now an empty parcel of land) and wonder why the town intends to build a hospital way out in the middle of nowhere. They miss the skeleton behind the bushes. I have no idea what the climax of "Fireman, Burn My Child!" is supposed to mean. Are we to assume that ghosts (or demons or something) brought Bob to an imaginary hospital and then killed him when he didn't pay his bill? Then why does Bob's skeleton look as though it's been on that site quite a while? I can picture Michael Fleisher exclaiming "I've got it! He'll be a skeleton at the end! How cool is that?" but not thinking it through. I don't like Frank Thorne's art here, which is strange because I usually like Thorne's work. It almost looks unfinished, like that of another Frank (Robbins).

Jack: Stadtler is such a monster that I was reading this one right from the get go wondering what sort of horrible fate Fleisher had in store for him. What should have been the ending is pretty good, when the doctors tell him that they'll have to repossess his body parts because he can't pay, but the story goes on a page too long and the last page doesn't make much sense. I took it to be a scene from some future date, after his body had decomposed. The skeleton is in a wheelchair, so perhaps he didn't die after all.

"See No Evil"
Peter: Frank Creighton awaits execution on death row but muses he'd sell his soul to the devil if he could only turn invisible, slip out of his cell, and get his hands around the throat of the man who betrayed him. Turns out Ol' Sparky moonlights as a prison guard and, before you can say "not another 'deal with the devil' story, ferchrissakes, that makes two in one issue and I've just about had enough of these cliched story lines," a bargain has been struck. Creighton's a bit nervous though when he takes his place on the gallows and he's just as visible as the executioner standing next to him. The rope goes 'round his neck, the bottom falls out and before you can say "oh no, not another 'homage' to 'Owl Creek Bridge'-- didn't we just have one of these not too long ago or is it that we've seen so many I only think it was last issue?" the rope breaks and Frank hightails it to find the betrayer, who happens to be his dear old dad. When the con gets to pop's house, he's alarmed to see a hearse parked in front. Has pop died and stolen Frank's vengeance from him? Nope, turns out the rope didn't break and it's Frank who's in the coffin. He got half his wish; he's invisible (as in dead). That Satan can be a real SOB sometimes. "Owl Creek" rip-offs come a close second to "Sadistic Jungle Explorers" on our Top Ten List of Cliches for DC Mystery Writers to Fall Back On. The only saving grace to "See No Evil" is Nino's stylish artwork.

Jack: I love Nino's artwork but even he can't save this bag of cliches and retreads.

"This One..."
Peter: Sick of taking care of his wheelchair-bound brother Wilbur, Simon Crowe takes a page from the Book of Cain and scares the weak-hearted man to death. Unluckily for Simon, his brother has been studying the dark arts and now Simon thinks Satan's sent a few demons to collect up the sinner. Turns out it's only Halloween and the demons are neighborhood kids, but Simon has a heart attack before he gets that news. The police muse that it's quite a coincidence that both Crowes died of heart attacks. The most amazing thing about "This One'll Scare You" is that it took two guys (one with an idea and one who could type) to pump out this nonsense. This One'll Put You to Sleep.

Jack: Not a bad story--we've seen much worse. E.R. Cruz seems to get handed a lot of weak scripts and he always turns in artwork that is above average but not brilliant. I figured out what was going on right away.

Peter: "Reprints! We got reprints! Department." A decidedly mixed-bag of reprints this time out. A super-popular TV quiz show attracts the most intelligent contestants in the world. One of those, who calls himself "Master of the Unknown" and dresses head to toe in a Ku Klux Klan-esque robe, seems to know all the mysteries of the unexplained. He pinpoints the location of Excalibur and Atlantis, the whereabouts of the long-vanished mystery ship, the Carla Mona, and the latitude and longitude of the island home of the last-living Cyclops. The genius only slips up when he comes to the studio one day and forgets to cover his hands, which are lion's paws. The mystery man turns out to be... the Sphinx! That final panel, of the golden boy unmasked, is pretty doggone silly but the build-up is intriguing and suspenseful and Kirby's art is as dynamic as the stuff he'd pump out shortly thereafter for Atlas. In fact, this story could be mistaken for a "Tale to Astonish."

Jack: This story plays off of the quiz show fad of the time period and I really liked the twist ending, but I have a question for the Master of the Unknown: where did all my hair get to?

"Master of the Unknown"

Peter: I'm not sure how, but we managed to miss covering "The Curse of the MacIntyres" when it was first published in DC's The Sinister House of Secret Love #1 (which morphed into Secrets of Sinister House). I wouldn't have minded if we'd missed it again this time out. Romance, dwarves, romance, evil children, romance, family curses, romance, axe-wielding old ladies, and Don Heck. Do I need to say more? Well, how about that this funny book equivalent of a Barbara Michaels novel runs an insanely long 25 pages? That's three Johnny Peril adventures we could have read instead. What fan of House of Mystery in 1974 (or any other year, for that matter) read "MacIntyres" and thought "Hmmm, this is my cup of tea!" Not this twelve year-old, that's fer sure.

Don Heck + Gothic Romance = Disaster

Jack: We didn't start covering that comic till the name changed. As I read this story, memories flooded back of 1971 DC comics and lots of art by Don Heck. The Donster sure could draw cheesecake! The story goes on and on and follows the formula of a DC Gothic romance, but I was hoping the midget son of the romantic lead would turn out to be a killer leprechaun. No such luck.

"The Hairy Shadows"
Peter: The Spectre and The Phantom Stranger put in appearances as well. The Spectre's yarn, "Shadow Show," is nothing more than a fragment and features some of the worst Jack Sparling art we've ever seen (and that's pushing the envelope, folks). Check out that poor buck-toothed yahoo below. No wonder he turned to a life of crime. The Phantom Stranger's adventure, "The Hairy Shadows," is a fun trip down memory lane, taking us back to a time when PS wasn't a brooding party-killer and traveled the nation looking for goofball spirits and inter-dimensional screw-ups. The Hairy Shadows are the latter and, might I say, it's refreshing to find out that these are legitimate other-dimensional creeps and not a neighboring farmer who's dressing up in a Charles Bronson mask to scare off the railroad tycoon who plans to run a line through town...?

Jack Sparling.... Yecch

Jack: I always thought the Spectre was a cool character and I liked the ending of the story, where the gigantic Spectre holds the bad guy in his great big, white-gloved hand, but I agree that the art is ugly. The Phantom Stranger story was fun and goofy. I love how PS turns up out of nowhere and says, "Sometimes I'm called the Phantom Stranger." Oh, OK. That explains it. And what are you called the rest of the time? A creepy weirdo who pokes his nose in other people's business? This was an uneven issue where the new stuff edged out the reprints in quality for a change.


Luis Dominguez
The House of Secrets 121

"Child's Play"
Story by Jack Oleck
Art by Ramona Fradon

"Corpus Delicti"
Story by Jack Oleck
Art by Gerry Talaoc

"Ms. Vampire Killer"
Story by Don Glut
Art by E. R. Cruz

Peter: Old Man Davis is having lots of trouble with those Shaw kids. They're obviously into voodoo and they view him as an old ruddy-duddy who needs a lesson learned. It's "Child's Play" for the demonic duo to terrorize Davis, making him believe sticking a pin in a doll will bring lots of pain and suffering. And then when little Ellen bakes a Mr. Davis gingerbread man and bites its head off... things get complicated. Here's a case of "He Said... They Said" with its dual viewpoint story line running side-by-side. Problem is, the uniqueness of the format wears out its welcome fairly quickly. The climax, with Old Man Davis writing down the details in his journal right up to the point where he gets his head bitten off (well, we assume that's what happens, at least) is straight out of H.P. Lovecraft. At least the old man didn't write "Aargh, my head seems to be separating from my body!!" When I see Ramona Fradon's highly stylized artwork, I can't help but think of Bruce Timm's similar work on Batman: The Animated Series.


Jack: When I read one of these comic book stories where one point of view runs down the left side and another runs down the right side I'm always a little confused about how I'm supposed to read them. Do I read left-right, left-right, etc., or do I read down the left and then down the right? It gets in the way of my enjoyment a little, but it did not mar this terrific story. I am enjoying every opportunity to re-encounter Ramona Fradon's art, which I don't think I fully appreciated 40 years ago. The conclusion is a winner!

Bad horror stories can have
the same effect on Jack
Peter: After but one year of marriage, Arthur Price has had enough, but divorce is not an option so he does what 90% of other husbands in the DC Mystery Universe resort to: murder. Through flashbacks, we discover that his wife, Martha (the number one choice of name for a DC Mystery Universe wife, by the way), has become overbearing and stifling, allowing no ray of sunshine into Arthur's life. At least, that's how Arthur perceives it. So, the widower stuffs his wife's body in a trunk and has a moving company come to haul it up to a vacation cabin (where Arthur and his wife were to spend the following weekend). The plan is to dump the body, trunk and all, into the deep lake near the property. Unfortunately for Arthur, it seems his wife's grasp extends from beyond the grave and the trunk ends up back where it came from, accidentally popping open and spilling its contents all over Arthur's stairway. The police discover a letter from Martha, to the owner of the cabin, canceling the reservation because of her husband's asthma. "Corpus Delicti" is a nicely illustrated little fable with a good, humorous climax. One of the few DC murderers that I sympathize with.

Jack: It's hard to blame Arthur for killing Martha. She gets rid of the furniture he ordered, she throws out the chili he made for breakfast, she dumps his beer and--worst of all--she gives away his dog! Arf!

Peter: Present day Transylvania has the same problem with vampires it's had for centuries but the blood-suckers seem to be getting smarter and avoiding all the traps and pitfalls. Into this unnatural disaster area comes Professor Zarko, a decidedly atypical vampire hunter, geared up in low cut blouses and go-go boots and ready to kick vampire behind. "Ms. Vampire Hunter" puts a stake to the head monster and the villagers welcome peace at last. One man waits behind to put the moves on Zarko and discovers exactly how it was she was able to rid the world of the fanged demon: she's a vampire too and wants to eliminate the competition. Groan. If you've read as many of these snoozers as we have, you can guess the "surprise" the second the babe walks in the door. Don Glut is perhaps best known to horror comics fans as the creator of Gold Key's Doctor Spektor but, to me, he'll always be the guy who write the best non-fiction study of The Frankenstein Monster back in the early 1970s.


Jack: I'm a Don Glut fan from way back for his monster movie writing, but this story landed with a big thud. I did not see the ending coming but when it came I thought, oh no--not again!


Nick Cardy
The Witching Hour 44

"Color the Dead Black"
Story by George Kashdan
Art by Ruben Yandoc

". . . Better Off Dead!"
Story Uncredited
Art by Mike Sekowsky

"Kill the Demon Tiger!"
Story by Mike Fleisher
Art by Don Perlin

Jack: In the days of the Black Plague, London was devastated by disease but a small town outside the city has been spared until a family comes along seeking shelter. Soon, people begin dropping left and right and the villagers blame the old woman who came to town with the new family. Just as they are about to execute her for being a witch, along comes the son of the town's leader to tell them that, not only is the old woman not a witch, but her black cat is the only thing saving them from having to "Color the Dead Black." Rats bring the plague and cats kills rats. Though the villagers killed her cat just before the wise young man's return, they discover that it had kittens right before it died and so the village will likely be saved. Yandoc's art evokes the plague times nicely and the unexpectedly happy ending worked for me.

