The Critical Guide to
the Warren Illustrated Magazines
1964-1983
by Uncle Jack
& Cousin Peter
Frazetta |
"Rock God" ★★
Story by Harlan Ellison
Art by Neal Adams
"Death is a Lonely Place" ★★1/2
Story by Bill Warren
Art by Bill Black
"I... Executioner" ★1/2
Story by Don Glut
Art by Mike Royer
"A Wall of Privacy" ★★1/2
Story by Nicola Cuti
Art by Ernie Colon
"V.A.M.P.I.R.E." ★
Story by Bill Warren
Art by Bill Fraccio & Tony Tallarico
"Movie Dissector" ★1/2
Story by R. Michael Rosen
Art by Bill DuBay
"The 3:14 is Right on Time!" ★★★
Story by Ken Dixon
Art by Billy Graham
"Rock God" |
More "Rock God" |
That's a half-assed synopsis, I know, but this story is very hard to follow and makes little sense. The story behind the story is that comic fan Harlan Ellison wanted to write a script based on a Frazetta cover and this is the one that landed in his lap. Neal Adams was then assigned to visualize Harlan's words (a natural choice, since Adams was coming off much acclaim for his stint on Deadman and was just about to revolutionize comics with Denny O'Neil on Green Lantern/Green Arrow). I liked writer Ellison's use of the seven stones but Dis's reappearance and the Stedman episode seem rushed, as if this was only a couple of chapters from an Ellison novella. I've never been a huge fan of Harlan's (a bit too pretentious for me); his reputation was built on some solid work in the 1950s and early '60s but the writer became more of a lightning rod for controversy afterwards. I'm not denying the man his talent, but that pretension I alluded to certainly shows through in "Rock God":
Work, mouth, work this man out of the East River where fish eat garbage.
"Death is a Lonely Place" |
Miklos Sokolos, a centuries-old vampire, finds that "Death Is a Lonely Place" when he falls in love with a "normal" girl. At first, Miklos decides to bring the girl into his "lifestyle" but he has a change of heart and commits suicide by dragging his coffin out into the sun. Though "Death Is a Lonely Place" is far from perfect and contains some sentences that could have used a bit of editing/proofing (When the sun goes down and people leave graveyards are lonely and depressing.), at its core is a sympathetic character and a surprising conclusion. Bill Warren and Don Glut and the rest of the "second tier" scribes of Warren funny books tended to leave things off in a somewhat ludicrous fashion, as we all know. So it's refreshing that there's no reveal that Miklos's love is really a werewolf and, instead, we get a genuinely sad fadeout.
"I... Executioner" |
In the distant future, citizens are ruled by electronic flying "eyes" that keep watch on all. A telepath comes in contact with similar mutants who wish to escape the tyranny and hop over the tall brick wall that circles the city to freedom. When the night comes, most of the rebels are killed, but one man scales the wall to discover that the other side is miles long but only five feet wide. One of the better science fiction tales to come out of the Warren mags so far, "A Wall of Privacy" is an obvious nod to Communism but doesn't use a ball-peen hammer to deliver its message (as Stan Lee might have). The weak point is the Colon art (under his David StClair pseudo), which looks posed, cartoony, and fake. The twist is a nice cherry on top.
"V.A.M.P.I.R.E" |
Two young boys, Bobby and Tom (think George Lucas and Steven Spielberg), love monster movies but are convinced they can do a better job. An argument on the set of their first low-budget feature sees the pair parting ways angrily, with each swearing they'll one-up the other when the last "Cut" is called. The boys finish their films and have a "world premiere" in Bobby's garage, inviting about a dozen folks to critique the end results. Bobby goes first and the audience raves at the make-up techniques and cinematography, but mostly how "respectful" Bobby is of the monsters in the movie (see where this is going?). Tom's turn comes and his primitive acting skills and lack of a script have the critics rising from their seats and literally ripping the boy to shreds. The audience is made up of monsters! I enjoyed most of "Movie Dissector," the two boys and their enthusiasm for the genre, but the finale is criminally bad and ruins what goodwill Rosen had built. I was very surprised to see this wasn't written by Don Glut, as this is his usual playground. DuBay's art is not bad at all for a beginner and it's only going to get better.
