The Marvel/Atlas
Horror Comics
Horror Comics
Part 20
May 1952
"The Cozy Coffin!" (a: Joe Maneely) ★1/2
"The Joke" (a: Jay Scott Pike) ★★
"Creep, Hands, Creep" (a: George Roussos) ★
"The Man I'm Gonna Kill" (a: Tony DiPreta) ★
"Escape From Death" (a: Manny Stallman) ★★
"Stay Away! (a: Bernie Krigstein) ★★
"The River!" (a: Manny Stallman) ★★
Neil can't wait for his rich old uncle to drop dead and leave him loaded down with millions of bucks (gee, where have we heard that before?) and a telegram bidding him to visit said uncle has Neil hopping a plane for the French Riviera. When he arrives at his uncle's castle, he finds the old coot sleeping in a coffin. The old man allows how it's the most comfortable way to sleep and he insists Neil should try it. Wanting to please the old man, Neil relaxes in "the Cozy Coffin!" and promptly falls asleep. When he awakens the next morning, he discovers he can't move. In fact, his uncle tells him, he's dead! Nice Joe Maneely art can't save this puzzler and its nonsensical climax.
When his friends play a really nasty joke on him, Eddie keeps it festering inside for ten years until it finally comes out in a blaze of violence. Jay Scott Pike has a very rough, very amateurish style that I'm sure I won't warm up to in the near future but there are a couple of standout panels in "The Joke" that keep the tale from tanking. Eddie wallops one of his friend in the head with a big rock and you can almost feel the blow through the page.
Nifty Mead has two very clumsy hands and they've landed him in the stir for a long visit. If only he could have a pair of hands that didn't fumble and bumble, he'd be a force to reckon with, he reckons. Luckily for Nifty, Big Boy Angus, the world's craftiest pickpocket (and owner of the steadiest hands in the biz) is due to be fried and Nifty has been given a job in the jail morgue. Once Big Boy has his shot of voltage and is wheeled into the morgue, Nifty skins the corpse's hands and slides them on like gloves. Suddenly, the bumbler can do anything, including busting out of the pokey. Our dopey hero is winged on the way out but his hands drag him free and Nifty soon finds himself in the prison cemetery, where Big Boy is waiting to reclaim his hands. "Creep, Hands, Creep" doesn't seem to know what to do with its premise, which is a variation on an old theme: the hands with life of their own. Oddly, Nifty's new gloves seem to last even though a layer of skin would probably dry up in a matter of days, if not several hours. It's also unclear whether Nifty is always earring his new skin or if he keeps it hidden in his pocket and takes it out for special occasions. George Roussos's art is very noir-ish here and cartoony there, but it does the job well enough.
"The Man I'm Gonna Kill" |
"Escape From Death" |
Nelson, a washed-up has-been archeologist will do anything to discover the fabled City of the Dead in the Valley of Tuzo... even murder! Once the bone-digger gets a helpful clue as to the whereabouts (see the panel to the left), he discovers a strange old man who promises to lead him to the City... for a price! Nelson agrees to whatever the man is asking and is led into a fabulous treasure-filled cave hidden behind a few well-placed boulders. Unfortunately for Nelson, the old man reveals he is one of the residents of the City of the Dead and his price for the discovery is... Nelson's life. "Stay Away" is a fun little bit of nonsense, with some giggle-inducing dialogue (when a colleague questions why an old man like Nelson should be allowed on the trip, our hero chimes in: "I can still take notes!") and one of Bernie Krigstein's more cartoony art jobs. And, in the final story this issue, "The River," murderer Cain Denis flees from the hounds and forces a ferryman to take him across an eerie river. Of course, the ferryman turns out to be Charon, Hell's most famous skipper. Yes, it's a bit on the obvious side, but Many Stallman's feisty art for the reveal raises my rating at least a half-star.
Everett |
"My Brother... The Ghoul" (a: George Roussos) ★
(r: Dead of Night #1)
"Step Right into the... House of Horror"
(a: Jim Mooney) ★1/2
(r: Dead of Night #1)
"The Wooden Man" ★★
(r: Tomb of Darkness #10)
"The Ghost Still Walks" (a: Joe Sinnott) ★★
(r: Dead of Night #1)
"He Dwells in a Dungeon"★
(r: Dead of Night #1)
Hugo is technically not a ghoul (he doesn't eat corpses), but he's not a very nice guy either. He digs up freshly dug graves to steal valuables and has no attack of conscience for the deed. His brother, identical twin Julius, however is appalled when he finds out what Hugo has been up to. It's very easy to figure out when Hugo accidentally puts a pickaxe into his foot while digging one night and the pain is felt clear across town in Julius's toes as well. You see, what one feels, so does the other. When the cops chase Hugo back to the flat, he frames Julius for the crime and and smiles while the trial unfolds. Found guilty, Julius is sentenced to the electric chair but, when the switch is pulled, it's Hugo who fries and Julius walks away a free man. Identical twins were as common as scheming husbands in the 1950s and "M Brother... the Ghoul" is not one of the best documents of the phenomena. No one explains why Julius survives the voltage since both brothers felt the pickaxe in the intro. His final proclamation, after riding the lightning and living to tell the story, is laugh-out-loud funny:
"Release me, gentlemen! The guilty one is dead...My Brother, the Ghoul!"