"Color the Dead Black"

Peter: Another history lesson disguised as entertainment. I'm not sure what's worse - a twist that falls flat on its face or the twist that never comes. With the latter, it always feels, to me, as though the story ends uncompleted. That's certainly true with "Color the Dead Black" (yet another really dumb title).

". . . Better off Dead!"
Jack: Pretty Ellen Franklin is barely off the train in New York City when she meets Jack Wallace, manager for Borago, the master hypnotist. Jack asks Ellen if she wants to work for the performer and she jumps at the chance. Borago is a little creepy and she begins to think she'd be ". . . Better off Dead" than to continue working in his act. She runs off and marries Jack, only to discover that he is really Borago and that he hypnotized her into thinking there were two men. She runs off, only to be picked up again at the same train station by an older gentleman. She does not realize that it's Borago again, hypnotizing her anew. Mike Sekowsky's art is certainly an acquired taste; fortunately, it's one I acquired as a child reading the JLA. The story is somewhat confusing but Ellen is cute enough that I'll give it a pass.

Peter: Final panels like the one we get with "Better Off Dead" make me feel like I've missed something (like maybe a page or two?). If Borago is so frightening to Ellen, why is she smiling at us in that last panel? And raise your hand if you thought Jack was really Borago from the start? Yeah, big surprise that, right? If I didn't have the artist credit right here in front of me, I'd swear that Jerry Grandenetti teamed up with Don Heck on this one.

"Kill the
Demon Tiger"
Jack: In Rahjapur many years ago, when India was still a British colony, a native named Sanisn has his teeth filled by a dentist and they discuss the tiger that has been killing people in the area. British hunter Paul Richards arrives with his big gun to "Kill the Demon Tiger." Kitty snatches a young boy from his home and Richards blasts away, but when the late tiger is examined they discover that it has gold fillings in its teeth--just like those the dentist gave Sanisn! Hands down the worst Mike Fleisher story we've read to date, and it's fitting that it's illustrated by Don Perlin, who is down there at the bottom of the barrel of DC horror artists, along with Jerry G and a few others I won't remind you of.

Peter: Just a paycheck this time around for Mike Fleisher (and probably a very small paycheck at that) and, with the quality that Mike pumps out for our entertainment, I think he's allowed that now and then. I was hoping the true identity of the tiger wasn't Sanisn but that trip to the dentist ("Oh my, what large teeth you have!") pretty much telecast it, didn't it? At one point, when the tiger grabs the little kid between its jaws, I thought the real Mike Fleisher might burst forth from this pablum and scream "I am Mike Fleisher and I'm going to show you something reeeeeally nasty!" but no, he's muffled by that happy ending.


Luis Dominguez
Weird Mystery Tales 12

"To Sleep, Perchance to Die"
Story by Jack Oleck
Art by Abe Ocampo

"Till Death Do Us Part"
Story by E. Nelson Bridwell
Art by Luis Dominguez

"Time Plug"
Story by Steve Skeates
Art by Tony deZuniga

Peter: Unable to sleep due to continuing nightmares, Charles Sawyer slips further and further into madness. In his dreams, he sees a shadowy beast stalking him, getting closer with each encounter. Professional help is useless so Sawyer resigns himself to nights with little or no sleep. His wife continually pleads with him to return to his therapy but her concern comes off as nothing but nagging to the haggard Charles. His wife begs one time too many and Sawyer wrings her neck. When he looks up from her corpse, he sees the monster who has been invading his dreams but soon realizes he's looking into a mirror. Oh, I get it! We all have a beast inside of us that we keep at bay but is just that far away from emerging and doing nasty stuff. What a unique idea! "To Sleep..." is terminally dull. I thought for sure Sawyer's wife would rise from the dead after he'd strangled her and say "Doctor Evans--you must go see Doctor Evans just one more time!" She says that phrase so many times throughout the strip you'd think Bob Kanigher wrote the thing.

"To Sleep..."

Jack: Points to Jack Oleck for trying something a little different, but this psychological horror story falls flat. I figured out what was going on about halfway through, so the ending was no surprise. Ocampo's art is strong but can't overcome a weak story.

Peter: Jason Bowers wants to marry heiress Laura for her money rather than for love. She'll have nothing to do with him until Jason visits a local voodoo practitioner and buys a love potion. Bewitched Laura firmly in the bag, Jason gets his wife and his money, too. Laura plays the doting wife and does her knitting and reads about exotic hobbies while Jason spends all the money. Once the well is dry, the con man announces his intention of leaving Laura and heading for a warmer climate. Years later, after Laura is found dead of old age, it's discovered that one of her exotic hobbies came in handy. Jason is found in perfect condition, a book on taxidermy nearby. That clever climax would have seemed more of a surprise if a variation had not been plastered across the cover. If I had been writer E. Nelson, I'd have been pissed. There are a few plot holes I can't get past in this one. When Jason disappears, it's taken for granted he's gone despite the fact that Laura tells those who will listen that her beau is still in the house. Also, why make a big deal out of the voodoo queen and her joy juice when it's quickly dismissed and never addressed again? This is not one of Luis Dominguez's better jobs but the inker or maybe even the colorist might have had something to do with that. Many of his panels appear sketchy at best.

Jack: Now that Dominguez is replacing Nick Cardy as the main cover artist for the DC horror line, I was happy to see some of his work on the pages inside, yet the art in this story is not as good as what is on the cover. Had I not known the ending from the cover I might have enjoyed this story more.

Peter: On the run from the law, two bandits drive into a valley of magic, ruled by an old man with a secret. I can't say much more about "Time Plug" (a really dumb title, by the way), not because I don't want to give anything away but because I'm not sure I understand much of it. There's a time warp (sorta) and an old man who's lived for 200 years because of some crazy Indian magic (I guess) and... Well, that's it. There's some pretty pitchers to look at, though.

"Time Plug"

Jack: For the third time in this issue, the art is much better than the story. Doesn't that kind of sum up the DC horror line? You know a story is bad when Destiny has to come in in the last panel and explain what happened and what the title means. I think what he said is that, by killing the old man, a time plug was pulled and this allowed the last 200 years of progress to come flowing in. Steve Skeates is not impressing me.


Nick Cardy
Ghosts 28

"Flight of the Lost Phantom"
Story by Leo Dorfman
Art by Don Perlin

"The Corpse in the Cradle"
Story by Murray Boltinoff
Art by Alfredo Alcala

"The Specter of the Iron Duchess"
Story by Leo Dorfman
Art by Jerry Grandenetti

Jack: 1965, Hoboken, NJ--reporter Ralph Kelso visits the WWII aircraft carrier Washington, which is being taken apart. Touring the ship with its old caretaker, he hears and sees a ghostly plane trying to land and learns about the "Flight of the Lost Phantom." During the war, a pilot named Carter was the last to survive a bitter fight with Japanese planes, but when he tried to find his way back to the ship it was blacked out and the captain would not turn on the lights for fear that a submarine would find its target. Lt. Carter was doomed to fly his ghostly plane over the ship for eternity. The captain never recovered from having to make this tough decision, and he ended up as the ship's elderly caretaker.

"Flight of the Lost Phantom"
Suddenly, he hears the plane circling overhead and decides to light some flares to guide it home. He is mowed down as the plane lands but, when the authorities arrive, they find the old man dead of a heart attack. Kelso finds a piece of the plane on the ship's deck, making him wonder if it did land after all. An unexpectedly entertaining start to this issue of Ghosts, marred only by the usual amateurish Perlin art.

Peter: I thought the set-up for "Flight of the Lost Phantom" was intriguing and pretty darn creepy but it eventually devolved into just another Ghosts story.

Jack: On the cold and lonely border where Scotland meets England, hard working farmer Clyde Jameson spares no effort to get things ready for the baby his wife is carrying. Certain that it will be a boy and determined to give him a good start in life, Clyde leaves his pregnant wife to run the farm while he ventures off to make some cash by working on a fishing boat. He returns just in time to fetch the doctor to deliver the baby, and in the nights that follow he enjoys spending time with his wife and new baby. He fails to comprehend that the woman and child died in childbirth, so "The Corpse in the Cradle" and its mother are merely the ghosts of those he once loved. A lovely and elegiac story from Murray Boltinoff, of all people, with illustrations by Alcala that range from very good to masterful. We have watched his progress through the DC horror comics to the point where his human characters are extremely well drawn.

A good example of Alcala's
growing ability to draw a
person who is not a corpse
Peter: I enjoyed the heck out of this one but it seemed a bit truncated, as if my copy was missing a couple pages. We're going in with Clyde to check on Mary and then suddenly she and the baby are ghosts. It's still a sad, and at the same time disquieting, climax. Alcala's art is magnificent and... not one jungle in sight!

Jack: In Communist-era Czechoslovakia, Minister of Transport Jan Rasek takes matters into his own hands to stop another truck from being destroyed on the lonely mountain road that leads to an old stone castle. He does a little research and drives a truck himself, only to come face to face with "The Specter of the Iron Duchess," a ghost who is said to haunt the road as long as the castle stands. Jan convinces the National Council to let him blow up the castle and he drives a truck full of explosives up the road, but the Iron Duchess interferes and he ends up being blown up along with the truck and the castle. His plan worked, and the road is now safe. The first vehicle to pass when the smoke clears is the hearse carrying Jan's body. Danged if this isn't one of the better issues of Ghosts in some time! Grandenetti's art is no worse than Perlin's, but the stories are entertaining.

Peter: There might be the makings of a decent Ghosts story in there but it's buried beneath the tons of rubble known as Grandenetti. Chuckles rather than child are the order of the day. How pathetic a month is it when Ghosts is better than The Witching Hour?

"The Specter of the Iron Duchess"


Nick Cardy
Secrets of Sinister House 18

"The Strange Shop on Demon Street"
Story by George Kashdan
Art by John Calnan

"The Baby Who Had But 'One Year to Die' . . ."
Story by D. W. Holtz (Dave Wood)
Art by Angel B. Luna
(reprinted from Unexpected 111, June 1969)

"The House That Death Built"
Story by Leo Dorfman
Art by Jerry Grandenetti

"The Half-Lucky Charm!"
Story Uncredited
Art by Gil Kane & Bernard Sachs
(reprinted from Sensation Mystery #115, June 1953)

"The Strange Shop . . ."
Jack: What lurks within "The Strange Shop on Demon Street"? Why, it's just kindly old woodcarver Titus Farro and his mannequins. People in the neighborhood sometimes see the puppets moving as if they were alive, and local hood Nort Lasher is convinced that Farro has a fortune stashed away somewhere. When Nort and his pals mug the old man it's puppets to the rescue; Nort's cohorts get a beating but he disappears. The world outside never learns Nort's real fate--he is transformed into a puppet and performs with Farro's other creations! Despite a great cover by Cardy, Kashdan and Calnan start off the last issue of Sinister House with a story dreadfully written and drawn.

Peter: "The Strange Shop..." is the pits in both story and art and I have nothing else to say. Bailiff, take this story away, please.

Jack: Satanic schemer Orin Garth was master of "The House That Death Built." His false beacon on the seashore lured many ships to their doom and he profited by combing the wreckage for timbers he could use to build himself a home. He vows that one day his head will lie on a silken pillow. One night, as he is picking through the wreckage of another lost ship, he trips and his head lands on, of all things, a silken pillow. He nods off to sleep, unaware that he is lying in a coffin that washed up near the shore. When a wave takes the box out to sea and slams the lid, Orin is trapped forever but he got his wish. Whenever I find myself trying to be an apologist for Grandenetti, along comes a story like this to remind me why he was one of the worst artists at DC in the 1970s.

