The Marvel/Atlas
Horror Comics
Horror Comics
Part 162
April 1959
by Peter Enfantino
and Jack Seabrook
Cover by Jack Kirby & Christopher Rule
"Last Warning--Evacuate Earth!" (a: Joe Sinnott) ★
"The Creatures from the Bottomless Pit!"
(a: Steve Ditko) ★★1/2
"Test Pilot!" (a: Jack Kirby & Christopher Rule) ★★
"Next Stop--Mars!" (a: Carl Burgos) ★1/2
"Trapped in Tomorrow!" (a: John Buscema) ★1/2
Makka, an alien from Aquila Centurius, is sent to Earth to determine if it's a good place to start Aquila's domination of the galaxy. Unfortunately for Makka, who resembles a vapor cloud, he's set down in a rural town and comes in contact with a/a tree; b/a dog; c/a bunch of hicks; and d/some JDs. After trying to have a discussion with these various life forms, Makka decides that Earth is not a great place to invade as the inhabitants have no fear. "Last Warning--Evacuate Earth!" recycles yet another moldy old plot line and not even Joe Sinnott can save this from sinking.
In "The Creatures from the Bottomless Pit!," tycoon Serge Kemplet discovers a cave at the bottom of the ocean that contains a vast, unmined wealth of valuable minerals and the first man there will be the wealthiest, most powerful man in the world. In no time, he's built a bathysphere that (somehow) can withstand the insane amount of pressure at the bottom of the sea and he heads down to his destiny.
Once he gets in the cave, he discovers it's the home of elves and fairies, the survivors of the sunken city of Atlantis! The little people tell Kemplet their plan to hijack the bathysphere and conquer the surface world. They'll make him a very important person if he helps out. Is he in or out? Kemplet agrees but has a sudden attack of morality and destroys the vessel, marooning himself in the cave with the munchkins. Serge Kemplet has turned his back on fame and fortune and sacrificed his life for mankind. A fanciful and fun little adventure helped along quite a bit by Ditko's penciling magic.
One hundred years in the future, we get a look at the average workday of a "Test Pilot!" This pilot is flying a rocket ship into outer space and out of our solar system (in only seven hours!). We get to see firsthand the dangers our hero must navigate and the thrills he must feel. We know that this is a real glimpse into tomorrow because the writer drops terms like "hyperspatial directional lever" and "polymerized neoprene" into every other sentence. Nothing really happens but it looks pretty good.
Along the same lines is "Next Stop--Mars!," about a really short guy (nicknamed "Shorty" for some reason) who can't get involved in any of the school activities because of his compact physique, but who gets the last laugh when he's selected to be the first astronaut to fly to Mars. And that's the story! This science fiction stuff sure is easy. Last up this issue is "Trapped in Tomorrow!," another time machine turkey. Willy Phelps becomes the latest guy in his Atlas neighborhood to invent a time machine and takes it fifty years into the future so that he can make a fortune. The idea is that he'll go to the local 2060 library and study what horses won in the races immediately following the day he took off in his gizmo. But the knucklehead accidentally parks his machine in an electronic garbage disposal field and his ticket home is reduced to tinfoil and broken sprockets. Why did this dunderhead have to travel fifty years rather than, oh, let's say, two weeks, to sow his field of lucre?-Peter
Strange Worlds #3
Cover by Jack Kirby & Christopher Rule
"I Was a Human Satellite!" (a: Steve Ditko) ★★1/2
"My Job... Catch a Robot" (a: Joe Sinnott) ★1/2
"I Was Face to Face with the Creature from Planet X!"
(a: Jack Kirby & Christopher Rule) ★1/2
"I Was the Man Who Lived Twice!" (a: John Buscema)
(r: Strange Tales Annual #2) ★★
"I Fly to the Stars!" (a: Jack Kirby & Christopher Rule)
(r: Strange Tales Annual #2) ★★1/2
A young man joins the rocket corps to cure his claustrophobia (!) and ends up freaking out aboard a ship deep in space. In a daze, he ejects himself from the rocket and goes soaring through space in a small ball that has enough food and oxygen to keep him alive for a week. The idea is to alert a passing freighter and climb aboard, but real life gets in the way and he ends up on an asteroid.
