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Project: Iron Man – Iron Man #6

Right off the bat I’m impressed with how good the color is in this issue. It is remarkably well preserved.

I’m not sure if the scan does it justice, but I thought it was worth mentioning.

As I read through these early books of the series two things hit home more and more:

  1. I was not paying anything close to attention when I read these the first time because I barely remember any of them.
  2. Removing the fact that no one except the bad guy gets permanently hurt in any given issue, these stories are surprisingly mature – in a sophisticated way, not an inappropriate way.
I originally started this project expecting that it would just be a trip down memory lane where I could examine the context of where I was at age-wise and emotionally when I read them the first time, but it’s pretty clear that for the most part I was grabbing and collecting these early issues strictly out of the desire to complete the run.
I know I read these all before, but I didn’t appreciate them.
When I really geek out, have comic discussions with my friends, or listen to podcasts like iFanboy it is almost cliche to talk about the Golden and Silver Age books, how great Kirby is, and how writers back then really knew how to get a story out in 8 to 20 pages. It is easy to see that there has definitely been an evolution in how stories have been written in comic books (don’t even get me started on how decompressed some books are now) but it has taken decades to get back to the kind of grown-up-yet-still-appropriate-for-all-ages themes that writers like Stan Lee and Archie Goodwin were popping out month after month in the late 60’s.
These aren’t crazy political stories or scripts designed to raise eyebrows, they were stories about people and things that just happened to go on in a world inhabited by super people. They were mature without being scandalous. Combine lots of relationship drama, a certain amount of timely political intrigue and then people in costumes punching each other, that’s a recipe for success.
It’s not Pulitzer material, but it is on par with so much of the sci-fi and young adult fiction that people of all ages enjoy so much now-a-days. Plus it’s illustrated.
That being said there is a little bit of something in this issue that is worth bringing up – Comic Book Accents.
Take this issue for example: The Crusher returns from his defeat in ToS #91. I have not read the issue, but I found a picture of the cover:
EDIT: Turns out I HAVE read this story, but in the Iron Man King-Sized Special #2 where it is reprinted. That will be covered in the “King Size & Annuals” section that I plan to do in the appropriate year by issue time-line.
The Crusher is a Cuban professor who created a formula that granted him amazing strength and body density. At least I’m pretty sure he’s Cuban, he’s named El Professor and works for El Presidente who has a great beard and all the soldiers are clearly in Cuban uniforms – but they never mention Cuba by name.
Oh, and they have dialogue that looks like this:
Just in case that wasn’t easy enough to read, all the language is pretty plain English with the exception of phrases like, “Perhaps you are WEELING to hear my demands!” or “Si, si, Crusher! ANYTHEENG you ask… …ANYTHEENG!” And that leads me to what I mentioned before: Comic Book Accents.
Comic Book Accents aren’t new in the late 60’s and are still in use today. It’s a great way to get across how a particular character talks or to show a local dialect. Chris Claremont made wide use of this during his epic run of the X-Men with English characters, Scottish characters, Russian characters and specifically Nightcrawler and Rogue who were German and Southern respectively.
But something about it in this issue seems a bit… disrespectful.
Maybe it’s because it was the height of the Cold War or maybe it was unintentional, but the use of the long “EE” in the word balloons seems a bit redundant to me when you’re already using Spanish to show country of origin and accent.
Or maybe I’m just reading too much into this?
As we get further into the series there will be quite a few more accents, especially Russian ones, but that’s for another blog.
Safe to say, Iron Man wins with The Crusher falling into the sea unable to swim to the surface quick enough due to his enormous bulk, but more importantly the seeds are planted in this issue for the relationship between Tony Stark and Whitney Frost and the eventual betrayal by Jasper Sitwell.
Both spring from this punch:
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Project: Iron Man – Iron Man #5

If you’ve ever listened to “Tom vs. The Flash” then you probably know just how often 60’s era comic book stories would rely on time-travel. (Here’s the iTunes direct link just in case.)

Actually, if you’ve ever seen an episode of Star Trek the Original Series you know even more so!

Even though Iron Man is set, by comic book standards, in a more realistic world there was no way to escape time travel in the late 60’s. The thing that I found eerie, though, is just how much 24th century Earth sounds like 21st century internet culture, but we’ll get into that.

There is no delay in the start of the action this issue, page one is Tony getting ripped through time to the future, and he is unable to reach his armor.