How we feel sometimes . . .

Peter: Grandenetti outdoes himself here. What in the world was the scale he was working in on that splash page? The cliff appears to be five times the size of the two figures below. That's either a very tiny cliff or those are very tall men. Which begs the question--how tall are the really big men floating in the sea?

Oh! So that's it!
Jack: The pathetic mess that is this comic is filled out with three reprints. There's the one-page "Mad to Order" (from Unexpected 116, January 1970), "The Baby Who Had But 'One Year to Die' . . ." (from Unexpected 111, March 1969), and "The Half-Locked Charm!" (from Sensation Mystery 115, June 1953). We briefly mentioned "Mad to Order"here. "The Baby"is a silly story in which a baby delivered to an orphanage on New Year's Day grows up rapidly and eventually figures out that he's Father Time, fated to die on New Year's Eve. Finally, "The Half-Lucky Charm!" is an early '50s tale with period-appropriate art by Gil Kane and a story that isn't even half-interesting. Kids who paid 20 cents for this issue were either disappointed or completists. I'm betting it wasn't widely distributed.

Peter: The art in "The Baby . . . ," by Angel Luna, is about as primitive as art gets without resorting to stick figures. The climax made my head hurt really bad. Where do the New Year babies come from? The stork? Do they magically appear before each new Father Time to distribute? Even our '50s reprint, usually the best thing in these titles, blows big time. Aside from the outstanding Nick Cardy cover (which could be one of the ten best DC mystery covers of all time), the final issue of Secrets of Sinister House could be one of the worst issues of the year.

Jack: Amen to that!

Did Mike Sekowsky walk by
Gil Kane's desk and offer to help?

What the--?
The mystery deepens in our next war-torn issue!
On Sale Monday, April 6th!






The Hitchcock Project-Roald Dahl Part Three: "Poison" [4.1]

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by Jack Seabrook

The third episode of Alfred Hitchcock Presents to be adapted from a story by Roald Dahl was "Poison," which Dahl wrote in January 1950. First published in the June 3, 1950 issue of Collier's, "Poison" begins as Timber Woods arrives at Harry Pope's bungalow, only to find Pope lying motionless in bed. Pope whispers to Woods, who thinks:

"The way he was speaking reminded me of George Barling after he got shot in the stomach when he stood leaning against a crate containing a spare airplane engine, holding both hands on his stomach and saying things about the German pilot in just the same hoarse straining half whisper Harry was using now."

"Poison" was first published
in this issue of Collier's
This paragraph recalls Dahl's earlier short stories that took place in World War Two and which were collected in Over to You (1946). It suggests that the events in this story take place after the war and that Woods fought in that war. He sees the current crisis from the perspective of a former soldier who has experience dealing with men in extreme situations.

Harry tells Timber that a krait (a deadly, venomous snake found in India) crawled into his bed and is lying on his stomach. He has been lying still for hours, afraid that movement would awaken the snake and cause it to deliver a fatal bite. The location of the story is established through Timber's narration when he tells us that "they kill a fair number of people each year in Bengal, mostly in the villages." Bengal is a region in Southeast Asia that was partitioned along religious lines in 1947, part of it ending up in India and part in Pakistan. The Bengal region played a major role in the Indian independence movement, a detail which will become important later in the story.

Wendell Corey as Timber Woods
Harry asks Timber to telephone Dr. Ganderbai and ask him to come and help. Ganderbai arrives and carefully injects Harry with anti-venom serum. Outside Harry's room, "the little Indian doctor" tells Timber that the serum is not very effective. He decides to administer chloroform to the snake to slow it down and spends a long time carefully pouring the liquid anesthetic through a tube in order to soak the mattress beneath Harry. Timber smells it and has "faint unpleasant memories of white-coated nurses and white surgeons standing in a white room around a long white table." The Indian doctor is using a medication that Timber, the British ex-military man, associates with white men and the war.

Chloroforming the krait
Harry yells with impatience and Ganderbai's "small brown face" grows angry; he stares down Harry in an attempt to keep him still and quiet. Here, Ganderbai is like a snake charmer, fixing his gaze on a snake in order to keep it motionless. Timber thinks of an image that is a good metaphor for suspense: "I had the feeling someone was blowing up a huge balloon and I could see it was going to burst, but I couldn't look away." Harry and Dr. Ganderbai draw back the sheet very slowly and find no snake. The doctor checks all around the bed and Pope leaps up and shakes out the legs of his pajamas, yet no snake appears.

James Donald as Harry Pope
Dr. Ganderbai asks Harry if he is quite sure he saw the snake, at which point Harry shouts at the doctor and calls him a "dirty little Hindu sewer rat" and a "dirty black ---." Timber is mortified by Harry's behavior but Ganderbai just remarks, "All he needs is a good holiday," before driving away.

"Poison" is an allegory about the British experience in India. Harry represents the colonial Englishman and Ganderbai the Indian; in an incident that recalls E.M. Forster's A Passage to India, the Indian man risks his life to help the British man and is rewarded with scorn and derision. Dahl creates suspense only to deflate it (like the balloon Timba imagines), forcing the reader to consider the story's real purpose. The poison of the story's title is in Pope's words to Ganderbai, making Pope the real venomous snake and, by extension, suggesting that the British Empire's influence in India was a deadly one.

Arnold Moss as Dr. Ganderbai
with Wendell Corey
"Poison" was quickly purchased for adaptation on radio and was broadcast on July 28, 1950, on the CBS radio anthology, Escape. The radio play was written by James Poe and starred Jack Webb as the Timber character and William Conrad as Harry. In this version, Harry is an American in India who hates foreigners and calls everyone who is not American a "gook." The show plays up Harry's racism and, instead of making his outburst a surprise at the end, the racism is explicit from the start of the show. Harry's final verbal attack on Ganderbai is extraordinary, including the line: "I oughta split your head wide open, ya gook!"

The radio play sounds extreme today, but one should recall that North Korea had just invaded South Korea on June 25, and the anti-Communist Red Scare was in full swing in the U.S., so the thought of an American in India who fears and hates foreigners and calls them all "gooks" probably did not sound unusual to listeners at the time. It is unfortunate that Poe took Dahl's subtle story and made its point so obvious.

"I've been bitten!"
The first television adaptation of "Poison" was written by Casey Robinson for Alfred Hitchcock Presents. As he did with "Lamb to the Slaughter" and "Dip in the Pool," Hitchcock himself directed "Poison," rehearsing and filming it quickly on August 21 and 22, 1958, less than a week before he would leave for New York City to start filming North By Northwest on August 27.

Robinson does not follow Poe's radio play. Instead, he does a very careful job of taking the majority of Dahl's story almost word for word and translating it to the small screen, while making small but significant changes that alter the point and climax of the story completely.

The first sign of Harry is
just a twisted hand
The first change is telegraphed by the opening title card, which reads "Malaya." Malaya, like India, was a British colony that was dissolved right after World War Two, but the fact that the setting for the story has shifted from Bengal to Southeast Asia is the first clue that this version of the story will be different. Hitchcock gets the suspense underway immediately when Pope's twisted hand reaches up and into the frame as Woods enters his room. The room itself is lit in high contrast by a table lamp next to the bed; the camera then pulls back to show Harry in bed and Timber at the door.

The second change comes when Timber tells Harry: "You been hittin' the booze," introducing a theme absent from Dahl's original, that Pope's story about a snake is a figment of his imagination connected to his drinking problem. Other than these changes, Robinson's teleplay follows the story closely and Hitchcock's shot choices depict Pope bathed in sweat and Woods often seen from the perspective of Pope, looking up from his bed.

Harry insists he's telling the truth
Another major change in focus is shown by Timber's apparent lack of concern for Harry's plight; in the story, Timber is a good friend who works hard to save Harry, but in the TV version he seems to delight in prolonging his business partner's agony. As we have seen in other episodes of the series, simple contrasts between shots illuminate the power relationship between the characters: Pope is motionless and lying on his back, while Woods stands above him, able to move freely and in control of his partner's fate. Hitchcock alternates between extreme closeups of Harry's face and shots looking up at Timber. The director surely enjoyed the challenge of filming a tense drama in an enclosed space, since he often remarked on how the technical challenges of telling a story were what interested him most.

Timber almost looks gleeful
In a brief exchange, Woods adds an element of a love triangle with a woman named Julie to his relationship with Pope, telling Harry "once a lush, always a lush" and reminding him that Julie came all the way from Paris to see Pope. Harry accuses Timber of trying to make him act rashly and Timber admits having made a drunk out of Harry in order to take over the business. Robinson's decision in adapting "Poison" to remove the elements of racism and allegorical commentary on the British Empire in India made it necessary to introduce a new plot thread to replace the story's key point; unfortunately, the rivalry between men adds little to the story, whose most memorable parts remain the suspenseful efforts of the doctor to deal with the snake.

It wasn't in his pants!
In contrast to Dahl's story, there is no outburst from Woods directed at the doctor. Instead, the metaphoric snake of the original becomes an actual snake onscreen. After the sheet is pulled down and no snake is seen, Harry leaps up and shakes out the legs of his pajamas. We then see an insert of a small snake slithering out from beneath a pillow when no one is watching and then slithering back to safety. After the doctor leaves, Timber pours drinks for himself and Harry and Harry throws the drink in Timber's face. Another insert of the snake is shown and then Timber laughs at Harry, sits on the bed, and lies back on the pillow, at which point he is bitten on the side of his face by the krait. Timber sits up in shock and begs Harry to get the doctor, but Harry stands there and tells Timber that the doctor is gone. The show ends with Pope watching Woods as the screen fades to black.

Harry tells Timber that the doctor has gone.
Anyone reading "Poison" and then watching the TV adaptation of it is in for a surprise, since the main point of the story is completely discarded and an allegory is turned into a literal tale of suspense. Yet, if one follows the story on the page while watching the TV show, it is clear that Casey Robinson followed much of the story very closely, almost word for word in spots. It is impressive that such significant changes in focus were wrought by such minor additions and deletions in the script. I suspect that Hitchcock was intrigued by the suspenseful aspects of the story and by its technical challenges and decided that American audiences would have little interest in watching a subtle tale about racism and colonialism. The show succeeds in its use of lighting, camerawork, and the performance of James Donald as Harry Pope. It fails in its change of focus and in the performance of Wendell Corey as Timber Woods.

The snake makes an appearance!
Wendell Corey (1914-1968) was an actor who progressed from stage to screen to television, appearing in Sorry, Wrong Number (1948) and Hitchcock's Rear Window (1954). He was president of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences from 1963 to 1965 and this was his only appearance on the Hitchcock show. His portrayal of Timber Woods as cruel and unconcerned with his partner's welfare detracts from the success of "Poison."

James Donald (1917-1993) was born in Scotland and followed a similar path as an actor as Corey. He was in The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957) and appeared on Alfred Hitchcock Presents twice. For more about Donald, see this website.