On the small planet, he discovers a ship full of space raiders who will be attacking the very ship he left behind. Can our goofy astronaut find the nerve to enter a tight, dark cave and use a radio to alert his crew, or will he be stranded forever? "I Was a Human Satellite!" is a perfectly readable example of the road Atlas was detouring down, virtually abandoning the horror story and concentrating on heroic fantasy and science fiction ("It's the space patrol!"), at least until the big monsters take over. As long as Ditko does the visualizing, it's hard to complain... much.
Cushing, chief of the National Robotics Division, is called in to investigate a shortage in the ore being mined on the moon. Cushing hops in his X-13 and quickly finds himself stepping out on the moon, which now holds colonies for America and also the stinkin' commies. Most of the work is done by androids, but would a robot steal? Cushing finds out the answer with a little sleight of hand and uncovers the real thief: you guessed it, a double agent working for those mischievous bastards, the Soviets! How could he tell? Cuz he's a robot, silly! You could probably hear the very loud groan I let out at the embarrassingly cliched reveal for "My Job... Catch a Robot." Not even the usually reliable Joe Sinnott showed up for work that day.
On her maiden voyage as an ace reporter for the Daily Cosmos, Cynthia Adams is assigned the blockbuster story of a new creature captured and held in the zoo on Planet X. Cynthia enters the facility and is struck by the sheer power and girth of the hairy beast, so much so that she doesn't notice when the zoo closes and she's locked inside. Suddenly, the monster breaks free of his "hermetically sealed dome" and heads right for our heroine. Luckily, the shattered glass has set off an alarm and the police arrive just as the creature collapses. You see, the monster could not survive outside its glass home, filled with the atmosphere of its home planet! "I Was Face to Face...!" is a really weak sf tale with a monster that barely shows up and Kirby art that is crowded out by way too much wordage.
John Buscema's gorgeous art is the star of "I Was the Man Who Lived Twice!," about a young gypsy who refuses to learn the rules of society and shuns responsibility, hoping to latch on to a sweet young thing from the village, a girl from a wealthy family. When that falls through, the boy grows up to be a social outcast, doing menial tasks and hating every day. Then his gypsy mother writes to him that she's dying and wishes to give her son one last chance, detailing the whereabouts of a fountain of youth in hopes he'll clean up his act in a reboot. But the numbskull stays too long in the swamp of youth and becomes a baby, rescued by a gypsy couple and cursed (?) to relive his life all over again. I'm not sure why this guy, who's spent his entire life bitching about how hard he's got it, would want to be young again. Still, this is the best art we've seen from Big John in the Atlas sf/f titles.
The third issue of Strange Worlds ends on a high note with (ironically) the melancholy "I Fly to the Stars!" Interstellar space pilot Frank Coventry must break off his serious relationship with Sally but cannot tell her why. The reason becomes all too clear by the final panel when we discover that Frank's mission is to travel the galaxy for six months... but like dog years, space years are completely different than Earth years. By the time Frank comes back to Earth, it's been fifty years since he left. He looks up Sally and, sadly, she's just an old lady now, certainly not ripe for Frank's little black book... but she does have a daughter! Again, I know this is serious science fiction cuz Jack (or Stan maybe) uses terms like "hydrospectroscopic sighter" and "dynamoelectrical system" and really feels the need to explain Frank's conundrum for us in a lengthy final panel.-Peter
World of Fantasy #17
No one thinks that it's a good idea to entrust the lighthouse space station to the care of a robot, even though the "Guardian of the Stars!" needs little maintenance and can execute dull routines with ease. When a convoy from the planet Tago III blasts off for Earth with a shipment of rare elements, the robot keeps watch, but people on Earth worry when the station stops sending signals and the convoy is late in arriving.