Yeah, right, Bob. Give him another zap!
"Step Right Into..." |
"Step Right Into the... House of Horror" and meet a debunker who visits a "haunted house" to uncover the reasons why the house won't sell and then becomes part of the house of horror. Purely predictable with a bit of a luster added thanks to Jim Mooney's nice visuals. Nut job Laura falls in love with a ventriloquist named Ventro but the guy won't put aside his dummy for two seconds to give her a squeeze. The poor girl is getting frustrated so she (literally) takes matters in her own hands and discovers the horrible truth about "The Wooden Man." Well, it's a surprise to Laura but we horror buffs saw it coming a mile away because most of us have seen "The Glass Eye," an episode of Alfred Hitchcock Presents. Based on the John Keir Cross story of the same name, published in the 1940s, and obviously read by Stan and the gang. Still, I give points for the sheer creep factor of the art.
"The Ghost Still Walks" |
Amazing Detective #12
"The Man Who Shrunk" (a: Martin Rosenthal) ★★
"Harrigan's Wake!" (a: George Roussos) ★
"The Eerie Escape" (a: Bernie Krigstein) ★
"What in the World" (a: Jim Mooney) ★★
"The Cat's Meow!" (a: Mike Sekowsky) ★
Detective Jim Kirby is enjoying an off-night in front of the tube, watching a variety show featuring The Great Moru and his "living dolls." Suddenly, Kirby recognizes a couple of the dolls from Missing Persons reports as members of an acrobatic troop. Realizing his story would be greeted with derision, Kirby begins an investigation into the mysterious Moru, discovering that the showman is actually the disgraced scientist, Dr. Marcus, who was thrown out of his Scientist Country Club for working on a serum to shrink human beings. Ransacking the professor's estate, Kirby is startled by the wacky Prof., who pulls a gun on the cop and injects him with little people juice.
Kirby gets off a firm right cross and the dopey doc goes down; the flatfoot shrinks down to the size of a flea and takes shelter in the egghead's beard. Shrinking even smaller, Kirby finds himself slipping into Moru's bloodstream but is delighted to find out the serum only lasts a few minutes. He grows right back up to Big Boy size and leaves his former hideout a bloody mess. Though nothing that will pop up on the annual Best-Of list, "The Man Who Shrunk" is an amiable bit of gibberish, with some distracting art from Martin Rosenthal, who had a brief association with Wally Wood (working on romance comics published by Fox) in the late 1940s.
Two awful shorts follow. In "Harrigan's Wake!," a mob boss decides the only way to find out who his true friends are is to fake his own death and see who comes to his service, but the only attendees are the unfortunates he's rubbed out over the years. "The Eerie Escape" sees con, Slimey, dreaming about transforming into a rodent and escaping from the stir. A fellow inmate grants him the wish but, once he's a little rat instead of a big rat, he discovers why the stranger granted him his wish: the guy's really a large cat! No, seriously! "The Eerie Escape" is not only one incredibly ludicrous read, but it also contains the worst Krigstein art I've ever seen; as if Bernie thought "Why bother?"
Three "criminal czars" plot the takeover of Earth by stealing large quantities of A-Bombs and "germ-bombs" and hiding them in a remote, camouflaged area. At that very moment, coincidentally, three aliens, cast out of their world for heinous crimes, speed in their spaceship towards Earth. Even though the mob bosses consider their plan foolproof, the Feds surprise them and haul them off to the pokey. En route, the bad guys get free and head for their secret stash. But, ho ho, the G-Men were playing possum and had arranged for the escape so that they could track the Dons back to their ammo dump. Coincidentally, at that moment, the three aliens arrive just outside the armory and happen upon their three Earthling counterparts. They zap there three astonished mafia hoods and assume their identities just in time for the Feds to show up and blast them. Well, of course, with a lot of these funny book horror/SF tales, you have to throw logic out with the first panel or you're going to be in trouble. "What in the World" almost seems to have been written with tongue firmly in cheek so it's a lot easier to accept the Holy-Toledo! coincidences that riddle the text. Jim Mooney gives us classic one-eyed frog aliens to keep our mind off the silly plot (the Feds sure are taking a leap of faith that the three hoods won't gun them down when they "escape"), but the finale doesn't so much surprise as fizzle.
