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Blog Archive: September 2019
Death DroneDoom doesn't appear at all in the actual story for this comic, which is an extraordinarily daft episode for the usually-very-daft-anyway Champions where they fight Swarm, The Bunch Of Bees Who Walked Like A Man. Doom only appears in the "next time" box, acting as a warning to regular readers that they'll need to read Super-Villain Team-Up #14 if they want to understand the next issue of this series.

The second point is that I could very easily have missed it. This "appearances" isn't flagged up by any of the crowd-sourced databases that I used to put my research corpus together.hese databases are great, but they're not very reliable, and I only spotted it here because I wanted to check to see if there was any lead-in to the crossover for when it continues in the next issue of this series.
Which brings me to my final point, which is to say that it's interesting to see Marvel getting the hang of crossovers, explicityly pointing them out to readers and telling them to go out and buy the relevant comics to understand the story. Advance notice hasn't always been given, although I'm not sure how it would have been received by fans at the time who found they had to pay for an extra comic next month. In a few years time, of course, they would be doing this a LOT more!
posted 30/9/2019 by MJ Hibbett
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When Walks The Warlord!
Keith Giffen channels the spirit of Jack Kirby throughout this issue, not necessarily by doing straight copies of his drawing style, but by using the same science-fiction design flair and dramatic poses. A prime example of this is the cover, which is another example in the long line of covers that show a huge Doctor Doom looming over everybody else. One of my PhD Supervisors has previously noted that there seem to be an awful lot of images of Doom like this, and I think he's got a point!
After the previous issue's thrilling Doom VS Red Skull showdown, this one catches up with The Submariner again. Afetr agreeing to help him free his people from suspended animation, the story this time sees Doctor Doom and Namor heading back to Atlantis to do just that. Before they get there, however, they are attacked by some very Kirby-esque underwater tanks.


Most of the rest of the issue is taken up with Namor fighting the warlord Krang, the villain who attacked them in the first place and who is trying to take over Atlantis. There's not an awful lot of story in it, but it looks fabulous thanks to Keith Griffen's amazing artwork which, as I say, takes inspiration from Kirby without necessarily copying him.





posted 27/9/2019 by MJ Hibbett
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Spider-man And Web-man
This story sees Doctor Doom trying to destroy Spider-man in a world similar, but not quite the same, to the regular Marvel Universe ... which is eerily similar to the story we looked at last time, over in the newspaper strips.
However, where that version of Doom was fairly similarly to the mainstream one, the Doom appearing in Spidey Super Stories is more in line with the characterisation given to him by Luis Avalos on the Super Spidey Stories album i.e. decidedly camp, right from the expanded version of his origin story on the inside cover.



Web-man tries to rob an armoured car and is stopped by the real Spider-man, at which point a Big Fight breaks out. When Web-man runs off Spidey follows him, all the way back to the original mirror room, enabling Doom to create another twin - Webby 2!



posted 25/9/2019 by MJ Hibbett
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Return To Reality
We're back in the world of newspaper strips this time, and it's very clear that Stan Lee and John Romita have been getting into the swing of it since we last saw Doom here, in the very first series. The recaps at the start of each strip are done a lot more smoothly, the Sunday strips now add information to the stories without being unmissable, and the self-aware sarcasm that Stan Lee is known for is starting to make itself known. There's less repetition on a day to day basis, but an awful lot in the story itself, as Doctor Doom tries to persuade Spider-man that he's going mad by, basically, tricking him again and again in the same way. This wouldn't be so bad in a single comic, but it must have been a bit annoying for readers over the course of three months of three panel strips!
We first see Doctor Doom in Latveria, where a group of peasants grovel as he approaches. In this version of the country it seems that the Latverians are outright terrified of him, and so are surprised when he spares the life of a young lad who wishes to look at him, leaving them impressed by his kindness.


Doom returns to his castle, where he watches Spider-man through a video screen - another classic Doom characteristic. Doom will remain in Latveria for the whole storyline, never leaving his castle. It's from here that he sends some robots - here called "Mecho-Men" rather than Doombots - to kidnap a noted psychiatrist and bring him back to Latveria. Meanwhile, he uses a special Robot Pigeon, with a two-way video screen in its chest, to follow Spider-man around New York.


Spider-man is horrified, and distraught when he dives into the river and is unable to find a body. He's even more upset when he goes into the Daily Bugle the next day to find Jameson his usual grumpy self.


Having done that he puts Lazlo into a Scientific Device which drains all the scientific knowledge from his brian and records it in a computer, which Doom can use later on. Meanwhile Spider-man finds himself questioning his sanity when he faces Doctor Octopus - a character he knows for sure is in prison.



Things get even worse when he starts to lose his powers - caused by a tiny disc which Doom has attached via Robot Pigeon to his back. After another terrible session at the psychiatrists he discovers the disc, but when he takes it back to show her he's not paranoid Doom destroys it by remote.