Weaver Levy as the houseboy
Playing Dr. Ganderbai was Arnold Moss (1910-1989). Moss was born in Brooklyn, New York, and was mostly a stage actor, specializing in Shakespeare. His well-trained voice made him a good fit for radio shows; he appeared in movies and on TV as well, including twice on the Hitchcock series and once on Star Trek.

Finally, the small role of Dr. Ganderbai's houseboy is played by Weaver Levy (1925-?) who, despite his name, was an American actor with Chinese parents. He was seen twice on Alfred Hitchcock Presents and also played Chop-Chop in the 1952 serial, Blackhawk: Fearless Champion of Freedom, based on the DC Comics series.

Casey Robinson (1903-1979), who adapted Dahl's story for TV, was called "the master of the art--or craft--of adaptation" by Richard Corliss and counted Casablanca as one of the films he co-wrote, even though he was uncredited onscreen. Other screenplays included Captain Blood (1935), Dark Victory (1939), and Fritz Lang's While the City Sleeps (1956). He wrote two episodes of Alfred Hitchcock Presents.

One last shot of Harry sweating
"Poison" was adapted for television a second time, decades later, when Robin Chapman wrote a new teleplay for Roald Dahl's Tales of the Unexpected. This version first aired on March 29, 1980, and it eschews the tight space of the prior version in favor of a long opening sequence where Harry wanders around his bungalow and we learn that he is an alcoholic on the wagon who hates India and looks forward to leaving. There is no doubt about the snake's presence this time, since it is shown slithering along the floor, up the leg of the bed, under the sheet, and up Harry's chest. He even lifts the sheet and comes face to face with the krait! In addition, a female character is introduced as Timber's married lover; she comes back to the bungalow with him after a party and spends most of the show hiding from the doctor, afraid that her extra-marital activities will be discovered.

As in Dahl's story and the radio play, there is no conflict between Pope and Woods; instead, this version sets up a parallel story between Harry's predicament with the snake and Sandra's predicament with hiding her presence. Pope's final outburst is reinserted into the story, though--as with so much TV of this era--it is overdone, with Harry insulting the doctor and starting to choke him. Sandra steals the doctor's car and drives off, forcing Timber to drive the doctor home in his own car. Harry is left alone in the bungalow, where he reaches for a bottle of alcohol and is bitten by the snake.

This version of "Poison" is neither subtle nor suspenseful, yet the key scenes with Harry in bed and the doctor trying to help him remain so captivating that the episode is not a complete failure.

"Poison" is a fascinating story, as is the way its themes changed depending on who was adapting it and what was going on in the world at the time of each adaptation. The 1950 version focuses on xenophobia, the 1957 version focuses on rivalry, and the 1980 version focuses on adultery. Quite a journey for a little tale about a snake that was not really there in the first place!

Read Dahl's story for free online here. The radio version is available here. The Hitchcock version is available on DVD here or for free online viewing here. The Tales of the Unexpected version may be seen here.

Sources:
Dahl, Roald. "Poison."Roald Dahl Collected Stories. Ed. Jeremy Treglown. New York: Everyman's Library, 2006. 259-69. Print.
Grams, Martin, and Patrik Wikstrom. The Alfred Hitchcock Presents Companion. Churchville, MD: OTR Pub., 2001. Print.
IMDb. IMDb.com, n.d. Web. 22 Mar. 2015.
"Poison."Alfred Hitchcock Presents. CBS. 5 Oct. 1958. Television.
Rudel, Ulrich. "Cinema En Miniature: The Telefilms of Alfred Hitchcock."The Alfred Hitchcock Presents Companion. Ed. Martin Grams and Patrik Wikstrom. Churchville, MD: OTR Pub., 2001. 97-108. Print.
Spoto, Donald. The Life of Alfred Hitchcock: The Dark Side of Genius. London: Collins, 1983. Print.
Wikipedia. Wikimedia Foundation, n.d. Web. 22 Mar. 2015.

Bullet Gal, a new graphic novel by Andrez Bergen

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Andrez Bergen is back with a new graphic novel that collects all 12 issues of his Australian comic book, Bullet Gal!

Bergen is onto something new here, yet it's something old at the same time. This graphic novel is a prequel of sorts to his 2013 novel, Who Is Killing the Great Capes of Heropa?, but this time it's told more in pictures than in prose.Bergen writes that one of his influences was the Dada movement of a century ago, and he uses photos, drawings, comic art, and more to make pages that are like a collage of images, some that you will recognize and some that may tickle at the edges of your mind and make you wonder if you've seen them somewhere before. But another influence that goes unmentioned is T.S. Eliot's The Waste Land, in that Bergen is taking scraps of popular culture from decades past and juxtaposing them to help tell a story.

The story concerns a young woman who becomes a noir-like hero in the city of Heropa. I won't give anything away, partly because I had a bit of trouble following what was going on at some points. Yet Bergen is definitely inventive and the book looks great. Especially nice are the various artistic interpretations of the title character provided by comic artists from all over the globe.

You don't need to have read any other Bergen books to enjoy Bullet Gal, but if you pick it up you many want to find out more about the worlds Bergen has been developing. My favorite book of his so far was One Hundred Years of Vicissitude (2012), followed by Tobacco-Stained Mountain Goat (2011). He also does other comics from his home in Tokyo, though with the flavor of his native land of Australia.

Give Bullet Gal a try. It's not like much else you'll see in comics these days! Click here to get a copy of the book, or here to order individual issues of the comic.

--Jack Seabrook




Star Spangled DC War Stories Part 50: July 1963

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The DC War Comics 1959-1976
by Corporals Enfantino and Seabrook


Joe Kubert
Our Army at War 132

"Young Soldiers Never Cry!"
Story by Robert Kanigher
Art by Joe Kubert

"Wings for a Washout!"
Story by Hank Chapman
Art by Jerry Grandenetti

Jack: Easy Co. lands on the beaches at Normandy on D-Day and fans out. They soon find themselves pinned down by Nazi machine guns hidden in hedgerows. With Rock's guidance and some well-placed grenades, the threat is soon eliminated. Sending his men back to base for some first aid, Rock sets out alone with orders to bring back a prisoner. He sees a French farmhouse being bombed by a Nazi plane and, after the plane is destroyed, Rock goes into the house and finds the only survivor--a baby boy whom he christens Little Joe and puts in his backpack for safe keeping. Is it true that "Young Soldiers Never Cry?" Rock doubts it as he avoids the enemy and milks a cow to feed the baby before shooting down another plane and destroying another tank. He meets a French woman and hands the baby off to her, but when Little Joe yanks off her wig Sgt. Rock finds the Nazi prisoner he was seeking.

Strong action work by Kubert

First of all, it's great to see Easy Co. located in a specific time and place for a change--June 6, 1944, in Normandy! Second, having Rock rescue the baby shows his human side and having him change a diaper and milk a cow provides a little levity in the midst of all the fighting. As always, Kubert's work is brilliant.

Peter: Way too silly for my tastes, especially that comedic finale. I'll stick to the blood 'n' guts Rock, thank you. Two stars for Kubert's art, as usual, but that's about all the enthusiasm I can work up.

A great panel by Grandenetti
Jack: Poor Ted--his Dad was a war hero and now so are his three brothers. Ted fails as a pilot, a bombardier and a gunner, even though his brothers try to tutor him, so he ends up a combat photographer. Sent out on a bombing raid to take pictures, Ted has to take the places of the gunner, the bombardier and finally the pilot, defeating the enemy and landing the plane when the rest of the crew is shot. I don't usually like Jerry Grandenetti's work by this point in his career (though it will get much worse in a decade or so), but "Wings for a Washout!" was so propulsive that even his stylized drawings worked for me. I know it's far-fetched, but Jerry almost makes it work.

Peter: I'm not sure we've read a bigger pile of ludicrosity on our journey than "Wings for a Washout!" You can almost feel the excitement coming off the page as Ted runs from wounded brother to wounded brother, manning their posts and hoping out loud he'll do a better job than they did. Nothing like earning your wings while your kin drop like flies. "Gee, I can do this after all!"Never mind the massive coincidence of the three brothers landing at black sheep Ted's base and needing a ... wait for it... photographer. Two "brother-in-arms" stories are too much for one year, let alone one month (see Star Spangled below).


Jerry Grandenetti &
Jack Adler
G.I. Combat 100

"Return of the Ghost Tank!"
Story by Robert Kanigher
Art by Joe Kubert

"The Glory Box of Charlie Company!"
Story by Bob Haney
Art by Ross Andru and Mike Esposito

"The Big Jump!"
Story by Robert Kanigher
Art by Jack Abel

Peter: Jeb Stuart (the ghost) has a warning for Jeb Stuart (his descendant) about the Jeb Stuart (the tank): something really surprising is going to happen. When the tank is attacked by a Focke-Wulf, the tank becomes tangled with a tree and is almost blown to kingdom come before the men get hold of themselves and do a little blasting of their own. Jeb is convinced that must have been the surprise he was warned about but the ghost pops back up to let Jeb know he should keep his eyes and ears open. The best is yet to come. Small talk while traveling leads all four tank boys to discover an unnerving coincidence: their fathers all served in the same tank together and disappeared in World War I, never to be seen again. Could this be the surprise the Colonel warned about? Nope. It just gets better, boys and girls. Rolling by an infantry unit, the lieutenant in charge asks Jeb if they've ever met and then whips out a picture taken of his father taking a picture of the four missing WWI soldiers. Now, the men are particularly disturbed; could history be repeating itself? Will the men disappear just as their fathers once did? At about the time the soul-searching reaches a crescendo, the tank disappears down a very large rabbit hole and reappears in a village square, surrounded by Nazi tanks.

Just then, a WWI tank rolls into the battle and engages the enemy. The Jeb Stuart is saved but the men are left with no answers. Who was behind the wheel of the mystery tank? Well, that's a question I can't answer either as Bob Kanigher leaves everything (and I do mean everything) a mystery. Obviously, this was the tank that vanished into thin air decades before, a vehicle manned by the fathers of our present-day heroes. So what happened to the WWI GIs? Were they killed in action and now they want to keep the same from happening to their juniors? Once the old tank finishes its business, it doesn't go up in a puff of smoke; it just lays there in a heap. Why don't the men open her up and investigate? Since even the reason these four men were thrown together (fate? a grand scheme? ghosts having fun?) is glossed over, "Return of the Ghost Tank" comes off half-baked. Great idea, lousy execution. That lousy execution, of course, does not extend to the glorious Kubert art, Joe's second consecutive Haunted Tank job. So where's Russ Heath? Good question. Heath will be absent from the Haunted Tank series until #114 and until then (aside from a fill-in by Jack Abel next issue) we'll be getting double duty from Sgt. Kubert.

Jack: It says in the story that the tank in the middle of the square is a monument of a WWI tank. After the battle, the soldiers wonder if they imagined the old tank getting involved in the fighting after they first got hit. I did not take this to mean it was the same tank that their fathers had disappeared in. I thought it was a monument and they imagined that it came to life. That would explain why they did not open it up. Why would you investigate a monument to see if anyone was inside? In addition to the fantastic art by Kubert, we should mention the gorgeous cover by Grandenetti and Adler, which makes dynamic use of color. As for the story, Bob Kanigher sure loves coincidences involving families, doesn't he?