Three panels later he’s being accused of creating the computer that runs the world – CEREBRUS!

When we learn what Cerebrus is it comes off as a proto-Skynet created by Stark to help run America’s defense planning, but it didn’t end there!

Cerebrus was so good at it’s job that people started using it for everything and it functioned on an international level, expanding as needed.

Here is a quote: “Cerebrus swelled like a mammoth mechanical spider-web — until it engulfed the world!
Kinda’ sounds like the internet, right?

Here’s another quote: “The world had grown almost totally dependent on Cerebrus’s monolithic might… many gave in to become zombie-like slaves of the machine…”
Now it totally sounds like the internet, except internet trolls don’t have the Mr. Universe physique!

The differences between Cerebrus and the internet quickly become apparent, though, when two “Tracking Coils of Cerebrus” come bursting through the wall. As far as I can tell Google apps doesn’t currently support  tracking coils.

Naturally Tony is helped by hot-lady-scientist who delivers exposition and leads him to a museum where his Iron Man armor has been kept – remarkably well preserved considering being over 400 years old. (To be fair, at this point in continuity Stark wears the power source to the armor, the chest plate, all the time so the only parts that he uses from the museum are the extremities and helmet. But still…)

Tony takes the fight to Cerebrus, who can manipulate energy and become just about anything – like God in Star Trek 5

So fight, fight, fight, fight, fight – neither can get the upper hand so Tony pulls his mask to show Cerebrus that the man Cerebrus is fighting is actually his creator and that Cerebrus risks destroying himself  if he kills Stark. This freaks the machine out and hot-lady-scientist blows up the computer core and before all energy in the world goes away Tony is transported back to his own time.

Yeah, the ending feels as rushed as that was written. The whole thing wraps up in two pages, seven panels from explosion to “Next Ish:”

Like all media, you can see what the concerns of the day are by what is dealt with in its entertainment. Just like “Soylent Green” dealt with over population, this issue is all about the growth of automation and human dependence on machinery. But even though writer Archie Goodwin may be able to laugh now looking back on his horrors of the 24th century, take a look at this ad for Cheerios to see the context of where we were in 1968:

Intelsat III was the height of tech that most consumers had access to. 1200 calls and 4 TV channels, my phone can do that. In that world what would they think of the internet? What would it sound like to know that you have a little box in your pocket or purse at all times that knows exactly where you are and functions as both eyes and ears in our society? Would it be cool or scary that you could turn on the lights of your home, start your car and change the TV channel all with the same device?

Part of me likes to laugh at the “quaint-ness” of these comic stories, but are they really all that different from the horror stories we tell ourselves now? “Contagion” was a terrifying movie about a world-wide pandemic, but in fifty years will we be so medically advanced that we’ll look on that movie as a wild exaggeration? It’s nice to take a look at these and see how far we’ve come while at the same time realizing that it isn’t as far as I thought.

On a completely different subject, but still related to time, I found this great video on I09 about why old books have that “old book” smell. Breaking into these old comics has made my office smell like a used book store.  My romantic writer side is loving it!

Next time:

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Project: Iron Man – Iron Man #3 & Iron Man #4

There’s something about old 60’s comics, and I’m not just talking about the smell of deteriorating news print. The language, the character arcs, and the serial style of the issues are all a window into the past where you can see how entertainment was consumed.

This was the late 60’s, 1968 to be specific, and a good five years into “The Marvel Age” the focus of “super-heroes with real world problems” is being laid on in a liberal way. Nothing points that out more than issues 3 and 4 (at least so far). At the time most weekly entertainment was still derivative in style to theater shows, live acts and radio plays and that is visible in the way these issues were written. In fact it’s so much a part of the fabric of how all these early issues were written that I don’t think I’ll mention it again until the style changes (sometime in the 70’s).

Both issues feature villains that were prominent in old issues of Tales of Suspense and both are instrumental in effecting Tony Stark’s opinion on being Iron Man.

Reading back through these again I remember issue 3 pretty well. We’re going to see more of The Freak, enough that my 9 year-old self rolled his eyes when I saw him on the cover, but issue 4 was a bit of a surprise. The cover I remember clearly, I mean I’ve had it for over 20 years, but the story was completely new to me! I’m curious how often that is going to happen in this project.

