Monday, May 30, 2016

EC Comics! It's An Entertaining Comic! Part Seven: February 1951







Featuring special guest star, John Scoleri!


The EC Reign Month by Month 1950-1956
7: February 1951

Craig
Haunt of Fear #5

"A Biting Finish!" 
Story by Al Feldstein
Art by Graham Ingels

"Horror in the Freak Tent!" 
Story by Al Feldstein
Art by Wally Wood

"A Tasty Morsel!" 
Story by Al Feldstein
Art by Jack Davis

"Seeds of Death!" 
Story and Art by Johnny Craig

"A Biting Finish!"
Bob and Bruno are vying for the affection of Ellen but Bruno has the upper hand: he'll stop at nothing, including Bob's murder, to get Ellen to a chapel. After disposing of Bob's body in the casket of a man buried decades before, Bruno explains to Ellen that his rival has probably headed off to the big city to find a more suitable mate. Heartbroken, Ellen marries Bruno and the couple settles down to live a quiet life. Well, it would be quiet if Bruno didn't talk in his sleep. When his frightened and outraged bride confronts him about his nocturnal admissions, Bruno strangles her and then murders the maid, who's unfortunate enough to have witnessed the skirmish between her employers. In a house filled to the brim with witnesses, Bruno stands no chance and soon is on the run from the cops. He scurries down to an old house, the basement of which gives way to an ancient "underground railroad." When he hits a dead end in the tunnel, Bruno digs up and finds himself confronted with a rotting coffin. When he tries to move the casket, the wood gives way and his hand becomes lodged in the mouth of the corpse inside. Bruno bleeds out and it's only afterwards we discover that the corpse was Bob's. Ghastly's art shores up the weak Feldstein script and sometimes that's all you need. Interesting that Al is still skirting around the "resurrected corpse" scene and attributing Bruno's death to misadventure and a whole heaping helping of coincidence.

"Horror in the Freak Tent"
Looey Glantz is one sick puppy, the owner of a freak exhibit at Henry Hastings's carnival. Looey loves to torture his poor employees and, finally, pushes them a bit too far. After one of Hastings's other performers, the knife expert Zolto, tires of witnessing Looey's masochistic fun, the two men argue and Looey blinds Zolto. The freaks convince Zolto he can perform just as well without sight and they set up a practice . . . without notifying him they've tied Looey to the board! Ah, now that's more like it! We've finally gotten to one of those classic EC (-choke-) finales with "Horror in the Freak Tent" rather than the abrupt or telegraphed climaxes we've been subjected to so far. Yes, "Horror" borrows liberally from Tod Browning's Freaks but Al manages to inject a liberal dose of originality as well. And Wally's art is to die for. Boys! We've officially turned the corner, I believe.

That feeling only intensifies with "A Tasty Morsel!," the first real EC horror story illustrated by Jack Davis (no, I don't count HoF #4's substandard "The Living Mummy," sorry), the artist who will become second only to Ghastly in the hearts of EC horror fans. The story, again by Al, is rubbish (man stays at creepy old inn for the night and discovers the innkeeper is a vampire . . . no, he was only dreaming . . . no, when he wakes up it's all true!) but Jack's rotund, sharp-toothed ogre could almost be seen as the blueprint for his future nightmares.

"Seeds of Death!"
"Seeds of Death" is much better. Connie Woods lives with her abusive husband, Basil, on a secluded farm and has become quite enamored of hired hand Cliff. Basil's no fool and, after Connie sends Cliff off to the big city for some gardenia seeds, he confronts the young man and murders him, burying his body on the farm. After several days, Connie goes to the city to look for Cliff and her husband follows, attacking her in an alley and assuring her she'll never see her wonderful Cliff again. Connie bashes her hubby upside the head and hides his unconscious body in a garbage can, only minutes before the sanitation workers collect the can and dump its contents in their compactor. Connie returns to the farm and mourns the missing Cliff, but when a patch of gardenias pop up out of nowhere on the farm, she's confident she's finally found him. Nice little twist there at the finish but silly that Johnny spoils the surprise by telegraphing it on the splash page (which, unusually, doesn't feature the title and, instead, identifies itself as a story from the "Vault of Horror." Odd that. -Peter

"A Tasty Morsel!"
Jack: The Jack Davis story shows that his art had not yet reached the classic stage with which we're all familiar. The story was the weakest of the lot. Ingels's tale is nice and gruesome, but the art is so poorly reproduced that I'd like to see the original pages. I agree with you about Woody's freak story--it's just what we've been waiting for, though I would have liked to see the human pincushion at the end rather than just imagining it. As for Craig's story, the final twist was disappointing but I'm so enamored of his art and storytelling skills that it hardly matters.

Jose: Graham Ingels demonstrates with “A Biting Finish” that his art is the standard representative of pre-code horror comics. Even his captions drip like blood on the page! Jack’s correct in stating that the scanned pages for this particular issue are not very complementary to the artists, but we’re still able to see some of the craft shine through, most notably Wood’s work on “ . . . Freak Tent.” Feldstein shows his hand in “A Tasty Morsel” by reusing the second-person-dreaming-of-ghouls shtick that he tried already with “The Strange Couple” (VoH #14), but I found Davis’s rough-around-the-edges compositions endearing. “Seeds of Death” is ample proof that Craig is really starting to come into his own. His rendition of the Vault-Keeper here feels especially right, and his talent for those evocative, silent panels continues to work quiet wonders. Of all the E.C. artists, I think it’s Craig’s influence that you can find in a lot of modern graphic storytelling.