"Movie Dissector" |
"The 3:14 is Right on Time!" |
Jack-The good news is that this issue of Creepy is all-new, with plenty of comics and not a ton of ads. The bad news is that none of the stories is particularly good. The Ellison/Adams effort is best, mainly due to the gorgeous art, but the story is muddled and overblown. I liked the contemporary part of the story better than the ancient part but it ends before it can really get going.
"V.A.M.P.I.R.E." is so bad it's laughable, and I thought "Movie Dissector" was only marginally better; as often is the case, the art is not bad but the story is a stinker. I agree with you about the creepiness of "The 3:14 Is Right On Time!" and I like Billy Graham's art, but the story (like many others) runs out of steam before it's over. The other three stories are all mediocre, both in text and illustration.
Jones & Bode |
"Journey Into Wonder" ★★★
Story by Bill Parente
Art by Ken Barr
"Amazonia"★1/2
Story by Gardner Fox
Art by Miguel Fernandez
"The Machine God's Slave"★★
Story by Buddy Saunders
Art by Ernie Colon
"Swallowed in Space!"★★
Story by Bill Parente
Art by Tom Sutton
"Enter... Dr. Laernu!"★1/2
Story by R. Michael Rosen
Art by Dick Piscopo
"All Sewed Up!"★★
Story by Buddy Saunders
Art by Mike Royer
"Face It!"★★1/2
Story by Nick Cuti
Art by Jack Sparling
"Journey Into Wonder" |
Grendel sets off and, aided by a map drawn by an old crone who wants the dwarf to retrieve her lost ring from Eleen, he passes the monstrous Grinka and meets beautiful, blind Eleen, who turns out not to be a sorceress after all. Using his wits to defeat Grinka, he takes Eleen back to the king, but one of his knights doubts that the girl is who Grendel says she is and insists that the dwarf prove himself in a trial by arms. Grendel once again prevails by means of wit and courage; the king knights him and, suddenly, Grendel becomes a handsome man and Eleen's vision is restored.
Amazonia's shirt never had a chance. |
A beautiful girl named "Amazonia" is on a quest to place the iron crown on the head of the king who has usurped the throne of the kingdom. She battles demons and other baddies and her tiny shirt barely hangs on, but she finally reaches the king and plops the crown on his head. Voila! He turns out to be her Pop and drops dead, freed at last from a nasty spell by the placement of the crown.
"The Machine God's Slave" |
Office clerk Murray Roche stole probe tapes from the department of stellar exploration and flies a dilapidated spaceship to the planet Selcannam, where he hoodwinks the natives into loading his craft with treasure. He demands that an old priest tell him where all of the goods came from and kills the man when he won't reveal the source of the valuables. As punishment, Murray is chained to the temple idol, a sort of tank that starts to roll slowly on its own, making Murray "The Machine God's Slave." He is dragged hither and yon until the machine god rolls into the sea and Murray drowns.
I think Buddy Saunders was better off publishing fanzines and selling comic books online than writing stories like this, which doesn't have much of a plot and just falls flat at the end. Ernie Colon's overly stylized art is getting on my nerves as well. Maybe it's the lack of color or the unfinished look, but it just seems to be a lot of effort and not much of value.
"Swallowed in Space!" |
At least, that's the best I can make of the gobbledygook that is "Swallowed in Space!" Leave it to Bill Parente to follow up the nice script for "Journey into Wonder" with another incoherent mess. Tom Sutton does his best with this mess but there's only so much he can do.
Who has cast a spell on Gerda, turning her into an animal? Gretchen the serving girl is killed in the woods by a werecat. Baron Bruno summons Dr. Laernu to the castle to solve the mystery of the murders before Gerda marries a Duke. Lucky Gerda also stands to become a baroness when her father dies, but her sister Lisa doesn't mind.
