Showing posts with label The Sentinels. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Sentinels. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 24, 2024

Sarge Steel And The Sensational Sentinels!



Above is a delicious pin-up shot of Sarge Steel by co-creator Dick Giordano, from the 1974 CPL Gang's Charlton Portfolio which also sported a wraparound Don Newton cover. Just wanted to share this nugget before we dive into our main course today. 



Thunderbolt #57 is dated May 1967. The Sensational Sentinels appear again in a story titled "If This Be Triumph!". The story is plotted by D.C.Glanzman and the script and the art are by Sam Grainger. Lettering is by A.Machine. The story begins soon after the battle from the previous issue where we find Brute, Mentalia, and Helio in their apartment recovering. Brute apparently survived the fall from the roller coaster by landing in some water. Rick still has amnesia. The android Titan breaks into the apartment to continue the battle and he and Brute exchange blows, with Titan eventually flinging Brute toward a window. But Mentalia exerts her thoughts and is able to stop Brute in mid-air revealing for the first time not only an ability for telepathy but telekinesis as well. The Titan captures Mentalia and climbs down the building with her in tow. Brute follows using his great hand strength to grip the bricks on the side of the building. He and Titan again mix it up until Brute realizes that he was granted great strength over other men and not androids, so he changes tactics and uses a light pole to attack Titan to great effect. Then Brute leaps to attack Titan and Mentalia adds her telekinetic might to the thrust and they severely damage the android who ultimately collapses. 


Returning to their apartment the find Rick still confused but just they are dealing with what that means for the team Sarge Steel appears and announces that the Mind-Bender and Titan were creations of the C.I.A. and that Dr.Kolotov who gave them their powers was a Soviet spy. As the story ends, he is taking the team into custody in order for them to make statements.
 


Thunderbolt #58 is dated July 1967. 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 saga has a third chapter, but we never see Sarge Steel again. 

More Sarge Steel to come. 

This is a Revised Classic Charlton Post! 

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Friday, November 18, 2022

Thunderbolt - Special Case Number 07!


Thunderbolt #56 is dated February 1967. Once again, the feature is credited as created, written, and dawn by Pete Morisi under his P.A.M. pseudonym. Morisi did the cover too as he has done all the covers for the series so far. Special Case Number 0007 from T-Bolt's Personal Files is titled "Beware...The Cobra". 


It begins in Peter Cannon's secluded mansion outside New York City where Peter and Tabu are sparring in judo. After the bout, they again talk about Peter's responsiblity as Thunderbolt to his fellow man with Tabu urging him to take a greater role. Tabu also asks about the nature of Peter's power which Cannon explains as tapping into that unexplored reserved that all human beings have. He is vague and says the way it's tapped must remain a secret. The origin of "Thunderbolt's Personal Files" is revealed as Tabu announces that he has been recording Thunderbolt's adventures. What follows is a two-page review of the previous issues with a panel devoted to each of the previous six cases. The scene shifts to the waterfront area where a mysterious bearded man named Cobra meets with some eccentric looking types and conducts a slave auction, offering up men who are compelled to follow orders because they've been given some drug derived from cobra venom. The Cobra makes one hundred thousand dollars from the auction and has his henchmen go out into the city to get more potential slaves. What follows is a wave of kidnappings that terroize the city and attract the attention of Peter and Tabu. Again Peter is reluctant to investigate until Tabu tells him that one man who has disappeared is a surgeon who is the only man able to cure a young girl currently waiting for the operation. She has only a day left to live. With that deadline facing him Peter becomes Thunderbolt and heads through his hidden tunnels into the heart of the city. He leaps about on rooftops for a time looking for clues. He at last finds an area that seems suspicious and investigates further finding the prisoners and the Cobra and his men. He attacks but the Cobra shoots him with darts coated with the drug and has him tied up. While he is bound, the Cobra unleashes a real cobra into a room with T-Bolt who uses his teeth to subdue the deadly serpent. Shocked the Cobra attempts to cajole the Thunderbolt into being his partner but a punch sends him falling and he lands on the fangs of the dead cobra, and is killed. Tabu and Peter discuss the case later and Peter urges Tabu to end the installment with "The End", but Tabu insists on "To be continued". 