"A Biting Finish!"
John: I enjoyed “A Biting Finish,” and not just for the last few panels. I thought it was amusing how each time Bruno killed off a witness to his crimes, there was someone else around to see that. Reminded me a bit of the hilarious hitman scene in David Lynch's excellent Mulholland Drive. I prepared myself for "Horror in the Freak Tent" to regurgitate Tod Browning's Freaks right up to the very end, so I was pleasantly surprised that the ending was somewhat unique. That said, like Jack, I was disappointed that we were spared seeing Glantz's comeuppance. "A Tasty Morsel" didn't do much for me, art or story-wise. But at least it provides a teachable moment, in clarifying that flesh eating ghouls like their meat drained of blood. You'd think they'd pair up with vampires for efficiency. [Hey, I just mentioned "The Strange Couple"! -Jose] "Seeds of Death" does a serviceable job despite relying on a number of the standard clichés (I personally think it would have worked better if Connie and Cliff were only having an affair in Basil's mind).


Feldstein
Weird Fantasy #17

"Child of Tomorrow" 
Story and Art by Al Feldstein

"The Time Machine and The Shmoe" 
Story and Art by Harvey Kurtzman

"Deadlock!" ★ 1/2
Story and Art by Wally Wood

"Prediction of Disaster" 
Story by Al Feldstein
Art by Jack Kamen

It’s just dust bunnies and dustpans for Donald Yubyutch, a harebrained cleaning man who wants nothing more than to hop along with employer Professor Serutane and his pals on Serutane’s newly-finished time machine. Donald’s request is naturally laughed off by the stuffy scientists, but the cleaner has his own bright ideas. Why, conquering the Middle Ages with his superior intellect is a simple matter, so long as he has the right materials. Racing to the store, Donny buys a toy gun and model airplane to use as blueprints when he builds the real things in the 9th century. To further charm the local peasants, he purchases a transistor radio whose music will surely astound the masses. Back in the lab, Donald plugs in the time-top and throws the switch on his journey. He’s excited to find that the machine works, but the King’s royal entourage presses the happy fool for his business on the castle grounds. Donny's talk of weapon molds and airplane glue draws blank stares. The shmoe starts to realize that the materials he needs to wow his new friends haven’t been created yet. Same for the radio stations and the electric outlet needed to return him back to his century. Deemed a double-talking scullion, Donny is assigned to sweep the King’s dungeon.

"The Time Machine and the Shmoe"

As Peter notes below, “The Time Machine and the Shmoe” is a kind of companion piece to Kurtzman’s earlier “Henry and His . . . Goon Child,” but it also bears the humorous streak found in “The Mysterious Ray from Another Dimension” (WF #16), showing that Kurtzman was intent on having a little fun with his science fictional premises. That’s certainly for our benefit, as Kurtzman’s irreverent tone and punchline endings act as nice refreshers from the doom-and-gloom stories that sometimes fall victim to unintentional parody.

Oops, Part 1 ("Child of Tomorrow")
Speaking of which . . . Al Feldstein seriously fumbles the ball here with “Child of Tomorrow,” a ludicrous howler that finds our must-be-Kryptonian hero surviving atomic attacks, radiation poisoning, and death from starvation AND exposure only for him to find the United States populated by a gaggle of friendly mutants save for the ravenous two-headed variety, one of which is our hero’s heretofore unseen child, whose identity is only discovered after Dad shoots the double-sexed goon dead. The boring info-dumps of scientific facts that we’ve bemoaned in the past seem to be in dire need here, as by all rights Jim McSuperman should’ve died shortly after his jaunt in the mining tunnels ended with a cave-in. If any story we’ve read thus far was ripe for the MST3-K crew, this one is it.

Oops, Part 2 ("Child of Tomorrow")
“Prediction of Disaster” is fairly solid most of the way through, but it takes a bizarre tangent at the last minute when our dismissed professor says to hell with trying to warn the world about the sun going super nova within a matter of days and exerts his newfound nihilism by calling his old boss a jerk. In the very next panel, the sun explodes. Way to build up to the moment. “Deadlock!” is much more consistent in tone and boasts some of Wally Wood’s most rugged and moodily-inked work to date. His cast of square-jawed, super-buff astronauts find themselves tagged by a strange vessel in the deep reaches of  space. Translated communication is established with the aliens, and both parties agree that the opposing crew sound like a gaggle of gruesome monsters who cannot possibly be trusted to go their own happy way. Differences are settled in space the same as in the Old West: both ships draw their rayguns and blast each other to smithereens. It’s a lightly moralistic fable that we imagine could have found a definite fan in Rod Serling, and Wood’s compositions invite the reader to pore over them for days. Exciting to think what will come from him next. -Jose