Story stuff: In issue 3 we pick up right after issue 2 with Shellhead returning to his Long Island, New York factory desperate to recharge, as is so often the case.

As he’s flying by, the Uranus rocket that Stark Industries is building falls over.

Iron Man catches it while all the workers escape but the strain on his transistors weakens his already damaged heart and he is forced to re-build a new armor!

Already in the pages of ToS he has re-designed or re-built the armor, but this is the first example in his own book of the Iron Man armor catching up with the technology of the times. Now instead of transistors he’s using integrated circuits and a thermocouple to help keep the armor charged.

Unfortunately, because his heart is so damaged, he can’t build the armor himself so his best friend and former driver, Happy Hogan, comes to help! Happy Hogan and Pepper Potts and long time mainstays in the Iron Man mythology, but this was their first appearance in his own book. Where they used to be comedic foil and romantic interest respectively, from here on out they really just serve as ways to torment the Tony Stark character. By the way, if you’re interested, Gwenth Paltrow plays Pepper in the movies and Jon Favreau plays Happy Hogan.

So during the building of the armor Happy get zapped by some of the rays from one of the machines creating the armor and gets turned into The Freak!!

He beats up Iron Man, who’s still not up to snuff yet since the new armor isn’t charged, grabs Pepper in a very King Kong way, and runs out into the city.

After some typical comic book action The Freak is incapacitated by gas and taken back to Stark Industries to get de-Freaked. The important part of this story is that seeing his best friends hurt makes Tony wonder if being Iron Man, with all of its dangers and secrets, is really worth it – so the whole issue ends on a real bummer.

Then we get to issue 4, page 1: fixing Happy. That goes fine, as all comic book science does when it needs to, but Pepper is all upset because she doesn’t know why Tony would put Happy in danger…

You know what, leaving all the soap opera aside we go to our favorite Cold War enemy, The Soviet Union, where they are giving new super-powers to a character called The Unicorn.

Yep. The Unicorn.

I know the name is silly, but he’s actually one of my favorite early Iron Man villains. I really like the design of this costume and he shows up a lot more becoming a more and more tragic figure. This issue starts all that story.

So the Soviets give him these great powers: super strength, durability, a bitchin’ armor mesh costume and, the piece d’resistance, the Unicorn helmet and power belt!

Small downside, the rays they used to make him powerful put his body in a constant state of crisis response so his life-span is significantly reduced. So he escapes with his new powers bent on finding someone who can fix this little problem…

…fortunately there’s this big science conference, being attended by none other than Tony Stark, still brooding about whether or not being Iron Man is a good idea.

So Unicorn storms in, makes demands on TV, and intends to use the scientists he can to heal himself and then ransom off the ones who can’t help him to make a little money.

Naturally Iron Man can’t let that happen and they fight! It looks like this:

After destroying the power belt, thereby eliminating the very horn that makes the Unicorn the Unicorn, the Unicorn freaks out and dives into the lake after it hoping to fix it. We’re going to see more of his unfortunate dealings with water (including a particularly disturbing run-in with the Atlantic Ocean) but for now the Unicorn is gone.

Seeing someone with unrestricted power proves to Tony that he should, and will, continue being Iron Man because the power of the Iron Man armor can’t be trusted to anyone else. This becomes a bit of a problem about eighty issues from now, but we’re not there yet.

For me, I’m actually surprised at how mature these stories are. Back in the 60’s these comics were written for and intended to children. It makes me sad that these kind of stories, dealing with real things (albeit in a cleaned-up safe way) don’t show up that much anymore in titles that are called “all ages.”

Also the serialized aspect of it all isn’t the same as current comics. These issues all literally take place the next day, if not the next hour, from the last issue. It makes for a kind of tight continuity that helped to make the Marvel Universe what it is today.

We’re getting closer and closer to multi-issue arc stories so more of these multi-issue posts are coming. Leave me a comment and let me know how you’re liking it so far. If the view numbers are any indicator this is one of the most popular series I’ve done so I hope it’s true!

Next Time:

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Project Iron Man – Iron Man #2

It was bound to happen, I just didn’t realize it would happen this soon.

I have very few memories about this issue.

It features a one-off battle with a robot super-villain, the Cord family (who will play a big role in the early Iron Man comics), and more of the obnoxious SHIELD agent Jasper Sitwell.

