This one had 96 pages and cost £2.50.
I think I can identify Mike Lacey as the front cover artist; again, the cover illustration
wasn’t connected to the Frankie Stein story inside.
Contents (reprints are marked in blue): Out
and About with the Little Monsters (two sets in colour (…In
the Park and …On a Sightseeing Trip) + one set in
black and white (…At the Fair), artwork by Martin Baxendale), X-Ray
Specs (a 2-pager in colour by Mike Lacey and a 2-pager by someone else), Draculass
(two 2-pagers by Terry Bave, including one in colour), Frankie’s Diary (four single-page
sets, including one in colour, artwork by Sid Burgon), Gums
(3-pager and a 6-pager by John Geering), Tom Thumbscrew (three 2-pagers by
Norman Mansbridge, including one in colour), Gorgon Zola the Witch Girl
(three 2-pagers), Frankie Stein (two 2-pagers by Robert Nixon, 4-pager by John Geering
(new story)), Kid Kong (three 2-pagers, including one in colour, and a
6-pager (new story), all by Robert Nixon), The Return of Eric Superwimp
(4-pager by Mike Green), Art’s Gallery (two 2-pagers by
Mike Lacey), Teddy Scare (two 2-pagers by Barrie Appleby), Dough
Nut and Rusty (three 2-pagers by Trevor Metcalfe), Monster
Puzzles (two 2-page sets of puzzles), Major Jump (5-page puzzle
story by Barrie Appleby), Holiday Heroes (5-page story), Monster
Movies (two single-page sets of gags by Artie Jackson, including one in
colour), Spot the Changes (one-page puzzle).
The
Little Monsters by Martin Baxendale were in
bright full colour on front and back endpapers, so I will use them as a “frame”
for this blogpost:
Let’s
start with the star characters identified in text on the front cover. In the only
new Frankie
Stein story Prof. Cube has an idea to make a presentation on Frankie at
the Inventors’ World Conference in Tibet, and hopes to leave him there. Frankie
accidentally exits through the emergency door during their flight to Tibet, lands in the
snow-covered Himalayas and meets Yeti. He brings one specimen to the conference
and steals Prof Cube’s glory by winning the special medal for his great
discovery.
The
story was provided by John Geering who also illustrated both new episodes of Gums
in this Annual. In the first one Gums sits down to write his memoirs but Captain
Mayhem interferes and gets the shark’s false teeth. Gums recovers them with the
help of his mate Olly the octopus and the noted beauty Pamela Eelvenson.
In
the second tale Gums and Olly stumble across a magic machine that grants wishes
and Gums takes the opportunity to get real teeth again. The re-acquired self-confidence
and ruthlessness get him into trouble, first with a school of piranha, then
with a submarine, until a daft dentist pulls all his teeth out. The two pals
turn to the magic machine once again, only this time Gums wishes he had his false
teeth back.
Olly looks like Gums’ regular companion in the strip but I don’t
recall seeing him in MFC weeklies, so he must have been introduced later on
sometime during the run in BUSTER.
In
the only new Kid Kong tale included in his Annual Gran and Kid go to Banana
Republic to visit Gran’s nephew Dan:
The
story reaches its climax when Gran is kidnapped by the “slippery ones”
who take her to the lost city of Eldabanana, and Kid comes to her rescue:
All
is well that ends well:
The
Annual has a generous helping of new strips. There are three episodes of Gorgon
Zola the Witch Girl about a Mother and a daughter who are both witches.
Mom is a nasty witch who enjoys making people miserable, while the daughter believes
it is nice to be nice. Her gimmick is magic hair that she uses to save people
from her Mother’s nasty tricks. The strip may be reprinted but if it is, I don’t
know where from or who the illustrator was:
Holiday
Heroes is a contribution by yet another artist whose name
I don’t know. It is a weird tale about a lad named Tony who is on holidays in
Greece with his parents and is very bored until he meets Mercury – messenger of
the Gods. The new pal takes Tony to Mount Olympus – home of the Gods, and introduces
him to Neptune. Then he meets a pair of footballing Centaur forwards and
finally makes the acquaintance of Hercules who helps him during an athletics
session in school. There’s a good chance Holiday Heroes is also a reprint but
if it is, the source remains to be identified.
The
4-page story The Return of Eric Superwimp is about a lad named Eric who is short
of money to buy food so he gets a superhero outfit in the scrap yard and sets
out to patrol the city first as Leapfrogman, then as Balloonman and finally as
Rubber-Tyreman to capture the notorious Roller Skate Thief and claim the reward
of £1,000. A series of accidents later he becomes Bandageman and accidentally catches
the villain. As far as I know, this is the second story of Eric (hence The
Return of... in the title) - the first one was in Frankie Stein Holiday Special 1982. There is something about the simplicity of Mike Green's style that makes it quite appealing:
What
I like about the Annual is these Monster Puzzles:
…
and especially the five-page Puzzle Story of Major Jump. It reminds me
a bit of the hilarious Save Our Stan feature in Monster Fun Comic
weeklies. I should get a clean copy of the Annual some day because the original
owner of the one that I have had some fun with it:
I
will round up this post with another panorama featuring The Little Monsters that
graces the back endpapers of this book:
All
Images 2015 © Egmont UK Ltd. All rights
reserved. Used with permission.
Gorgon Zola is drawn by Dick Millington, and Holiday Heroes looks to be by Chas Sinclair (Some Mummies do ‘ave ‘em)
ReplyDeleteI think I might have this one somewhere. I must check.
ReplyDeleteEric Wimp? Wasn't he the little lad who turned into Bananaman? Sheer copyright theft!
ReplyDelete