Tuesday, March 31, 2009

365 Days with Ben Grimm: Day 90

FF #42
Panel from Fantastic Four #42 (September 1965), script by Stan Lee, pencils by Jack Kirby, inks by Vince Colletta, letters by Sam Rosen



Happy birthday to my bestest pal

Me 'n John

People let me tell you 'bout my best friend
He's a warm hearted human who'll love me till the end
People let me tell you 'bout my best friend
He's a non-bull, got some pull, of love and joy his heart is full



People let me tell you 'bout him he's such fun now
Whether we're talkin' man to man or whether we're talking guy to cow
'Coz he's my best friend
Yes he's my best friend

Happy birthday to my pal John!



(Also, happy birthday too to my friend Benjamin Birdie, who's a real good draw-er and has excellent taste in birthdays!)


Arroooo from You: Googum presents Scud, the Disposable Assassin #11

ScudIt's a good thing that werewolves are immortal (or am I thinking of elephants? I often get them confused). Because at least one of them has been waitin' a heckuva long time for his moment in the spotlight...er, I mean moonlight. Almost a whole month ago Googum over at Random Happenstance sent me a link to a post looking in on one of his favorite comics of yesteryear, Scud The Disposable Assassin! You can check out all the arrooooin' goodness by clicking right here!

Gosh, I gotta check out the Scud collections...I've never read it, but how can you turn down a comic so wild and weird and arroooo-punctuated, as well! And you oughta check out the rest of Random Happenstance, fulla funny and incisive comics and pop culture commentary. Especially don't miss Googum's ongoing epic action-figure filled fumetti "Timing" (now in it's thirty-ninth part and goin' strong with the laffs an the action and the Kurt Wagner and Wade Wilson babysitting excitement)!

Mister Googum, thank you for the arroooo and double thanks for bein' so patient for me to link to it! That's why I'm awarding you the much-coveted Waiting for Bullot Bull-Prize! It's in the mail and it'll be in your happy hands in six to eighty-three weeks!

If my long delay in posting the newest entry of Arroooo from You, the internet's hottest meme, hasn't dissuaded you from joining in, you too can arroooo! Just email me a panel or panels featuring the sound effect arroooo (or a similar sound effect) scanned from any comic book we haven't covered here yet. Make sure you tell me what comic book it comes from, and email your scans to this address: email address

Or, you can post it on your own blog and send me a link so I can link back and properly credit you for your arroooo!

So, be back here in September of October 2011 for the next eagerly-awaited and not-at-all-delayed installment of arroooo!


Monday, March 30, 2009

Bullypen Bulletins

Bullypen Bulletins

Bonjour and bonzai Bully-boosters, and belcome...I mean welcome back to the flurry and the frenzy of Comics Oughta Be Fun. Let's get caught up post-haste with some Bits of Bully Business shall we?

ITEM! Letters, I get letters! A few weeks ago I wrote about the missing colorist credits in 1960s Marvels and lamented that we didn't have a definite record of who provided the Thing with his orange, the Hulk with his green, and Daredevil with his yellow red. Over at his blog, Mister Mark Evanier kindly answered the question: it was usually or at least often Stan Goldberg, and the reason he didn't get a credit was because the process left the coloring until after the inking...and the credits...were done! What I didn't get a chance to mention at the time was that Eric Houston, author of the upcoming book The Comic Book Podcast Companion, checked in with Kirby expert John Morrow, publisher of The Jack Kirby Collector and gave me an authoritative confirmation: "His answer: Stan Goldberg colored most of the early [FF] issues." Now that's what Mama Bull always taught me—get a second confirmation! Thanks, Eric 'n' John! Consider yourself the recipients of a four-color Bull-Prize!

NewspaperITEM! Or should I say "FLASH!"? We here at C.O.B.F. spend an awful lotta time checkin' out the cool, clever, and creative competition, and tip our nose ring in jealousy at the ones that are not only fun but which make this little stuffed bull muse "I wish I'd thought of that!" That's the green flash of respect and envy I get when I check out one of my favorite new comics blogs, Dateline: Silver Age: "Headlines ripped from the pages of comics' great metropolitan newspapers!" Editor-in-chiefed by the Two Daves (Lartrigue and Thiel), D:SA reproduces those peculiar and preposterous papers with howling headlines a-plenty! Catch up on the antics of Batman, bank robbers, and The Sensational New Character Find of 2079, the Crime Clown! Who says newspapers are a dying breed? All they gotta do is put more stories about intelligent apes in 120-point type on the front page. Head on over there and—as they say—read all about it!