Tony Stark also has a bevvy of beauties on his boat, and he wears a captains hat.

This was definitely the 60’s.

I do know that a lot of these early issues, because they were difficult to find, I read out of order. Because of that they don’t have the emotional “stickyness” that I have for some of the other issues. Although I will admit, I’m glad I’m finding the time to read the series in order. It’s really nice to fully understand the story!

I think that it’s worth bringing up that one of my charming foibles, at least back before I was old and cynical, was that I was a “complete-ist.” That’s a collector who wants to have all of whatever it is he collects. This drove my obsession from when I was a kid and well into my twenties.

It wasn’t enough to have all of the recent issues of Iron Man, I wanted ALL of the issues. And then it wasn’t enough to have just his title, then I wanted any issue of whatever book he might have showed up in. That might sound like an impossible task, but I had a resource back then, before the internet, called the Overstreet Price Guide. In it were not only the most reliable prices for all comic books (it’s what everybody used) but also a list of who appeared in what book. You can still get it today, HERE, if you wanted it!

But why stop at comic books? Iron Man was a character that was just popular enough to have some cool memorabilia without it being at Spider-Man or Superman levels of “impossible to find,” so I wanted all that too!

I made a pretty good job of it! With the exception of some stickers and iron-on t-shirt decals, I was able to get just about every Iron Man bit – with one major exception: The Marx Plastic 6″ figure.

I had one opportunity when I was 11 to get it at a convention. The seller had the whole Marvel set and was selling the whole set for $100. That was a LOT of money when all I wanted was one of the figures so I pulled out some of the tricks my dad taught me, no dice. He was only selling them as a set.

Hindsight being 20/20, had I known that eBay would exist and that I would be a relatively active eBay seller I would have happily spent the $100 bucks since I can get about that or more for each of the figures now – but whatcha’ gonna’ do?
EDIT: I just did an eBay search that you can see HERE showing that maybe I was right to walk after all, however maybe it’s worth the $10 bucks to get the Marx Iron Man now? Oh cruel collector gene!!! Why are you re-activating!?


All that being said, I gave up my complete-ist ways a long time ago. It isn’t that Iron Man has suddenly grown into super popularity, although that would make being an Iron Man complete-ist one of the most expensive hobbies ever, but I just kinda’ grew out of it.

Hanging on to the hunt like that is something you really need a lot of extra time for – something a kid, a teenager and a guy in his early twenties actually has.

I think my new relationship with money was an influence as well. There are other things I need/want to spend my money on now. It’s really difficult to say that a piece of plastic that will just be hanging out on my desk is worth even just the few dollars it may cost…

…although every once in a while….

Next time:

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Project: Iron Man – Iron Man #1

So before I even begin I would like you to look at the cover:

You purple circle stamp on the “N” on the cover? Fun story behind why I bought this issue and how it’s easy to confuse a kid who thought he knew everything about his favorite character’s premiere issue but turned out to know just enough to get himself in trouble.

Well, trouble in a relative sense.

OK, so not any actual “trouble’ but we can go with “mild embarrassment.”

I remember very clearly the comic convention where I finally found, and more importantly had saved up the money to buy, Iron Man #1. Well, I remember except for the location – it was definitely a hotel ball room, can’t remember if it was L.A. or Anaheim, but that’s not the important part.

The dealer who was selling it was right next to the entry door. He had what comic collectors would recognize as a “rare wall” where they put all the number one’s and first appearance issues. He had multiple copies of Iron Man #1 ranging in price and condition. Two caught my eye right away – one at $250 and another that was $350. However, because it was so early in the show, I didn’t want to blow my cash right away. And it was a big show so I figured there’d be other dealers carrying the issue.

Comic conventions for my dad and I were really cool bonding moments. We’d walk the aisles, check out artists and new books and he started teaching me the way to negotiate and bargain – ideas that were completely foreign to me. I have several items in my Iron Man collections that he managed to talk down to a fair price, and I still flinch to myself when I remember how I screwed up a negotiation for a Wolverine Secret Wars action figure almost twenty-five years ago ($40 bucks! Gah! I shoulda’ walked away!).