Last, and in a race to be least, is "The Cat's Meow!," about a woman who believes her husband, a dabbler in black magic, is changing into a mouse to give her a heart attack. Her therapist is, to say the least, skeptical until the husband is found with a broken neck and the only clue is a sprung mouse trap. Mike Sekowsky's fans are legion (his DC work is highly-regarded) but I am not among those legion, I'm sorry to say. Sekowsky's art is just too cartoony and average for my tastes. There are no flares nor moments of inspiration to be found here. Just your average (or perhaps below-average) 1950s funny book art.
Low-grade Krigstein |
Heath |
"The Thing Behind the Wall" (a: Ogden Whitney) ★★1/2
"The Worm" (a: Fred Kida) ★1/2
"The Flat Man" ★★
"Crazy Glass" (a: Manny Stallman) ★
"X" (a: Cal Massey) ★★
With World War II approaching, the dying Mrs. Miles makes Nana promise she'll hide her little Johnny from the war department. Never mind that Johnny is a pre-teen; Mrs. Miles is convinced this war will last forever. So, with the death of Mrs. Miles and the promise of a fortune laid out before her in the will, Nana takes Johnny into the basement and bricks him up, leaving just enough space for air and food. Johnny wants meat but Nana insists that she doesn't have the budget for anything more than carrots. Years pass, the war ends, and Nana tears down the brick wall to free Johnny and is shocked to see he's turned into a ghostly beast, more hungry for meat than ever before. Here's a weird one for you. "The Thing Behind the Wall" has got a very sleazy vibe to it, and that's not even taking into account that Johnny had no sanitary facilities behind that wall. Ogden Whitney's art is just fine here, adding even more unease to the proceedings. We're never told exactly how Johnny came about his transformation (obviously, his hair and nails are longer but he's also grown fangs ) but the story is such a short one, it doesn't matter anyway.
Poor, meek Casper has to put up with his older brother, Hugo, and his mockery. Since Hugo is the elder, he inherited the family fortune and now rules over Casper like a slave-driver. Tired of being "The Worm," Casper conspires with Hugo's wife, Violet, and buys rat poison for his brother's nightly rum-drinking ritual. Hugo drops dead immediately after drinking the laced rum and Violent pulls a gun, informing Casper she's going to call the police and inherit the fortune herself but Casper has other ideas. He strangles Violet but a bullet grazes his forehead, knocking him out. The poor schlepp awakens to a couple of cops pouring rum down his throat to resuscitate him. Casper only gets a taste but that's enough to paralyze him and he's buried alive. Boy, oh boy, funeral arrangements were made so much easier back in the 1950s. Even though he gets a mere smidgen of the poison, Casper maintains his shroud all through the autopsy, the embalming, the funeral service, and the burial without making a sound. And, sure, this stuff will paralyze you but nothing is said about it masking the breathing. Well, anyway... this here's a Stan Lee script (we know cuz he signed it), not one of his better ones I hasten to add, and I suspect Stan whipped it up on a lunch break while scripting the adventures of Hedy Hollywood and Kid Colt Outlaw.
The narrator of "The Flat Man" isn't your average hood. Nope, this guy has spent the last seven years perfecting a pill that will make him "The Flat Man!," a being so thin he'll be able to slip under bank vault doors and make away with loads of booty. There's only one catch to this miracle drug: it lasts six hours and then brain-boy must take another pill to decompress him or he'll die (of what, we're not told). So, our quasi-scientific genius pops his pill, becomes "The Flat Man," and robs the local bank of millions. He hops back into his getaway car after spending five hours in the vault and heads back to his apartment to take his antidote, only to discover his throat is too thin to swallow the pill! Incredibly dopey and yet undeniably a fun read, "The Flat Man" is the absolute definition of a guilty pleasure (but let's not confuse this with "The Flat Man," about a guy who survives a run-in with a steamroller, that appeared a few years later in Superior's Journey Into Fear #19, a story that was vastly... um, superior to this one). All the while I was wondering why this guy, smart enough to craft a pill that can change the entire structure of one's body, wouldn't think of every pitfall and concoct a liquid antidote. Also, how does his heart survive the transformation (I won't be rude enough to bring up the fate of his other organs) and wouldn't he notice the constriction of his throat when he tries to breathe? Well, don't be a worrywart like me and just enjoy some fiction that doesn't force you to think.
