A big game hunter is after the biggest game of his career... the legendary creature, the Evil One! The thing lives in a foreign country in a hidden valley filled with monks. When Ellis seeks permission to shoot the thing, he is denied. No one, and I mean no one, tells Ellis no! That night, he sneaks out of the village and heads for "The Creature in the Cave." When he finds it, the thing looms above him but makes no move to assault him.
Just then, the monks arrive and explain that the thing is their way of keeping villagers from committing crimes. The monster removes his head, revealing a man in a costume. The monks then tell Ellis that he will stay in the valley as the new Evil One. Predictable script with art that very much resembles 1960s Gold Key; it does the trick without much work involved.
But then Paul remembers that if he uses his entire power at once, he'll drop dead as well. He does. It's only then, in the epilogue, we discover that the government official who's been narrating was Paul's father. Yep, it's pretty hokey and convoluted, but "The Way He Died!" is also pretty effective. I'm not sure how Paul knew that turning his "energy" level to 11 would kill him (I assume from past mutant experiences), but the fact that he forgot it would deep-six him is pretty silly. This is not prime Reed Crandall, by the way; the figures are stiff and need a better inker.
Wow! Angelo Torres delivers art so far above his comrades-in-Atlas at the time that you'd (again) mistake it for work left over when EC's science fiction/fantasy line collapsed. Lump Torres in with Frazetta and Williamson as the best artists of jungle peril stories. The script is exciting and comes equipped with an effective twist ending. "Where Prowls the Beast!" might be the best story I've run across so far in the post-code era.
"Ravalo the Mysterious!" is a silly "what if" story about a woman who meets a handsome man on a station platform who informs her he works for the great Ravalo the Magician and they're looking for a female assistant. But who is the handsome man and should she accept his invitation? No.
Good-natured Ollie takes all the pranks and jokes thrown at him by the mean folk of Hooterville and still emerges smiling, unscathed. When aliens arrive on Earth looking for one single human being without malice, they select Ollie, of course. It's only when he's on the ship and doffs his mask that we discover Ollie was an alien. "The Man Who Was Taken!" has three pages of Joe Maneely's art and that's about it.
Larry disagrees and his brother cold cocks him, carries him to the spaceport, and dumps his unconscious body on the tarmac. Larry awakens, tells his brother he's seen the light, and climbs aboard the rocket. As Dave leaves the base, two soldiers discuss the fact that Dave Collins lives on Mars because he lost his nerve to make a return trip! Somehow, I never saw that ironic twist coming! The script for "His Brother's Keeper" was written by EC vet (and future DC mystery line powerhouse), Jack Oleck.-Peter
Journey Into Mystery #40Cover by Bill Everett
"I Saw a Demon!" (a: John Giunta) ★★
"The Silence!" (a: Gene Colan) ★★
"How Harry Escaped" (a: Ed Winiarski) ★1/2
"The Strange Secret of Henry Hill!" (a: Bill Draut) ★★
"The Victim!" (a: Vic Carrabotta) ★1/2
"The Question That Can't Be Answered!" (a: John Forte) ★★
A scientist named Morgan has a theory that a machine could be used to read sound waves etched on ancient surfaces and he builds a machine to test it. Using an ancient rock unearthed in Egypt, he hears a chant and suddenly a demon appears, explaining that he will use his powers to rule the world. There's only one problem: the demon has to grant one wish to the person who summoned him. Morgan wishes him back to where he came from and destroys the machine.
Extra points to "I Saw a Demon!" for the unintentionally hilarious speech where the demon explains that he's really a mutant created by ancient radiation and ancient people called him "the man." Over time, that was garbled into "de man" and, finally, "demon." The demon also resembles Sub Mariner in a red cape that drags on the ground. You'd think a demon would be smart enough not to announce his plans to the person who could wish him away.
In 2076, the first men reach Mars and find that it has a breathable atmosphere. On exploring the planet, they find a town that looks just like one on Earth! However, there are no inhabitants. Befuddled by "The Silence!," the astronauts leave a signpost that reads, "We came, we saw, we found nothing!" and then take off back to Earth. An hour later, apelike Martians emerge from hiding, puzzled that the humans left so soon after the Martians built them a town just like one on Earth.