The Shrine shows were my favorite! ComiCon is great and all, but nothing beats a good old fashion comic book and collectors show like the one’s they held at The Shrine auditorium (They still put on this show! INFO HERE). It was $10 to get in and it was an easy way to burn a Sunday. I bought so much Yoda memorabilia there – just ridiculous. I still remember that there was a sculptor one month that did an Iron Man statue. The armor didn’t match any that I was familiar with, it was his own take on the current armor of the time, so I held off buying it. I decided after we got home that it was cool and I did want it after all. We went back the next month and he wasn’t there. Dad told me that sometimes, especially for one of a kind items, you really can’t wait. Lesson learned.

Back to the story…

So we waited until the end of the day to go back to the original dealer, no other dealers at the con had a decent copy of Iron Man #1 at a better price and, as my dad had taught me, people are more likely to wheel and deal when it’s the end of the day.

We went up and I asked to see the two different versions of the issue that had caught my eye in the first place. The $250 one was a little worse off for wear, but still in what would be considered VG or very good condition. The $350 was definitely better overall, practically NM or near mint condition, and there was an extra label on the bag that said “Marvel Value Stamp intact.” At the time I had no idea what a Marvel Value Stamp was. I thought it was that purple mark that I pointed out to you on the “N’ at the beginning of this post. Seeing that as an extra bonus I totally got that one. We talked money, I know the price came down a little but I don’t remember how much (yay for negotiation skills, boo for memory loss), I handed the man my money, bagged it up and I was the happiest little boy walking out of that convention! It was, and continues to be, the pride of my collection. Even after decades of storage it is still in marvelous, no pun intended, condition.

Fast forward, decades later, I find out what a Marvel Value stamp actually is! You can get a full explanation HERE but the basic story is that they were small pin-ups of characters, the size of stamps, that you’d cut-out and collect from all the different issues of Marvel comics – in the mid 70’s! there is no Marvel Value Stamp in this issue! This came out a good five or six years before that promotion! So as an adult I’m thinking to myself, “That bastard screwed over a kid!” Really, using my rational brain, $350 was a very fair price for the issue at the time given it’s condition so even if I had paid full price I couldn’t be too unhappy…

…but then you look at the purple stamp that is there on the “N” and it’s just a constant reminder that part of my decision making process was based on my misunderstanding of what a “Value Stamp” was. So embarrassing! I have no idea what that mark even is. I think it might be a postage mark, but I don’t know for sure. If you do please let me know in the comments.

The issue itself is very fitting for the times. It picks up right where the last issue of Tales of Suspense left off (as retold in Iron Man and Sub-Mariner #1 see last post) with shell-head sucked via vortex beam into the A.I.M. submarine.

This is the end of the story and it wraps up everything nicely – Iron Man wins the day, Jasper Sitwell is saved and we are re-introduced to Whitney Frost (originally introduced in ToS #98 – an issue I do not own so this was my first exposure to her). Whitney becomes very important later so stick her name in the back of your mind.

Some of the cool images of in this issue come from the renderings in and of the A.I.M. island base. Not only are the yellow beekeeper suits eye catching, but apparently in the late 60’s you needed to put a monogram on everything, even the floor!

This is my favorite:

Seriously, that is a highly stylized “A” on that machine arm!

The big-bad in this issue is a one-off named Mordius – a pre-cursor to the menacing M.O.D.O.K. who we’ll meet later. His face is deformed, although there is no explanation as to why, and he speaks just like the kind of super-villain you’d make fun of. He’s so corny, in fact, when Iron Man decides to kiss some ass he makes mention of it:

Oh, and I should probably mention that he invented what is essentially a very powerful 3D scanner and printer that he uses to make copies of the Iron Man armor. What he wasn’t counting on was the refractory coating on the armor that screws up the x-rays and makes it so that the armor copies don’t work right!

The story ends with the island base exploding, Mordius is never heard from again, and we are promised more action with “The Demolisher!”

There’s also a bonus story in the back, a three page re-telling of Iron Man’s origin. There wasn’t a collector’s market at the time. People couldn’t easily get the back issues so re-prints like this were common. When we get to the Giant-Sized issues and Annuals you’ll see more stuff like this.

Now I kinda’ wanna’ take my dad to the next Shrine show.