Two short-shorts finish off this issue. The first, "Crazy Glass" is a weak tale about a carnival worker who discovers a face looking back at him through the new distorting glass in the Hall of Mirrors. The art is average but the story is an oft-told one. A bit better is "X," wherein a businessman blackmails his two partners by sending them letters, threatening to make secrets public and signing it "X." The two men kill themselves but our protagonist is not far behind when he gets a similar letter. Who was the sender? Perhaps the best bit about this quickie is the fact that we never find out.
Mystic #8
"We Meet At Midnight!" (a: Paul Reinman) ★★
(r: Dead of Night #4)
"Sorry... Mr. Hopkins!" (a: Bill Everett) ★1/2
(r: Fear #21)
"House for Sale" (a: Dick Ayers) ★
(r: Journey Into Mystery #11)
"The Burning Flame" (a: Gil Kane) ★
(r: Journey Into Mystery #11)
"A Monster Among Us" (a: Joe Sinnott) ★★
(r: Monsters on the Prowl #29)
Hugo Blore has been avoided, mocked, and ridiculed his whole life because he’s less than handsome. After reading up on the occult, Hugo travels to Egypt to learn the secret of the Sphinx. The first half of "We Meet at Midnight" builds suspense, but it leads to a disappointing climax. Paul Reinman's art is crude but it continues to grow on me for some odd reason.
Timothy Hopkins has had enough of his overbearing wife and boss but it’s not until he meets the beautiful carnival fortune teller that he does anything about it. Bill Everett’s art is the only thing that keeps the reader turning the pages of "Sorry... Mr. Hopkins!," and the “shock” ending is given away on the splash.
"A Monster Among Us" |
The best story by default is the finale, "A Monster Among Us." Bullying fisherman, Dan Harper, is tired of the legends of a sea monster that can take the shape of anything it likes, and is determined to show his crew there’s no such thing as monsters. Not much in the way of surprise here but Sinnott’s pre-code horror work is always a plus.
Mystery Tales #2
"This Corpse Is Mine" ★
"The Crawling Horror" (a: Ogden Whitney) ★★★
"He Went for a Train-Ride" (a: Bernie Krigstein) ★
"The Gold Gorilla!" ★
"The Rat Race" (a: Bill Everett) ★★★
A heartless mortician won't give anyone in the village a break, not even the poorest of the poor. One night, as he's embalming the richest man in town, he hears a noise in the back room and discovers a vampire and a werewolf battling over a fresh corpse. At first, the mortician believes it's a pair of townfolk trying to scare him, but soon he discovers these creatures are the real deal. "This Corpse Is Mine" is not only deadly dumb but it's a meanderer. The mortician is so rotten and evil, he becomes a joke rather than a character and the monster showdown is tossed in almost as an after-thought when the writer couldn't come up with anything better.
Despondent after the death of his wife from a deadly virus, Dr. Frank Carson makes a vow over her casket to discover a way to destroy bacteria and other small things. In order to rid the world of microscopic bugs, Carson must first make the tiny pests larger, and that's where he fumbles the ball. The Vitamin B-1 and Caffeine shots he administers make the little monsters grow and grow and grow until they've burst their beakers and come after the mad scientist himself. Carson realizes the closer they get to him, the more sick he will become so he resolves to burn the house, the monsters, and himself to ashes. Alas, as the fire eats away at his body, he watches as the one surviving bug, now ten times the size of the house, trots away from the fire. This month's fare had been running average to below-average, so let's all thank Ogden Whitney and our nameless scripter for bringing "The Crawling Horror" to print. No, there's not much in the way of originality here; we're talking about your basic mad scientist plot (though, to be fair, this one only has good intentions in mind). What elevates "The Crawling Horror" is its fun-factor and a pretty grisly climax. Dr. Carson, knowing he's about to die, continues his narration for our benefit: My flesh crackled and cooked as the fire seared into my body! But I managed to get to the cellar window, and as I melted into death in that inferno, I... saw... a really big 1950s bug-monster!
The creepy climax of "The Crawling Horror" |
Neither "He Went for a Train-Ride or "The Gold Gorilla" make a whit of sense. Both have unexplained twists that lead to unsatisfactory climaxes. The former is about a man who steps onto the wrong subway train and steps out thirty years in the future. Everything is changed, including his wife, but there's no possible explanation for the phenomena. The conductor looks like a ghoul and the train itself is littered with detritus. Why? "The Gold Gorilla" follows two fortune hunters in the African jungle, who happen upon a rare golden gorilla and kidnap it from its mother. The larger gorilla falls into a trap and the hunters set off with their booty. Halfway to civilization, one bad guy does in the other bad guy and then hops a plane, where he meets a fetching babe named Maura. He asks the gorgeous dame to party with him in Miami but, once they've checked into their hotel rooms, Maura comes up to visit... and turns into a gorilla. As predictable as this outcome is, the reveal still comes from far left field since we're never let in on the fact that the mama gorilla has morphing powers.