Gene Colan's art is the highlight of this pointless three-pager. It's interesting how his style remained so consistent for decades.
A banker named Harry Thomas flees the U.S. after embezzling millions. He discovers a portrait that causes the person looking at it to grow younger as long as the portrait is hung in moonlight. After paying crooks to steal the portrait, Harry finds himself growing younger until the police enter the house and arrest him, insisting that he's too young to be who he says he is. The portrait remains in moonlight and Harry keeps growing younger until he disappears. The portrait is now blank!
Once again, Jack Oleck gives Carl Wessler a run for his money in the bad script department. "How Harry Escaped" is a story we've all read before and the art by Ed Winiarski doesn't do it any favors.
Abner Ferris wonders what is "The Strange Secret of Henry Hill!" that allows the rich, handsome young man to succeed at everything. Discovering that Professor Seth Blye put Henry through school, Abner pays a nocturnal visit to the abandoned house where the Prof lived and worked. He finds a mysterious machine that is still running and a diary that explains that the Prof transported Henry as a baby from another dimension to our own. The jealous man discovers that he can eliminate Hill by turning a dial on the machine so, like any good villain, he attempts to blackmail Henry for $100K. Too bad Abner doesn't realize that he, not Henry, was the baby from another dimension; when he destroys the machine, Abner fades away, having returned to the dimension from whence he came.

This story is more enjoyable than it has a right to be, mainly because of the odd plot and the twists and turns it takes along the way. The best thing Bill Draut (or whoever colored the story) does is to give the baby blond hair, so we think it grows up to be blond Henry rather than dark-haired Abner.
A con man named Adam Stokes targets an old inventor named Charles Perkins and convinces "The Victim!" that he is a promoter, interested in developing his gizmos. Perkins shows off his new rainmaking machine and gives Stokes a check for $5000 to start a publicity campaign. Stokes is living it up! Soon, he spies a machine that Perkins calls a Space Diminisher. The inventor throws a switch and both men find themselves on the planet Pluto! Turns out Perkins is a purple Plutonian who was intent on proving that his machine worked by bringing an Earthling to Pluto! Stokes played along perfectly.
Another Atlas story ends with a development out of left field where one of the characters turns out to be an alien from outer space. Carrabotta's art here is not bad and reminds me in spots of Ayers or Sekowsky.
Ned Parker is a cynical reporter determined to expose Prof. Jiminez, a hypnotist whose act involves bringing back to life a woman who has been dead for 200 years. During a performance where Jiminez puts his assistant, Cara, to sleep, Parker is in the audience and also nods off, hypnotized. He travels 500 years into the future, where he accuses another hypnotist of fraud and is hypnotized into going 500 years into the past. On stage, Cara accuses Jiminez of fraud and he thinks he's ruined, but Parker confronts him backstage and tells him he's for real. Parker poses "The Question That Can't Be Answered!," asking the hypnotist "'Who am I'"?
The puzzle that ends this story is intriguing: is the Ned Parker of 1956 the real one, or is the man 500 years in the future the real Ned? The writer provides no answers. John Forte's art is serviceable but hardly exciting.-Jack
Journey Into Unknown Worlds #51 Cover by Carl Burgos
"Who is Nokki?" (a: Joe Sinnott) ★★
"He Was Nobody!" (a: Wally Wood) ★★
"I'm Afraid to Shut My Eyes!" (a: Bob McCarthy) ★
"The Faceless Man!" (a: Steve Ditko) ★★1/2
"Inside the Dark Cave" (a: John Severin) ★★★
"Our Strange Neighbors" (a: John Forte) ★★
High in the Tibetan mountains, a greedy explorer named Grover Clayton learns of a large vein of gold and offers to reward any native who will guide him to it. One man agrees and, after an arduous journey, they reach the gold. Grover turns on his guide and shoots him, but the guide reveals that he is a spiritual being known as Nokki, and he leaves Grover alone to die on the remote, snowy mountain.
