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.



Friday, July 6, 2012

A LOOK AT COR!! STRIPS: RAT-TRAP


Rat-Trap was a weird adventure strip and reader participation feature centered around the unappealing figure of a fiendish criminal mastermind – Doctor Rat. Announcements of a new feature came in the form of teasers in COR!! issues dated 15th July, 1972 (No. 111) and 22nd July, 1972 (No. 112) - a single panel in the POSTBAG section in the former and a half-pager in the latter:


Dr. Rat made his first appearance in the issue of 29th July, 1972 (No. 113), announcing it was time to strike and make the forces of law and order tremble at the very sound of his name. The sinister rat-like figure emerges from his hidey-hole and presents the readers with a calling card – a rodent with a stethoscope round its neck. A police officer instantly recognises him as Doctor Rat, about to become known as King of Crime. Without any delay he is off to his first robbery and the Bank of England is the target. Putting on a show of his super-natural powers, Dr. Rat robs the bank and escapes from the police. No one will ever catch the World’s Master Criminal - laughs the villain as he runs along the sewers of London… - and rats to all you, readers of COR!! With a rodent raspberry thrown in for bad luck! RAAAASSSP! 

The first episode in COR!! issue dated 29th July, 1972 (No. 113)

In the following issue we see the Government meet at Downing Street; the ministers decide that as the police have already failed, it is obviously a job for the Army. Task force under the command of Major General Flushem-Out will attack Rat’s hideout in the sewers. But law and order are in for another humiliating defeat, ending with a RAAAASSSP!

The police and the army have failed, so a week later the government calls in the men from BIFFF – British Institute for Foiling Felonies consisting of six secret agents. They decide they need only one thing – a rat trap. The men of BIFFF make their first attempt to trap Dr. Rat while he is robbing an art gallery but Dr. Rat foils the plan and challenges the agents by giving them a present – a list of his future crimes. Law and order realize they are powerless to stop the villain and the Chief of BIFFF makes an appeal to every reader of COR!! throughout the World in the issue dated 15th August, 1972 (No. 115): 


Dr. Rat provokes COR!! readers by ridiculing and scorning at them. The script writer’s intention was probably to irritate the readers and make them want to contribute their best effort toward bringing the King of Crime down. And contribute they did by suggesting all sorts of ingenious traps designed to catch the criminal mastermind wanted for burglary and rudeness. A prize of £1 was offered to the reader whose design was used. Every week BIFFF agents announced the name of the reader whose plan was to be put into action, but their combined efforts produced no result and Dr. Rat remained at large. 

Sample eposide from COR!! issue dated 7th October, 1972 (No. 123)

Dr. Rat must have been popular with the readers because COR!! issue dated 6th October, 1973 (No. 175) came with a free gift RATTY RAASSPER that was of course a tie in with the feature. The gift was a cardboard sleeve with a rubber band and a metal hoop inside that made a rasping sound as it spun around inside the envelope; besides, the design of the sleeve was such that Dr. Rat would also thrust his tongue out to accompany the rasping sound. Here is what it looked like (sadly, the insides are no longer present): 



A week later the free gift was used as part of another failed plan to trap the King of Crime:

Free gift in action - from COR!! issue dated 13th october, 1973 (No. 176)

In the issue dated 8th June, 1974 (No. 210) BIFFF agents announced that the rodent might be caught next week and that’s final! And trapped he got, but not thanks to an idea offered by a reader:

Last eposide from the final issue of COR!! dated 15th June, 1974 (No. 211)

Rat-Trap started in the issue dated 29th July, 1972 (No. 113) and continued until the demise of the paper on 15th June, 1974 (No. 211). It was the only feature in COR!! to enjoy the luxurious three-page treatment until the issue of 15th September, 1973 (No. 172) when the page count was cut down to two. In addition to the drawing of the RATTY RAASSPER free gift on the cover of the issue dated 6th October, 1973 (No. 175), Dr. Rat made two “proper” front page appearances in full colour in the issues dated 19th May, 1973 and 16th March, 1974 (Nos. 155 and 198). Illustrator’s name is Giorgio Giorgetti.

Wednesday, July 4, 2012

A LOOK AT COR!! STRIPS: ZOO SUE


Zoo Sue. Sue had lived in the Zoo all her life because her Dad was Chief Zoo Keeper. The lass was quite a freak - she could instantly conjure up different animal body parts with some ghastly results. No explanation was offered as to how she came to possess the “talent” but Sue was probably the scariest Cortown citizen. The first episode (in which she sprouted an elephant’s trunk, tusks and ears to teach two bullying boys a lesson) was in the issue dated 29th July, 1972 (No. 113). The feature was dropped after just 23 weeks – the last installment was in the 1972 Christmas issue of COR!! with the cover date of 30th December (No. 135). Illustrator’s name is unknown to me, but the same artist contributed a number of episodes of Teacher’s Pet in COR!! and also drew Boney in KNOCKOUT. 

From COR! issue dated 2nd September, 1972 (No. 118)
From COR!! issue dated 25th November, 1972 (No. 130)

Monday, July 2, 2012

A LOOK AT COR!! STRIPS: JELLY BABY


Jelly Baby was about a naughty baby girl who could stretch her limbs and other body parts like jelly. The feature began in COR!! issue dated 27th May, 1972 (No. 104) and lasted until the last issue of the paper. Jelly Baby made four front cover appearances in issues dated 26th May 1973, 28th July 1973, 3rd November 1973 and 25th May 1974 (Nos. 156, 165, 179 and 208). The majority of episodes were in black and white, with the odd one in full colour. Illustrated by Mike Lacey.

Frm COR!! issue dated 21st April, 1973 (No. 151)

Sunday, July 1, 2012

FOOTBALL THEME IN BRITISH HUMOUR COMICS TO CELEBRATE EURO 2012 (FINAL DAY)


I will conclude this series of blogposts with two Buster stories by Nadal and a busy three-pager from Smash! 1969 annual. I hope you have enjoyed reading the various football strips over the last 3+ weeks, just as I have enjoyed searching for them! I may repeat this exercise in the future, if I find an interesting theme :) 




Saturday, June 30, 2012

FOOTBALL THEME IN BRITISH HUMOUR COMICS TO CELEBRATE EURO 2012 (DAY 23)


Here’s the second batch of examples of football strips by Ken Reid.

From SCORCHER dated 14th March, 1970
From SCORCHER dated 17th October, 1970
From SCORCHER AND SCORE dated 4th November, 1972
From SCORCHER AND SCORE dated 9th December, 1972
From SCORCHER AND SCORE dated 27th October, 1973
From SCORCHER AND SCORE dated 17th August, 1974
From SCORCHER AND SCORE dated 21st September, 1974
From SCORCHER AND SCORE dated 29th July, 1972

A LOOK AT COR!! STRIPS: CHIP


Chip was another reprint strip in COR!! about a mischievous naughty little kid desperate to have some fun in his life. The feature was drawn by Graham Allen and originally appeared under the name of Kicks in POW! some five years prior. COR!! reprints started in the issue with the cover date of 15th April, 1972 (No. 98). A total of 22 episodes of the original series were reprinted with some long intervals, the last one appearing in the issue of 15th September, 1973 (No. 172)

From COR!! issue dated 14th July, 1973 (No. 163)