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