 
"Thunderbolts" offers up four letters from fans. There is praise for The Sentinels save for one writer who wants them replaced with Nightshade. It's noted that a number of fans have become writers for Charlton in recent months and that is encouraged. One writer apparently knows the identity of P.A.M. and uses his name in the letter though Dick Giordano edits it out. Speculation about P.A.M.'s job though is erroneous. The new Blue Beetle book is announced as well as a new showcase-type book which certainly must be Charlton Premiere though the title is not mentioned. It is also announced that the next issue of Thunderbolt will be by Pat Boyette, filling in for Morisi. 


The Sensational Sentinels return in a story titled "Where Walks...The Titan!" written by Gary Friedrich and drawn by Sam Grainger. Dick Giordano is listed as editor. This story is advertised as "Another Cataclysmic Charlton Classic", a bit of a stretch even for a diehard like me. The story begins with Ed Sullivan introducing the Protesters who sing a fairly lame song about being in jail and throwing a pie in the warden's face. They are nonetheless mobbed by girl fans. Their manager the Colonel is happy and takes them out to eat, but they bicker as usual. Meanwhile at Coney Island a young boy (who looks like Billy from the last few issues) and his grandmother find themselves in harm's way when an orange giant appears demanding to know the whereabouts of the Sentinels. The man who calls himself Titan begins to wreak havoc in the park. TV news informs the Sentinels who don their garb and head on over to face the threat. Helio flies up but he is unable to control his flight and Titan smacks him hard to the ground. Mentalia finds that as with the Mind-Bender's robot she is unable to effect this Titan with her ESP. That leave Brute to confront the foe and they have a knockdown dragout fight for a few pages until finally Titan throws Brute from the top of the roller coaster. In the last panel Helio awakes but apparently is suffering from amnesia. The story ends at this point. I liked the idea that the comic is developed from the records kept by Tabu. This gives a neat meta-fictional twist to the proceedings, not unlike the mechanism used by Arthur Conan Doyle with Watson and Sherlock Holmes. It's a clever bit. The story though, like last issue felt a bit rushed. With a lot of page count used in reprise, this left precious little time for the story unfold. It's not really clear how Thunderbolt found the Cobra, he just sort of does it.



One neat thing though is a panel by Morisi showing Thunderbolt biting the cobra which is clearly a swipe/homage to Bill Everett's Amazing-Man cover from Centaur Comics. Thunderbolt is clearly inspired by Amazing-Man in many ways, though perhaps streamlined a bit for the 60's, and it's nice that Morisi pays tribute to his inspiration. Here's some more information about Amazing-Man. 

More Thunderbolt to come. 

NOTE: This is a Dojo Revised Classic Post. 

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Wednesday, November 16, 2022

Thunderbolt - Special Case Number 06!


Thunderbolt #55 is dated December 1966. Again, the entire Thunderbolt story is written and drawn by P.A.M. the pseudonym of Peter Morisi. Special Case Number 0006 from T-Bolt's Personal Files is titled "Where Stalks the Mummy?". 


The story begins with Peter Cannon and Tabu playing basketball and once again discussing Peter's role as Thunderbolt, and Peter repeats that he is reluctant to involve himself in a world filled with greed and hate and violence. The scene shifts to Egypt and an archeological dig where Professor Hugo Drummond and his team unearth a sarcophagus with an undisturbed mummy inside. Drummond only wants the mummy for his work, rejecting the other riches and has the mummy shipped to his castle-like armory in America. He begins a series of experiments searching for the gift of immortality the ancient Egyptians have possibly hidden in the mummy. He uses technology to connect himself mentally to the mummy and a merging takes place with the mind of Drummond and the mind of the slave who was mummified blending. It is primarily Drummond's consciousness though that now animates the mummified body. He then uses his new-found power to kidnap his former colleagues and begin a crime wave of terror. 


