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Showing posts with label Vampirella. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vampirella. Show all posts

Thursday, July 18, 2019

Billy Graham's Power and Energy


Jungle Action was a title I picked up when I could find it back in the Bronze Age. The Rich Buckler and/or Gil Kane covers usually drew my attention, but it was the interiors that cemented the deal. And most often, those interiors were drawn by Billy Graham. While I had had a relationship with the Panther over in the Avengers, I was less in tune with Luke Cage. My encounters with the so-called Hero for Hire tended to focus on his guest appearances in the Defenders or that short little stint in Fantastic Four. So I really didn't get a load of Graham's inking prowess (over the pencils of George Tuska) until later in life. And his work on Vampirella? Forget it! I only just found out about that material in the past few years.

For around a year or so around the release of Marvel's Black Panther film, Graham's family was running a Twitter account. It appears to have gone inactive, but it was nice to have it around and to see the pride they took in honoring his work.

Enjoy today's retrospective, and thanks again to all the fans and dealers who own these works, presented in this space for all our enjoyment.



 


 
 


Monday, May 20, 2019

Vampirella, in "What Price Love?" - a Review



Vampirella #25 (June 1973)
"What Price Love?"
William B. DuBay-Jose Gonzalez

Five months ago I reviewed the inaugural adventure of our heroine, from the pages of Vampirella #1. That story was created by Forrest Ackerman and Tom Sutton. Today we'll pop back in, some four years later, and see Drakulon's favorite daughter as rendered by Jose Gonzalez - the artist perhaps most associated with Vampirella. I am loving the art throughout the Vampirella: The Essential Warren Years trade, and although it looks great, I'll testify to not having read much from it. In fact, today's material comes from a simple flip-and-choose process for a story. I wanted Gonzales, so as long as he was the penciler, my major criteria was met. But... did I choose wisely? Let's investigate...


100-Word Review:
We're dropped into the middle of a story, but the narrative soon catches us up to previous happenings. Vampirella, allied with an older gentleman named Pendragon, has landed in New Orleans - 20 years after Pendragon vacated his life with his wife and daughter. He is unaware that his daughter has married gangster Richard Granville, and that they have a son. But he and Vampirella find themselves in the clutches of Granville's toughs, and when a mind-altering drug is administered to our Drakulonian beauty, can anyone be responsible for the results?
 No sense wasting time, as this one is pretty fast-paced. May as well write my thoughts the same way!


The Good: Hokey Smokes, Bullwinkle! This Pepe Gonzalez fellow can sure draw! Wow... I've always felt that Neal Adams's late Silver Age work was about as close to photo-realistic as one can get. But Gonzalez is simply incredible. I featured his work on the BWBC several weeks ago, but I'd not read any of his narrative pencils before this story. To say I'm blown away would be an understatement. Breathtaking to behold.

I'm going to insert right here that I continue to pat myself on the back for coming to the conclusion a few years ago that I need to check out more black & white work from the Bronze Age. On one hand, I continue to regret the time missed. On the other hand, catching up has been a blast - so better late than never!

Back to the story, there was a good and sort of not-so-good right from the start of the tale. Granville's goons decide that rather than kill Vampirella, they are going to make Pendragon suffer by injecting Vampi with pure cocaine and making "Pen" watch her reactions. Now it's good, because it drives the plot of this 12-page story. It's, in a way, bad as it seems a trope fully grounded in the era this was written - this plot could have been plucked from any number of films of the same period. It's seemingly too easy a device. But back to good - it becomes part of the morality play that is this episode.

I will need to read the issues that come before and after this, as I am intrigued concerning how the characters got to this place and where it goes afterward. While I don't think this is high (haha...) literature by any stretch, it has me curious.


One of the character traits you can glean from the art samples is Vampirella's need to have a special serum on 24-hour intervals to stop her from the desire to slake her bloodthirst on actual human blood. We're told that Vampi has pledged to never murder a human; it's fitting, then, that Granville's orders will prove his undoing. So while we as readers are pushed into a similar space as when we read Marvel's Tomb of Dracula, we find ourselves somewhat repulsed at the very nature of the lead character and unclear just where our rooting interests should lay. That is solid character development and plotting.

The Bad: Which brings us right to this section. While not bad, I'd say effective - it was tough to watch as Vampirella succumbed to the effects of the cocaine injection and her own serum withdrawal. Once Granville's child was introduced, it was not difficult to deduce where this was headed. And when it landed where it was going to, I found myself wishing that Vampirella would catch herself and pull back as she had earlier when she attacked her friend Pendragon. It was not to be. Upon reflection, the ending of the story probably goes with my impressions of the previous section - it was jarring, and left this reader feeling a bit weak. Good and bad, all wrapped up.

I'm not familiar with William DuBay's work outside this initial encounter. While his writing was light years ahead of Forrest J. Ackerman's (as seen in my review of Vampirella #1), it left a little to be desired. I did not find it as polished or mature (I use that term from an experience standpoint) as other Bronze Age writers I've encountered. Sure, it was ahead of what a novice would have written, but it didn't strike me as coming from someone who has mastered their craft.


The Ugly: Ah, not much here. I'm sort of struck by the death of the Granville child, but it was a necessary plot point even if predictable.

