The third Monster Fun Annual was 144 pages thick and
cost £1.25. The unusual cover design with just the large portrait of Kid Kong
by Bob Nixon is not the only thing that makes it stand out amongst other MF
Annuals: unusually for the times, it was printed on quality white paper which
doesn’t look like it is prone to browning. Unlike
the previous two editions, this one has no adventure stories.
Contents: Draculass (two 2-page stories
by Terry Bave, one in b/w and one in colour on front endpapers), Monster
Mirth feature (2 pages, including one in full colour), Kid Kong (three 4-pagers: two by Bob Nixon (UPDATE: They were probably by Rob Lee - thanks, Andy, for pointing this out!)), including one in colour, and one
by another artist), The Ghost Train (7 pages (2 episodes) of reprints from the
early issues of WHOOPEE!, art by Brian Walker), Hot Rod (4 episodes, all reprints
from WHIZZER AND CHIPS, art by Alf Saporito), Rex (a 6-pager by Alan
Rogers), Ticklish Allsorts feature (2 installments by Les Barton), King
Arthur and his Frights of the Round Table (reprints from the early
issues of WHOOPEE!, art by Bob Nixon, three 3-pagers), Lunchin’ Vulture (3
episodes reprinted from the early issues of WHOOPEE!, art by Frank McDiarmid), Boggles
Super Ace Detective (Badtime Bedtime Story by Mike Brown, 8 pages), The Little Monsters (3 spot-the-difference puzzles, 2 full pages each by Tom
Williams, and two 2-pagers by Sid Burgon), Mucky Mick (3 episodes – two 2-pagers
and one single page episode by an artist whose name I don’t know), Brainy and His Monster Maker (two
2-pagers by Barrie Appleby), Gums (a 4-pager by John Geering), X-Ray Specs (two episodes – a 3-pager featuring Mummy’s Boy and a 4-pager,
both by Tom Williams), Martha’s Monster Make-Up (a 2-pager
by Ken Reid), Freaky Farm (a 4-pager by Jim Watson), Dough Nut and Rusty (two
episodes – a 4-pager and a 3-pager in full colour by Jim Crocker) , Croc
(reprint from WHIZZER AND CHIPS, art by Mike Lacey), Frankie Stein (two
2-pagers - reprints from the early issues of WHOOPEE!, art by Bob Nixon), It’s
a Scream feature (2 pages of gags by Jim Crocker), Fun Fear (a 2-pager,
probably by Mr. Hill), Ghost Town (a 2-pager reprinted from
WHIZZER AND CHIPS, artwork by Tom Williams), Art’s Gallery (a 4-pager by an artist whose name I don’t know), Tom Thumbscrew (a 6-pager by Barrie Appleby), Terror TV (a 4-pager by
Barrie Appleby), Creature Teacher (a 4-pager by Tom Williams), Major Jump (a 4-pager by Barrie Appleby), Teddy Scare (a 2-pager in
colour by Barrie Appleby), Mummy’s Boy (a 2-pager in colour on back
endpapers by Trevor Metcalfe, possibly a reprint).
The Annual is a bit on the heavy side of reprints but Hot
Rod is the only reprint strip seen in earlier MF books. The list of
reprints was expanded with first rate artwork by some of IPC’s top talent from
the early issues of WHOOPEE! and includes The Ghost Train by Brian Walker, Lunchin’
Vulture by Frank McDiarmid:
... Frankie Stein by Bob Nixon and the
absolutely beautiful King Arthur and his Frights of the Round
Table, also by Bob Nixon:
All in all, that's 23 pages of reprints of early WHOOPEE! strips. Looking at them I couldn’t help pulling out the box with my early WHOOPEE! comics and admiring
the quality artwork that the paper was chock-full from cover to cover in the
mid-seventies. I really must get round to doing that detailed review of WHOOPEE!
I’ve been meaning to do for so long…
Mr. Nixon’s early work in the reprints is a lot more
detailed in comparison with his new strips. Looking at his two Kid Kong sets in this annual, I even wonder if they are indeed Mr. Nixon’s
work (UPDATE: they aren't. In all likelihood both episodes were illustrated by by Rob Lee - thanks, Andy, for pointing this out in your comment below!):
In the first of the two episodes that I believe are by
Robert Nixon, Kid enjoys the white Christmas and in the second one he tries to
earn some money to buy Gran a Christmas present. In the 4-pager by another artist
Kid and Gran check into a posh hotel and Kid nearly gets them kicked out but the
flood caused by Kid’s tears puts out a fire in the kitchen. As a reward, the
hotel manger allows them to stay and the chef treats them to the Christmas
dinner of Kid’s dreams:
The style looks familiar but I can’t put a name to it:
The episode of Gums was illustrated by John Geering.
In it Bluey tricks Gums into taking a bite on his surfboard made of sticky toffee and
pulls his false teeth out. The shark resorts
to playing dead in order to get his choppers back.
There are two completely new stories in this book. Rex is about a gluttonous baby
Tyrannosaurus Rex who hatches from the egg found in an ancient box labelled “not
to be opened until 1978” buried deep under the ground. First he wins a fancy
dress competition, then a short-sighted kid takes him to school:
Mucky Mick is about a boy whose “gimmick” is getting dirty and
hating to wash. I don’t know the name of the artist but wasn’t he the one who
illustrated Goon Platoon in the early issues of WHOOPEE! ? UPDATE: the character originally appeared in KNOCKOUT in the early 70s, so in all likelihood it is a reprint rather than new material drawn especially for this MF Annual 1979.
Fun Fear was a regular strip in WHOOPEE! (usually drawn by Bob
Nixon and occasionally by Brian Walker) and is seen for the first time in a MF
publication. I wouldn’t bet mo money on it, but I think the episode in this
book may have been drawn by Mr. Hill:
Group Captain Brown (aka Mike Brown) contributed a
classic 8-page Badtime Bedtime Story Boggles Super Ace Detective about
Airborne Division of Police Air H.Q. and the daft aces Boggles and Wingco.
The
pair are sent on a mission to fight the fiendish Doktor Grotti who bombards
London with his giant mushroom missiles and infests the city with toadstools.
More by accident than by design, the villain and his henchman end up in the
soup…
Like many classic BBBs, this one had side gags, loony advertisements, jokey
riddles and interruptions by the reader’s adviser and of course ‘the Amazing
Leonard Rottingsocks’.
Santa Claus calls at Freaky Farm to give
Farmer his present but quickly comes to regret it:
Tom Williams and Barrie Appleby were the two artists
who were particularly busy drawing stuff for this book: the former illustrated
19 pages, while the latter – as many as 20, all new material. This is where I’ll
take a break and leave the rest for part two.
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