Tabu and Peter Cannon read of these events, the crimes carried in many newspapers it seems. And Tabu convinces Peter once again that he has a responsibility to become Thunderbolt to help his fellow man. Peter though reveals that his reluctance comes from his desire to work peacefully and not through violence, but he ultimately accepts that he must. He follows the clues to Drummond's castle and finds the kidnapped archeologists and Drummond in his mummy form. Drummond is just about to kill the men in his gas chamber when T-Bolt appears and breaks the glass of the chamber freeing the men. Thunderbolt then pursues Drummond into the basement of his castle but is under surveillance by camera as he does so. Drummond unleashes a fully-grown tiger on T-Bolt and it takes all of T-Bolt's skill to defeat and possibly slay the man-killer. Thunderbolt then confronts the mummified Drummond and they fight, with Drummond finally falling from the parapet of the castle. The castle then catches fire as T-Bolt leaves. Later no sign of Drummond is found as Tabu and Peter discuss the case in his secluded mansion and they note that Drummond's human body is now under observation though it seems in a vegetative state. They wonder if such a thing as the mummy could exist, but ultimately are forced to accept that such superior beings as the mummy and Thunderbolt himself exist. 


The Sensational Sentinels return in a story titled "Beware...The Menacing Mind-Bender!". The story is edited by Dick Giordano, written by Gary Friedrich, and drawn by Sam Grainger. The story begins with the trio trying on their new uniforms and arguing incessantly all the while, especially Crunch Wilson know as Brute and Rick Strong known as Helio. Cindy Carson known as Mentalia tries to keep the peace as much as she can. Ultimately they head into public and endure the stares of the crowd each harboring secret thoughts. Rich wonders what money can be made in addition to the good they can do, Cindy only wants to help her fellow man, and Crunch is reluctant and looks forward to his pro football contract. They see a purse-snatching and intercede, but their inexperience comes into play as Helio smacks into a street sign and Brute crashes through a brick wall. They get arrested but are bailed out by their manager "Colonel" Juniper Julep who wants them to appear as the folk singing act "The Protesters" on the Ed Sullivan Show. He says they can wear masks on stage to protect their identities. Meanwhile the leaders of the world are undergoing changes in attitude which result in war being declared between Russia and the United States. The Sentinels get a message from the late Dr.Kolotov (who gave them their powers) by way of his grandson Billy and they learn that he feared one former colleague known as the Mind-Bender. No sooner do they learn this than they are attacked themselves by a robot sent by the the Mind-Bender and after a brief struggle they send the machine out the window, but out of the ruined machine a warning from the Mind-Bender erupts and the Sentinels brace for more attacks. 

"Thunderbolts" features four letters from fans. Among the concerns are a desire to see Blue Beetle again and the new Ditko version of the hero then appearing in Captain Atom is promoted. One writer thinks P.A.M. is a woman and is corrected. There are a number of requests for original artwork, but Dick Giordano says that selling this material is not possible. As he puts it "For reasons too lengthy to go into in this space, we MUST keep all of it! It is carefully stored and indexed, and it is necessary to our operation that we maintain this procedure." Given the haphazard way the artwork was ultimately treated, with much of it forgotten and destroyed carelessly, this is painful to read today.


 And that wraps another issue. This particular issue of T-Bolt seemed the most formulaic yet. The threat was defined, T-Bolt reluctantly goes to fight it and is triumphant but broods. Maybe it's the loss of pages, but the ending seemed a bit abrupt without an interesting twist. The villain was a nice one though and seemed poised for a return at some point. The Sentinels story was full of plot for such a small tale, but still the incessant bickering among the team does get tiresome very swiftly. 

 More Thumderbolt to come.

 NOTE: This is a Dojo Revised Classic Post. 

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Monday, November 14, 2022

Thunderbolt - Special Case Number 05!


Thunderbolt #54 is dated October 1966. Again, Pete Morisi using his pseudonym P.A.M. is responsible for the story and art for most of the issue including the cover. Special Case Number 0005 from T-Bolt's Personal Files is titled "This One's for Tabu!". 


The story begins in Peter Cannon's secluded mansion where he and friend Tabu are discussing the Peter's role as Thunderbolt and the current whereabouts of the Hooded One. Peter is still reluctant to become T-Bolt. The two get into the boxing ring yet again and spar but Tabu using Savate knocks Peter onto the canvas for a change. But before Peter can retaliate Tabu collapses. A doctor then informs Peter that Tabu has contracted African Tryanosomiasis better known as "Sleeping Sickness". The doctor regrets that there is no cure. But Peter knows of one from his days in the Himalayas and immediately takes a trip back to the land that gave birth to Thunderbolt. He consults the High Abbot of the lamasery and discovers that the plants he needs have been destroyed by the winter snows. But then Peter remembers the "Cave of the Peaks" a dangerous location where the Mongols patrol, but where all things exist. He immediately heads off on horseback to find it. He is confronted by Mongols and his horse is killed by gunshots. But when the Mongols attack in close quarters Peter overcomes them and they then tell him of the location of the Cave of the Peaks. He again rides into the snow and eventually discovers the cave. Inside he changes his wet clothes but finds only his Thunderbolt costume which Tabu persistently packs in his supplies. Putting it on he explores the cave and finds dinosaurs frozen in ice. 