Next time:

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Project: Iron Man – Iron Man and Sub-Mariner One-Shot

The memory I have in my head: Adventureland Comics, Harbor Blvd., Fullerton, California. Me and my mom shopping for Iron Man comic back issues. Along the wall of the store classic, high priced back issues were displayed. My mom spotted a cover with Iron Man on it and the number “1.” She got my attention and asked me if this is Iron Man number one? Having burned the image of Iron Man number one into my memory (at this time I had not yet found and purchased my own copy of Iron Man number one) I checked it out, made a face and said no. The man behind the counter, bearded with longer unkempt hair, over-heard and filled in the details: this issue is a special reprint of the Iron Man story from Tales of Suspense #99 and the Sub-Mariner story from whatever anthology series he was featured in.

It is important to have this issue to understand what happens in Iron Man number one. I know we didn’t buy the issue that day, but my parents did get it for me for a major gift giving holiday (I forget which) and it is, actually, really important if you want to know what’s going on in Iron Man number one (which is probably why they re-printed it back in the late 60’s in the first place). For a long time this issue was an “also ran” in my collection, it wasn’t an issue of Tales of Suspense or Iron Man number one, but that kind of thinking really discounts how nice this issue is.

The story continues from the tale that we saw in ToS 97, which started (I think) in ToS 95. More Maggia trouble, more Whiplash, more advertisements for correspondence art schools and Grit magazine. Seriously, what the hell was Grit magazine? Has anyone ever read that? The ad reads like multi-level marketing for kids.

Breaking with a tradition that really had yet to be established, Iron Man starts off the story powered down and spends the rest of the issue, remarkably, fully charged! He escapes the evil death ray bed he was magnetized to and, just when he’s about to land the final blow on Whiplash, AIM’s super secret vortex ray sucks him out of the ship and into AIM’s waiting clutches!

It was a lot of fun to re-read this issue. I did not appreciate Gene Colon as an artist when I was younger, all I wanted was John Romita, Jr. or Luke McDonald, but looking at it now is great! The faces are so expressive, the action is really dynamic and he makes great use of shadow and motion. He was really at the top of his game in the late 60’s. There’s another Gene Colon issue coming much later, in the mid-200’s, where I’ll break down the difference between this Gene Colon and the Gene Colon of the late 80’s early 90’s but that’s for later.

The story itself would actually make sense in today’s comic environment with some small changes to the speech bubbles. I find that the writing of dialogue in the 60’s is more like radio-play dialogue than what we’re used to today. If anything reading this story after reading the most recent issue of Avengers shows that not much has changed for the major crime syndicates of the Marvel universe – they’re all still back-stabbing each other for money and power.

As usual we’re left with a cliffhanger and the promise that Iron Man is coming back next month in his own full-length magazine, a magazine that this writer will eventually be way obsessed with.

This is one of those comics that you used to see a lot at comic book stores and on convention floors. For you other comic nerds out there I’m sure you saw the cover and said to yourself, “Oh yeah, I recognize that.” Even at San Diego ComiCon last year it was easy to pick this issue out on the premium boards set-up at different booths. I don’t know how much play Sub-Mariner got out of this, his series that sprung up around this time didn’t last long from what I remember (EDIT: Wikipedia says it only lasted 6 years, 68-74), but Iron Man definitely stuck around and, frankly, just had the way better story in this issue.

Next time we get to number 1!

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Project Iron Man: Tales of Suspense 39, Tales of Suspense 40 & Tales of Suspense 97

It’s fitting that the walk down memory lane starts in the easiest kind of way, Tales of Suspense 39 is the first appearance of Iron Man and is also the first time that I bought a re-print of a comic, that I really wanted the original of, on purpose. Released in 1993, this Marvel Milestone Edition of Tales of Suspense 39 was released for the 30th anniversary of the year of creation of the first wave of the most popular super-heroes in the Marvel universe. Even though at the time Iron Man was not a popular hero, copies of the actual, original ToS 39 were going for far more money than I could justify spending. Now that the movie is out this issue is skyrocketing! I satisfy myself with this facsimile, but it has some desirable aspects.

First, let’s start with the fact that the book itself is still in amazing shape. No creases, no bends and no discoloration. It’s printed on modern 90’s paper so it’s glossy and really shows off the color, which leads us to…

…the art in this version looks fantastic! It’s easy to think of old 60’s artwork as cheap or less sophisticated because comic books were printed on newsprint so the lines and color would run. This “fully restored” version shows the art how it could never have been printed before. My appreciation for Don Heck exists mostly on the presentation of his art in this copy.