"Deadlock!"
Peter: "The Time Machine and the Schmoe," a semi-sorta follow-up to "Henry and His . . . Goon-Child" (from WF #15), is proof positive that, while Harvey Kurtzman was pumping out effective science fiction and adventure tales, he also had a bit of a funny bone. These dark comedies were just a  warm-up to the real thing, Mad, which Kurtzman would help launch and oversee the following year. "Deadlock!" is the closest yet to the Wally Wood we all know and love; the close-ups of the crew, in particular, are little slices of noir, gorgeously rendered. "Prediction of Disaster" is a fun little frolic but would be so much more effective had not the ending been used a few times already in the SF titles. Still, I have to admit that Jack Kamen comes through this time; luckily the narrative asks for no more than talking heads for much of the duration. The only swing and miss this issue is the ludicrous opener, "Child of Tomorrow," in which we're led to believe that Jerry, having been in a mine when the bombs dropped, is immune to any lasting traces of radiation. Oh, and how about digging yourself out of a mine collapse with nothing but a shovel and a lunchbox? No problem? How about slashing your way through seven hundred miles of jungle for three years and emerging in the same nicely pressed shirt, no worse for wear and tear? Only one memorable moment in this turkey: the final panel revealing Jerry's offspring, half-man and half-woman, complete with one large breast! Makes you wonder if the thing is half-and-half all the way down.

"Prediction of Disaster"

Jack: I really liked “Child of Tomorrow!” Feldstein’s art is very good, and I appreciate how Linda survives nuclear devastation and still manages to fix her hair in a most fetching way to go with the low-cut blouse and tight skirt. Now, that’s the kind of gal you want with you in a post-apocalyptic world! Kutzman’s story would fit right into Mad and Wood’s space saga looks forward to the classic work he would do on The Spirit the next year. I thought Kamen’s piece was the weakest, as usual, though I laughed out loud at the ending.

John: I also enjoyed "Child of Tomorrow" and the comical renditions of post-apocalyptic mutants. And I appreciate that they didn't shy away from showing the dead, two-headed Jerry's kid(s). "The Time Machine and The Shmoe" might have been more entertaining in MAD. It was a letdown for a WF story. "Deadlock!" was my favorite in this issue, thanks to the fine art of Wally Wood, and the return of our favorite alien languages. Squa Trunt, everyone! While "Prediction of Disaster!" ends well, it is otherwise completely forgettable.


Kurtzman
Two-Fisted Tales #19

"War Story!" ★ 1/2
Story by Harvey Kurtzman
Art by John Severin and Will Elder

"Jivaro Death!" ★ 1/2
Story and Art by Harvey Kurtzman

"Flight from Danger!" ★ 1/2
Story and Art by Johnny Craig

"Brutal Capt. Bull!" ★ 
Story by Harvey Kurtzman
Art by Wally Wood

Slick Charlie is a smooth customer and a savvy criminal to boot. Even when he’s held up after killing a bodyguard’s charge and stealing the dead man’s credentials, Charlie’s got something up his sleeve. Or rather, his cohort Garcia does, who makes short work of the bodyguard with a flip of his trusty dagger. The partners take their stolen credentials and enter the city on Manaos on the Amazon coast, posing as two delegates from an American diamond company. They leave the South American facility with a cool half million in jewels, but instead of boarding the ship back to the States the crooks chill in a local tavern where Garcia, sensing a double-cross, goes for his knife but gets it stuck in his own ribs when Charlie’s secret partner Smitty intercepts at the last minute. The duo leaves the tavern and cannily plans to cut a meandering path through the untamed jungle to throw the authorities off their tails. There’s only one snag in their scheme: their path cuts straight through Jivaro territory, and Smitty explains that the tribe is infamous for prolonged torture and shrinking heads. And who should our heroes meet immediately afterward? Charlie and Smitty are easily overpowered, and later Charlie listens as his partner’s pained cries carry on for hours. But Charlie’s always got something planned. Telling the tribe’s translator that he’s an all-powerful god whose impervious skin will destroy any weapon that touches it, Charlie is brought to the chopping block and, at his request, is given a quick whack of the machete upon his neck. The tribe is pissed by the treachery and Charlie’s grinning shrunken head is the final affirmation of his victory.

"Jivaro Death"
Like Charlie, “Jivaro Death” is a slick little yarn that gracefully slipped through my expectations and ended on a surprisingly dark note that, in true EC style, confirmed that fate can even be on the side of the doomed and the dead. Kurtzman’s illustrations leave me frustrated that my vocabulary of artistic criticism remains so limited; there’s something about his art that I find intrinsically pleasing, a kind of unreal, hangdog style to it that can still be as emotionally resonant as a realistic, drawn-from-life portrait hanging in a museum. Are there any other fans out there who can pinpoint his gifts more eloquently?

“War Story” has a climax that’s just as grim. A hardened sergeant relates a tale from his past to a young rookie facing death on the Korean battlefield for the first time, a WWII fable where a sadistic troop accidentally knifed his own twin brother to death after thinking he was ambushing a wounded Japanese general in the medical tent. Severin has some striking layouts, and though I couldn’t quite get myself into the story’s groove on the first read it becomes more impressive upon reflection.

Oh, brother ("Flight from Danger")
I was surprised to find that “Flight from Danger” wasn’t scripted by Al Feldstein, so similarly old-fashioned it was to “Hong Kong Intrigue” from the previous issue. There’s not a spark of engaging action in all of its six pages, especially disappointing considering it’s a story about a square-jawed type attempting a rescue mission in Nazi-occupied Germany. Craig’s art is shockingly bland and homogenized, not at all like the innovation we saw in the horror comics this month.