ITEM! Speaking of howlin', our crack staff of crackpots has been knee-deep in submissions for Arroooo from You...the werewolf meme the entire internet is ga-ga for! But when those lazy slackers in our mailroom fell behind in processing our arrooos because of all those three ice-cream-soda lunches on their business expenses, there's only one thing we can do: apologize! Especially to gracious and gorgeous Googum over at Random Happenstance who shot us an arroooo several weeks ago that we still haven't linked too! We're sorry, Big G, and we'll put that right tonight just after the ring of the midnight bell, okay? Who says this isn't the Boisterous Bully Age of Abject Apologies!?!

ITEM! Remember when I wrote about Scorchin' Johnny Storm makin' googly-eyes at his pal Ben's gal, the lovely Sue Storm impersonator Alicia Masters? Why, sure, we all do! Well, get ready to squeeze your peepers tight so they don't poop outta your skull, because our crack research team here at C.O.B.F. (which consists of Shelly the Little Otter Puppet and my kid sister Marshall the Tiny Stuffed Cow lying around reading old comics) have discovered an even earlier precursor to that John Byrne tale of Johnny 'n' 'Licia, sittin' in a tree. How early? How about...pre Beatles' first appearance in America?:
Strange Tales #116
Strange Tales #116
Strange Tales #116
Strange Tales #116
Strange Tales #116
Strange Tales #116
Panels from Strange Tales #116 (January 1964), script by Stan Lee, pencils by Dick Ayers, inks by George Roussos, colors by Stan Goldberg, letters by Ray Holloway


Oh, those boys. Will they never learn?!?

ITEM! I know what you're saying. "That Bully is sure one lazy bovine! He started two projects and hasn't finished them yet! Oh when, oh when, will we ever see 'A Wodehouse a Week' and 'Love Actually In (Sorta) Real Time' continue?" Gulp! To which I can only say, as did Cosby's co-star in I Spy when he introduced himself at the auditions for the Super Mario Brothers movie: Mea Culpa! Both projects got sidelined by that ol' devil called life, but this is my solemn Bully-promise: you'll definitely see both start up again soon and definitely finish off (this year)! And if I don't, I'll eat The Five Thousand Hats of Jack Kirby! And that's a good-hooves promise from the good bull at C.O.B.F.!

ITEM! Speaking of mislaid missives, here's another long-delayed post from the Bully Mailbag that's been rattling around waiting for a chance to give credit where credit is due! Back right after I posted about the fabulous Jack Kirby Photocollages, Jaunty Jim Engel emailed me to share a Kirby Kollage he and Chuck Fiala did for their 1982 Kitchen Sink fumetti comic Fandom Confidential. Let's let Jim tell the tale:
We did a special story just for the collection where Chuck & I visited John Byrne's house. He was then "the man" at Marvel & on the FF. He actually appeared in it (to be gleefully ridiculed by us). I designed the back cover parody/homage & did the photo collage & Byrne did the framing art. Thought you might enjoy it!
I sure did, Jim! And with Jim's kind permission, so can you!:
Fandom Confidential
(Click picture to Dark Horse-size)


Way cool! Thanks for sharing, Jim—we who gaze into the Negative Zone in awe and wonder salute you! And, speaking of the bearded one...

Separated at ByrnethITEM! Are you man enough for John Byrne Month over at our Saturday "Separated at Birth" feature? Well, you better, because of the best of J.B.'s homages, tributes and parody covers are comin' up, every Saturday in April! Put on your 2D glasses, clip and save 'em all! Prepare yourself...for Separated at Byrne-th Month! And may the Byrne Robotics discussion board forgive me!

ITEM!: Speaking of clipping and saving...
Bully Value Stamp #32


Until next time, Bully Batallions, keep your feet on the ground and keep reaching for the comics! And remember above all else the material that makes great box packing to cushion your fragile shipments across country:
Excelsior!