Cover by Jack Kirby & Christopher Rule
"It Hides in the Forest!" (a: Joe Sinnott) ★★★
"When a Planet Dies!" (a: Don Heck) ★1/2
"The Man from Tomorrow!" (a: Carl Burgos) ★★
"The Brain Picker!" (a: Matt Baker & Vince Colletta) ★1/2
"Guardian of the Stars!" (a: Steve Ditko) ★★1/2
A spaceship from another planet hovers over a city on Earth and a voice from inside announces that the ship comes from Ursa Eruditis, home of the most intelligent and warlike race in the universe. They plan to invade and conquer Earth in a month but offer us one chance at survival: one Eruditian will land on our planet and take the shape of an Earth object. If we figure out which one, it will show that we're smart enough to survive and they'll leave us alone.
The search begins across the world, but no one knows that "It Hides in the Forest!" A boy is out in the forest one day with his dog, Spot; the boy relaxes and catches fish, but the pooch recognizes that one tree is not what it seems and the planet is saved.
I'm getting to enjoy Joe Sinnott's art and I like the way this story's plot developed. It's a silly premise, but it was fun watching everyone around the world search in vain until the unnamed lad and his dog happen upon the alien.
Xanna, the warlord of another planet, announces his plan to conquer the universe. Granu, the prophet, tells Xanna of the ancient prophecy that says that any attempt to conquer other planets will result in Xanna's planet being flooded. The dictator ignores the prophet and readies his troops for war. Just before takeoff, a deluge floods the planet and the citizens wish their leader had listened to Granu. On Earth, a scientist has just washed a speck of dust off a slide and comments that there could not be any life on such a small speck.
Hoo boy, the folks at Atlas trot this one out pretty often, don't they? At least Don Heck's art is decent, though the aliens all have weird eyes that look like black, glassy discs.
A failed con man named Humphrey Pym has a sure fire scheme to make a bundle. He dresses in a spacesuit, puts a phony time machine in Times Square, and emerges to tell the crowd that he's "The Man from Tomorrow!" Pym feigns confusion, claiming he's from the year 2985, and fields generous offers from reporters before being arrested by a cop, who drives him to the countryside and chastises him for telling everyone that he's from the future. The cop and others really come from the future and don't want anyone to know, so Pym is placed back into the time machine and sent back to the future to keep him quiet!
Two entertaining stories in a single issue of an Atlas comic? What is happening? Even the art by Carl Burgos, which I usually don't care for, fits the story's tone, and I don't think we've seen this plot before.
Frederic Kane is exposed to radiation while out fishing when a nuclear bomb test occurs miles away. Several weeks later, he discovers that he now can read minds. Like any Atlas protagonist, "The Brain Picker!" uses his newfound power to get rich and soon crowns himself emperor of the world. His subjects seek a way to depose the tyrant and finally succeed by using a robot, whose brain he is unable to read.
At least they didn't all turn out to be tiny people on a scientist's slide. The ending where someone turns out to be a robot is also one of the most overused Atlas plot devices. Baker and Colletta's art isn't bad, but it's hard to make much of such a tired idea.
No one thinks that it's a good idea to entrust the lighthouse space station to the care of a robot, even though the "Guardian of the Stars!" needs little maintenance and can execute dull routines with ease. When a convoy from the planet Tago III blasts off for Earth with a shipment of rare elements, the robot keeps watch, but people on Earth worry when the station stops sending signals and the convoy is late in arriving.The convoy ship finally arrives and its captain announces that the robot blew up the space station! The people are angry until the captain explains that the robot did the only thing it could to provide a guiding light for the ship when a pirate boarded the station and turned off its beam. The people are so grateful that they erect a statue to the robot.
I'm always excited to see a new Ditko story, and I hope we'll be seeing plenty of them in the months to come. This one tells of a heroic robot and benefits from the artist's skill; the pirate looks like Baron Mordo from the Dr. Strange comics.-Jack
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| Next Week... Amidst the Science Fiction, a Good Old-Fashioned Haunted House |











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