See ya’lls in February, got lotsa good’uns lined up fer yew (including more trips in the Time Machine!) Ya’ll come back now, ya hear…
TOMORROW: Matt Fox! Larry Woromay! AND Al Luster??!!
+++++++++++++++++++++++
Vintage Ads
Who wants to see the giant Moon Monster take on Doc Satan's giant flaming skeleton?
Mom, I iz scared of the dark... can I get a life sized Raquel Welch pillow to sleep with?
+++++++++++++++++++++
Awww, My First Swipe
Yesterday you saw an incredible illustration by Mr. C; now today you get to see one by me! Okay, mine is not so incredible, and I was probably only 8 or 9 years old when I drew this sometime in the 70’s, but if you’ve already read The Ballad of Doc Satan post today you’ll see just how inspired I was by one of the demons in that tale (see page 4,bottom panel.) Kinda cute don’tcha thinks?
No comments yet? C'mon, guys! This tale was f-ing awesome! The best we've had this week, if you ask me. I was kind of surprised that evil won in the end. I thought ol' Jake would somehow save the day.
ReplyDeleteAnd I wouldn't say no to a Raquel Welch pillow either.
Thanks Goblin, but in everyone's defense I JUST posted this story this morning because blogger was acting buggy on me all night... I usually have new posts up at 12:01 AM daily.
ReplyDeleteOh.
ReplyDeleteWell, that explains it, I guess. I didn't think of the time difference. I'm from Germany and it's already 6 PM around here.
Nice tale. Poor writers, to think that they had to produce one weird western tales after the other. Can´t have been easy. At least Doc Satan was consequent.
ReplyDeleteRacquel Welch Pillow, ah, why don´t they produce stuff like that anymore? :-) But what I would really like to know is what was in the surprise paket.
Or the xray-specs. Now that would be fun :-) But the ad-copy is strange! To see under the clothes of your friend, to see "his" body? Tz ...
ReplyDeleteWOW THIS WAS A KICK ASS STORY! AND AGREE IF THERE WAS A DOC SATAN COMIC SERIES I WOULD OWN EVERY ISSUE WITH OUT FAIL. REALLY GOOD CHOICES OF 70S STORIES THIS MONTH, LOOKING FORWARD TO MORE!
ReplyDeleteLOVE THE ADS........ AND HA THATS A GREAT DRAWING, EVEN FOR A LITTLE KARSWELL!
Awww... I reckon that's the cutest drawin' of a demon I ever done sawed!
ReplyDeleteYeah, the demon illustration is awesome. I love the happy sun rising over the mountains in the background. You can just tell it's gonna be a great little day in hell.
ReplyDeleteI thought the silver age story started better than it ended. All character and brimstone and then the writers didn't seem to know what to do with any of it. "Damned if you do, damned if you don't" is hardly a three-act play. It was fun to read, though.
darn, wish i still had my monster drawings from elementary school- first one i ever did was Gamera & Gaos from memory after seeing "Return of the Giant Monsters" on TV in oh, '68 or so.
ReplyDeletei sent away for the Monster Fan Club stuff, the only thing i have left is the badge though- darn, again.
by the way, today's story was great but i wish they'd done a little better job with their
"yews" and "yuhs", consarn it. the townsfolk in this tale really got HORNswoggled though...
Ha ha! that's very good. Better use of perspective than most drawings you see from talented children.
ReplyDeleteInteresting to see a story beginning with a "pre-title" page rather than the usual big splash panel. Pretty effective.
ReplyDeleteMoon Monster looks a close cousin of the big fellow in the movie Night of the Demon.
Okay, Mr. C is kinda right. This is hardly great storytelling, but at the same time I would suggest that it's very hard to find any fault with a tale which ends with 400 foot tall, flaming, laughing skeleton in a small western town at midnight. As Bill Draut's long-time friend and frequent collaborator, Alex Toth once said: "Jeeeeeeeeee-Zus!"
ReplyDeleteBah, I think the ending is awesome... what'a ya want, some goofy angels to descend and save the day? I remember reading this as a kid and praying to the dark lords that there were more Doc Satan tales on the way... but unfortunantly there weren't.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the comments today, and also the kudos on my grade school drawing. I was thinking it might actually be fun to even start posting more of these early illustrations from you guys too if you're interested. So, if you were inspired by a comicbook story as a tot, or even if you weren't, send your illustrations my way and I'll find a story to go with it for a future post. Or maybe you're just a damn good artist anyway and would love to display your talent here at THOIA. Drop me line, seriously.
TOMORROW: Is February!
That panel of the huge, fiery, laughing skeleton is maybe the coolest visual in the entire history of this blog.
ReplyDeleteGrossness is always welcome, but it can't hold a candle to the spectacularly eerie.
haaaaa this was an wild one!!!!!!
ReplyDeleteone of my favorites this week too
thanks!
Actually now that i think about it, Warren's EERIE magazine had a series set during the old west about an aged wizard who could summon demons with magic bracelets i don't remember the title, but i DO remember the old man's name was Jeremiah Pan. I don't have many 70's issues of EERIE but if you hunt 'em down...never know. I agree this character seems to good to waste, in the modern world of DC.comics, with all of the gore and rape he'd either fit right in, or seem quaint....or make a great villain in a Jonah Hex reboot.
ReplyDeleteI loved anything DC put out that used Weird in the title! That's some cool kid art!
ReplyDeleteGreat artwork and story!
ReplyDelete