"Enter... Dr. Laernu!" |
"Enter... Dr. Laernu!" keeps almost making sense, but it's plagued by terrible proofreading that makes some of the word balloons a bit confusing, not to mention the dopey plot and hit or miss art by Dick Piscopo. He seems to have been looking at Dr. Strange comics when he drew Dr. Laernu (whose name spelled backward, as Cousin Eerie tells us, is Unreal) but I can't say what he was looking at when he drew Gerda and Lisa, neither of whom is exactly a knockout.
Bitten by a werewolf while in the service in Germany, taxidermist Nesbit Pegler returns with a monthly inconvenience and has to lock himself in the cellar every full moon to avoid wreaking havoc. The rest of the time, things are great, so he hires Felix Knox to assist him with his business, which is a roaring success. Nesbit gets engaged to lovely Elissa, unaware that Felix is cooking the books and hitting on his gal while Nesbit is locked in the basement and getting hairy. Felix catches on to Nesbit's secret and, when Nesbit discovers that Felix has been stealing from him, Felix goes to Nesbit's house and kills him with a silver bullet. Felix thinks he has things "All Sewed Up!" when he stuffs and mounts the wolf he shot, but when the full moon is over, visitors to the shop are shocked to see a naked Nesbit Pegler in place of the wolf.
"All Sewed Up!" |
Mister Mentalto, the mind reader, and his assistant Rhoda join the run-down carnival of Bunk and Jenssen. Their act is nothing special but they both wear metal masks. Jenssen's sexy teenaged daughter Marion tries to cozy up to Mentalto to see what's under the mask, so Rhoda whacks her in the head. In return, Jenssen smacks Rhoda a bit too hard and she drops dead in the middle of the next performance. Marion sees Mentalto take out Rhoda's brain and bury it; the horny teen tells her Dad it's platinum and they dig it up, only to find a miniature Rhoda in a tiny coffin. Mentalto confesses that he shrank Rhoda while experimenting with miniaturization; he also was affected, and he shows Jenssen and Marion that his face is tiny.
Jack Sparling can draw a pretty girl when he wants to! "Face It!" |
Peter-Reading the first stories this issue, one might be convinced that Eerie had gone over to the dark side of "sword and sorcery." Luckily, it's just a toe in the waters. "Journey into Wonder" is a fun romp with some dazzling art, but "Amazonia" is just the opposite. Gardner Fox's script (his first for Warren) was probably moldering away on one of his shelves (doubtless rejected by Weird Tales) for thirty years until he heard editor Parente exclaim "I'll buy anything!" Fellow newcomer Fernandez does his best to make the titular femme fatale barbarienne look like a frog with breasts. This probably would have been handed to Wally Wood if he were still a member of the Warren club. Fox will stick around for a while, contributing more weak fantasies, while Fernandez was a one-hit-wonder.
We're offered up the same see-saw in quality with the two science fiction entries this issue. "The Machine God's Slave" is a clever and unpredictable delight (yes, the Colon art still needs work--imagine what Reed Crandall could have done here) and, like "A Wall of Privacy," gives us hope that the Warren writers have somehow cracked the science fiction nut. Well, maybe not. Bill Parente manages to say something deep without actually saying anything in "Swallowed in Space!" I'm sure Jack (the college guy) can tell you what the hell that was all about but me, I'd just shrug my shoulders. Not top tier Sutton either.
"Enter... Dr. Laernu!" seems like the opening chapter for a continuing character (and probably would have been a few years later), but the story is a snooze. The highlight of "All Sewed Up!" is obviously the final panel but not for the horrific reasons Buddy Saunders imagined. I'd hate to be standing where Felix and Elissa are standing when Nesbit made his change. The closer, "Face It!," reminds me of one of those sleazy Eerie Pub stories, complete with Jack Sparling's lurid art. It's not an awful story but, let's face it, the twist is a major letdown.
