Sunday, May 31, 2026

Ditko's Amazing Spider-Man Artist's Edition!


I'm closing out this month-long look at Steve Ditko's work for Marvel with a glimpse of a beautiful Artist's Edition. This tome contains many pages of original art including entire comics. Spidey's origin is here, a true bit of Americana.  Here are more details. 


At $175 bucks I don't suspect I'll be adding it to my hoard, but it's nice knowing it exists.  Next month we turn our attention back to Charlton and the project Ditko turned his attention to when he left Marvel -- The Blue Beetle. 

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Saturday, May 30, 2026

Spider-Man '67 - Season Three!


This is easily the weakest of the Seasons by far. As I said there's very little new here, but a whole lot of vintage stuff often squeezed into tighter timeframes and with little sense a lot of the time. Motivation for crime seems to be an afterthought as villains show up do really offbeat things, but then get captured and we get no background on them at all to explain why they adopted the method they did. That's the interesting part dang it. The first season of the series had been produced by Grantray-Lawrence, the same outfit responsible for the syndicated Marvel Super-Heroes show. But this third season as well as the one before were produced by Krantz Films, the outfit which would later bring us Bakshi's Fritz the Cat movie. 


This Season even reuses one earlier cartoon twice. The episode with the villain the Master Technician is re-worked, and he's made into a "new" villain from Atlantis (they added pointed ears and a fin on his head) who does pretty much the same thing save that instead of NYC getting lifted into the sky it gets dropped into the ocean. Later the "Master Technician" shows up again but renamed the "Radiation Specialist" he repeats his crime from before lifting the NYC skyline again. So essentially, we get the same cartoon three times in three seasons with slight variations.


Here is a list of a half-dozen things I learned watching this season (I cut it in half since the season was so short):

1. Snowmen are inherently angry, so you better not accidently bring them life. They want to kick your ass!

2. Comets have antennae.

3. Despite all aerodynamic principles, biplanes can still outfly jets and even shoot them down with rays and stuff.

4. Peter Parker will give anyone a lift, even villains.

5. Captain Stacey looks completely different, even in the same episode from scene to scene. Sheesh!

6. Mysterio is a hipster who wears glasses and though he lost his pointed ears from the First Season, his skin has gone green for the Third.


This set of cartoons also looked muddier on my DVD set. I assume that had to do with the original source materials as the rest of the disk is fine in that regard. It's only Season Three that has the slight glowing effect in the backgrounds.

I did like the episode culled from the Rocket Robin series, "Revolt from the Fifth Dimension". It was strange and had some great images, though as a Spidey tale it was pretty limited. The Mysterio story was dandy and I think is based on a classic Spidey comic though again Mysterio looks different. Mary Jane shows up but she's Captain Stacey's niece time. There is also a keen interest in the Universal Frankenstein movies, but I'll have more to say on that in a separate post.

One other thing I did notice was there was a lot of mind-gaming in these episodes. Whether it was the Swami (a somewhat pointed racial stereotype for the time) or Mysterio or Infinata of Dementia-5 or the Kingpin with his brainwashing, the human mind was getting twisted a bunch in these episodes. Surely this had nothing to do with the "high times" of that era. 

All in all, I didn't find this Season as much fun, though it had high points. After watching them all now, I have to give the nod to Season Two and despite its endless web-swinging, I still think it's the most compelling in terms of story and art.

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Friday, May 29, 2026

Ditko's Hulk!


Often overlooked is Steve Ditko's contribution to early stories featuring The Incredible Hulk. Ditko drew the sixth and final issue of the Hulk's first series featuring the menace of the alien Metal Master. 


And during that short but important time when the Hulk was being co-starred in a host of magazines to keep his profile high, Ditko took on old Jadejaws in the pages of The Amazing Spider-Man

But most significantly, when the Hulk was given a new series in the pages of Tales to Astonish, it was Ditko who was tapped as the penciller. He was inked by George Roussos, Dick Ayers and Vince Colletta on the series. This was at that point in time when it was not yet public knowledge that Bruce Banner was also the Hulk. 


Ditko stayed with the series through the first eight installments of Tales to Astonish. As expected, Jack Kirby supplied the covers for the Ditko issues. Kirby also stepped in and took over the series when Ditko left. Ditko was the first artist to draw the Hulk's arch nemesis The Leader. 

Below are the covers. 









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Thursday, May 28, 2026

Steve Ditko In The 1960's!


Steve Ditko in the 1960s is a delightful tome assembled by J. Ballman. He researched and gathered most all of the surviving fanzine responses, reviews, and interviews concerning Steve Ditko and his work, most notably The Amazing Spider-Man from the decade. There is some minor coverage of Captain Atom and other work at Charlton as well as a peek at what Ditko got up to at DC after he left Marvel, but the overwhelming majority of the material is about Spidey. We begin with announcements of a new comic book character from Marvel and follow the fan response as Ditko wins over the community with his dedication and with is willingness to engage the fanzine makers on their terms. He responds to written interviews with terse but clear answers, and we see him withdraw from that practice as the decade develops. Finally, we see him reflected by the fans as the only artist for Spider-Man, the most sensational creation of the decade. 


