Given the admittedly shameless aspect to this post's bait-and-switch title, it's understandable if those of you dropping in on the PPC today were expecting to see something like the following--a concept which is still kicking up steam long after its first film debuted in 1968 and carved a successful franchise that continued to 1973 and beyond which, as of this date, has collectively grossed $2,127.776,430 worldwide. That's a lot of bananas.
However.
Like Lucy van Pelt, who graciously balanced a football on the ground so that Charlie Brown could have the opportunity to run up and kick it--only to snatch it away the moment before his foot made contact, and consequently causing him to spectacularly crash to the ground, flat on his back--we regret to inform you that this post's title refers instead to a similar yet separate subject altogether. Namely:
Have you noticed the number of characters in comics which are based on or actually are, if only in part, simians--e.g., APES?
Yes, it's those characters who beckon us today, not some actors in furry suits who, along with their film crews, raked in over $2 billion at the box office. Who needs 'em? Today, we explore the apes who populate Marvel's Planet Earth. We bring you, instead, Marvel's own...
And speaking of the Beast, he would be the odd man out in this assembly--a mutant, further mutated by his own hand, yet regarded by some as simian in appearance and movement (particularly in his early days), an assessment which characters from the distant future unfortunately appear to agree with.
Of course the real thing was well represented, in comics and other mediums. In "2001: A Space Odyssey," apes received everything but billing in the first minutes of the 1968 Stanley Kubrick film (though they may have found their way into the end credits, if I recall correctly)--and in Jack Kirby's 1976 adaptation, the artist-writer gives them their due.
Kirby would strike a similar note with the Celestials, whose first host on Earth had specific plans for man's earliest form (as rendered here by artist Ron Wilson).
Fast-forward to the big city, where we find one poor soul who took his nom de guerre as the Gibbon too seriously--and whose rejection by Spider-Man would make him vulnerable to the influence of none other than Kraven the Hunter.
The Black Panther has had his battles with his share of apes--most prominently the Man-Ape, but also creatures his people had believed to be fables yet had also in their eyes taken on the stature of gods, myths that T'Challa would be forced to meet in the flesh.
And thanks to Kirby, the Panther would also clash with another creature of legend--the Yeti, whom the Silver Surfer as well as the Human Torch would cross paths with. (Well, not so much the Torch, as his Yeti turned out to be one of the Inhumans.)
No doubt one of the most prominent groupings of apes over the years have been the Red Ghost's super-apes, all having gained their abilities by exposure to cosmic rays which made them a fair threat that even George Taylor would have wanted more than a rifle to deal with.
You can find the Ghost and the Super-Apes all over the Marvel map, having logged more appearances than I can readily count.
And on the subject of super-apes, well, this five-issue series from 2008 (with No. 0 lagging behind) ranks right up there as one of the most bizarre.
A title in which our friend Martin Blank plays a part, Marvel Apes takes place in an alternate universe where Earth is populated by simian counterparts of the characters we know. (Spider-Monkey, Captain Ape-merica, the Ape-Vengers, Doctor Ooktavius... you get the idea.) Once the series runs its course, both Spider-Monkey and Speedball would be featured in their own respective issues.
Another type of super-ape was the evolved being named Gorr, who was sent to Earth by the High Evolutionary to fetch the Fantastic Four but wasn't behaving too civilized in their first meeting.
Solomon Kane also looks like he has his hands full with an attack by a gorilla, but Kane's beef is actually with a tribesman named Gulka who was out to slay him.
But Gulka is thwarted when our gorilla shows up to take its revenge on him for slaying the gorilla's mate. (And if by that you infer that we won't be seeing Gulka among the living again, you're not wrong.)
Another visible member of the ape clan over the years has been Arthur Nagan, a surgeon who used apes as organ donors but who wound up on the wrong end of the scalpel when the apes rebelled and, with newly gained human intellect, grafted Nagan's head onto one of their bodies. Turning lemons into lemonade, Nagan went on to become part of the Headmen, whose members' origins in classic tales revealed their own medical, scientific and mystical specialties and who went on to join Nagan in devious (and hopefully profitable) schemes.
Nagan's as ruthless and merciless as they come--but when he goes up against a depowered Luke Cage and hurls the man's body into an electrified fence, he receives a comeuppance when the fence's power has restored Cage's abilities and, at a crucial point in the battle, our hero is able to take advantage of Nagan's one vulnerability.
Nagan, like the other Headmen, never got around to calling himself anything other than his given name and surname (which must have made the F.B.I.'s job a little easier), even though "Gorilla Man" would have fit like a glove. But that name was awarded another character a little over seven years later:
The story of Dr. Franz Radzik, who thought to begin a criminal career by using a device he'd invented to exchange his personality with that of a gorilla, but doesn't count on the strength of the beast's own personality which refuses to transfer back, thus trapping Radzik in the gorilla's body for life.