Picking up the slack is the utterly fun “Brutal Capt. Bull!”, a salty seafaring adventure if there ever was one. Peter might be laughing over how much of a “masculine romp” the story really is, but I think Wood’s art packs as much of a brawny punch here as anything we’ve seen from him. This is another instance where I was actually surprised by the turn of events, suspecting that shanghaied do-gooder Jeremiah Pringle would offer his other cheek—the one on his face, Peter—in a show of good faith to the cruel Captain Bull after saving the tyrant from a marauding cannon, but Pringle proceeded to show Bull that they don’t call this rag Two-Fisted Tales fer nuthin’! You can see Kurtzman’s comedic side showing through in the climax that finds Pringle beating some sense into Bull, the ubiquitous “THUDS!” and “WHACKS!” following them throughout their struggle across the ship and ending with the captain’s face getting punched through a window. Arrgh! - Jose


"Brutal Capt. Bull!"
Peter: The second issue of Two-Fisted Tales continues the stark contrast in story themes we saw in its premiere issue. On one hand we have the almost parodic noir elements of "Flight From Danger!," whose Steve Canyon-esque hero manages to exit a burning plane, with the requisite trench coat and fedora, into the arms of a scantily clad babe named Lisa. Their adventure goes nowhere and leaves us with nothing. While still on that lightweight side of the storybook, there's "Brutal Capt. Bull," a rip-roarin' sea adventure that does, indeed, begin brutally but takes a turn towards Easy Street about three-quarters of the way through. There's an overwhelming aura of . . . oh, how should I say it . . . "pillow fight night with the boys" to the tale, thanks mostly to Wally's "wink, wink" penciling. Then, more to my liking, there's the dark side of TFT #19.

Whereas most of the war comics being published in 1950 were of the "War is, yes, a Nuisance" variety, ignoring the mental anguish and immoral acts on all sides, and heavily accenting the "America the Beautiful" mantra, you really get the sense, sixty years on, that EC war comics were written by scribes who didn't buy into the notion that war is essential. First up in that history lesson is Harvey Kurtzman's "War Story," which deftly blends conflict and crime, climaxing with a dialogue-free panel of exposition that says more than a hundred words in a caption box. This is the first we've seen of John Severin and I'm looking forward to more. My story for the month is "Jivaro Death," again by Harvey (who is fast becoming my favorite EC bullpenner) with that old chestnut, the jungle expedition populated by greedy cutthroats. Can someone out there name me a funny book story that has a more unrelentingly grim finale?

"War Story"

"Flight from Danger"
Jack: Holy smoke, “War Story!” gets four stars from me all the way. Story and art are both tremendous, though I see quite a bit of Will Elder’s inks in among the John Severin pencils. I only recall having read one EC war story long ago (I think it was called “If”) but this is raw, powerful stuff, written in the middle of the Korean War and only a few years after the boys came home from WWII.

“Jivaro Death!” has a clever twist and Kurtzman’s expressionistic art is growing on me just as it is on Jose and Peter. I always thought of him as the “Little Annie Fanny” artist but we’re seeing that there was much more going on with Harvey. Craig’s “Flight From Danger!” is a straightforward yarn with lovely art, though we’ve come to expect a twist ending and it’s a surprise when one doesn’t appear. Wood wrings all he can out of “Brutal Capt. Bull!” and makes it more entertaining than it probably should be.

John: Two issues in, and I'm getting the sense that Two-Fisted Tales may just not be for me. “War Story!” has a powerful climax, but was otherwise nothing special. I found Kurtzman's art to be particularly unappealing in "Jivaro Death!" While "Flight from Danger!" benefits from great Johnny Craig art, it has little else to offer readers. And “Brutal Capt. Bull!” is also nothing particularly special. Maybe I had better stick with the horror and Sci-Fi/Fantasy books.

"War Story"


Feldstein
Weird Science #5

"Made of the Future"
Story and Art by Al Feldstein

"Return"
Story by Al Feldstein
Art by Wally Wood

"The Last War on Earth"
Story and Art by Harvey Kurtzman

"The Man Who Was Killed in Time!"
Story by Al Feldsetin
Art by Jack Kamen

Sign us up!
Alvin is heartbroken when his girlfriend Marge tells him that she’s breaking off their relationship in order to marry his best friend, Bob. Wandering in a daze, Alvin joins up with a group on a guided tour of Rockefeller Center in Manhattan. The tour takes a surprising turn when the group heads into the basement and climbs into a time machine! Alvin goes along and finds himself in the year 2150, where he sees a sign advertising “Construct-A-Wife” kits for sale. He enters the store and buys a kit for a beautiful blonde, then goes back to 1950 and follows the directions, eventually creating a knockout named Jean. He immediately takes her down to City Hall and ties the knot. Soon enough, he is the envy of his friends, especially Bob, who is miserable being married to Marge. It all ends sadly when Alvin comes home from work one day to find a note from Jean telling him she was heading out for a guided tour of Rockefeller Center. Alvin never saw her again and assumes she went back to the future. I thought this story was hilarious and I loved Feldstein’s take on what makes the perfect wife. He also took full advantage of the opportunity to draw a bevy of beautiful gals in clinging costumes.