365 Days with Ben Grimm: Day 89

X-Men: The Hidden Years #8
from X-Men: The Hidden Years #8 (Marvel, July 2000), script, pencils and letters by John Byrne, inks by Tom Palmer and Joe Sinnott, colors by Greg Wright

Sunday, March 29, 2009

Ten of a Kind: We could be heroes just for one day





















(More Ten of a Kind here.)


365 Days with Ben Grimm: Day 88

Ultimate Fantastic Four #54
Panel from Ultimate Fantastic Four #54 (July 2008), script by Mike Carey, pencils and inks by Tyler Kirkham, coloring by Blond, lettering by Rus Wooton



Saturday, March 28, 2009

Separated at Birth: Have you seen the Spider-Piggies/Crawling up the walls?

ASM #294/What The?! #3
L: Amazing Spider-Man #294 (November 1987), art by Mike Zeck and Bob McLeod
R: What the?! #3 (October 1988), art by Alex Saviuk and Bob McLeod
(Click picture to Hogzilla-size)



365 Days with Ben Grimm: Day 87

What If? v.2 #11
Panel from What If? v.2 #11 (March 1990), script and pencils by Jim Valentino, inks by Jeff Albrecht, colors by Tom Vincent, letters by Phil Felix



Baturday Morning Cartoon: The New Adventures of Batman




Title sequence and episode segments of The New Adventures of Batman (Filmation 1977), featuring the voices of Adam West and Burt Ward




The Dark Knight Revisited—a documentary on the 1977 Filmation Batman cartoon



Japanese opening titles to Denkou Sekka Batman (The New Adventures of Batman)



Friday, March 27, 2009

365 Days with Ben Grimm: Day 86

Strange Tales #161
Panels from Strange Tales #161 (October 1967), script and art by Jim Steranko, letters by Sam Rosen



Thursday, March 26, 2009

365 Days with Ben Grimm: Day 85

What If?
Panel from What If Doctor Doom Had Become the Thing? one-shot (February 2005), script by Karl Kesel, pencils and inks by Paul Smith, colors by Paul Mounts, letter by Randy Gentile. That's Ben Grimm (as the Hulk) on the left there, and Dr. Doom (as the Thing) on the right.

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

365 Days with Ben Grimm: Day 84

FF #13
Panels from Fantastic Four #13 (April 1963), script by Stan Lee, pencils by Jack Kirby, inks by Steve Ditko, letters by Artie Simek



Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Gone Fishin'. Back Saturday.

Marge's Tubby #22

Never fear!: "365 Days with Ben Grimm" will update as usual throughout the week.


365 Days with Ben Grimm: Day 83

MTU Annual #5
Panels from Marvel-Team-Up Annual #5 (1982), script and pencils by Mark Gruenwald inks by Jim Mooney, colors by Diana Albers, letters by Bob Sharen



Monday, March 23, 2009

365 Days with Ben Grimm: Day 82

Fin Fang Four #1
Panels from Marvel Monsters: Fin Fang 4 one-shot (December 2005), co-written by Scott Gray, co-written, pencilled, and inked by Roger Langridge, colored by James Brown, lettered by David Lanphear



Sunday, March 22, 2009

365 Days with Ben Grimm: Day 81

Hulk #152
Panels from Incredible Hulk #152 (June 1972), script by Gary Friedrich, pencils by Herb Trimpe and Dick Ayers, inks by Frank Giacoia, letters by Artie Simek



Ten of a Kind: Animals Strike Curious Poses





















(More Ten of a Kind here.)


Saturday, March 21, 2009

Separated at Birth: Re-drawing Comics the Marvel Way

FF #3/Black Panther #27
L: Fantastic Four #39 (June 1965), art by Jack Kirby, Chic Stone and Wally Wood
R: The Marvel Saga #20 (July 1987), art by Keith Pollard and Jose Marzan Jr.
(Click picture to Saga-size)



365 Days with Ben Grimm: Day 80

Fallen Son: Avengers #2
Panel from Fallen Son: The Death Of Captain America #2 (June 2007), script by Jeph Loeb, pencils by Ed McGuinness, inks by Dexter Vines, colors by Jason Keith, letters by Richard Starkings and Comicraft