Peter: What is the secret of "The Glory Box of Charlie Company"? Why is that all the men are named "Charlie"? Why would a wounded soldier give up his medal rather than wear it proudly? These are the questions asked by a green recruit who swears he'll win a medal and, when he does, it's going on his chest and nowhere else. When the Company destroys a Nazi tank, the kid pulls off genuine heroism but when he sees the ghosts of the men who didn't make it he suddenly sees the light and tosses the medal in the box. The Glory Box idea is intriguing but this is too close to a few other stories we've gotten in the past where the young protagonist's eyes are filled with medals and, by the climax, he's a changed man. I don't buy the quick transformation. As with the "War That Time Forgot" series, Andru and Esposito prove they can tackle military vehicles just fine; it's the teenaged GIs with eyes agog that they struggle with.

Why do we get the feeling "Charlie"
will see the error of his ways soon?

Jack: The snowy setting and ghostly soldiers are impressive, but I find it hard to believe that soldiers ran around thinking of medals while under fire. I think they were just trying to stay alive. Were medals really handed out in the field? Stories like this make it seem like the commanding officer went around with a stack of medals ready to hand to survivors after a battle. Wasn't there more paperwork and delay involved?

Peter: GI Mickey has been training to be a paratrooper but, before "The Big Jump," he's having nightmares about faulty chutes.Come the big day, the chute opens but he's caught on the tail of a passing cargo plane and is a sitting duck for the enemy. Thankfully, Mickey is able to cut himself loose and take out a couple of Nazi planes on the way down. You can feel Mickey's tension before his first jump and for that bit of realism I'll recommend "The Big Jump." It's the standard Jack Abel art where everyone looks like they were drafted from Riverdale but it'll do in a pinch. Apply all the denigrating adjectives you can to Jerry Grandenetti's interior artwork (and we do), but the guy sure can deliver on the cover (with help from Jack Adler).


Jack: One interesting thing about this story is that it mostly takes place in the course of a single jump. It's far-fetched that a paratrooper's chute could get caught on the tail of a plane and he would not be killed instantly, but hey--I believe Superman and the Flash raced around the earth eight times in one second, so I'll believe anything.


Joe Kubert
Our Fighting Forces 77

"Double Cross!"
Story by Robert Kanigher
Art by Joe Kubert

"The Walking Booby Trap!"
Story by Bob Haney
Art by Jerry Grandenetti

"No Foxhole--No Home!"
Story by Robert Kanigher
Art by Jerry Grandenetti

Jack: In the North African desert, an American soldier and a Nazi soldier come face to face, holding each other at gunpoint in a tense standoff. Agreeing to flip a coin to decide which man will take the other prisoner, the American wins and begins marching the Nazi back to camp when a second Nazi jumps the American in a "Double Cross!" The Nazi's gun goes off in the struggle, killing the first Nazi and allowing the American to take a new prisoner and resume his march. Wow! Where did this come from? A four-page, black and white stunner with a single splash of color when the gun goes off. It feels like something from an EC war comic, and we couldn't have a better writer-artist team to pull it off.

Kubert's nod to Eisner

Peter: A walloping good yarn this one. I'm not sure why Kanigher (or Kubert?) chose the gimmick of printing "Double Cross" in black and white (but for that one panel) but it works. Sometimes the color can soften the "atmosphere" of a gritty story and it certainly works here. I may be wrong but this might have been the first B&W war comic (and probably the last until Archie Goodwin introduced Blazing Combat over at Warren two years after this issue went on sale) and when it gets reprinted, in Our Fighting Forces #115 (October 1968), it will be presented in four colors.

The only panel with color

Jack: The Nazis are launching rockets at London and wreaking havoc on the city, but Allied spies sent into enemy territory to look for the launching base never returned. A lone soldier is sent behind enemy lines with a plan: locate the launchpad and send a radio signal to a drone plane circling overhead so that the plane can fix the target and crash into it. "The Walking Booby Trap!" has no luck in finding the base until he is captured and taken prisoner on a train, which turns out to be a mobile rocket launching base! He manages to signal the plane and leap off the train as it passes over a bridge, ensuring that the movable base is destroyed. Two in a row! Who would've thought an issue of Our Fighting Forces would start out so strong! Even Grandenetti's art works in this action-packed story.

Grandenetti's take on the Blitz

Peter: Despite Jerry's cartoony squiggles, I really liked "The Walking Booby Trap." With its many tense moments of espionage, it's almost like a mini-Alistair MacLean epic. Wow, this issue is developing into one of the best in a long time. Hope that third story can... Oh, never mind.

Abbott and Costello meet the Japs
Jack: The small section of island beach held by the marines is being blasted by Japanese planes. Time to dive into a foxhole! But for Gunner, Sarge and Pooch, they find "No Foxhole--No Home!" In between blasting Zeroes out of the air and machine gunning enemy troops, the trio digs their own foxhole, but as soon as they settle in they are sent out on patrol. They board an enemy patrol boat but it blows up due to a time bomb; another enemy boat lands in the beach and they take refuge inside, only to find it destroyed by an enemy plane. The explosion creates a giant foxhole. Not the worst Gunner and Sarge story we've seen, but not the best, either. More a series of incidents than a real story.

Peter: Since I've always been an optimist when it comes to funny books, I approach each new Gunner, Sarge and Pooch "adventure" with a glass-half-full attitude. "Someday" I says to myself, "We'll get a GS&P worth writing about and I won't have to google synonyms for 'lousy' anymore." Having said that, after reading this latest snicker-fest, I'll have to maintain my optimism and look forward to next issue. If nothing else, I take away from this installment that Pooch can smell a Zero approaching. Perhaps we'll find out that Pooch and Krypto were separated from the same litter.


Andru & Esposito
Star Spangled War Stories 109

"The Last Soldiers"
Story by Robert Kanigher
Art by Ross Andru and Mike Esposito

"The Castaway Torpedoman!"
Story by Bob Haney
Art by Irv Novick

"No More Aces!"
Story Uncredited
Art by Jack Abel

Peter: When a flock of pterodactyls assaults a cargo plane, the tank men aboard must fashion a survival strategy pronto. Their tank is jettisoned and a parachute engaged but they land on the back of a giant monster dinosaur from the stone age of a prehistoric time and all hell breaks loose. "The Last Soldiers" end up at the bottom of a river but, luckily, they've packed a robo-pilot and the tin can (which resembles a cash register with legs) manages to save the day. At this stage of the game, all that changes is the names of the GIs and the species of dinos they encounter. Bob Kanigher's not even trying but, then, maybe this series was so popular he didn't have to.


Jack: Can a tank's descent really be slowed by a parachute? We haven't seen a robot soldier from Kanigher in awhile so it was a surprise to see this one, although it (he?) did not survive this story. The human soldiers don't even seem all that surprised to encounter dinosaurs anymore.

Peter: Born with two left feet, a stumbling, bumbling new torpedo man does not endear himself to his C.O. or his fellow seamen. Then, during a routine procedure, the sailor is left outside the sub during an attack and must fend for himself, with only a raft and a few supplies, on the open sea for days. When the enemy ship reappears, his sub fires a torpedo but the torp dies in the water. Our young stumblebum has one chance to make up for all his mistakes and comes through with flying colors. I think I saw the film version of "The Castaway Torpedoman" with Jerry Lewis (or was it Don Knotts?). It was so much better. I love the sequence where our Naval numbskull experiences a series of errors no one person could possibly be responsible for, capped off by a panel where he doesn't so much drop a monkey wrench as throw it! If I'd been this guy's skipper, I'd have packed him in one of the torpedo tubes and... Sayonara, sucka!

Inspector Clouseau Joins the Navy

Jack: This story was headed for a one-star rating until the final sequence, where the idiot rides a torpedo toward the enemy ships just like Slim Pickens on an atom bomb. Yee hah! I was kind of hoping he would forget to jump off, but no such luck.

Peter: A Korean fighter pilot has quite a bit of pressure on his shoulders to live up to the family name. Dad was a WWI ace and brother Bill notched several kills in WWII. Now, it's his turn, and he's finding it hard to avoid shaming the family name. Nothing seems to go easily for our hero until he manages to sink a stinking commie sub and, while there are "No More Aces" in the Banner family, there's at least another hero. Ah, another DC military dad who only wants the best for his boy... as long as the kid kills enough pinkos to merit some badges and keep the family name alive. These curios are so dated and so full of propaganda that they're barely readable.

DC Family Values

Jack: Although the comic has no credits and the GCD is silent on this one, I'm betting Hank Chapman was responsible. Neither Kanigher nor Haney could be counted on to pen such immortal lines as "That double bingo-bango gives you more aces than a stacked deck!" or to refer to the Korean War as the "Korean bang-bang." I won't even go into "If I scratch this MIG pussy . . ." By the way, if Dad is Eddie Banner and brother is Bill Banner, can our hero be anyone other than a young BRUCE BANNER, who later went to school on the G.I. Bill, got a pair of glasses, and saved a young man from a Gamma Ray blast???




In our next voyeuristic issue!
On Sale Monday, April 13th!

In Search of... In Search Of: An Index to the Alan Landsburg Book Series

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by John Scoleri

Growing up in the 1970s, a time when interest in aliens, bigfoot, and strange phenomena seemed to be at an all-time high, one of my favorite TV shows was In Search Of. Hosted by Leonard Nimoy, each episode detailed stories of unexplained mysteries, von Daniken inspired alien influences, and other strange phenomena.

Many years later, I discovered that the producer of the show, Alan Landsburg, had written a series of books for Bantam; each focused on a category of the types of stories that appeared on the show. As the show and the books were so closely related, it's worth providing a brief of history on the origin of the series. It all started with In Search of Ancient Astronauts, an edited version of a 1970 documentary based on Erich von Daniken's 1968 book Chariots of the Gods; re-dubbed by Rod Serling and aired on television in 1973. Landsburg also produced two follow-ups similarly narrated by Serling: In Search of Ancient Mysteries, a 1973 TV movie, and the 1975 documentary, The Outer Space Connection. If not for Serling's death in 1975, one can reasonably assume he would have gone on to host the TV series that aired from 1977 to 1982.

What follows is an index of the eight Bantam volumes and the contents of each. Note: all volumes contain 32 pages of photos.