I must be losing my faculties, since I did not guess the twist ending of "Who Is Nokki?" in advance. I figured Nokki would be an abominable snowman or an alien from outer space, or perhaps an abominable Martian snowman. Joe Sinnott's art is decent, especially in a panel with Grover blasting away at Nokki that looks like an illustration from a Western pulp.

The only thing keeping the town of Valley Ridge from being destroyed is a dam, and it's been raining so long and so hard that the dam can't hold back the water for much longer! An old man called Preston the Magician offers to help, but his advice to have faith and pray seems to yield little benefit. The dam watchman warns everyone to clear out, but suddenly a young stranger appears and leads the townsfolk up to the dam, where they try to avoid destruction. It's too late--the dam bursts and the town is destroyed. The people rebuild the town and the state builds a new dam; the people look for the silent stranger who led them in their hour of need, but it turns out that "He Was Nobody!" The old magician denies being the source of salvation and, when he's alone, takes off his fake beard and reveals himself to be the young stranger, who used the faith of the people to accomplish a miracle.
I give the writing of this story one star, but I give the art by Wally Wood a rating of four stars. The graphics are as good as anything he did for EC, even though his hard work was in service of a worthless tale.
After renting a house in France that was once owned by a famous painter named Rambeau, John Martin returned to the States, where he tells his psychiatrist that "I'm Afraid to Shut My Eyes!" Rambeau was known for his primitive paintings of jungles, but one day he vanished. While staying in the house, Martin had a dream that he walked into one of the jungle paintings and heard a voice calling him to stay. Now he fears that if he snoozes, he'll be trapped forever on the other side of a canvas. John reluctantly accepts a sleeping pill from the shrink, has another dream of the jungle, and barely escapes.
Aside from the terrible scribbling by Bob McCarthy, this story made little sense. In the first caption, it says that John is back in America. Yet his shrink tells him "'Good night, monsieur,'" and at the end of the story he is seen fleeing the house, which suggests that he's in France. I'm confused.
Earl Tenley is happily married, but he keeps thinking there's something he should recall but cannot. While out for a walk one evening, he encounters three men whose faces are shadowy and who wear spandex suits and flowing capes. He suddenly recalls that he was sent from the planet Daneb to scout Earth and see if it's ready to benefit from the other planet's advances. The aliens invite Earl to return to his home planet and its cold, mechanized civilization, but Earl declines, having gotten used to Earth and this crazy little thing called love.
A sappy story is improved by very nice art from Steve Ditko, who clearly labored over each page. It may only by 1956, but his style is already evident in the four pages of "The Faceless Man!," including a panel I've reproduced here that features one of Ditko's trademarked silhouetted figures.
"Inside the Dark Cave" on a hill in Ireland live a group of leprechauns, imprisoned by a boulder that blocks the cave's entrance. One of the group produces a musical instrument that, when played, will send a thought to a mortal, who will come and move the rock, thus freeing the wee folk. They think hard and come up with the name of a man who will be bound to succeed. They play the instrument, which will work its magic only one time, but the man who responds can't budge the boulder. Who would think that such a puny lad would be named Samson Muldoon?
I have to hand it to the editor of this issue--Wally Wood, Steve Ditko, and now John Severin! Quite a lineup! I am particularly fond of Severin's art, and this three-pager gives him the opportunity to draw some spiffy leprechauns. The twist ending is cute, too.
A real estate man named Henry Daniels is surprised when a trio of green-skinned aliens from the planet Zeraphon show up at his office, wanting to buy a piece of land to settle on. He sells them a patch of crummy land on the outskirts of town and they pay him in gold nuggets. Soon, the local bigots start to talk about "Our Strange Neighbors" and grab their torches and baseball bats in order to drive the immigrants back to where they came from. The aliens fight back and the bigots run off. Days later, they vamoose, having left a lovely neighborhood in place of what was a wasteland. The local bigots kick themselves for chasing off the aliens, realizing that they could have done some good.
The more things change, the more they stay the same, eh? A story from 1956 looks an awful lot like the U.S. in 2025, where people are all too ready to chase off immigrants. Shameful.-Jack
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Next Week... The Rogues Join Forces! |