welcome and enjoy!

Hi and welcome to my blog about comics from other people’s childhood! It is dedicated primarily to British humour comics of the 60s and 70s. The reason they are not from my childhood is simply because I didn’t live in the UK back then (nor do I live there now). I knew next to nothing about them until fairly recently but since then I’ve developed a strong liking for the medium and amassed a large collection, including a number of complete or near complete sets. My intention is to use this blog as a channel for sharing my humble knowledge about different titles, favourite characters and creators as I slowly research my collection.

QUICK TIP: this blog is a sequence of posts covering one particular comic at a time. The sequence follows a certain logic, so for maximum results it is recommended that the blog is read from the oldest post up.

Copyright of all images and quotations used here is with their respective owners. Any such copyrighted material is used exclusively for educational purposes and will be removed at first notice. All other text copyright Irmantas P.



Wednesday, April 29, 2020

SOME OF MY EARLY COMIC WORK



I found a pile old comic art that I drew as a kid and thought I might share some of it here. I’ve mentioned on more than one occasion that one of my big inspirations to draw comics was an early issue of WHOOPEE! sent to me by my British pen friend Andrew. I studied and admired the art so much that I even copied it in my drawings, as confirmed by the images below. Created in 1980, they come from what I hoped would be a 36-page comic book drawn for my own and my mates’ enjoyment, with not even the remotest hope/thought of getting it published because we didn’t have comics here at the time, and I was just a kid when I drew it. Oh, and we didn’t refer to those things as ‘comics’; we called them ‘adventures’. 


Looking at it now, I think it was quite a good story idea: two Moonsters (i.e. humanoid residents of the Moon) enter for a space race around the Solar System. At the same time, three crooks steal a precious statue from the Moon Art Museum. They must deliver it to a criminal mastermind on another planet to get paid. One of the crooks, who is having second thoughts about his way of life, joins the crew of the two Moonsters who know nothing of his secret cargo that he carries hidden in a pram and hopes to deliver to the boss. The other two crooks are eager to get hold of their mate, recover the statue and claim payment for themselves... 


Sadly, other things (or new story ideas) must have come up and I only drew 8 pages of the book (up to and including the start of the race) but the general premise suggests it would have been filled with weird adventures involving space creatures, suspense, explosions and whatnot… 

As you can see, the front cover is a rip-off of World-Wide Weirdies by Ken Reid:


One of the crooks is a spitting image of Prof Cube, while another one appears to be inspired by the monstrous pilot of the spacecraft seen in the top left corner of Ken’s original World-Wide Weirdies frame. In the panels below the two ‘gangsters’ decide to blow up railway tracks to prevent the arrival of the President of the Moon and sabotage the start of the race. Prof Cube’s lookalike appears to have no hands but in truth his hands fold inside the compartment behind the little door on his belly…



The dashing news reporter in the splash panel below is obviously Frankie Stein (minus screws and bolts): 


President fires the starting pistol to signal the start of the race, and this is where the adventures end…


Anyway, the find brought back some happy memories, and I think both the story and the drawings are rather good – I was only 12 or 13 years of age then!

Let me know what you think. I have other stories to show. Many are unfinished (I was a busy kid :) ), but I have a complete 4-page comic adaptation of “The Lobster and the Lioness” – the most famous short story by Australian writer Ernest Francis "Kodak" O'Ferrall which I drew at the age of 14 or 15 in 1982. Here’s the opening panel: 


3 comments:

  1. it is fun to see what inspired your own cartoon work...

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  2. That's a very high standard of work - it could easily have appeared in a UK comic of the time.

    ReplyDelete