In Search of Ancient Mysteries
by Alan and Sally Landsburg
Foreword by Rod Serling
Bantam, February 1974

Table of Contents
Foreword by Rod Serling
1 How Did We Start?
2 Spores and Artifacts
3 The Sea in the Mountains
4 Space base One?
5 Who Was Viracocha?
6 The Colossal Charts
7 Something to Make the Gods Weep
8 Voyages into Limbo
9 Who Taught the Egyptians?
10 Secrets in Stone
11 A Feretic at Karnak
12 Back to the Bible
13 Looking Down on Earth
14 How Did Man Get His Brain?
15 Shortcuts in Space-Time?
Bibliography
Index


The Outer Space Connection
by Alan and Sally Landsburg
Foreword by Rod Serling
Bantam, July 1975

Table of Contents
Foreword by Rod Serling
1 The Question We Couldn't Get Out of Our Minds
2 The Mayan Mystery
3 How About the Clone?
4 Engineering the Embryo
5 Neurosurgeons in Peru
6 The House of Death
7 Back to the Pyramids
8 Book of the Dead
9 Myth as History
10 Methuselah Lived to Be 980
11 Old Age: A Curable Disease?
12 Strange Life Forces
13 Afterlife: The Journey to the Heavens
Epilogue


In Search of Lost Civilizations
by Alan Landsburg
Foreword by Leonard Nimoy
Bantam, December 1976

Table of Contents
Foreword by Leonard Nimoy
Prologue
1 Where Did Everyone Go?
2 The Drowned Kingdoms
3 The Wave That Wrecked a Civilization
4 To Meet the Minotaur
5 Into the Maze
6 What the Cyclops Left
7 A Blind Man's Secrets
8 When Death Was Fun
9 Britain's Shadow People
10 Egypt's Black Rival
11 Reach Into Darkness
12 Africa's Tribe of Mystics
13 The City Under the River
14 The First Civilization?
15 The Invisible Machines
16 Old Enemies
Bibliography


In Search of Extraterrestrials
by Alan Landsburg
Foreword by Leonard Nimoy
Bantam, January 1977

Table of Contents
Foreword by Leonard Nimoy
1 The Hunt Begins
2 Beneath the Surface
3 To Witness the Fires
4 The Tainting Problem
5 History Visits in the Deep Past
6 Out There
7 Hello Out There
8 Black Holes
9 Designs of Spaceships
10 Astronomers' Views
11 The Viking Mission
12 Why Bother with Life Out There?
13 Conclusion
Epilogue
Bibliography


In Search of Magic and Witchcraft
by Alan Landsburg
Foreword by Leonard Nimoy*
Bantam, February 1977

Table of Contents
(Foreword by Leonard Nimoy)
Introduction
1 What is Magic?
2 What is Witchcraft?
3 Witchcraft and Christianity
4 What Makes People Want to Be Witches?
5 The Witchcraft Scene Today
6 Talismans, Amulets, and Fetishes
7 Spells, Incantations, and Rituals
8 Mediterranean Magic Cults in Modern America
9 Love Potions, Herbs, and Scents
10 The Kabala, Alchemy, and the Hermetic Orders
11 Curses, Fact or Fantasy?
12 Magic, Witchcraft, and Sex
13 Satanism and Devil Worship
14 Exorcism
15 Voodoo
Bibliography


In Search of Strange Phenomena
by Alan Landsburg
Foreword by Leonard Nimoy*
Bantam, March 1977

Table of Contents
Foreword by Leonard Nimoy
1 What Are Psychic and Other Strange Phenomena?
2 The Nature of Man: The Link With Strange Phenomena
3 Pipeline to the Beyond
4 ESP and its Variations
5 Psychic Dreams and Astral Projection
6 The Case For Reincarnation
7 Ghosts and How to Deal With Them
8 Kirlian Photography and Psychic Photography—Hoax or Fact?
9 Criminal-Detection Work and ESP
10 Psychic Surgery and Healing
11 The Psychic World of Plants
12 Pyramids and Pyramidology
13 Improbable Monuments and Archaeological Puzzles
14 The Bermuda Triangle
15 Mediums and Mediumship and the Strange Case of Uri Geller
Bibliography


In Search of Myths and Monsters
by Alan Landsburg
Foreword by Leonard Nimoy*
Bantam, July 1977

Table of Contents
Foreword by Leonard Nimoy
1 Monsters and I
2 The Reign of Monsters
3 The Great Dying
4 Missing and Presumed Nonexistent
5 The Things in the Loch
6 Dark Worlds Below
7 Sea Giants
8 The Snowman Wants to See You
9 America's Longest Hide-and-Seek Game
10 Monsters Astray?
11 Part-time Monsters
12 Monsters from the Laboratory
Bibliography

In Search of Missing Persons
by Alan Landsburg
Foreword by Leonard Nimoy*
Bantam, February 1978

Table of Contents
Foreword by Leonard Nimoy

Part I - The Adventurers
Prologue
1 Richard Halliburton
2 Percy Fawcett
3 Amelia Earhart
4 Michael Rockefeller

Part II - The Fugitives
Prologue
5 The Romanovs
6 Martin Bormann
7 James Hoffa
8 D.B. Cooper

Part III - Strange Disappearances
Prologue
9 Jesus Christ
10 Aimee Semple Macpherson
11 Dalton Trumbo
12 The Great Gods

Bibliography

*Nimoy wrote different Forewords for the first two volumes in the In Search of series. His Foreword from the second volume was reprinted in each of the remaining volumes.

Fans of the series may be interested to know that in 1979, the Doubleday Book Club released a hardcover condensed compilation of the first five Bantam In Search of paperbacks published in 1977.

In Search Of...
by Alan Landsburg
Doubleday Book Club, 1979
(printed in December 1978 as per T52 gutter code)

Table of Contents
Introuduction

Part One - Lost Civilizations
1 Where Did Everyone Go?
2 Atlantis
3 The Heirs of Minos
4 Britain's Shadow People
5 The Invisible Machines

Part Two - Extraterrestrials
6 The Hunt and the Witnesses
7 The Scientists' DIlemma
8 The Prospects Out There
9 The Visitors

Part Three - Magic and Witchcraft
10 What is Magic?
11 What is Witchcraft?
12 The Witchcraft Scene Today
13 Talismans, Amulets, Potions and Herbs
14 Spells and Curses
15 Witchcraft, Sex, and the Devil
16 Possession, Exorcism, and Voodoo

Part Four - Strange Phemomena
17 ESP
18 Spiritual Survival and Reincarnation
19 Psychic Dreams and Astral Projection
20 Ghosts and How to Deal With Them
21 Psychic Phenomena at Work

Part Five - Myths and Monsters
22 Monsters: Missing and Presumed Nonexistent
23 The Reign of Monsters
24 Dark Worlds Below
25 Monsters Who Walk Like Men
26 Dracula, Vampires, and Werewolves

Bibliography
Index


Fans of the show, and those interested in strange phenomena, will be thrilled to know the entire series (including the original two pilot films and two follow-on series) has been released in a complete series set on DVD. You can order the complete series of In Search Of on Amazon (and keep an eye out for sale prices - it has been offered for less than $50 in the past!).



In memory of 
Leonard Nimoy
March 26, 1931 - February 27, 2015

Alan Landsburg
May 10, 1933 - August 14, 2014

The Dungeons Of Doom!: The Pre-Code Horror Comics Volume 6

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Harvey Comics
Part Six

By Jose Cruz and
Peter Enfantino

Part 1
Part 2
Part 3
Part 4
Part 5


Peter: Dalton Draymond has a peculiar fetish: he wants to make his home in a tomb at Shady Rest Cemetery. Well, peace and quiet and cheap overhead, right? Well, the humans he deals with find him to be eccentric but it’s not the living Dalton has a real problem with. The spirits of his “neighbors” rise from their unrest to give Draymond a hard time; seems the dead find it hard to slumber while the living reside nearby. But Dalton is a stubborn one and a visit from “the ghost of death” doesn’t scare the miser away from his new palace. In the end, Dalton Draymond is captured by a host of ghosts and put on trial for his crimes. The verdict is guilty and the poor guy is hung by the neck right outside his tomb. Upside is that now Dalton can join the HOA.

There will be a theme running through this volume’s picks, for me at least, and that theme is wackiness. “Deadly Acres”  (from #32) has gobs of wacky imagination just seeping from its 36 panels. Why in the world would anyone want to live in a tomb? After a couple pages, you won’t even be questioning that anymore. “The Ghost of Death”? Death has a ghost? Yep, and he’s a mean sucker, too. The dead have their own juries and judges. Does that mean this kind of crime against corpses happens frequently or are the dead put on trial as well? Nostrand and Powell team up to present a quite ghoulish (though often humorous) take on “Us vs. Them,” complete with the patented bug-eyed shock and eerie shadows. I’ve mentioned this before but I think it bears repeating: Harvey writers were ruthless sons of bitches. The innocent die in droves. No EC-esque “poetic justice” here. Dalton Draymond, when we stand back a few feet and have a good look, is nothing more than a goofy old man who has some wild ideas of where to lay his head. He’s not harming anyone save these vengeful spirits and, when we witness Draymond swinging from a tree for his crimes, the hilarity of the build-up (skeletal judges with barrister wigs!) quickly switches to a numbing shock.

Mention must be made of the wildly random cover on #32 we are served this time out: bikini-clad blonde bombshell, mutated dwarf, an old bum holding a last will and testament and, of course, the muscular dude wearing a cat cowl and cape, leopard-skin briefs, and blue pirate boots. Just what the hell is going on here?
Yowza!

Jose: Baxter is short on dough and hard on luck, but that doesn’t stop him from betting everything he owns at the roulette wheels of Reno. With $100,000 in the hole, Baxter curses the heavens and swears his vengeance on all the powers of darkness. A jowly hag from the underworld heeds the loser’s call and promises Baxter the best of all possible odds so long as Baxter follows any requests made of him later on. Soon Baxter is reaping big bucks, but that night the hag comes calling for her favor… and she’s brought along a few friends, too. They’re folks that Baxter has seen on a regular basis: the King, the Queen, and the Jack. But these royal heads are also royally insane, and the hag demands Baxter lead them on a homicidal field trip so that they can satiate their murderous lusts on any unsuspecting citizens. Maddened by his plight, Baxter sets the three specters alight. But Baxter discovers that his own escape has been deterred, so he exults in his newly earned winnings one last time before the flames consume him and his deck of playing cards.

When they were on their A-game, the folks at Harvey could take what at face value might appear to be a ludicrous premise and really go there with it. That’s certainly the case of “Jack of Horror” (from #34), a tale that sees the figures from a hand of cards coming to life and going on a regal rampage. The artwork of Bob Powell and Howard Nostrand goes a long way in making the story seem legitimately chilling: the faces of the King, Queen, and Jack are twisted into gaping-mouthed masks of insanity, like the masks of comedy and tragedy given a demonic turn. They also make other inspired choices, like the bulbous-cheeked, blue-faced hag that haunts Baxter and culminating the tale in a fiery climax where the inferno seems to eat the very pages. Kudos to the colorists here, too. Such vivid shades of orange!

Peter: Dr. Sennett has a nasty, sadistic habit: he loves to torture the scorpions he studies. His young assistant, Graham, does not approve and, one day, he lets the scientist experience the level of his chagrin. Graham frees the entire lab of scorpions and orders them to attack and kill his boss. Greedy with his new-found talent, Graham orders the creatures to kill anyone on the planet who's harming insects; a farmer smoking out a beehive, an old lady swatting a fly, and a butterfly hunter netting a monarch are the first to gal before the army of stingers. When Graham's fiancee questions her lover's mental capacity, he snaps and hurls one of his subjects at her. Seeing this as an act of betrayal, Graham's creepy crawly soldiers turn on and sting the man to death.


Years before Stephen Gilbert's Ratman's Notebooks (and its filmed version, Willard), "Army of Scorpions!" (from #33) has, as its protagonist, a kindly, nature-loving young man who discovers he has an uncanny ability to manipulate a mass of deadly critters and then pays the ultimate price when that power goes to his head. I'm a sucker for scorpions and spiders in these old horror stories (perhaps because both species scare the hell out of me) and Tom Hickey's art portrays them for the nasty buggers they are. I think it's hilarious that Graham decides to punish the real felons behind insect mistreatment (like the old woman and butterfly collector), instead of going after the CEOs of the DDT companies, but perhaps expansion was in the cards. Also classic is when Graham winds up and throws one over the plate at his future wife only to miss and splatter one of his faithful subjects all over the wallpaper.

