Showing posts with label Metal Men. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Metal Men. Show all posts

Friday, March 22, 2024

THE EVERLASTING FIRST: Comic Books

The 1966-68 Batman TV series turned me into a lifelong comics fan. But my interest and (at least) peripheral awareness of comic books predates the BIFF-BANG-POW! of that specific introduction to Batman and Robin and their Gotham City playground.

Nor were the Dynamic Duo the first larger-than-life comics characters introduced to me via black-and-white cathode ray rather than four-color funnybook. I knew Superman, Flash Gordon, and Popeye from TV before I ever looked at a comic book. The same can be said of various characters from other media who had comic-book careers, from radio hero the Lone Ranger and pulp hero Zorro through various animated notables like Bugs Bunny, Woody Woodpecker, and the Walt Disney stable. In each case, I saw 'em first on TV.

My first conscious memory of comic books is circa 1965, when I was five years old. I betcha I saw comics before that, but my concrete details from that era are sketchy at best. Man, if only I'd thought to take notes! Irresponsible preschooler....

Anyway, I  do remember a 1965 Superman comic book that belonged to one of my older siblings: 80-Page Giant # 14, starring Superman's girlfriend Lois Lane. I regard this as my first comic book.

What came next after that 80-Page Giant? Lemme check my notes...er, skip that. There are a number of comics that I saw somewhere in this 1965-66 timeline. A big one for me was Metal Men # 16, which I adored. I had my sister Nina read this to me again and again. I wrote about the book as part of my remembrance of growing up in the '60s:

"Metal Men, by contrast, was just plain goofy fun: Bickering robots with super-powers and human personalities, saving the world from an outer-space invasion. One panel from that Metal Men comic book became a classic fave rave in my house, as the Metal Men fought off robot termites, prompting the Metal Man named Mercury to quip, 'You're not going to throw ME into an antipasto!'

"I laughed. I laughed and laughed and laughed. For a long time thereafter, Nina would occasionally wrestle and tickle me, and threaten to throw me into an antipasto.  I think she may have finally stopped just after I graduated from college, but I wouldn't put it past her to try again, even now.  And I'd probably still squeal with laughter, just as I did when I was five."

I also recall an issue of the World War II-set Our Army At War (# 162, cover-dated January 1966 but probably on stands in the fall of '65), in which Sgt. Rock and the battle-happy joes of Easy Company meeting the Norse hero Viking Prince. I betcha there was another Superman book for me somewhere in this time frame, and maybe some long-forgotten funny animal book, too.

And then: January 1966. Batman. A TV show sparks absolute superhero obsession. That obsession turned me into an avid comics fan. I remain so to this day.

For whatever reason, even though the TV show was what hooked me, I don't think any Batman title was my first comic book after being hooked. As with the case of that Lois Lane book mentioned above, my brothers and sister continued to bring comics into the ol' homestead. These included an issue or two of Tales To Astonish (starring Sub-Mariner and the Incredible Hulk) and, I think, an issue of Strange Tales (starring Dr. Strange and Nick Fury, Agent of S.H.I.E.L.D.), which served as my collective entry into Marvel Comics

Also in '66, my Dad took me to an outlet selling discount books and magazines, a clearance outfit whose wares included a bunch of cover-compromised comic books. I snapped up the 80-page Superboy # 129, an issue of The Flintstones, and maybe something else. But mainly: Superboy # 129.

Magic. Just absolute magic.

Summer of '66 found me on vacation in Missouri, picking up my first issue of Batman (a purchase probably preceded by acquisition of a paperback collection reprinting older Batman stories when I was home in Syracuse), another Tales To Astonish, another Superboy, and bypassing what would have been my first Justice League Of America. While in Missouri, my sister and cousin gave me a back issue of The Avengers

And I was off and collecting. 1966 and '67 brought so many more comic books into my hands, from World's Finest Comics to Tales Of Suspense to Spyman, Mighty Comics Presents, and Dell Comics' Super Heroes. And more. And LOTS more!