The story itself is the height of 60’s comic book storytelling. In thirteen pages we are introduced to Tony Stark and his amazing life, see him showing off his scientific genius for the U.S. military, getting blown up in the jungles of Vietnam, given the “deal with the devil” offer from the Vietcong, see him build the suit, watch Yinsen die and then marvel at Iron Man reaping his vengeance against Wong Chu and the Red Army. It almost takes thirteen pages just to list it all! In today’s decompressed style comic books this would have been a six issue arc. In the end it promises that we’ll see more tales of the Iron Man in the next issue, but we’ll get to that later.

There are other stories in the book, very Twilight Zone-type stories. They are enjoyable, but have nothing to do with Iron Man so I’ve decided not to mention them here.

Now Tales of Suspense 40 is a whole different story! This issue is beaten, bruised and smells like an attic. The edges of the cover are ragged and this issue is probably barely worth more than its cover price.

I scored this issue from a baseball card shop that had a single short box of comic books on the floor by the front counter in West Covina. My sister used to ice skate and her training rink was there. During the summers I had very little to do. They had an arcade, I got VERY good at Crystal Castles and Discs of Tron, but I went through quarters like it was Kleenex in allergy season. There was another boy there, his parents owned the snack bar I think, and we would go raise the pre-teen, well behaved equivalent to hell. Checking out the card shop next door was part of that. This issue features more plot by Stan Lee, a script from R. Berns (don’t know what the “R.” stands for), art from Jack Kirby, inked by Don Heck and lettered by Duffi (this might be wrong).  Part of the spine of the cover just tore, this issue is so old. The difference between the “fully restored” 39 and the “authentically worn” 40 is astronomical. Having seen how the art looked in 39 it’s easy to imagine what the original boards must have looked like, but… I don’t even know what to say, just look:

Even faded, the gold of the armor is striking versus the grey. The important part of this story is that Iron Man painted his armor gold this issue so that he didn’t look frightening to women and children. Comic story aside (he fights a robot cave man sent to Earth by little green aliens that never make an appearance in a Marvel comic again, oh but that’s after he battles a bunch of big cats that get loose at a circus – why do circuses play such a large role in 60’s comics?) the real story is how I snaked this issue. I don’t know that I was unethical, but the other boy at the rink mentioned that he saw an Iron Man comic at the card shop when I told him that Iron Man was my favorite. He’s the one who showed me the issue. Now, he never expressed any interest in the issue, he was a Batman guy from what I remember, but after I bought it I showed him and I still have a clear memory of his face dropping and him saying, “Oh, I was gonna’ get that.”

Now, really, I don’t think he really was going to get it. He often talked about stuff that never happened, but that look on his face in the booth by the pinball machine is still stuck in my head.

That being said, my enjoyment of the issue never suffered. I’m not sure what that says about me.

Then there’s a massive gap in my collection – I never had much luck finding affordable back issues of ToS – so the next issue is Tales of Suspense 97.

I have no memory of purchasing this issue. When I pulled it out of the long box I was surprised to see it. It is an important issue in that it is part of the story that leads up to Iron Man number one, but I didn’t even remember the cogent points of the story except that Whiplash is in it  – but I know that from the cover.

Reading it was actually really nice because it was like reading it for the first time! By this time ToS was re-branded to be the monthly adventures of  Iron Man and Captain America. The differences between the storytelling style of 1963 and 1967 is actually pretty big. There’s definitely less “gee wilikers” and more, actually I’m having a problem coming up with a clever two-word distillation for this, depth and intrigue. Instead of always being at a circus where animals are always getting loose Iron Man has just defeated the Grey Gargoyle and his armor is out of power. Iron Man’s major nemesis until the late 70’s was not The Mandarin or the Crimson Dynamo or even Titanium Man, it was his battery life. This guy was a generation 1 iPod as far as how long he could hold a charge and, of course, his power would always give out at the worst moment. This is a plot device that we’re going to see a lot more of. SHIELD is involved, there are cool spy gadgets, there’s a mob gambling sub-plot that involves Tony’s cousin, Morgan – more about him in later issues – and a secret new leader for the preeminent crime family in New York – The Maggia!

The end is a cliff hanger: Iron Man is freshly out of juice, Whiplash is about to attack and we find out that Tony’s cousin, Morgan Stark, is a shit.