I'll look forward to some leisurely reading from my Vampirella trade. After two forays between the covers (so to speak), I have become curious enough to return and enjoy an extended reading. I'll also look forward to encountering a few other artists' work on the title. Warren certainly had a stable of solid creators, many perhaps unknown to readers such as I who might be characterized as Marvel/DC Zombies.

Thursday, March 21, 2019

Jose Gonzalez and Vampirella - Scary Sensuality








 As I stated in my review of Vampirella #1, I have next to no experience with the character, and little with the Warren line. But there was one name I was fully aware of dating back many years, and that's Jose "Pepe" Gonzalez. I've included a few art samples, all from Vampirella, and I think you'll say that he could be considered among the masters of the comic medium. Strong draftsmanship, beautiful lines, and a photo realism on par with Neal Adams, et al.




Monday, January 7, 2019

Vampirella of Draculon - a Review



Vampirella #1 (September 1969)
"Vampirella of Draculon"
Forrest J. Ackerman-Tom Sutton

First-time Vampirella reader here, kids! Talk about "forbidden fruit"... I've mentioned before that I never had a single black & white magazine as a kid growing up in the 1970s, and I guarantee you if I had it would not have been an issue of Vampirella. You think Mom was going to let a mag like this get into the grocery cart? Think again. I recently purchased the Vampirella: The Essential Warren Years trade, just so I could begin to bring some reviews of this well-known (by everyone but me, apparently) material. It's titillating, to say the least. And the art - fabulous from cover to cover. But we'll perhaps get to some more of that later. Let's check out Vampi's 1st appearance now.


That dialogue box... To say it is rife with double entendres would be overstating the obvious. Are you struck with a sense that facially Vampirella looks like she's about 13 years old? That may not be unintentional...

100-Word Review:
Drakulon is a planet where blood flows as water does on Earth. And as Earthlings need water to survive, so do the inhabitants of Drakulon require blood. A world of vampires, we’d call them, Drakulon’s people have fangs, wings, the power to turn invisible – the whole vampiric nine yards! One day a spaceship crash lands, and Vampirella goes to investigate. Attacked by the astronauts, Vampirella bites back. Discovering that the men are basically founts of blood, she kills her assailants. But upon entering the ship she spies several men in a hibernation tank… and a feeding frenzy commences!

The Good: Wow. Not sure where to begin with this review. Usually I'm overflowing with praise when I write these things, but I can't say that here. I'll give a nod to Tom Sutton's art, which is pretty nice (for many reasons), but I'm afraid most of my time is going to be spent in the two categories that follow. I thought it was interesting, from an evolutionary standpoint, how Sutton drew Vampirella as some sort of dark, insatiable sprite. My guess is that for most readers, our mind's eye images of the character run more akin to the Frazetta painting on the magazine's cover. The images here seem more suitable for Playboy. Speaking of Sutton's art - I usually don't provide scans of complete stories, but as this one is so short it is presented here in its entirety. And no inker was listed, so I have to assume that we're seeing the whole Sutton enchilada.

The Bad: Now I have some room to move. I'm unsure of what I just read (I'm writing this on 12/20/18 while home from school caring for my wife after some foot surgery she had). Was it an origin story? Was it just a teaser to hook the reader, designed to make said reader bloodthirsty for more? Was it softcore porn? Or... am I choosing D) All of the above? Yes! - x4. Forrie Ackerman would have been about my age when he wrote this story; if I didn't have access online to his biographical information to make that determination, I'd have assumed the writer of this comic was a flowering adolescent, not a 53-year old man. This story, as you can see, is an odd mixture of T&A and vampires, with the fantasy of a beautiful dhampir attacking a man. From the opening partially-nude scene to the low-rise leggings and back dimples, this tale just oozes sex and sexual gratification. I'm not sure I'd have been in the market for this even when I was a flowering adolescent (oh, who am I kidding? I would have been). But to read it now with 52-year old eyes, I see it for what it was. That aside, the script is very crude - and I don't mean in content. The quality is low - some of that dialogue is of the quality you probably wrote in your notebook in study hall when you were in the 9th grade. Which makes me think all the more that plot and payoff were secondary to presentation - presentation of all that T&A. I'm writing most of this tongue-in-cheek, but overall it's just not a good story and was written very sophomorically.

I also found the pairing of vampires and sci-fi astronauts a bit odd in this case. Call me out for categorizing the suspensions of my disbelief, but I felt it was a strange series of circumstances. This coming from a guy who's read his fair share of Steve Gerber yarns. However, given that there was no pretense that this was a superhero mag, the genres represented (horror and scifi) seem a fair enough mashup.




The Ugly: There's not really anything to add here - "Vampirella of Draculon" most likely isn't the worst thing I've ever read. So I'll just leave one more quibble, simply for the sake of filling this space. As you see in the title, Draculon is spelled with a "C". However, once you get to the actual story it is spelled with a "K". Just seems sloppy to me. Sloppy like a vampire's kiss on your neck...

In fairness to that one bad day we've all had, that first impression that went awry, I'll be back to this collection. My curiosity is now piqued concerning the duration of popularity of Vampirella. This beginning could not be as bad as I've perceived. A future reading seems a must - especially given the quality of the art, as stated above. I'll be sure to report back with further thoughts, once that happens.


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