He is then confronted by the Hooded One and the pair exchange threats. Put Peter leaves the Hooded One and explores the cave further and discovers an opening into a hidden jungle region seemingly from the prehistoric past. He starts his search for the plants he needs and encounters many types of dinosaurs even getting charged by a Styrachosurus (a one-horned dinosaur similar to the more famous Triceratops). He avoids the beast which gets its horn stuck in a tree. Taking to the trees, Thunderbolt explores the jungle further before he is struck down by tiny arrows fired by pygmy warriors. Using his vast will power he overcomes the effects of the arrows and charges into his small attackers overcoming them when they suddenly run away. The reason is all too obvious as a Tyrannosaurus Rex appears. T-Bolt takes a spear and launches it puncturing the beast on its nose. It dies and the pygmy warriors are impressed enough to help T-Bolt find the plant he needs. Quickly he retraces his steps and is soon flying back to America. At the hospital he arrives with only an hour to spare as the cure awakes Tabu. Peter tells a grateful Tabu that he only went on this quest so that they could have a return boxing match and Peter could repay Tabu for his kick to the head.
 

"Behold...The Sentinels" is a new back up feature created and written by Gary Frierich and drawn by Sam Grainger. The story begins in a smoke-filled Greenwich Village nightclub where a trio of folk singers called "The Protesters" are performing. They are Rick Strong, a 21-year old college graduate, Cindy Carson, a 19-year old beauty with a future in Hollywood, and Crunch Carson a beefy fellow with a potential future as a professional football player. After the performance in their dressing room they are arguing with Rick indicating that unless they find some financial success relatively soon he might have to take a job as a teacher. The keep bickering for some time when a small boy opens the door and asks them to come see his uncle Mr.Jones their landlord. The go to see him and he reveals that his real name is Kolotov and he's an exiled Russian opposed to Communism. To that end he has invented some great weapons that he wants to share with the trio, who he has been watching for two years preparing for this moment. He gives Rick a power pack that straps to his back which will make him lighter than air and he dubs him "Helio:, he gives Cindy a headband which will give her ESP and dubs her "Mentalia", and finally he gives Crunch a pair of gloves which will make him super-strong and he dubs him "Brute". Crunch demonstrates the power of the gloves by punching through a solid oak door. Kolotov makes the trio swear a pledge to use the devices only to combat evil and promptly dies. The three agree to stay together and become Sentinels of Justice. 

"Thunderbolts" is the name of the letters page and this time offers up four letters. The lackluster cover design of Charlton books is mentioned. One fan thinks that P.A.M. is actually editor Pat Masulli, but is disabused of that notion. One fan regrets that P.A.M. has left the westerns and Dick Giordano, the editor who did these pages informs us that P.A.M. does comics part time only. The Sentinels back-up feature is mentioned and a new policy is announced that all of Charlton's Action-Hero books will feature back-ups and fans should certainly let editorial know what works and what doesn't. And that wraps another Thunderbolt issue. 


With this installment the book is fully ripened. The T-Bolt adventure is a dense one filled with good action, and the concern Peter has for Tabu gives us an insight into this aloof hero. The addition of the Sentinels completes what will be the format of the book for several months. I found the bickering between the trio a bit hard to take since it had so little background to support it as relevant characterization. It seemed forced like Friedrich wanted to ape the Marvel style which was becoming dominate in the comics of the time. Mighty Comics was the worst offender of this habit of creating bickering heroes, but sadly losing the deep context which made it work so well for Marvel. The Sentinels is a very Marvel-feeling strip, especially with Grainger's artwork. I really like Grainger though I know many folks don't. He's got a lively line and there's a real energy to his work. The strip is a very neat visual counterpoint to the more austere Thunderbolt lead. 

 More Thunderbolt to come.

NOTE: This is a Dojo Revised Classic Post.  

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