And I'm still getting more. I buy new comic books every week at Comix Zone in North Syracuse, coincidentally located in the same two-block radius where I started getting comic books regularly in the mid '60s. 

A few recent Comix Zone purchases

Some things don't change. My obsession certainly hasn't. It had to start somewhere. I see no reason why it will ever have to stop.

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Saturday, July 21, 2018

100-Page FAKES! presents: METAL MEN # 45

100-Page FAKES! imagines mid-1970s DC 100-Page Super Spectaculars that never were...but should have been!



Metal Men # 16 was among the first comic books I read, or at least one of the first comics I can remember reading. It was published in 1965, though it's possible I didn't see it until '66, after the Batman TV show had heightened my awareness and appreciation of all things superheroic. An 80-Page Giant with Superman's girlfriend Lois Lane is the earliest comic-book experience I can recall, and an issue of Our Army At War featuring the unlikely meeting of Sgt. Rock and the Viking Prince likewise sticks in the ol' memory box, but Metal Men # 16 was certainly in the mix. I was five or six, and my sister Denise read me this wacky, colorful adventure starring seven idiosyncratic super-robots--Mercury, Gold, Iron, Tin, Lead, the lovely Tina (short for Platinum), and Tin's soulmate Nameless--and their long-suffering creator, Dr. Will Magnus. I was particularly tickled by the scene of our metallic heroes fighting off an invasion of robot termites from outer space, as Mercury quipped, "You're not going to throw ME into an antipasto!" Thereafter, I was literally tickled by my sister, as she said she was going to throw me into an antipasto. I can still hear my own laughter, and it's one of the most cherished memories of my childhood.



That was the beginning of my affection for The Metal Men. I followed their exploits as often as I could throughout the remainder of the '60s, and I followed their occasional guest spots with The Batman in the pages of The Brave And The Bold. And I was primed when DC revived the title at the end of 1975 (cover-dated April-May '76), continuing the original series' numbering with Metal Men # 45.

This is the point where I'm supposed to say that the revival didn't match the original. Au contraire, mein amigos! I immediately loved what new writer Steve Gerber was doing with my beloved Metal Men, and I also loved Walt Simonson's artwork. Their combined efforts resulted in what I thought was an engaging attempt to update the characters without tarnishing them, and the debut story ended with an acknowledgment of original writer Robert Kanigher (who created The Metal Men) and original artists Ross Andru and Mike Esposito.

Though this revival of Metal Men appeared after the demise of the 100-page Super Spectacular, the elastic rules of the Boppinverse allow us to ignore chronology and expand away. For this faux Super Spec, I've added reprints of DC's golden age hero Robotman, a 1964 The Brave And The Bold Metal Men team-up with that mighty mite The Atom, Captain Marvel Jr.'s 1951 encounter with a metal man of his own, and--of course!--"Robots For Sale!" from Metal Men # 16. You're not going to throw ME into an antipasto! Roll credits:

The Metal Men in "Evil Is In The Eye Of The Beholder," Metal Men # 45 (April-May 1976)
The Metal Men and The Atom in "Revenge Of The Robot Reject," The Brave And The Bold # 55 (August-September 1964)
Robotman in "Tops In Crime," Star-Spangled Comics # 78 (March 1948)
Captain Marvel Jr. in "Sivana Jr.'s Friendly Robot," Captain Marvel, Junior # 93 (January 1951)
The Metal Men in "Robots For Sale!," Metal Men # 16 (October-November 1965)

It's all copyright DC Comics Inc., and can only be revealed here in a few representative pages. My $2 a month patrons get to see the whole thing. Hey, check out the house ads! A couple of cool adverts appeared in Metal Men # 45, including one for that fab 1976 DC superheroes calendar I would later pick up at the Super DC Con in February, and one for the first meeting between DC's Superman and Marvel's friendly neighborhood Spider-Man. Your responsometers are not faulty. It's time for adventure with The Metal Men.

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