“Return” finds Earthmen and women coming back to the planet they abandoned 500,000 years before to find that nothing has changed. In “The Last War on Earth,” Kurtzman anticipates Watchmen by a few decades when a scientist figures that the best way to unite the people of Earth is to fake an attack by Martians. Finally, there is another Kamen story. ‘Nuff said. -Jack

Peter: "The Man Who Was Killed In Time" (or just plain "Killed in Time" according to some sources) takes the time travel gimmick that, so far, the EC writers had been aces on and pushes it just a bit too far. It's got a hokey premise (even for a science fiction story) and any story that needs a final page diagram to explain the contrived plot to the reader probably isn't worth publishing in the first place. "Made of the Future" doesn't fare much better but at least there are no Step A - Step C charts; Al seems to take his time setting up the plot and then squeezes a whole lot of story into the final page. "Return" has wonderful Wood art but a predictable twist. Hell, who cares? It's got wonderful Wood art! Leaving Best Story of the Issue honors to Harvey Kurtzman's "The Last War on Earth" which, like most of Kurtzman's mini-essays so far, simultaneously tugs at your funny bone and makes you realize that either Harvey was a seer or politics and human nature really haven't changed much in sixty years. Probably six of one and half dozen of t'other.


Now we get it!
Jose: Kurtzman’s story was undoubtedly the tops for this issue. As Peter mentions, the artist had an almost uncanny ability to fuse madcap humor and sobering commentary together, sometimes in the very same panel. His breakdown of human conflict, and the enmities and affiliations that are borne from it like rising phoenixes, is especially impactful. “Made of the Future” seems like it has tongue placed more firmly in cheek than the serious-minded and seriously funny “Child of Tomorrow,” and it works as an okay fluff piece that could’ve been told more economically. (Did anyone else think the story was going to end with wife-from-the-future Jean leaving Alvin for his best friend Bob? That would’ve been great!) The conclusions to both “Return” and “The Man Who was Killed in Time” are telegraphed practically from page one, but Wood’s powerful art easily trumps Kamen’s run-of-the-mill work.

John: I liked the premise of stumbling upon a time-travel tour group, as well as the 'Construct-A-Wife' kit, but felt both were wasted in the uninspired "Made of the Future." Fortunately, since EC has already demonstrated a willingness to rehash old plots, perhaps we'll see these used more effectively in the future. When I saw the Flash Gordon headgear, I was hoping "Return" was going to be a classic Wally Wood space-jockey adventure. While it's a decent story, most of it takes place in contemporary times via flashback. "The Last War on Earth" is a great story, but I still have trouble warming up to Kurtzman's artwork. I also thought "The Man Who Was Killed in Time!" was a fun if predictable time-travel tale, but I honestly can't believe they felt they needed a diagram to explain it. A good rule of thumb: if you have to explain the punchline, it's probably not a very funny joke...


Next Week!
Sgt Rock vs......
The Vikings?


Thursday, May 26, 2016

The Hitchcock Project-Robert C. Dennis Part Twenty-Three: "Fatal Figures" [3.29]

by Jack Seabrook

Robert C. Dennis followed "Guest for Breakfast" with his adaptation of "The Right Kind of House," which was discussed here in my series on Henry Slesar.

After that came "Fatal Figures," adapted from a story by Rick Edelstein. In the story, we meet Harold Goams, who has been passing the same flower store on the way home from work at 6:12 PM every day. He always exchanges a friendly wave with the shop's owner, so when he passes the shop one Friday evening and sees a sign that reads "Mr. Rubin died. Store for Rent," his world is shaken. Arriving home, he tells his spinster sister Margaret about the man's death, but she calls him "ridiculous." Harold laments his own lack of importance and comments that he was excited to see in the company newspaper that there are 8,756 employees; he was proud to have "contributed to an important figure."

Margaret takes out the World Almanac and shows him that he is one of 9,113,614 people born in New York State in 1910. Harold begins to study the Almanac, looking for figures in which he is included, such as "Employment Status of the U.S. Population" and "Male Labor Force." He stays up all night, "finding himself in every table," until he happens on the statistic for "Auto Thefts . . . 226,530." He disappears and returns ninety minutes later, wearing "soiled trousers."

"Fatal Figures" was
first published here
In the morning, he breaks with routine and walks out to get the newspaper. Returning home, he goes to his room and searches the paper until he finds a headline that reads, "Councilman Barnett's Cadillac Stolen and Found in Bronx River." That afternoon, Harold again breaks with routine and retires to his room, where he crosses out the auto theft statistic in the Almanac and writes in a new number, increasing the total by one. He sees the next entry: "Robberies . . . 63,197" and leaves the house again, heading for "the corner drugstore." He returns an hour later and Margaret hears sirens outside. Alone in his room, Harold removes two bottles from his pocket and updates the statistic for robberies in the Almanac.

Margaret enters and asks Harold what is wrong, pointing out that he has been acting different since "we had that conversation about your being important." Seeing that one of the bottles contains a perfume called "My Sin," she concludes that he is "having an affair with some hussy" and insults him, saying that he had "better become resigned to the fact that you and I are nobody, and we're even less without each other." She leaves the room, goes downstairs, and calls up to ask him if he would like some tea.

Harold reads the next entry in the Almanac: "Murders and Manslaughters . . . 7, 124." He disposes of the perfume bottle but notices that the other bottle is labeled "As2 03," which his chemistry book reveals is highly poisonous white arsenic. Harold goes downstairs and pours tea for himself and Margaret. He goes back upstairs to drink his tea alone, ignoring his sister's "aborted cry." He revises the figure in the Almanac for murders and, laying down in bed for a nap, looks at the next entry in the book: "Suicides . . . 16,000."