Jose: In a steamy Louisiana swamp, Ashley and Kruger are using an old map to find the remains of a wrecked vessel and the bundle of treasure it reportedly holds. Their joy at finding the ruins of an 18th century frigate is short-lived when, out of the mist, stumble a gaggle of hideous, decaying zombies. They are the forsaken crew of the ship, doomed to live out the rest of their days as monsters in the swamp for having killed their captain for the gold. The demons imprison the two explorers in a cave filled with the treasure to await their execution. One of the demons’ odious number calls to the men, promising to show them a way out so that he may earn his freedom as well. But when their guide brings them to the edge of the swamp, the men are horrified to see the creature crumble into “a putrid mass.” It seems the parameters of the curse dictate that the demons cannot leave the swamp without having this fragmenting horror visited upon them. Using this to their advantage, Ashley and Kruger set fire to the marsh and make a break for it. But as the demons perish, the men see that their own skin has started to take on a moldy hue and realize that the curse has been placed on them as well. They then reason that it’s better to die by fire than by inches.

This fetid adventure mainly serves as a means for Bob Powell to flex his considerable talents in depicting the dripping, putrefying undead, which is fine by me. The artist bestows his creations with all manner of savage flourishes: barnacled, open sores; peeling lips that reveal ghastly rictus grins; swollen tongues lolling in the humid air. Powell was a gifted writer to boot, but “Rotting Demons” (from #36) is clearly an art showcase. He also realizes the inherent Gothic quality of the swamp, giving the mossy trees, hot mists, and foul water all the creeping dread of an English graveyard at sunset. This tale is damp with horror.

Peter: In the months after an atomic war in the year 2052, the few left on earth are becoming radiation-spawned mutants, giant blue ogres who eat human flesh and cannot be killed. Like amoeba, severed limbs grow back immediately. The only defense we humans have against these creatures is to herd them into a lab and study them. Dubbed "the Hall of Horrors" by its staff, the building is supervised by big-brain scientist, Doctor Collins. A lab accident allows the monsters to escape, killing Collins in the process. The mutants forge a path of destruction and death throughout the land, taking very few prisoners. Those taken prisoner are kept in a facility much like the Hall of Horrors where, eventually, all transform into the hideous blue meanies. All but one man, that is. Mogyll seems to be immune to whatever causes the change and the monsters decide to keep him around for a couple years to monitor his (lack of) progress. Knowing he'll be done away with soon, Mogyll chances an escape and, once free, discovers the notes for a formula to destroy the humanoids. Whipping up the potion, the old man turns the tables on his tormentors, blasting every one of the mutants to dust. Sadly, after the world-wide purge is complete, "The Last Man on Earth" discovers he's turning into a mutant. His brain now completely feral,the Mogyll Monster roams the earth alone until, one day, he happens upon a time machine and takes it back to the year 1952, where he plans to murder all those responsible for the atomic war.

For my money, "Last Man on Earth" (from #35) is easily one of the five best Harvey Horror tales I've read. It's filled with disposable lead characters, twists and turns, and a biting sense of humor (not to mention a dash of political commentary). Most funny book writers would have had Dr. Collins survive to create the Blue Monster-Destructo-Ray but, no, Collins is dispatched fairly early and the deed is left up to a character we don't meet until two-thirds of the way through the narrative. Since this was followed by the rare sequel, I wonder if "Last Man" was submitted as an 11-page story (a length unheard of for a Harvey Horror story) and then sliced or if the writer (probably artist Bob Powell) wanted to milk a good idea for an extra drop.

Jose: When we left off  “The Last Man on Earth” (from #35), the mutant was headed back into the past of 1952 to enact his vengeance on the scientists that brought about the atomic bomb and lead to his transformation in the year 2052. Trolling the streets of the city in a disguise, the monster is deterred by a police officer who quickly discovers the abomination’s invulnerability to bullets and hatred of humankind. Purchasing a newspaper headlining a scientific conference in town, the mutant makes his way to the assembly and presents himself to the terrified lab coats. One whiz kid, Reynolds, gets the idea to wrangle the mutant with torches and lure him back into his time machine. They send the fiend even further back into history, where predators more fearsome than the mutant wait hungrily for his arrival.

Strange perhaps to choose a “sequel” story over the original, but “The Last Man Returns” (from #36) has a more enjoyably sardonic streak than Bob Powell’s first round. From the moment that the mutant takes off his handkerchief to reveal his slobbering face and exults “Take a good look. It is the last sight you will see on this Earth!”, we know that this four-page oddity is going to be a fun ride. The fact that it has one of the most crackerjack, grin-inducing twists that I’ve yet seen makes it worthy of mention and inclusion alone. (Harvey Trivia -#36, the issue that featured "The Last Man Returns" was the only Harvey Horror comic to include a fifth story! - Peter)

Peter: In the mid-1800s, the Bar-X Ranch had ben owned by the sadistic Sam Bullard, a cattleman who has no time for local sheep-raisers and let's them know where he stands by burning down their homestead. Shot during the raid, Bullard dies cursing the land his ranch sits upon and, for good measure, includes his men in the haunt promise by shooting them all. A century later, Julia and Mat Harris experience the after-effects of Bullard's curse when Julia swears she's being stalked by a ghostly horseman. Mat scoffs, believing it to be one of his neighbors trying to scare them off the property, but eventually buys into his wife's theory after she's trampled by a herd of ghost cattle. Swearing revenge, Mat heads out onto the plains to locate and destroy the supernatural menace only to come face to skull with the merry troop and their newest member... Julia! The specters lasso Mat and drop him from a great height to the desert floor, soon rising to become the newest member of the ghost riders.

Unlike Jose, who below admits that the horror-western genre is one that leaves him cold as a cathouse floor in winter, I love the melding of the old west and the supernatural. There's an inherently creepy vibe about the huge expanse of the desert and its non-human occupants. You're isolated (and I'm speaking as someone who lives in Arizona) and help could be a day's ride in those pre-automotive days. Picture, for instance, John Wayne and his group of Indian hunters in The Searchers, drawn far away from the innocents back at the ranch. Now, substitute a group of skeletons atop ghostly steeds for those Indians. Dynamite! Like Dalton Draymond in "Deadly Acres", Mat and Julia Harris, the unlucky owners of "Doom Ranch" (from #37), have done nothing more heinous than buy a bit of property (albeit one that has been notoriously cursed) and try their luck at farming. Their deaths are particularly brutal for a pair of characters who didn't murder, cheat, or steal. The sequence reprinted above, where Bullard tells his men they'll haunt any interlopers from the grave and his guys question the statement by asserting they're still alive, is laugh out loud funny. Luckily for you, the reader, Jose has chosen this as his story of the month so you can read the entire fabulous oater below.

Jose: Rodney Lawrence can suffer the indignity of being a laboratory assistant for the brilliant Martin Sanstrum, but the fact that beautiful heiress Beatrice broke things off with Rod to be with the older and more promising Martin is simply too much to bear. The announcement of the couple’s wedding is what finally sends Rod over the edge, so he sends Martin over the edge of the catwalk into the dynamo containing “the secret of life” that they've been working on. Rod plays off his bereavement very well, convincing the scientific society to accept Martin’s discoveries as his own and Beatrice into becoming his bride-to-be. Things are looking up for Rod, until a pesky moth with Martin’s voice begins buzzing around him. Strange enough, but then the moth grows into gigantic proportions and develops a sneering, human face before dropping Rod into the dynamo. The traitor isn’t killed but instead transported to a sticky hive where a horde of flesh-eating moths and the Martin-thing wait for him. Just as Rod is about to meet his mothy maker, he awakens in bed, realizing it was all a terrible nightmare. Exhausted and shaken, Rod takes his head-shrinker’s advice for a nice, long rest and holds a party two months later at his house. But when the flutter of a moth’s wings attracts Rod’s attention, he immediately breaks down and chases it into the lab before he meets with the hungry horde again that only he can see. He falls from the catwalk, body intact but mind shattered, and spends the rest of his days raving in an asylum.

That was a mouthful. “The Moth” (from #37) is a prime example of a patently silly plot being turned into something just short of magical by the combined literary and artistic powers of the Harvey bullpen. The murderer haunted by his deeds by a pestering omen is a rich vein in the Poe tradition. The choice of moth here is so bizarre and arbitrary and yet it somehow works, greatly due to the utterly trippy nightmare sequence that has Rod knocked way down on the links of the food chain. Warren Kremer’s insects are truly a revolting and chilling sight, all hairy legs and skeletal faces with big, buggy eyes. It’s easy to sympathize with Rod’s insanity with such acidic visions plaguing him! And as if the main narrative wasn’t estranging enough, the final panel reveals that the whole tale is being told by Death, who removes his fleshy human mask to reveal his puckered, spaghetti-haired visage. After reading this one you’ll be asking yourself if it all really happened.

Peter: A group of four men pan for gold in the treacherous jungles of the Congo. Their spirt sapped and tension running high, three of the men announce they're heading back for civilization but Jeb, the snappiest dresser of the bunch, decides to move on and keep searching. Literally, one panel later, Jeb finds gold... a whole lot of gold... a cave whose walls are lined with the stuff. Just as he's jumping for joy and spending his dough, his three partners arrive, announcing they had thought better and followed Jeb into that next panel. All four are now gazillionaires but, as is the case with these kinds of partnerships, tension doesn't ease with the discovery of riches but, rather, multiplies significantly. Jeb realizes he needs to off the other guys and begins to do so immediately. Girk and Janer are easy targets but Mogue proves to be a fighter and Jeb is severely wounded before plunging a dagger deep into Mogue's heart. Still, riches can mend a man pronto and Jeb turns his attention to a huge golden statue that lies deeper into the cave. Ignoring the obvious golden statues surrounding the idol, Jeb approaches and brags that he may just melt down the giant for extra cab fare. Clearly, not the right vow and within minutes the idol raises its hands and transforms Jeb into a shiny new monument.

Here's one I picked solely on the great twist ending rather than character development or stunning art. Jeb's another typical Harvey Horror character, one who goes from being a seemingly decent guy (albeit one who dresses like Gene Autry) to mass murderer and greedy bastard in the space of five pages. It's always surprised me about these "greedy partner" stories that four guys can't split what looks like a billion dollars in gold (easily) four ways and be happy. The nature of the beast, I suppose. That penultimate panel (above) of Jeb undergoing his metamorphosis while uttering the by-now familiar  screech of "AGGRRAHAA!" (Harvey's answer to EC's catchphrase "SQUA TRONT!"?) smacks of Al Williamson even though we know it's the ever-reliable Joe Certa.

Palais is King!
Jose: England, 1652. A vicious mob breaks into the house of a noted town witch and all-around-not-nice person to hang her for crimes of black magick. Executioner Anthony Raven carries out the grim duty to the cheers of the gathered crowd even though the witch swears to visit death upon each of Raven’s descendants. The crone’s corpse is put in a wooden coffin and thrown into “a foul-smelling cleft in the earth from which lime oozed in whorls of fetid slime!” Through some unknown “chemical reaction,” the slime revives the witch three hundred years after her burial, so now it’s avengin’ time! She first visits chemist Sidney Raven and his wife, melting their flesh off of their bones through her burning touch. She continues her sizzling streak, killing all of the Ravens unfortunate enough to cross her noxious path. She meets that last living Raven in the form of a young soldier keeping watch in a Korean foxhole. The witch is undeterred by his bullets and is able to claim the last Raven. Too bad for her that the fulfillment of the curse means her business on Earth is through, so she melts down into a puddle of protoplasm.

