Thursday, January 30, 2025

The Moon and Some Change

This here's the last story from Eerie #15, June 1968.

With my grown-up eyes, I think of the story title, and the moon in general, and am reminded of Joni Mitchell's "A Case of You."  A guy promises her that he will be as constant as the Northern Star.  She sniffs, "Constantly in the dark? Gotcha."
The art here by Jeff Jones is a little ... how you say, impressionistic?  The angles of the girl's cleavage sure made an impression -- ahem -- on my 12-year-old self!
So the mysterious bald guy materializes from thin air to bring rescue Diane, and then vanishes after a cold dip in the Channel.
We've seen the trope a million times, people wandering off into the dangerous woods.  I guess all of those people are candidates for Darwin Awards, eh? 
Tony must have paid the gypsy a lot of moolah for her to throw six silver bullets at him!  Another fun fact:  There's a spiritualistic medium named Madame Zokar in an episode of The New Scooby-Doo Movies.  That's "A Good Medium Is Rare," from 1972.
Tony wants Diane dead.  But why?
And who is this bald guy who keeps apporting into the action?
All of a sudden the bald guy doesn't seem so altruistic.  What about Tony then?
I guess if you can't beat 'em, join 'em!  Talk about doing anything for love!

See you on Monday for a February trip through my twisted memories!

Monday, January 27, 2025

Them Dang Doll Collectors!

This here is another tale from the fifteenth issue of Eerie, cover-dated June 1968.
Here is the cover, and below is the story that goes with it!
I can tell you, my twelve-year-old self got an education in the female form here, buddy!
The top panel is the first in several ... shall we say, "narrative inelegances."  Having grown up reading the Silver Age of comics, I can say that it IS NOT good storytelling form to have the narrator talking into a telephone, when her words are plainly addressed to the little dolls on her shelf.  Miriam should be off the phone here.
On this page, the thought-balloon narrations of the flashback images are fine ... but the narration SHOULD NOT be tied by those little bubbles down to the younger incarnations of Miriam.  The child or adolescent Miriam IS NOT having the thoughts at the top of the panel.  The ADULT MIRIAM is thinking them.  And PS note the phrase "why he committed suicided."  An indication of slapdash production! 
By now you can draw the conclusion that Miriam is a sociopath, viewing all other humans as objects, with the most desirable to be kept for a time, as it suits her.
In the middle panel we meet Mr Fantocci the proprietor.  As a pre-adolescent I did not know that a "fantocci" is a puppetry term.  A puppet show is a "fantoccini."

The fourth panel, bottom left -- look at Miriam's devious expression.  You know she's up to no good, but I for one probably could not resist some femme giving me THAT LOOK.

Panel three is another narrative goof.  WHAT is Miriam reacting to?  There should be a text box at the top, something like, "A clank in another part of the theatre surprises Miriam."

And look at the last panel on the page, specifically the words "No! This is all a nightmare!"  Tell me, WHO IS SAYING these words?  You'd think Miriam.  Then why do some of the ragged edges of this word balloon seem to point to the rioting dolls? 
I learned in college that what happens to Miriam is an example of the trope "the biter gets bit."  This was used as the title of a story by Wilkie Collins, but in general it means, "someone suffers as a result of their own actions, especially when they were trying to hurt someone else."

We'll take one more bite out of Eerie #15 on Thursday, my friends, then for February we'll switch over to a long explication of pop-culture figures I love, or that have influenced me a lot, for better or ill.

See you then!

Thursday, January 23, 2025

Under Whose Skin?

Here's the fourth story in the June 1968 issue of Eerie, number 15.

The makeup wizard's name is Eric Starvos.  Don't you think his ride looks like the Munsters Koach?




Which was cursed, the makeup, or the guy who murdered to get it?  (By the way, this story originally appeared in Eerie's third issue, cover-dated May 1966.

See you on Monday!



Sunday, January 19, 2025

A Demon in Li'l Ole ME???

The third story in the June 1968 Eerie, number 15.





An interesting tale which wants you to think allegorically.  Do the guys guarding Moloch stand for the superego's restrictions on the id?

Muse for an extra day, campers!  We're posting this on Sunday because on Monday I'll be unconscious for awhile.  See ya on the flip side!
  

Thursday, January 16, 2025

A Wardrobe of Monsters!

Be-VEHR! It's more from Eerie #15, dated June 1968.







This would have made a good Night Gallery segment, wouldn't you say?  

The artist -- Gray Morrow -- and writer, Otto Binder -- have produced some gems.  This is a lesser one, but well crafted nevertheless.

Of course nobody believes that these bodies originated with the Egyptians, as mentioned at the top.  Maybe they were left in ancient Egypt by Doctor Frankenstein's Time-Traveling Circus and Sideshow!

See you at the beginning of the new week, friends!  In the meantime, don't peer into passing shadows TOO closely!
  

Monday, January 13, 2025

Let's Get EERIE!

Herewith commences a voyage through one of my brain's foundational documents!  Eerie #15 is cover-dated June 1968.  This means that my insightful parents were A-OK with their eleven-year-old reading such glorious nonsense.  Hooray for Mom and Dad!

Of course, these images are scanned from my personal copy, bought at the Git-n-Go in Bartlesville, OK.
Above is inside the front cover.  I'm pretty sure that most of these albums were radio broadcasts.
Got some pretty hefty artists there on the masthead!
The first letter refers to Eerie #13, which can be read page-by-page beginning on June 22, 2011 here on the Super Blog.  However, due to ancient tech, you have to click on each image in the post to read them.

So, research with a cyclotron led to the discovery of some long-lost burial monuments.  You just know THAT'S going to work out good, right?!?


Beware the breakthrough!

Yup, ole Mitchell might not like what's fixin' to BREAK THROUGH!  Heh-heh-heh!
Dontcha wish you could go back in time and order these back issues at these prices?

See you on Thursday with our next installment of Eerie #15!
  
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