Vivian Nathan as Margaret
"Fatal Figures" is a clever story, in which the author repeatedly uses the word "figures" both to describe the numbers in the Almanac and to describe Harold and his sister; all represent in one way or another the "Fatal Figures" of the title. Like many of the protagonists on Alfred Hitchcock Presents, Harold is no one special--a middle-aged bookkeeper who lives with his spinster sister. His daily routine is interrupted when Rubin dies, so he snaps, but in a manner entirely consistent with his personality; his crimes proceed in an orderly fashion and he carefully updates the statistics in his Almanac after each incident.  The perfume called "My Sin" describes his transgressive behavior and the ending is subtle, but we realize that he has no choice but to kill himself.

Rick Edelstein (1929?- ), who wrote the story, is quoted in The Alfred Hitchcock Presents Companion as saying that this was the first story he ever wrote. It was sold for publication and the TV rights were purchased soon after. He has numerous credits as a TV script writer from 1969 to 1986, including 349 episodes of the soap opera The Doctors from 1968 to 1969. He directed a handful of TV shows and also wrote plays, film scripts, novels, and short stories. He worked as a stage director, teacher and acting coach, and he was married to actress Sally Kellerman from 1970 to 1972. He is still writing today and samples of his recent work can be found online.

John McGiver as Harold
Robert C. Dennis adapted "Fatal Figures" for Alfred Hitchcock Presents and the episode was broadcast on CBS on Sunday, April 20, 1958. The show opens with a postman delivering the mail. Harold comes out of his house to get it, but tells Margaret that it's "just your Almanac." As he so often does, Dennis takes a key element of the story and introduces it right away. Harold complains that "I haven't missed my bus in 13 years" and Margaret replies that she doubts that a wife would have done much better. Margaret's initial comment comparing herself to a wife sets up a motivation that is lacking in Edelstein's story.

Harold passes a florist shop and sees a "For Rent" sign; he speaks to a man on the sidewalk in front of a store next door and learns of the florist's death and his name. This adds another character to the story, however briefly, and reveals the news of Rubin's death through dialogue rather than narration. When Harold gets home, he tells Margaret that "I'm mourning for myself. Mr. Rubin is me and I'm Mr. Rubin . . . when I die there'll be no more notice taken of me than there was of Mr. Rubin." Margaret is hurt and again takes on the role of surrogate wife, whining "after all the years I spent making a home for you." Harold tells her that he should have gotten married and had children; she responds that she would have gladly stepped aside if he'd brought home a wife.

Margaret shows Harold the Almanac in order to underline his insignificance, but he begins to read it and we hear his thoughts in voice over. Dennis again shows actions rather than telling them, letting us see Harold steal the car and later enter the drugstore to rob it. Harold comes home with a bottle of perfume but no second bottle of Arsenic; instead, he takes a gun out of his pocket and we realize that he held up the pharmacy at gunpoint.

The final statistic
Harold behaves almost like a husband disobeying his wife when he refuses to play checkers with Margaret and goes up to his room to read. When he claims to have bought the perfume for his sister, it once again underlines the curious relationship between the siblings, a relationship that is, in many ways, similar to one of husband and wife. Margaret certainly reacts as a spouse would: "I have devoted half my life to your comfort, your well-being, and this is the thanks I get?" She fears that he will turn her out and bring another woman into the house.

Margaret tells Harold that she saved him from making a fool of himself, presumably referring to a long-ago relationship he had with another woman, and he thinks that he would "rather have been a fool." This sets up a motive for murder. Harold then reads the statistic for that crime and the screen fades to black. Oddly enough, Dennis removes the scene where Harold prepares the poisonous tea. Instead, the next scene finds him in the parlor, wearing a black armband and speaking to a police detective about Margaret's death. The detective thinks that Margaret died of food poisoning and Harold asks if it could have been murder. He is clearly disappointed at the detective's conclusions and frustrated that he will have to change the statistic back to the original number in the Almanac.

Te detective returns for a second visit and Harold confesses to having murdered his sister with rat poison. The detective represents the viewer here, wondering why Harold would have committed such a crime and why he is now confessing to it. Harold explains his reasoning and is pleased with himself for ensuring that the statistic will have to be changed. He goes up to his room to get his coat and cannot resist another look at the Almanac. He sees the suicide statistic, picks up the gun, and announces the new number. The camera pans away, we hear a shot, the room shakes--and the episode is over.

Ward Wood as the detective
A strange ending, indeed! Dennis shows rather than tells the car theft and the scene leading up to the drugstore robbery, but then he leaves out Margaret's murder and adds on scenes at the end with the detective; a somewhat subtle conclusion on the printed page becomes a more obvious one on the TV screen.

Rick Edelstein, again quoted in The Alfred Hitchcock Presents Companion, praised Robert C. Dennis for going "that one step further" and dramatizing the suicide as much as he could within the confines of network television in 1958. Edelstein thought Dennis "did it tougher than me."

Harold is played by John McGiver (1913-1975), an actor with a face and voice like no other. Funny in a deadpan way, he was born in New York City and began his acting career in Irish Repertory Theater. He served in WWII and then worked as teacher, appearing in plays Off-Broadway before becoming a full time actor in 1955. He had ten children and was on screen from 1955 to his death in 1975. He was seen on Alfred Hitchcock Presents twice and also appeared on The Twilight Zone twice.

Vivian Nathan (1916-2015) plays Margaret; she was a founding member of the Actors Studio in 1947 and was on Broadway starting in 1949. She was born Vivian Firko in New York City and made a handful of appearances on screen from 1953 to 1989. This was one of her two appearances on Alfred Hitchcock Presents.


