Wednesday, March 10, 2010

The Thunderbolt Reports - Special Case #0009


Thunderbolt #58 is dated July 1967. Pete Morisi under his pseudonym of P.A.M. back for what will be his final full issue of the character he created. He is listed as the creator, writer and artist of the lead story and he did the cover too.

Special Case Number 0009 from T-Bolt's Personal Files is titled "Encore: The Hooded One". It begins as do most T-Bolt tales in the secluded mansion Peter Cannon has outside New York City. He and Tabu are boxing and discussing the world. Specifically Tabu brings up the disappearance of a young woman in the Himalayas who was searching for the grave of her father killed during WWII. It turns out that Peter has all ready gotten plane reservations to take them to the Himalayas to search for the girl who turns out to be the daughter of the pilot who crashed his plane next to the lamasery and in which were found an unexploded bomb which was carried away by the man who would one day become the Hooded One. His face was destroyed by his good deed and he was to be rewarded with access to the Ancient Scrolls until the deeds of Peter's parents superseded his claim. His bitterness has made him T-Bolt's most tenacious enemy.

Peter and Tabu get to the lamasery and quickly arrange to travel into the mountains to the Cave of the Peaks, the hideout of the Hooded One. Arriving there, Peter becomes Thunderbolt and leaves Tabu in the cavern as he travels deeper into the cave finding again the entrance to a hidden valley filled with all things that have lived including prehistoric dinosaurs. He eludes a Pteranodon and battles a pair of lions before finding a fortress wall. He enters and finds prehistoric dwarves all too ready to fight him. He is about to invoke his mantra to inspire his will when a stone axe knocks him out.

He awakes in a room with Lori Carson, the girl they've come to rescue. Soon enough the pair find themselves in an arena where the Hooded One presides as leader of the dwarves. He condemns to the beast of the arena demanding revenge on Thunderbolt and the daughter of the man he holds responsible for his suffering. A giant gorilla appears and T-Bolt must muster all his will to defeat it which he does. Then dispatching the dwarves, he and Carson escape from the fortress. The are assaulted by deadly army ants, but leap into the river to escape and then T-Bolt is able to use the river to escape the valley and the dinosaurs carrying Carson to safety.

In the lamasery Lori meets Peter Cannon and Tabu and wishes to thank the man who saved her. They say they came to assist her and she insists on returning with them, saying they are now responsible for her according to ancient traditions. Peter scoffs, but Tabu says it might be so and the story ends as the trio fly back to America.

"Thunderbolts" offers up three letters this time. One writer praises the odd nature of Thunderbolt's stories, and rejects the critics who want more action at the expense of the characterization between Peter and Tabu. The Sentinels get praise but generally it seems folks want more T-Bolt and fewer pages dedicated to the trio. Dick Giordano indicates the shorter T-Bolt stories have more to do with P.A.M.'s deadline woes than a desire to increase the Sentinels exposure. A new cover design is announced and perhaps a new logo to boot.

The Sensational Sentinels return in a story titled "Into the Lair of the...Mind-Bender!". The story features artwork by Sam Grainger, but writing this time is by Sergius O'Shaughnessy a pseudonym for Denny O'Neil. The story picks up with Sarge Steel arresting the trio for spying, saying that Dr.Kolotov who gave them their powers was a Soviet agent. But Steel's aggressive nature and his attempt to shoot the trio in an alley convince them he is being controlled and Mentalia uses her ESP powers to overcome him. Then Brute and Mentalia are attacked by a hotdog vendor who they realize must be the Mind-Bender. They repel the attack but he escapes.

They then take both Sarge Steel and Rick Strong, also known as Helio to the hospital where the reports are good for both that they will recover. Then Crunch Wilson and Cindy Carson resume their roles as two-thirds of the Protesters, a singing group and try to perform. But they are attacked by a very hostile crowd clearly under the sway of the Mind-Bender. Helio returns just in time to save them using his flying belt and the trio escape. Later that evening Helio gets a call from Crunch and goes to the location only to find that he and Mentalia are taken prisoner by Brute who is under the power of the Mind-Bender. As the story closes, Helio and Mentalia are strapped to tables while Brute pushes a button which will kill them.

This issue is one of two that my beloved grandmother got me when I was a mere youth. It was my first exposure to P.A.M. and I immediately fell in love with the spare and romantic style of the artist. This is sadly Morisi's last Thunderbolt adventure. He will turn up again on the cover of the next issue, but deadlines apparently were too much for the full-time policeman and so his hero gets turned over to the capable hands of Pat Boyette full time. This is a solid adventure, a few additional pages making a big difference in the apparent scope of the struggle. But there is alas no real solution to the Hooded One's threat.


This issue was reprinted under the Modern imprint in the late 70's.

More to come.

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