From the November 1952 issue of The Beyond #17
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And a big CONGRATS and THANKS to Laser who came in as THOIA "Follower" #100! Thanks to her and everyone (before and after) for adding on to our kooky lil clan. I'm truly honored to have you all aboard, and if you haven't added yourself yet please do so, it's free and easy with only a quick Google sign-up required.
That was absolutely disquieting in its bleakness,and yes this would've made a great movie,Francis or Bava would've had a field day.
ReplyDeleteI liked that one alot - yes you need a nice unhappy ending now and then.
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed the art on this one. I particularly liked the occasional stabs at Dali surrealism (at the bottom of page two, for instance) and the occasional cameo of the famous Isle of the Dead trees in the rocky landscapes. Moody.
ReplyDeleteBut are these people stupid? It really damages my sense of empathy to watch the characters forget information they've already received every few panels. Why go on accusing each other of acting erratically when it's been proven over and over that the mysterious island fog is assuming the shapes of the cast? Eventually, one must assume these are the reasons everyone keeps acting so surprisingly, and reasonable people would survive first and ask questions later. Also, if the fog just blows away at the slightest touch, well, there's a pretty good test for figuring who is or isn't real.
But whatever. I really liked the sequence of three panes at the top of page two. Together, they reminded me of a forties print ad for space aged convenience food. But I don't really know which food--what the heck is that guy eating? A stack of spoons? It's toasted!
And what is that in the splash? Why, it's the Scottish subarctic saltwater bat. Those things are pretty rare, let me tell you.
I really dug this story! I'm in agreement regarding the sophistication of the plotline and the awesomely downbeat ending. Super-great stuff, sir!
ReplyDeleteHorror Pariah--I'm kinda drooling over the notion of a Bava-directed version of this. YUM!
I liked the ending - even if it is like Mr. Cavin said: morons :-)
ReplyDeleteSome interesting art here.
Very cool story. And...can you imagine Bava directing his own version of "The Thing from Another World"?
ReplyDeleteTHESE ACE STORIES CONTINUE TO SURPRISE ME. ITS A SHAME THEY ARE SO OVERLOOKED WHILE THE WORLD CONTINUES TO ONLY THROW PRAISE AT EC AND ATLAS. I MEAN BOTH ARE DESERVING OF THE ATTENTION BUT ACE SEEMED TO BE RIGHT UP THERE WITH THEM. AWESOME ART, AWESOME STORY, DONT CARE HOW DUMB THE CHARACTERS ARE, ITS A COMIC BOOK. THEIR ACTIONS ARE NO DIFFERENT THAN IN THE MOVIES OF THE TIME THAT ARE CONSIDERED CLASSICS.
ReplyDeleteNice Bava thread, he was definitely a master with controlling fog on film, and if he hadn't died the same year as Carpenter's The Fog 1980 release, John should have hired him as Master Fog Consultant.
ReplyDeleteStill an awesome movie though.
Nice story. If the creators had more than a few pages to tell their tale, we probably wouldn't have seen the protagonists break so quickly.
ReplyDeleteThe part where hundreds of Pollys and Kens appeared is quite cool though, and would drive anybody nuts ...
Damn! Beyond #17 is a kick-ass issue!
ReplyDeleteI liked the ending - even if it is like Mr. Cavin said: morons :-)
Don't most characters in horror media act like morons? It's part of the fun!
Anyway, I really, really enjoyed the story and I, for one, agree with you, Karswell: I was reminded of 'Who Goes There?', too, with all the paranoia and shapeshifting going on in this one.
"You're still beautiful, Polly, but I can never again consider you sensible"
ReplyDeleteWhat a dick.
Highlights:
ReplyDelete1. "I can't stand this any longer! I'm going mad!" for the artwork.
2. The Scottish subarctic saltwater bat, for the writing.