Nesdon Booth
The detective is played by Ward Wood (1924-2001). He was acting in his first movie, Air Force (1943) at age 18, for director Howard Hawks, when he received word that his twenty year old brother Charles was missing in action. Ward wanted to quit the picture and enlist right away to avenge his brother's death, but Hawks talked him into finishing filming his part. Wood then joined the Marines. When he got out of the service, he returned to acting, appearing on screen from 1947 to 1982. This was his only appearance on Alfred Hitchcock Presents, but he also appeared once on The Twilight Zone and was a semi-regular on Mannix from 1968 to 1975 as Lt.Malcolm.

The man on the street is played by Nesdon Booth (1918-1964), who started in movies in 1949 and later appeared in many TV episodes, including twice on Alfred Hitchcock Presents, twice on The Twilight Zone, and once on Thriller.

"Fatal Figures" was directed by Don Taylor (1920-1998), the actor-turned-director who acted in one episode of Alfred Hitchcock Presents ("Silent Witness") and directed seven episodes, including "The Right Kind of House" and "The Deadly." In "Fatal Figures," he takes a humorous approach, as shown by the light, bouncy music that plays during several scenes.

"Fatal Figures" is available on DVD here or may be viewed for free online here. Read the GenreSnaps take on this episode here.

Thanks to Peter Enfantino for providing a copy of the story.

Sources:
"Death in Pacific Came--Not to Actor, But Brother." St. Petersburg Times 13 Aug. 1942: 1.
Edelstein, Rick. "Fatal Figures." Mystery Digest Mar. 1958: 4-12.
"Fatal Figures." Alfred Hitchcock Presents. CBS. 20 Apr. 1958.
"The FictionMags Index." The FictionMags Index. Web. 14 May 2016.
"Galactic Central." Galactic Central. Web. 14 May 2016.
Grams, Martin, and Patrik Wikstrom. The Alfred Hitchcock Presents Companion. Churchville, MD: OTR Pub., 2001.
IMDb. IMDb.com. Web. 14 May 2016.
Wikipedia. Wikimedia Foundation. Web. 14 May 2016.

In two weeks: "The Crocodile Case," starring Denholm Elliott and Hazel Court!

Monday, May 23, 2016

Star Spangled DC War Stories Part 79: December 1965/The Best and Worst of 1965


The DC War Comics
1959-1976
by Corporals Enfantino and Seabrook



Russ Heath
All American Men of War 112

"Lt. Steve Savage--The Balloon Buster!"
Story by Robert Kanigher
Art by Russ Heath

"Grounded Sparrow!"
Story by Hank Chapman
Art by Gene Colan

Peter: Growing up in the early 20th Century western town of Mustang River, Wyoming, young Steve Savage learns from his pa that it's always a good thing to learn how to use a pistol but with great power comes great responsibility. When Pa dies, Steve tries to strike out on his own but runs afoul of the town bullies and is run out of Mustang River by the sheriff. When World War I begins, Steve becomes a pilot and attempts to apply his uncanny shooting abilities to flying. Coincidentally, some of the bullies from his past turn up in his squadron but Steve does his best to ignore their taunts. When his Major announces that German balloons are playing havoc with the American pilots, "Lt. Steve Savage--The Balloon Buster!" is born. It's not a birth without hiccups, though, since the Major has expressly forbidden Steve and his fellow pilots to engage with the balloons; each enemy craft is guarded by several Fokkers. Steve ignores orders and blows up the balloons but, in the process, his two comrades are killed. The Major promises a court martial just as the General pulls up to inquire as to the name of the "ace" who had downed three balloons. As the General leaves, the Major promises that Savage won't be court-martialed but that his stay with the squadron, from here on out, will be hell.

"Steve Savage" opens as a western and quickly morphs into a war story; not such an unusual melding since both war and western comics were still very popular in 1965. I was prepared to dislike this new series but it won me over thanks to its flawed but likable hero and Russ Heath's magnificent illustrations. When Steve realizes that his actions have caused his fellow aces to come under fire unprotected, he lands his Spad at the wreckage and ties the men to the wings of his plane. When he lands back at the base, he's told that both men are dead. It's not spelled out for us (thankfully) but I think it was Bob Kanigher's subtle intention to imply that the men were dead before Steve strapped them to the wings and that our hero was experiencing some sort of battle shock. At least that's the way I prefer to read it. "Balloon Buster" will only last four installments but Bob will resurrect Steve Savage in 1982 for a short run in The Unknown Soldier, which climaxes with a duel between Steve and Hans von Hammer himself!

The hapless hero of "Grounded Sparrow" just can't catch a break. His fellow aces keep stealing his kills when he can't get there in time and then, to make matters worse, he's grounded in the midst of German artillery when his wings are sheared off. Only quick thinking and Gene Colan's lovely art can deliver this guy to the finish line. This is the first of three issues devoted exclusively to WWI adventures. The reason Bob chose to hatch this experiment is lost to time but since AAMoW was smack dab in the middle of the five DC War titles as far as circulation is concerned, chances are it wasn't to boost flagging sales. Perhaps it was just an attempt on Bob's part to mold a title that had no theme to speak of into a showcase for WWI tales but it's odd that the writer/editor didn't take this chance to spotlight his newest creation, Enemy Ace.