Like many, I have certain weaknesses when it comes to material which might be considered “bad taste” by the cultural elite. My soft spot comes in the form of stories like “The Witch Killer” (from #39), which I collectively call “horror overload.” These are tales that operate like shots: they may look slight and underwhelming on the surface, but they pack an alcoholic rush that goes straight to the brain. The four-pagers from Harvey had a higher potential of being disposable trash than anything halfway memorable, but on rare occasions they were used as a force of good (see “The Last Man Returns” above). Here, our unknown scripter and artist Rudy Palais go for broke in making this gore-filled doughnut a sugary treat. There’s plenty of the trademark Palais sweat, dollops of blood, drooling fangs, sneering skulls, withered skin, exposed ribcages, appendages dropping off like autumn leaves… This is horror junk food, and I eat it wholly and unapologetically. 

And the "Stinking Zombie Award" goes to...

Pictured: me, after reading this story.
Jose: If having two first names wasn’t bad enough, Herbert Spence has a shit life to boot. Scolded by his boss, jilted by the pretty secretary, and harassed by his apish co-worker, Herbie can only exorcise the bad juju of his daily existence when he goes to sleep every night and enacts some much-needed payback on all of his oppressors through the violent fantasies of his dreams. But soon Herbie finds that his dreams are compelling him… to kilt! No. Damn autocorrect. That is… to kill! In real life! Not just in dreams! This presents the sociopath with a moral dilemma for all of twenty seconds before he collapses from exhaustion, dreams of choking himself, and is found later by the police having choked himself.

Well, that happened. “The Sleepwalking Killer” (from #31) is from all appearances a write-off, a filler story that was done at the last minute to take up the last slot in the title's second issue. This may not be far from the truth, seeing as how artist Rudy Palais also did two other stories in the same issue. So perhaps it isn’t fair to pick this one to shreds, but it also wasn’t fair to have this inflicted upon us either. Palais’ art is technically good if unremarkable given his overtime duties on this issue, but we’ve seen much, much better from him to know what he’s capable of. Harvey always rushed through exposition and establishing character to get to the “good stuff,” for better or worse, and at four shrug-worthy pages long “The Sleepwalking Killer” employs that same tactic. It just forgot to put in the “good stuff” somewhere along the line.

"Grave Under the Bowling Alley"
is more like it.
Peter: I've always found the 13th hole to be terrifying but for different reasons than the protagonists of "Grave on the Green!" (from #33). Golfers have set out on the local course but don't seem to make it past the 13th. Mad old groundskeeper Finnegan relates that the trouble started when his brother, Malachi, was violently killed by an errant golfball on the 13th ("...his smashed head was horrible!) and then buried "quickly and quietly...". In the end, we find that Malachi's spirit has possessed his brother and forced him to kill and bury the corpses in a hollow chamber beneath the green.

I hesitate to call this one a stinker as some of the elements are so loony as to make the story entertaining but it crashes and burns towards its climax and, ultimately, makes no sense whatsoever. Vic Donahue, usually quite reliable, resorts to half-finished faces and less-than-frightful ghouls. Malachi's injury is so exaggerated you'd have thought someone forgot to yell "Fore" as they were throwing a bowling ball.


NOTABLE QUOTABLES

"Let me explain the phenomenon you are observing. There are other worlds co-existent with ours, but in different dimensional orbits! This black light instrument permits transfer from one dimensional orbit to another! This metal bar has come back to us frozen -- the way my finger did when I poked it through the black light plane! In both cases, the object passed through the black light plane into the ether of another solar system co-exitent with ours but in another dimensional orbit!"
- "Gateway to Death"
Submitted with no comment.

“I must find the old woman who sold me these flowers! She must explain why they are bloody!”
- "Bloody Red Rose"

"You are lying, decaying old woman!"
- "Bloody Red Rose"

“As the days pass, the seed of doubt and fear sprouts in the shadowy corners of a tormented mind… and as it grows, the flowers become a symbol of death and horror…”
- "The Tapping Doom"

“Where to, miss?”
“One way to Hicksville!”
- "The Tapping Doom"

“The sun sank slowly like the dying breath of a hanging man…”
- "Baron of Death"

"And so the curse is ended now, and will never return, unless another attempts to prod into the regions where living men have no right!"
- "Baron of Death"

"Two years ago my brother was killed by a golfball... on the 13th green..."
- "Grave on the Green"

"After all -- what is life but a manifestation of electrical phenomena?"
- "Battle of the Monsters"

"Hmm... the ninth cranial nerve is attached here.. that means if I anastomose these arteries to the Tungsten wire, it should work!"
- "Battle of the Monsters"

“Special price for a black suit soaked in embalming fluid thick with the stench of death!!! Heh! Heh! Heh!”
- "Satan’s Suit"

“Somewhere in the waters of the Caribbean, on nights when the air is as thick and warm as fresh blood, a ship drifts endlessly, its captain and crew afflicted with the paleness that goes beyond life to the dreaded realm of eternal death!!”
- "Sea of Corpses"

“And yet, look at our faces. We have paid the price.”
- "Halloween Nightmare"

"Aaaagh! Your blood... it burns like fire in my veins!"
-  "Blood of a Witch"

"I don't know why you waste your time with that nonsense... but if it keeps you happy while I'm at the beauty parlor, it's all right with me."
Apparently there wasn't a ration on headlines.
- "Blood of a Witch"

“In the year 2052 the atomic war was brief… and effective.”
- "The Last Man on Earth"

“Rise up from the pit, man of a distant land!!! Rise with your death wounds fresh and bleeding!!!”
- "Marching Zombies"

“Stop staring, serf! Your ugly face frightens my horses!”
- "Trick the Devil"

"He seemed polite and friendly, this inn-keeper. But there was something about him -- something that waited for that dreadful, horrible moment when he would eat again -- gorging, tearing, biting at his food with ghoulish appetite -- with screaming, slavering, smirking leer until the very rotted rafters of his crypt echoed and re-echoed their wailing plea: Flee -- Run! Run.. from.. HE!"
- "He"

"From all sides of him the rotted walls oozed a wet slime that gurgled out in fetid odor clearly warning him that he had descended into a labyrinth of hell!"
- "He"

“…Their replies send the hot bile of rage rushing through his veins…!”
- "Carnival of Death"

“You’re yellow, the lot of you! The color of gold—without the quality!”
- "Fool’s Gold"


STORY OF THE MONTH

Jose: With me, there are certain sub-genres and subsets of horror that I tend to bristle at or that bore me. Explorers searching for a lost civilization under the sea/under the earth/in the jungle? Yawn. Spouse wanting to do away with their significant other who may or may not be cheating on them? Snore. Mad scientist creating a horrible monster “for the good of mankind!”? Ugh! Also among these dubious ranks I would also group what I call “cowpoke horror.” The genre just doesn’t seem to work all that well amidst all the tumbleweeds and seedy saloons. Of course, a talented writer can make a difference in this or any of the other mentioned veins, and somebody was right on the money when they wrote “Doom Ranch” (from #37). The art is done by Joe Certa, always reliable and yet never quite cracking his way into our top spots before. He seems to be having a lot of fun with some of his creative choices here, which makes it that much more fun to take in. “Doom” reads a lot like a Bob Powell yarn. The husband and wife characters are not only noticeably human, but they actually like each other too, and not just in the saccharine sense that honeymooning newlyweds are painted. We watch them live and die in the face of their spectral horror and their bravery looks like it’ll beat all the odds. It’s a small-scale Western epic. But I get ahead of myself. Read on fer yerself there, cowboy.








Peter: Sometimes, one only really needs a good "Battle of the Monsters" to put a smile on your face, don't you think? Well, even though the "Battle" isn't Royale, it's still quite enchanting. Copping the look of Karloff's classic creation (at a time when Universal obviously didn't have a lot of lawyers looking for infringement), Vic Donahue gives us a Monster who's part terrifying and part sympathetic. The battle itself, as you'll see, is over a small child and the patchwork creature is on the defense. Pay close attention to John Lapham's appearance from one second (page 2, panel 6) to the next (page 3, panel 1) for the quickest clean-up in the history of mankind. I mentioned the Universal influence but perhaps a bigger influence on Donahue was Dick Briefer, whose classic Frankenstein title had just been resurrected by Prize Comics a few months before "Battle of the Monsters" appeared in Black Cat Mystery #36. Enjoy!







The Comics
Black Cat Mystery #30-39

#30 (August 1951)
Cover by Lee Elias

“Gateway to Death”
Art by Vic Donahue

“The Thing from the Grave”
Art by Rudy Palais

“The Werewolf Must Kill”
Art by Lee Elias










#31 (October 1951)
Cover by Al Avison

“Bloody Red Rose”
Art by Rudy Palais

“The Tapping Doom”
Art by Manny Stallman

“The Sea Witch of Sandy Hook”
Art by Rudy Palais

“The Sleepwalking Killer”
Art by Rudy Palais







#32 (December 1951)
Cover Uncredited

“Baron of Death”
Art by Rudy Palais

“Satan’s Suit”
Art Uncredited

“Deadly Acres”
Art by Bob Powell and Howard Nostrand

“Arms of Doom”
Art by Rudy Palais







#33 (February 1952)
Cover by Lee Elias

“Corpses from the Sea”
Art by Bob Powell and Howard Nostrand

“Army of Scorpions”
Art by Tom Hickey

“Grave on the Green”
Art by Vic Donahue

“Man Made Monster”
Art by Rudy Palais







#34 (April 1952)
Cover Uncredited

“Jack of Horror”
Art by Bob Powell and Howard Nostrand

“Shadows on the Tomb”
Art by Joe Certa

“Hand of the Yogi”
Art by Rudy Palais

“Halloween Nightmare”
Art by Manny Stallman







#35 (May 1952)
Cover Uncredited

“The Last Man on Earth”
Art by Bob Powell

“Forbidden Room”
Art by Joe Certa

“Marching Zombies”
Art by Rudy Palais

“Trick the Devil”
Art by Vic Donahue







#36 (June 1952)
Cover by Warren Kremer

“Rotting Demons”
Art by Bob Powell

“Battle of the Monsters”
Art by Vic Donahue

“The Last Man Returns”
Art by Bob Powell

“Whip of Death”
Art by Joe Certa

“Carnival of Death”
Art by Manny Stallman




#37 (July 1952)
Cover by Warren Kremer

“The Moth”
Art by Warren Kremer

“Kill No More!”
Art by Don Perlin and Abe Simon

“Doom Ranch”
Art by Joe Certa

“The Clock Struck—Doom!”
Art by Rudy Palais






#38 (August 1952)
Cover by Lee Elias

“Fool’s Gold”
Art by Joe Certa

“Blood of a Witch”
Art by Moe Marcus and Rocco “Rocke” Mastroserio

“Death Wears Green”
Art by Vic Donahue

“He”
Art by Rudy Palais






#39 (September 1952)
Cover by Lee Elias

“The Ape Man”
Art by Joe Certa

“The Witch Killer”
Art by Rudy Palais

“The Body Maker”
Art by Warren Kremer

“Portrait in Blood”
Art by Vic Donahue and Rocke “Rocco” Mastroserio








Get zem while ze're hott!


In four weeks, Part Two of our look at Black Cat Mystery!


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