The
publication of MFC weeklies began in the second half of June 1975 and IPC
didn’t have time to produce a book for 1976 so Monster Fun Comic Annual 1977
was the title’s first. It came out early in the Autumn of 1976 – the first
advertisement can be found in MFC No. 66 (Sept 11th, 1976). At that time the
weekly was already counting its last days and was absorbed by Buster a few weeks later. The book was
144 pages thick and cost a pound.
Here is an account of the contents: Little Monsters (in colour on the front endpapers and one page in b/w inside,
by Sid Burgon), Brainy and His Monster Maker (three 2-pagers, including one in
colour), Dough Nut and Rusty (three episodes by Trevor Metcalfe: 2
three-pagers including one in colour, and a four-pager), Monster Fun Puzzle Page (2
pages), X-Ray Specs (2 two-pagers and 2 three-pagers including one in
colour by Mike Lacey), The Robot Maker (5 reprints from
COR!! weeklies, artwork by Frank McDiarmid), Frankie Stein Ticklish All-Sport
(2 pages of gags by Jim Crocker), Art’s Gallery (2 episodes – a
three-pager and a two-pager), Draculass (2 two pagers by Terry
Bave), Stoneage Brit Ancient Nit (4 reprints from COR!! weekly comics,
artwork by Tony Goffe), The Ice Monster’s Coming! (adventure
thriller on 6 pages), Tom Thumbscrew – The Torturer’s Apprentice
(2 two-pagers by Norman Mansbridge, including one in colour), Freaky Farm (a 4-pager), Sam’s Spook (4 reprints from SMASH!
comic, artwork by Leo Baxendale), Mummy’s Boy (3 two-pagers by Norman
Mansbridge, including one in colour on back endpapers), Movie Monsters feature (2
two-pagers), Teddy Scare (a two-pager), Martha’s Monster Make-Up (a
two-pager), Gums (a three-pager by Tery Bave), Kid Kong (an eight-pager by
Robert Nixon), Terry and the ‘Dactyl (an 8-pages adventure thriller), Creature Teacher (a six-pager by Tom Williams), Monster Mystery (spot the
difference puzzle on two pages), Major Jump - Horror Hunter (a
two-pager by Ian Knox), Monster Mirth (2 pages of gags by
Jim Crocker), Crafty Cat (a two-pager), Film Funny feature (1 page), Ye
Badtime Bedtime Worsery Rhymes (6 pages by Terry Bave), Survive
All (a two-pager), The Day of the Apples Starring the Earthies
(a four-pager by Mike Green).
|
Advertisement in MFC No. 66 (Sept 11th, 1976) |
It
is appropriate to start the review from the beginning and here are the hilarious
front endpapers with The Little Monsters by Sid Burgon:
Unlike
in the first Summer Special, all reprints (Robot Maker, Sam’s Spook and Stoneage Brit) were re-arranged to fill two pages. Also, differently from the
Summer Special, the Annual had as many as two adventure thrillers. The first was
the six-page story The Ice Monster’s Coming! An ice patrol boat is clearing the
shipping lanes by blasting away icebergs with a gun. One shot does more than
shatter an iceberg – it also releases a prehistoric monster that was trapped
inside. Instead of showing gratitude to his liberators, the creature vents its
frustration on the ship and its unfortunate crew. The boat sinks and it looks
like it’s the end for the crew but they get rescued by another ice patrol ship.
Here are the last two pages of the story:
The
other thriller feature was an 8-pager called Terry and the ‘Dactyl. The
narrative panel of the first frame creates an impression that this is not the
first episode of the story:
Terry
senses foul play and escapes into the jungle where he has to hide from hostile natives.
Climbing some rocks, he finds a baby pterodactyl and starts looking after it. Terry’s
wanderings take him and his new “pet” to an ancient ruined city of gold
somewhere in the mountains where he stays for ten months raising and training
the reptile until it grows into a giant flying creature. A plane crash near the
ruined city and the death of the pilot make Terry return back to civilization and
settle scores with the corrupt local police chief Gomez who would stop at
nothing to find the lost city of gold. This is quite a violent story with as
many as five deaths: first Gomez’
sidekicks take care of Terry’s companion – the old prospector, then the
airplane pilot dies of poison, then both of Gomez’ cronies meet their fate at
the hands of their evil master and finally the rogue policeman himself falls
from sky high into the river never to be seen again…
Both
stories are drawn by the same artist whose name I don’t know but he was the
illustrator of the long-running and successful Rat Trap feature in COR!!
comic. I think I’ve seen his (her?) artwork in girls’ comics. Does anyone know
the name?