On the whole this has been an enjoyable, if rather repetitive, storyline, which has been especially interesting for the way it's allowed Doctor Doom to be the baddy for three months without ever even being in the same country as Spider-man. He's also displayed a lot of the traits we associate with the 616 Universe version of the character - something that can't be said for the next version of him that we'll encounter, over in Spidey Super Stories!
posted 20/9/2019 by MJ Hibbett
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Deadly Is The Doctor Called Doom - The Album
This time we're looking at - or rather listening to - an audio story which appeared on the 'Spider Super Stories Album'. It's one of eight adaptations of stories which originally appeared in the 'Spidey Super Stories' comic book, which was in turn based on the version of Spider-man seen in 'The Electric Company' show, which was a further adaptation of the original comic character. If that isn't transmedia then I don't know what is!
This particular story is based on
It also reminded me of The Fantastic Four Radio Show, if only for the way that certain lines get said as quickly as possible by the actors, as they don't really make any sense at all without the visuals. The section where Doctor Doom imagines a future where he has a Spider Army is particularly confusing!
Here's a YouTube clip of the whole story so you can judge for yourself:
Doctor Doom is played here by Luis Avalos, one of the regulars on 'The Electric Company' who performs the role as a rather camp mixture of Vincent Price and Peter Lorre. In the context it works surprisingly well, coming off like a rather creepy uncle - I guess the usual vocalisation of Doom, as a forbidding, deep voiced menace, wouldn't really work when his main plot is to kidnap a bunch of school children in order to lure Spider-man to his castle to steal his spider powers. It's also quite close to Stan Lee's early 70s version of the character as a wheedling, self-pitying, deluded dictator, so it's a pity Avalos didn't get the chance to use his particular performance on one of those stories too - I think it would have worked, but maybe it wouldn't have been as much fun for the Electric Company's target audience!
It's a very interesting way to play the character which, I'll warn you now, has the unfortunate side effect of getting into your head, so that Doom will continue to speak a little bit more camply forever after, notably in his 'Spidey Super Stories' appearances, but in the mainstream universe too!
posted 18/9/2019 by MJ Hibbett
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Death Duel!
As we've seen before, one really easy way to make Doctor Doom the sympathetic lead character in a story is to pit him against someone who is clearly, unequivocally, much worse than he is, and they don't come much more clearly, unequivocally evil than The Red Skull.
The story here carries on shortly after the previous issue of this series, with The Red Skull on the moon ready to fire a hypno ray and Doctor Doom (accompanied by The Shroud) heading into space to stop him. There's a lot of minor plotholes getting explained and characters moving into place during the start of the story, and initially I thought that Bill Mantlo (who writes this one) had been brought in as "The Fill-In King" to sort it out, but no, he wrote the previous issue too. Maybe this sort of fix-it scriptwriting becomes a habit?
One early example of this is when Doom and Captain America discuss what's happened since last time, and why it's Doom in the spaceship. This is the kind of recapping/explanation that usually happens in the first few pages of superhero comics from around this time, and Mantlo achieves it with some excellent Doom dialogue.



It's then time for action, as The Skull fires missiles at Doom's approaching space ship. I was going to say that it all loooks a bit like Star Wars, but of course this came out before the film, so Doctor Doom being blasted into space comes at least a year before the same fate befell Darth Vader. You don't think..?
Doom escapes the destruction of his ship, sealing off his armour and jetting down to the lunar surface, where The Red Skull (with swastika clearly displayed) arrives on a space jet ski, intent on killing him.



While this is going on The Shroud decides to ignore Doom's orders to wait and watch the satellite and instead try and disable it himself. This, of course, goes wrong (because The Shroud is rubbish) and he's knocked unconscious. Luckily for him (if not the reader) Captain America trundles by in the SHIELD spaceship and picks him up. Shame.
Back on the moon, Doom and The Red Skull are having a proper punch-up, which leads to Doom's armour being pierced so that his air supply starts to leak out. He solves this problem by using the freeze-unit in his glove to freeze the oxygen, sealing the hole.


posted 12/9/2019 by MJ Hibbett
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The Time Of The Terrorist
Doctor Doom makes his way into yet another media format this time, appearing as the villian in the first storyline in Spider-man's newspaper strip. This strip began in January 1977, written by Stan Lee and drawn (beautifully) by John Romita Sr and, with various other artists and ghost writers, would run for over forty years, only ending shortly after Stan Lee himself died.
The strip makes for mildly frustrating reading at first, as each three panel storyline is constructed so that the first panel is usually a recap of what's happened before, and the Sunday strip generally being unnecessary to follow the story, so that readers who could only follow it in a daily edition wouldn't miss out. This was, and probably still is, standard practice for an adventure-style comic strip, but in it does mean that there's an awful lot of strips which start or end with J Jonah Jameson leaning out of a window, angrily shouting the story so far at Spider-man!
Spider-man himself is slightly different from the comics version - here he's seen as a frightening, creepy individual by New Yorkers, while his alter ego Peter Parker is rather hairier and more matinee idol. It's as if Lee and Romnita are merging the Spider-man of Ditko's early run with the Peter of their own run shortly afterwards.