Clinical psychologist Dr. Tompson isolates himself in an old estate with cages of rats, all in order to determine... well, something. The professor runs all sorts of sadistic experiments on the little furry creatures but one large rodent catches the egghead's eye. This one is "almost human" in its intelligence. The big rat begins sabotaging the Prof.'s tests, so Tompson decides to kill it, but can't help making one more experiment out of the execution. He pours poison on a hunk of bread and then prepares to watch the outcome through a window in another room but the rat proves to be even more intelligent than imagined. The little furry ball swipes the keys and locks the Prof. in the room and then sits on the window sill, waiting for the inevitable. There's a real nasty edge to Dr. Tompson, perhaps because we're never told exactly what these experiments will prove; they just seem to be exercises in masochism and the challenge this smart rat brings seems to elevate the nastiness. We've seen mad scientists before, but this guy gets off on the pain he puts his subjects through. Bill Everett gives the Doc a suitably insane grin (almost Joker-esque) and devises a fabulous last look at the doomed
Everett |
"The Three Feathers" (a: Mike Sekowsky) ★★
"Ghoul's Gold" (a: Bernie Krigstein) ★
"The Death Watch" (a: Cal Massey) ★★
"The House on the Hill" (a: Vic Carrabotta) ★
"Helen's Husband" (a: Ogden Whitney) ★1/2
Albert dresses up asa demon and spooks his old grandma in order to inherit her riches but he (and his co-conspirator wife, Jane) is in for a big surprise when the will is read: the old woman has let only a "treasure box" for Albert. When the nonplussed murderers get homeland open the box, they discover it houses only a large dart adorned with three feathers. Irritated, Albert grips the dart and suddenly has the urge to murder his wife. Once he stabs Jane to death, Albert heads out into the street and confesses his crime to the first cop he stumbles into, insisting the dart made him do it. Investigating the crime scene, a skeptical detective pulls the murder weapon from Jane's back and questions Albert's sanity... just before he plunges the dart into his partner. I'm giving "The Three Feathers" an extra star for its obscure climax and nothing more (especially not for the awful art), but also recognizing the fact that the story is so poorly written that perhaps the "hows" and "whys" were left vague because writer Hank Chapman had no idea how to finish his story.
"The Three Feathers" |
In "Ghoul's Gold," the police become suspicious when a morgue attendant makes repeated visits to a gold merchant. Where could this incredible source of gold be located? Characters in this story actually mutter lines like: "I wonder where he gets (the gold). Where can a morgue attendant get so much gold?" And yes, it leads to the inevitable reveal. Nice Cal Massey art adorns "The Death Watch," about a reporter waiting for an old tycoon to die. Snooping around the rich man's mansion, the newshound runs into a startlingly beautiful girl and begs her for a kiss. The girl delivers one that literally takes his breath away. Encounters with Death (male or female version) are dime-a-dozen in the old comics but "The Death Watch" is an easy enough read and, as noted, boasts nice visuals.
"The House on the Hill" could very well be the worst Atlas horror story of 1952 -- at least I hope it is, and that I won't have to read something even worse. A noted lecturer on aspects of the human brain, Dr. Cranston is invited to the castle of a Dr. Morse to give a lecture to a small gathering of enthusiasts. When he gets there, he's greeted by two very strange people and told the lecture is off but Cranston is welcome to stay the night. After settling in, Cranston gets the creeps from the eerie paintings on the bedroom wall and decides he's going to exit stage left as soon as he can. Coming down the stairs, he's privy to a conversation between the creepy couple, detailing how they intend to dissect Cranston's brain. The terrified professor manages to escape and is rescued on the road by a hooded figure, who claims to be the real Dr. Morse, explaining that Cranston went to the wrong house! Morse takes Cranston home where he introduces him to Mrs. Morse and lifts his own hood, revealing the crazed madman who was going to carve Cranston up over at the other house! Morse explains that he and his wife are dead and they haunt the house, looking for innocent bystanders to behead. Absolute drivel, with a story that goes nowhere slowly and art that just might remind you of that sketch on your refrigerator done by sweet six-year-old Ellie Mae in Kindergarten. Oh yes, it's that bad!
In Two Weeks... |