Frazetta |
"The Craft of a Cat's Eye" ★
Story by Don Glut
Art by Bill Fraccio & Tony Tallarico
"Scaly Death" ★1/2
Story by Don Glut
Art by Billy Graham
"An Axe to Grind" ★★★
Story and Art by Jeff Jones
"Avenged by Aurora" ★★1/2
Story by Bill Parente
Art by Tom Sutton
"Ghoul Girl" ★
Story by Don Glut
Art by John G. Fantucchio
"Escape Route!" ★1/2
Story by T. Casey Brennan
Art by Mike Royer
"Luna" ★★
Story by Don Glut
Art by Jack Sparling
"The Craft of a Cat's Eye" |
"Scaly Death" |
"An Axe to Grind" |
Some kind of Sutton magic! ("Avenged By Aurora") |
Ken & Barbie? ("Escape Route!") |
Jack-After starting out as EC copies and then falling into reprint hell, the Warren mags are starting to find their own personality. This is not a bad issue of Vampirella, and all three of the mags we read for this post are at least half-decent. There's not a great pattern of quality yet, but things are moving in the right direction. "An Axe to Grind" by Jeff Jones seems to me to be what a Warren story should be; it just looks right. It's light on story, of course, and the ending is far-fetched, but Jones succeeds in telling his tale with a combination of words and pictures where both are required to understand what's happening.
Billy Graham must have been looking at an anatomy textbook when he drew "Scaly Death," since the characters have so many muscles! The spelling in this and most of the rest of the stories this issue is so bad that I feel my brain cells dying as I read. Who did the lettering and how could they make so many mistakes? There's one spot on the inside cover where someone wrote a "U" over an "E" to fix the spelling of "ARTHUR" but didn't bother to white out the "E." On page 36, in the Sutton story, one line reads: "I WILL JOURNEY YOU THROUGH THE THE SIGNS OF THE HEAVENS..." And on and on. How did this stuff get printed with so many mistakes? Did anyone ever ask about this in an interview with the people responsible? DC and Marvel never had this many errors.
In Two Weeks... Jack and Peter go ape over the 100th installment of The Haunted Tank! |
From Vampirella #5 |
6 comments:
The art for "Rock God" is quite strong, as Neal Adams typically is, but the story was always rather odd and confusing to me. To my knowledge this is the sole time an authorized work of Ellison's ever appears in Warren, which ain't a bad thing. We will a great many years later get an unauthorized adaption of Ellison's "A Boy and His Dog" in the 1984 magazine which will cause Ellison to sue Warren, likely hastening the company's bankruptcy.
"A Wall of Privacy" reminds me much of an anecdote from Bennett Cerf's "Try and Stop Me" which was the springboard for an EC story from Crime SuspenStories and a story in the "Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark" book series. My recollection is it involves an old man in a nursing home who is bound to his bed and whose roommate lays next to the window and tells him of all the fascinating things happening outside. Our protagonist grows quite jealous and desires the bed next to the window, leading him to kill his roommate by knocking away his heart medication. He is moved to the bed and happily looks outside... only to see a brick wall. Presumably his roommate was making it up the entire time.
"The Machine God's Slave" I particularly enjoyed and my recollection is that Jack Sparling did a fairly good job drawing some monsters for "Luna".
Frazetta, Ellison, Adams — I’m a fan of all three creators, but i’ve never been able to read «Rock God » all the way through, and I’ve tried several times.
-b.t.
Thank you both! With all the talent involved, "Rock God" should be better than it is. And I do recall that story with the brick wall, but my frazzled brain is not able to pinpoint it.
"Out of the Frying Pan" from Crime SupenStories #8 was the EC story influenced by it.
Rock God was originally published as a story in Coven 13, a short lived fantasy/horror digest magazine that was better than those Shock & WEB magazines that you guys have been lovingly detailing. Perhaps you should be showing some love for it too.
Well, Charles, unlike you I'll forego the snark and say that there are just so many hours in the day. But be patient. Coven 13 is, indeed, on my list of things to do. I have a lot of love to go around.
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