You know what contemporary superhero comics are sorely lacking in?Duck-themed vengeance.
If the Spectre had been feeling especially vicious that day, he could have opted to inflict today's b-side offering upon his victims instead...
Rick Dees and His Cast of Idiots - Disco Duck (Part II) (the b-side of 1976's "Disco Duck" 7") - Because an instrumental version of a novelty song predicated on a sub-par Donald Duck impersonation makes perfect sense. Then again, we are talking about the 1970's; I doubt anyone looked up from their gold-plated coke spoons or custom-made bongs long enough to notice the absurdity of it all.
...and because one waterfowl-related musical travesty deserves another, I might as well lob this rotten egg into the ring, too:
Thomas Dolby, George Clinton & Other Folks Who Really Should Have Known Better - Howard the Duck (from the Howard the Duck OST, 1986) - There are certain cinematic stinkers from the past -- Xanadu, for instance -- that have improved with the passage of time. Howard the Duck is not one of them.
Showing posts with label spectre. Show all posts
Showing posts with label spectre. Show all posts
Sunday, May 25, 2008
too fowl for words
Posted by
bitterandrew
at
9:35 PM
7
comments
Labels: b-side Sundays, cult movies, disco nightmare, ducks, evil wears the shape of an egg, quack, soundtrack, spectre
Friday, February 09, 2007
the dead shed no tears for the living





(click on a picture to enlarge)
I was eight years old when I first came across writer Michael Fleisher and artist Jim Aparo’s “Wrath of the Spectre” run in Adventure Comics, and the stories terrified and amazed me with their moralistic brutality and the graphic depictions of the Spectre’s brand of divine retribution.
It was the lone-wolf-versus-a-degenerate-society ethos of Dirty Harry’s world, married to both the absurd vigilante melodrama of the superhero genre and the ghoulish morality tales of the old EC horror comics. It worked extremely well, especially in the eyes of a kid raised on the predictable beats of stories where Superman goes up yet again against the likes of Terra-Man or Vartox.
While the stories may feel quaint to readers accustomed to the more sophisticated fare of Infinite Crisis or Civil War, these horror tales in superheroic drag still make for an entertaining and occasionally (mildly) shocking read. DC Comics, rumored to be uncomfortable with the subject matter, cancelled the run after ten issues. The remaining plotted but not penciled installments in the series were later completed by Aparo and printed in a miniseries collection of the entire run, titled Wrath of the Spectre, in 1988. The whole shebang has since been given the trade paperback treatment for your convenience and reading enjoyment. Highly recommended.
Royal Trux – The Spectre (from Cats & Dogs, 1993) – From the half of Pussy Galore that didn’t go on to become the Jon Spencer Blues Explosion, here’s a short-but-sweet slice of rootsy lo-fi rock that reminds me of something X might have recorded if they debuted in the early 90’s.
The Psychedelic Furs – The Ghost in You (from Mirror Moves, 1984) – Richard Butler always struck me as Johnny Rotten’s dreamier, art school-attending older brother.
New Model Army – Vengeance (from Vengeance, 1984) – NMA is a hard band to pin down. Arguably punk rock, but one can also hear elements of postpunk and protest folk in the mix. It’s been years since I’ve given this track a listen and I had forgotten how dour the band sounded. Crass’s material comes off as light-hearted in comparison.
Play Dead – Judgement (from Company of Justice, 1985) – More forgotten 80’s goth music. The tribal drum beats are pretty swell, even if the rest of the song is fairly generic genre material.
It was the lone-wolf-versus-a-degenerate-society ethos of Dirty Harry’s world, married to both the absurd vigilante melodrama of the superhero genre and the ghoulish morality tales of the old EC horror comics. It worked extremely well, especially in the eyes of a kid raised on the predictable beats of stories where Superman goes up yet again against the likes of Terra-Man or Vartox.
While the stories may feel quaint to readers accustomed to the more sophisticated fare of Infinite Crisis or Civil War, these horror tales in superheroic drag still make for an entertaining and occasionally (mildly) shocking read. DC Comics, rumored to be uncomfortable with the subject matter, cancelled the run after ten issues. The remaining plotted but not penciled installments in the series were later completed by Aparo and printed in a miniseries collection of the entire run, titled Wrath of the Spectre, in 1988. The whole shebang has since been given the trade paperback treatment for your convenience and reading enjoyment. Highly recommended.
Royal Trux – The Spectre (from Cats & Dogs, 1993) – From the half of Pussy Galore that didn’t go on to become the Jon Spencer Blues Explosion, here’s a short-but-sweet slice of rootsy lo-fi rock that reminds me of something X might have recorded if they debuted in the early 90’s.
The Psychedelic Furs – The Ghost in You (from Mirror Moves, 1984) – Richard Butler always struck me as Johnny Rotten’s dreamier, art school-attending older brother.
New Model Army – Vengeance (from Vengeance, 1984) – NMA is a hard band to pin down. Arguably punk rock, but one can also hear elements of postpunk and protest folk in the mix. It’s been years since I’ve given this track a listen and I had forgotten how dour the band sounded. Crass’s material comes off as light-hearted in comparison.
Play Dead – Judgement (from Company of Justice, 1985) – More forgotten 80’s goth music. The tribal drum beats are pretty swell, even if the rest of the song is fairly generic genre material.
Posted by
bitterandrew
at
7:31 PM
3
comments
Labels: comics, dc, horror, spectre, tossing a car into orbit, vengeance
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)