The heart of this package though is a piece titled "Steve Ditko and Memories of Another Day" by Bernie Bubnis who shares with the reader his earliest contacts with Ditko in those bygone days of 1962 and after when the artist shared a studio with Eric Stanton. Bubnis became a regular visitor to the studio, finding in the somber and quiet Ditko a man he could respect, more than he could respect his gangster father. Ditko's fiery sense of injustice is seen ablaze when he learns that Bubnis has been beaten, but that fire is tempered by the streetwise advice of Stanton who knows that it will only be worse for Bubnis if they intercede. Not only does Bubnis share these recollections of early days, but he also frames those tales with a visit he made to Ditko's studio in 2017 with his wife. Great stuff and for someone who has been a Ditko fan as long as I have been, it's fantastic to finally get a glimpse of the real flawed man beneath the reputation. 
 

This volume is an absolute treasure trove for any Marvel fan of the era when comics were more important than movies, and Steve Ditko was an idol. 

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Wednesday, May 27, 2026

The Amazing Neighborhood Spider-Pillow!


I'd imagine most comic book fans of any era not only have burned into their memories the artwork and stories of their golden era but the ads of that time as well. I know that for me comics were such treasures, discovered and acquired at great cost of money, time and energy that these glorious four-color pamphlets were sucked dry of their entertainment content almost completely, and that included the wonky ads they might contain.

One of the weirdest in my time was the ad above for inflatable plastic pillows starring some of Marvel's mightiest.  What struck me at the time and still does is the absolute randomness of the images used in this merchandising effort. I'd imagine when the Stan and the others at Marvel realized the success they'd tapped into with their new comics, they were eager to cash in. Certainly riding trends until they bust, had long been the working model for Martin Goodman.  Now Marvel seemed to be ladling out merchandising rights all around and some of it was profoundly strange.

These pillows for instance.


We have a dynamic Thor portrait by Jack Kirby and Vince Colletta. I don't recognize the exact source for this one but I'm sure someone can tell me.


Likewise this Ditko image for Spider-Man, which is a bit more subtle in how it integrates the artwork onto the total pillow for a clever effect. 



Here's a look at another version of this ad, this time with newcomer Captain Marvel thrown in for no discernible reason save to jazz up the image.


Weirdly I found this product starring Sub-Mariner as rendered by Gene Colan and Vince Colletta. It looks like it ought to be part of the same merchandising push, it certainly has that random art quality.



These are two handsome plastic pillows with proper Jack Kirby imagery and seem a bit more classically composed. I doubt they are part of the same push, but are delightful in their own way.


I think I've seen the Thor pillow in real life somewhere, but I forget now where that would've been. I don't remember ever really wanting these items, but I sure remember seeing that delicious ad.

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Tuesday, May 26, 2026

Your Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man!


There are some great pin-ups Steve Ditko contributed of "Your Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man". The poster above was a six-foot wonder delivered to fans in a handy-dandy tube. 



Some amazing art for a set of posters. Getting remuneration for jobs like this was just one of the sticking points for both Ditko and Kirby in Marvel's early years. Despite that injustice, they are great to look at nonetheless. 



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Monday, May 25, 2026

Marvel Masterwork Pin-Ups!



Marvel Masterworks Pin-Ups is one of my absolute favorite Yoe Books. It gathers between its pages most if not all of superhero pin-up pages which appeared in Marvel's comics over the course of about two decades or so beginning with the very first Fab 4 pin-ups from Fantastic Four #2 and ending with John Byrne's pin-ups for Fantastic Four Special Edition from 1984. In between there are scuds of images of both heroes and villains by the likes of Kirby,  John Buscema, Gene Colan, Dicky Ayers, Don Heck, Larry Lieber, John Romita, Bill Everett, and Barry (Not-Yet-Windsor) Smith. Most of them are by the "King", but coming in second is "Sturdy" Steve Ditko. Below I've gathered his Spidey images from the book. 


The oddball grace of Ditko's early version of Spidey is neatly showcases in this image  Amazing Spider-Man #3. 


It is a more muscular Spider we see here from the first Amazing Spider-Man Annual



This pin-up from Amazing Spider-Man #20  has always been a favorite of mine as it shows Peter Parker, a figure no less important to the success of the early Spidey stories.  


This a grand image from Amazing  Spider-Man #21, which of course served as the cover this Yoe collection. The way the light frames Spidey is outstanding. 


And this image from Amazing Spider-Man #23  might well be my favorite of the lot. There's not only the entirety of the Spider-verse cast represented with headshots, but we have a very mysterious and threatening image of Spider-Man himself. He's become so common that it's easy to forget that Spider-Man would be downright scary if you met him in one of those dim Ditko alleys. 

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