Next time:

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Project Iron Man – An Adventure In Reading Comics

I’m an Iron Man fan. I have been since my mom bought me my first comic books back in 1984. I still remember being in the back of our “brown car,” a Buick, being picked up from Elm Grove Lutheran School and my mom passing to the back seat a copy of Transformers, The Last Starfighter and Iron Man. Transformers were a no brainer. Like every other boy my age I had a complete fascination with giant robots from outer space, but I wasn’t familiar with the story in the book and it was, what I now understand to be, the middle of a story arc so I flipped through it but it didn’t really catch my imagination. The Last Starfighter was cool, but it was very clear on the front of the cover that it was number two (maybe three?) of a four (maybe five?) part mini-series. There were lots of cool space battles, but the themes were a little more than my seven-year old brain was ready for.

Then there was Iron Man.

Even though the story was also smack dab in the middle of an arc, the design of the Iron Man armor, being drawn by Luke McDonald at the time (still one of my favorite Iron Man artists), and the image of a man getting shot in the hand had me completely fascinated. I flipped through it over and over. I became an instant fan of the Red and gold armor and, when I found out that there were more of these things, I became a rabid collector of Iron Man comics. It made up a very big part of my pre-teen/teenage years.

I have very fond memories of hunting down back issues with my dad at local comic book stores like Adventureland and 21st Century Comics. We went to comic book conventions, especially the Shrine Auditorium shows, where I spent way too much money over the years. Every birthday and Christmas got me closer and closer to a complete collection and led to more and more Iron Man memorabilia that filled every flat surface of my bedroom. Many character fascinations have come and gone, but Iron Man has been consistent for almost thirty years.

So I kind of surprised myself yesterday when I started considering selling off my massive Iron Man collection.

I have a nearly complete run of Iron Man in all of it’s various volumes and all of his incarnations, with the exception of a section from the mid-90’s when Tony Stark was made crazy and killed so that a teenage Tony could be pulled from another dimension and take his place. Yes, it was as stupid as it sounds. This is around 500 issues taking up two long boxes that currently sit hidden under a table in our dining room. As an adult it is very easy to say that these symbols of my childhood and keepsakes of hundreds of happy memories are really now just dust collectors taking up a lot of space that we really don’t have…

…but the kid in me smells the newsprint, sees the armor and remembers what it was like when my biggest concern was finding a toy store that hadn’t liquidated it’s stock of Mattel Secret Wars toys so I could try and find an Iron Man action figure (a problem the kids of today no longer have).

So I started thinking really hard about why I was hanging on to these issues. The stories are 100% available in digital form, pristine and perfect and ready for viewing from any number of devices. Also digital takes up the desired amount of space (meaning none). But, as Tom Katers is so right to mention, there really is something about cracking open a really old Silver Age book, getting that musty news print smell in your nose and feeling the pages. The problem with that is I really haven’t cracked open any of the old books in a REALLY long time. In fact the oldest I’ve opened recently was stuff from the late 80’s, not even the stuff that made me dig the character in the first place.

So I made a decision. I’m going to read through every issue, from start of my collection to finish, and at the end decide whether it gets to stay or it gets sold.

I’m also going to blog about it.

Because I’m really busy with pre-production stuff I know that, at least here in the beginning, I’ll only be able to do about an issue a week, but there’s no real rush on this so I’m not too worried about it.

Huh, I just realized that an issue a week for over 500 issues is, like, 44 years. I’m probably going to pick up the pace there.

Anyhow, I’m going to go through, I’m going to read them and here I’ll talk about them and we’ll see where this all ends up.

See you tomorrow!

P.S. The images from the issue are from that first issue my mom got me. The issue itself is so worn the cover is still barely on. Wow, this might be tougher than I thought.

Next Time:

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3 Minutes with Curtis & Dean – The Avengers vs. The JLA

OK comics fans, it’s the battle royal! The subject of decades of debate! The reason for multiple super team ciphers at both DC and Marvel! The basis for at least one good mini-series!

THE AVENGERS VS. THE JUSTICE LEAGUE OF AMERICA!

We spent 3 minutes on it…
Comments on this are especially welcome because I KNOW we didn’t cover it all.
See you tomorrow!

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Avengers Trailer

This is it:


I was actually a little underwhelmed by it – but it DOES look like a good movie and VERY big in scope! I didn’t walk away with goosebumps, but I am REALLY excited!

See you tomorrow!

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