Showing posts with label marv wolfman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label marv wolfman. Show all posts

Monday, August 6, 2018

Marvel-ous Monday Groovy Guest Post: Mike Mikulovsky on "Vengeance Is the Copperhead!" by Wolfman, Brown, and Janson

Mighty Mike Mikulovsly is back, this time with his reminiscences of Daredevil #125's "Vengeance Is the Copperhead," part two of DD vs Copperhead. You can read part one right here, if you missed it last month...

When I spotted DD #125 (June 1975) on my local news vendor's stand, I wasn't disappointed. With yet another great cover by Gil Kane, inked again by Klaus Janson, we see Copperhead's copper armor. Shades of a certain Golden Avenger! My only disappointment was the interior art wasn't by the then usual stunning Gene "The Dean" Colan, but by new DD artist Bob Brown, who did a decent job. It helped a lot that the interiors were also inked by the impressive Klaus Janson.  Once again it was great seeing Copperhead in his trench coat & 1940's style fedora hat, which gave the stories that film noir look and feel to them. This time he even had a cool looking car. I always thought it was supposed to be a 1960 Ford Thunderbird.  It gave him a Green Hornet feel to me. This issue we learn more about the Copperhead's secret identity. We see him blow a door away with a Green Hornet type of sonic sting weapon, too. He used his poison dart/ knockout  gas gun once again, as well.




















In September of 1998, I went to a show at the Thunderbird Hotel in Minneapolis, Minnesota. To my huge surprise Gene Colan was there! They hadn't even put his name on their guest list on the flier I got in my mailbox down in Wisconsin. Gene was doing sketches, so of course I asked him if he could do one of Copperhead for me. I didn't have copies of these issues with me, but he actually remembered the character and drew it from memory! I mean this was 23 years later! This amazed me because he only drew like 6 full pages with Copperhead in DD #124. About a hour later, he invited me to sit with him. I ended up sitting with him for almost four hours. I like to talk a lot, but he made me look like an amateur. He did like 90% of the talking! It was a very memorable day in my life. He was impressed that I knew about so much of his work. He agreed with me, too, that Copperhead should have been an anti-hero of The Shadow/ Green Hornet type for Marvel. 

It sounded like he suggested this to his editors, but they didn't care, I guess. I'm not sure, but maybe that's why he left DD, to do Tomb of Dracula later? We'll enough of my rambling. I hope you enjoyed these issues of DD as much as I did as a 13 year old. And I hope you enjoy them just as much I still do, today. Here's the sketch Gene did for me at that show. I really regret not having him do many commissions for me. Oh, well, at least I met him in person once. We became good friends that day, and for the next few years he'd call me by phone every month or two.  We'd also frequently exchange e-mails. Gene was a true gentleman, and he cherished his fans. I miss the man and, of course, his art. 

Monday, July 2, 2018

Marvel-ous Monday Groovy Guest Post: Mike Mikulovsky on "In the Coils of the Copperhead!" by Wein, Wolfman, Colan, and Janson

Greetings, Groove-ophiles! Ol' Groove is stepping aside today to let Mighty Mike Mikulovsky lay one of his patented Groovy Guest Posts 'pon us! This one concerns "In the Coils of the Copperhead!" from DD #124 (May 1975) by Len Wein, Marv Wolfman, Gene Colan, and Klaus Janson. Check it out...

Around this time (early 1975), I had been buying DC Comics' The Shadow by artist Mike Kaluta. I was buying many pulp hero novels, too, one being The Shadow novels with the stunning covers by Jim Steranko. When I first saw Copperhead, I thought he was way too cool a character to be wasted as a villain. He would have made a great anti-hero, but  instead, Marvel ripped off the Executioner character to create the Punisher as their anti-hero. 

I thought the Copperhead's trench coat and hat were great. The cover by Gil Kane with inks by Frank Giacoia really rocked. Even though he only appeared in seven pages of this issue, the interiors by Gene Colan and Klaus Janson really grabbed my attention. This was Gene Colan's last issue on DD for a few years, too. I was recently incredibly lucky to pick up page 10 of DD #124. I'm always looking for the remaining Copperhead pages from DD #124 & #125. So what do you think? Anybody else dig this character as much as I did and still do? 























Monday, May 21, 2018

Marvel-ous Monday: "Nova" by Wolfman, J. Buscema, and Sinnott

Greetings, Groove-ophiles! Wow, has it been nearly a DECADE since Ol' Groove posted this article about The Man Called...Nova? Wow! Well, what I said back then still goes today: Young Groove dug and Ol' Groove still digs Nova! Yeah, it was a Marvel-ous mix of Green Lantern's origin, Superman's powers, Archie Andrew's pals and gals (maybe a dash of Welcome Back Kotter's  Sweathogs), and Peter Parker-y angst (actually, the more I think about it, the more I feel Richard Rider was a mix of Archie Andrews and a teen-aged Charlie Brown), but it was FUN! Naturally, yers trooley had been diggin' stuff like Warlock, Deathlok, Black Panther, Killraven, et al, but Nova was different. Not so heavy as the aforementioned strips; more like an updated Silver Age Marvel mag. And of course, the art by John Buscema and Joe Sinnot (soon followed in ish #3 by the art team of Sal Buscema and Tom Palmer) blew me away, as well. And who knew that this was creator Marv Wolfman's "try out" mag (if you will) for writing super-hero sagas in a style that would make him a super-star in the 1980s with New Teen Titans? Remember, besides a few Supergirl sagas and a pretty good stint on Daredevil, Marv was best know as a horror and humor writer (Tomb of Dracula and Crazy Magazine) up until his Nova series. Hmmph. So much for Ol' Groove's short intro! Let's travel back to the last day of seventh grade (for me, that is) in June 1976 and dig into Nova #1!
Cover art by Rich Buckler and Joe Sinnott


















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Special thanks to Mike's Amazing World of Comics and Grand Comics Database for being such fantastic resources for covers, dates, creator info, etc. Thou art treasures true!


Note to "The Man": All images are presumed copyright by the respective copyright holders and are presented here as fair use under applicable laws, man! If you hold the copyright to a work I've posted and would like me to remove it, just drop me an e-mail and it's gone, baby, gone.


All other commentary and insanity copyright GroovyAge, Ltd.

As for the rest of ya, the purpose of this blog is to (re)introduce you to the great comics of the 1970s. If you like what you see, do what I do--go to a comics shop, bookstore, e-Bay or whatever and BUY YOUR OWN!