One small difference here is that Doom is the actual King of Latveria, rather than just the "Lord" as he's usually termed. It doesn't make any difference to the story, so I assume this was done to make it easier for new readers to understand in the quick three panel version of the Marvel Universe. We do still get a brief, yet fairly complete, version of his origin in the Wednesday to Friday strips on week six, which sticks pretty closely to the regular comics version, including some near swipes of that version.

When Doom finally arrives in New York he's very rude to an ingratiating J Jonah Jameson. He holds a press conference where he stops a crate from landing on some news reporters, which he blames on Spider-man, thus happily reinforcing the Daily Bugle-promoted view that Spider-man is a menace and Doctor Doom is a hero - just as was the case when a very similar story played out in Spidey Super Stories #9. Here, as there, Doctor Doom is speaking to a meeting of the UN - a smaller sub-committee in this case, although it does contain some very familiar faces.


The fight carries on, with Doom burning through Spidey's webbing but then getting trapped by a specially prepared web-fluid which causes his armour to short circuit. Doom thus has to fight back using only his "super strength" until he's caught by a judo throw which, accoring to the world leaders, means Spider-man is the winner.


posted 10/9/2019 by MJ Hibbett
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My Ally, My Enemy!
Last time I was bemoaning the fact that this series was claiming "a dynamic new direction" while doing nothing of the sort, but maybe I was being unfair. Until now "Super-Villain Team-Up" has actually been just "Namor And Doctor Doom" every issue. The main "Marvel Team-Up" series almost always had Spider-man as lead, it's true, but they did swap around the guests a bit.
However, I now realise that this issue, and the previous one, actually did have a change, with The Red Skull sharing the top billing instead of Namor. It does make more sense of the title, although Namor is still there, as is The Shroud, and Doom and The Red Skull don't so much team-up as fight each other throughout.
The story begins where the last one left off, with The Red Skull having shot Prince Rudolfo, who was disguised as Doctor Doom. The Shroud tries to fight the Skull but is quickly overwhelmed by a Goon with a spanner.

The Red Skull then drags him over to a video screen, where we see that his Doomjet had not, as depicted last time, disappeared, but instead has been hit by The Rainbow Missile and is now crashing.
We also FINALLY get a reveal about the mysterious "buyer" Doom was talking about so long ago - it was The Red Skull, conning Doom into building him a Hypno-Ray!


The pair fight their way through a range of over-sized obstacles, including a grass snake and the castle's moat, with Doom remarking how well they work as a team, and Captain America being sensible enough to see exactly how that would work out.



The shrunken pair discover that Namor has arrived, and is arguing with The Red Skull and The Shroud in Castle Latveria's throne room. This enrages Doom who leaps into action and shoots the Skull... up the bum?



Faced with the prospect of a world mind-controlled by The Red Skull, a wounded Prince Rudolfo decides he prefers rule under Doom, and activates a device which he hopes will defeat The Skull.


posted 6/9/2019 by MJ Hibbett
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The Sign Of The Skull!
It's been at least three issues since we last had a "Dynamic New Direction" for this series, so thank goodness this one starts off with the promise of exactly that!

In the previous comic, Avengers #156, we saw Cap wander off to investigate something, with a promise that we'd find out what in Super-Villain Team-Up #11, yet here we are in Super-Villain Team-Up #10 with him telling (not showing) his colleagues that he went off and followed a trail from Hydrobase to the Latverian Embassy in New York. It's all a bit confusing, especially if you're reading these comics as a continuous block, rather having a month's gap in between!
The first four pages here see Captain America fighting his way through the Latverian Embassy's defences (apparently unconcerned about the non-aggression pact his country recently signed with Latveria) until he finds... Doctor Doom!


I don't think Eastern Europe is, techically, the third world, but we all make mistakes when being violently threatened by undersea monarchs. We then head over to Latveria itself, where The Shroud and Rudolfo are leading a pack of peasants through the castle. Rudolfo is in disguise as Doctor Doom, and is finding it all a bit too warm.



Meanwhile Doom and Captain America are on their way back to Latveria in a Doomjet, which Captain America is very impressed by. Doom, however, is unmoved.

The issue comes to an end with the ship being hit by "the rainbow missile", and then a cut back to Latveria where the villian is revealed as... The Red Skull! Just as promised on the cover! Characters have studiously avoided mentioning his name throughout, but still, it's hardly a surprise, nor is the fact that Doom is announced as returning in the next issue.

posted 4/9/2019 by MJ Hibbett
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