Readers were treated to two
new comedy strips. Crafty Cat was drawn by either Martin Baxendale or Tom Paterson.
I would put my money on Martin Baxendale but I wonder if he wasn’t too young to
contribute at that time:
Survive All pretended to be a weekly
strip (or perhaps TV show). I am not sure about the name of the artist but I am
finding the style similar to that of the illustrator who drew the Forest
Legion in SHIVER AND SHAKE annuals and signed one episode Mazza. Here is the strip in full:
This was a nice book with
lots of quality artwork by top IPC talent so let’s take a quick look at some of
the highlights.
In Freaky Farm the farmer
and his horrors do what they do best – scarring intruders off the farm. In this
case it is a team of road builders. I am not sure if this set was drawn by the
regular Freaky Farm artist Jim Watson – it looks like Elphin who drew a
couple of early episodes in the weeklies was responsible for it:
In Martha’s Monster Make-Up
Martha gets into trouble for wickedly using her cream on some people who did
her no harm. The artist tried imitating Ken Reid and he is also the one who occasionally
stepped in for Ken on Faceache in
BUSTER comic. I don’t know his name, unfortunately:
In Gums the shark finds being
toothless very embarrassing and goes to the swordfish for help. The sword-fish makes
him a set of teeth from the wooden hull of a sunken ship but the shark still
boobs in the end:
In Kid Kong the loveable giant
gorilla decides to earn some money and make it up to Gran for having such a big
appetite. A gang of crooks take advantage of the innocent mind and Kid helps
them rob the high street bank. Kid and Gran find themselves behind bars where
Kid realises that the crooks made a monkey out of him. Furious, he breaks out
of prison and stops the robbers from escaping the country. His cash reward is
quickly converted into ‘nanas.
|
Kid and Gran fantasizing about how they will spend the cash
that Kid brought home after the bank robbery |
In Major Jump – the first
one signed by Ian Knox that I can remember seeing, the horror hunter and his
assistant answer an S.O.S. signal and find themselves in an awkward situation
when they realise it was them who the tiny people got so terrified with:
Ye Badtime Bedtime Worsery Rhymes by Terry Bave implies a
connection with Badtime Bedtime Books which appeared in MFC weeklies, but it doesn’t
fit the definition of a classic BBB because it isn’t a strip and is only 6
pages long (as opposed to 8 which was the standard). Here are the first two pages:
In Creature Teacher Class X
are invited to put that year’s Christmas play and are thrilled about the
opportunity, less so about Creature Teacher being the producer. A series of
failed plots to get rid of him later, comes the day of their Cinderella
performance, and Class X have saved all their mischief-making for the night:
Needless to say that
Creature Teacher intervenes and saves the day:
It is the second time after
the MFC Summer Special 1975 that we meet those strange creatures called the
Earthies. The full title of the story is The Day of the Apples, featuring the
Earthies and the illustrator is Mike Green – thanks, Lew and Raven, for
identifying the artist in your comments to my previous post. Here is the story
in full:
It is that special time of
the year, so I will round up this post with this festive episode of The Little Monsters by Sid Burgon. More MFC-unrelated X-mas goodness to
come soon!
All Images 2014 © Egmont UK
Ltd. All rights reserved. Used with
permission.
I still have my copy (and that of the following year). By the time it was published I had already given up with IPC comics and moved on to Marvel UK. For a few years though I still kept getting the fleet away annuals.
ReplyDeleteI still have the original copy I bought all those years ago, as well as the following one. For some strange reason I missed the third Annual (I always try to get at least the first three of anything), but I managed to finally obtain it about a year or so back, thereby rounding off my collection of that particular book. (It's unlikely I'd have bought subsequent ones, especially as the weekly had cashed in its chips.) Great cover by Bob Nixon - shame he's not still around to grace The Beano with his work.
ReplyDeleteOne of my favourite childhood annuals.
ReplyDeleteRobert Nixon certainly created some striking annual covers.
I'd like to know who that Terry and the ‘Dactyl artist is, too.
Crafty Cat is by neither Leo nor Tom - that’s Leo’s son Martin!
ReplyDeleteThe Little Monsters pages were drawn by Jim Crocker, Creature Teacher by Jim Watson, and I think Martha may have been drawn by Henry Davies.
Thanks for confirming Martin Baxendale on Crafty Cat. I don't think Creature Teacher was by Jim Watson. It definitely looks like the regular artist Tom Williams to me.
Delete