For me it might have well started with Star Trek. I'm just a bit young to have been a booster from the get-go of that seminal sci-fi show, but I do have snippets of memories of waiting up to catch episodes in what was the third season, alas the final one as well. Star Trek then went away or seemed to do so. It was still on my scope because I read comics and on the stands from time time were Star Trek comics from Gold Key. Now while I loved Turok Son of the Stone and cottoned to but often ignored Magnus Robot Fighter, I tended to shy away from most all licensed comics from Gold Key, especially those with photo covers. For some reason I don't remember I was dismissive of photo covers back then, as if they were a cheap way to go about business or something.
Well I didn't dive into Star Trek until things were brewing in the fan base which resulted in the creation of a cartoon version from Filmation. The reruns were around by that time and I'd seen many if not most of the shows. And we all thought the screaming for a new show or a movie or something was just pissing in the wind. That is until Star Wars dropped like a bomb on the pop culture world and it was all on again. But all that time Gold Key had been chugging away and had kept the Star Trek standard up, along with the prose adaptations by James Blish and other bits of stuff here and there.
The first Gold Key issue was way back in 1967 and the show was not a known quantity to the folks putting it out. Clearly watching old Star Trek shows is interesting, especially if you do as I'm currently doing, watching them in production order. The first season wheezes and squeaks and finally like a jalopy begins to thrum along. When Gold Key got the franchise though there was one thing about Star Trek that was dominating the conversations about the show and that was the devilish look and distinctively cold demeanor of Mister Spock. Spock is all over the covers, being featured, even alone on some. In the first issue drawn by Nevio Zaccara the Enterprise crew goes to "Planet K-G" which stands for "Kelly Green". It's a planet of intelligent plants and the crew is barely able to get away from the Triffid-like creatures and their spawn.
The second issue which came out six months later or so is also drawn by Zaccara, has Kirk and Spock and the rest falling victim to a wily criminal who along with many of his species are imprisoned on asteroids which randomly explode. Of course they seek to use the Enterprise to escape but in the end they are overcome and alas their deadly sentences are carried out. This is the last issue that show Yeoman Rand in any capacity that I can detect. She was of course an early character and Kirk love interest on the show but was unceremoniously phased out in the first dozen episodes or so.
The next issue of the Gold Key run has an outstanding cover and Spock's domination of the brand is all too evident. This issue comes at the end of 1968 and has the crew try to help a culture in which its own technology has overwhelmed it with a program of building which never strops. Alberto Giolitti takes on the art chores and his muscular and direct style is one I find very attractive.
The Enterprise itself is featured on the next issue coming in the summer of 1969 and the Enterprise crew is confronted with the challenge of surviving on "Metamorpha" a planet that's landscape changes perpetually. The writer for all these adventures was Dick Wood and large he concocts robust adventures that move at a rapid clip. The characterizations are off here and there with Kirk coming across as very aggressive at times. Always Spock is the lead to solve the issues at hand. McCoy is around and looks about right though is personality is pretty bland. Scotty is there, but is some blonde guy and it takes the comic a long time to get this right.
More of the same on "The Ghost Planet" when the Enterprise crew is confronted with saving a culture from itself because as soon as they rescue the population from deadly radiation they want to go back to war for the express benefit of two leaders, both named "Justin" for some reason. There's little mention or use of what was to become the "Primary Directive" to not interfere in cultures, and to be honest it's not mentioned in the early episodes of the show either.
Under a cover with only Mister Spock featured which dropped on the stands in the winter of 1969 the crew finds another problem to solve when two planets are racing towards each other and their eventual demise. It requires lots of savvy to find the fix but they do thanks to the smarts of Spock of course.
My favorite cover of the run is on the seventh issue and again Spock is featured though both McCoy and Kirk get aboard. This issue has an evil dictator from Earth using alien technology and what appears to be magic to wreck monuments on Earth like the Eiffel Tower and the Sphinx. He is of course defeated but only when Spock uses Vulcan "voodoo" to overcome him.
More next week.
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