Jack: Steve Savage drove me crazy with his western talk! "I'm th' gun!" "I'm th' gun!" "I'm th' gun!" Over and over and over. In the flashback, Steve's Pa tosses five dimes in the air and Steve blows holes in each of the coins. Jeez! Use silver dollars next time to get a little bit of lift on them, Pa, so Steve doesn't blow yer fool head off! Part two supposedly "thunders to an unforgettable climax," but I wasn't buying it. When Steve tied Nick and Larry to the wings of his Spad I thought, "uh oh!" and, sure enough, I was right. Poor Nick and Larry don't make it back to base alive. I think they got riddled with bullets during Steve's gun battle with enemy planes, but that's just my opinion.

As for the latest Hank Chapman story, I agree that Colan's art is nice but that plane shore took a long time rolling down main street before it crashed into the German gun and blew up!


Joe Kubert
Our Army at War 161

"Dead End for a Dogface!"
Story by Robert Kanigher
Art by Joe Kubert

"MIG Bait!"
Story by Hank Chapman
Art by Ross Andru and Mike Esposito

Jack: The newest member of Easy Company is a panting soldier whom the other combat-happy Joes immediately nickname "Breathless." Rock's intuition tells him that Breathless ("gasp-gasp") has a secret and, while the reader may reasonably wonder if that secret is undiagnosed asthma, it turns out that the new guy's brother was a coward who was executed by a firing squad. Breathless wants to prove that he is no coward so, when Rock leaves him behind on a dangerous mission, the new recruit disobeys orders and follows the sergeant.

Nazi rockets have Easy Co. boxed in and the only way to go is straight into the path of a flame-throwing Nazi tank. After Rock and his men rush the tank and blow it up, they notice that Breathless is nowhere to be found. Has he followed his brother's example and run from a fight? Nope! He's been captured by the Nazis and is facing a firing squad. He refuses to give up the location of Easy Co. but Rock and his men get the jump on the bad guys and manage to rescue their newest member, destroying the secret Nazi rocket launching site for good measure.


A fair to middling entry in the Sgt. Rock series, though Kubert's superb art is almost to be expected at this point. One of these days, Kanigher will think of another way into a story besides the arrival of a new recruit.

Chapman's "MIG Bait!" is a fairly exciting tale of air battle action in the Korean War. The jet planes are a nice change of pace from all of the fokkers we've been meeting lately.

Peter: I found it utterly out of character for the Sarge’s supporting cast to lay the blame for Breathless’s disappearance on Rock’s shoulders. They’ve been with him through at least 79 adventures; there has to be trust built up. I’ve seen the boys follow Rock blindly into hopeless situations because of that trust. Does it suddenly dry up and disappear with the coming of Breathless, a green recruit who’s obviously damaged goods? I don’t think so. As for "MIG Bait," Andru and Esposito draw planes (and dinos) pretty good but if I was one of Nelson’s compadres and saw how hop-headed he looked on the splash page, I sure wouldn’t be flying in the same skies.


THE BEST AND WORST OF 1965

Peter

Best Script: Robert Kanigher, "Killer of the Skies" (Showcase #57)
Best Art: Joe Kubert, "Killer of the Skies"
Best All-Around Story: "Killer of the Skies"
Best Cover: All American Men of War #108 >




Worst Script: Hank Chapman, "Submarine Baby-Sitter" (Our Fighting Forces #89)
Worst Art: Jack Abel, "No Purple Heart for Pete" (Star Spangled War Stories #118)
Worst All-Around Story: Kanigher/Abel, "TNT Toothache" (Our Fighting Forces #89)


TEN BEST STORIES OF THE YEAR

  1 "Killer of the Skies"
  2 "Enemy Ace" (Our Army at War #151)
  3 "Fokker Fury" (Our Army at War #155)
  4 "Jets Never Let Go" (All American Men of War #111)
  5 "Battle of the Tank Graveyard" (GI Combat #109)
  6 "Ghost Ace" (GI Combat #112)
  7 "Tank Fight in Death Town" (GI Combat #113)
  8 "Lt. Steve Savage, the Balloon Buster" (AAMoW #112)
  9 "What's the Color of Your Blood" (Our Army at War #160)
10 "Choose Your War" (GI Combat #110)



Jack

Best Script: "Killer of the Skies!"
Best Art: "Nothin's Ever Lost in War!" (Our Army at War #157)
Best All-Around Story: "What's the Color of Your Blood?"
Best Cover: Showcase #57 (duh!)>



Worst Script: "TNT Toothache"
Worst Art: "Jackass Volunteer!" (Our Army at War #160)
Worst All-Around Story: "The Tank Eater!" (Star Spangled War Stories #120)

TEN BEST STORIES OF THE YEAR (in no order)

  1 "War Party" (Our Army at War #151)
  2 "Enemy Ace"
  3 "Easy's Last Stand!" (Our Army at War #153)
  4 "Booby-Trap Mascot!" (Our Army at War #154)
  5 "No Stripes for Me!" (Our Army at War #155)
  6 "Fokker Fury!"
  7 "Killer of the Skies!"
  8 "Nothin's Ever Lost in War!"
  9 "Iron Major--Rock Sergeant!" (Our Army at War #158)
10 "What's the Color of Your Blood?"



Next Week...
Jack gets some good old-fashioned Jivaro punishment
for disagreeing with Peter on Best Story of the Year!



December 1965 was a great month for house ads!