The "Gorilla-Man" name (hyphenated or otherwise) would be claimed by other individuals, which you'll find Rip Jagger has covered in his own splendid post on the subject. And one of those characters was actually an Avenger, albeit a team from an alternate timeline, perhaps (even the Watcher leaves the question open for debate).
Then there's Joe the Gorilla (yes, word for word, that's his name), whose human form makes clear that he's a gorilla in name only--a bruiser who was part of the Split-Second Squad whose members committed bank robberies under the orders of a mysterious figure named Kronus.
Unfortunately, Joe would later go up against the Valkyrie, who was crazed at the time and treated him to a fate to which any Asgardian would have dispatched what they perceived to be a troll.
Another hooded figure by the name of the Organizer forms the Ani-Men, one of whom is outfitted as... well, not Gorilla-Man, but a close second.
Thanks in part to Count Nefaria, the Ani-Men gain super-powers and are sent to attack the NORAD base at Mt. Valhalla--with the strength of Gort, our Ape-Man, being an obvious asset.
Parody issue covers by fellow blogger Ross Pearsall at Super-Team Family... The Lost Issues, where you can find clever guest-appearance concepts based on the Planet Of The Apes and much more. (But I gotta ask: Just how did these apes get the drop on the Avengers? With nets?)
16 comments:
Well, as this is the first (and probably last) time Planet Of The Apes will ever get mentioned on the PPoc I just want to say how incredibly dull the cover of the US POTA magazine #1 was. The cover of #2 was far more thrilling and that was the cover which was used for the first issue of Marvel UK's POTA weekly. The other POTA comic featured today, Adventures On The Planet Of The Apes, ran for 12 issues and reprinted (in colour) Marvel's adaptations of the first two films.
By the way, CF, last night BBC radio broadcast a documentary about your governor Ron DeSantis. I can only send you my deepest sympathies.
You left out the senses-shattering Apeslayer, Comicsfan.
https://marvel.fandom.com/wiki/Jonathan_Dozer_(Earth-7481)
-sean
I love how Spider-Woman is scratching her head on the cover of "Marvel Apes". Just hilarious!
Nice post CF.
In response to the I asked question of whether there's anyone else you could have included, I don't know anything about him but I thin there's a Mandrill somewhere.
Colin, I always enjoy hearing the UK side of (re)published Marvel stories. As for our governor, I'm mildly curious at how he happened to be the subject of a British documentary; at any rate, your sympathies are certainly appreciated. (In fact, keep 'em coming! :D )
sean, thanks--I'd already given Apeslayer his due in an earlier post so I felt like it might be redundant here, but in hindsight I probably should have linked to it, regardless.
dangermash, yes, absolutely! The character who had some sort of power over women, if memory serves. He's only appeared once in the PPC--his swan song, as it turned out, and I can't say I'm sorry to see him get the axe (or, in this case, the scythe).
lordjim6 here. I think you missed the Beasts from Berlin, which appeared in the Hank Pym section in Tales to Astonish in the first issue to co-star the Hulk. Also, the Yetis the Silver Surfer encountered were revealed in an early issue of the Defenders to be fakes. Further, the Yeti inhuman was retconned by John Bryne to be a tragic member of the First Line.
CF, the BBC is interested in Ron DeSantis because he might be running for President in 2024. The documentary also contained lots of information about Florida but Tallahassee wasn't mentioned!
lordjim6, you're not referring to the simians that turned out to be agents of Calizuma, are you? If so, they don't appear to be one and the same with the creatures the Surfer encountered in his own book; unlike the Yetis, these pseudo-simians feigned child-like behavior and displayed no hostility toward the Surfer whatsoever, a far cry from the reception he received from the "abominable snowmen." (He also met Calizuma's group after helping the Fantastic Four against the return of Galactus, which took place four years after that first issue of his series was published.)
At any rate, we can definitely add the Beasts of Berlin to the list, thanks!
Get your paws off Iron Man, you damn dirty apes!
I thought D.C. Comics in the '60's had a lotta apes and monkeys, but they didn't have much over Marvel in the '70's in that department, apparently.
Anybody remember that? There was some editor over at D.C., (maybe Weisinger or Schwartz, one of those guys, I dunno), who thought primates on the covers sold more copies. Pretty soon you couldn't throw a rock on Earth-One without hitting a super-powered monkey or a gorilla on the head.
Although I wouldn't advise it.
Jeez, though, it looks like Marvel was kinda going ape itself in the 70's, early '80's.
M.P.
Actually, CJ, it was the cover of the issue #1 shown here (on the left) that was used for the free poster in the UK POTA weekly #1. I know, 'cos I've got it.
Also, the white apes of Mars!
https://www.comics.org/issue/31234/cover/4/
Phillip
Good catch, Phil! I think we all forgot about them!
One more reason why a manned voyage to Mars would be risky.
M.P.
Phillip, an ape with a mohawk--now I've indeed seen everything. :) And just where does John Carter think he's leaping at that angle? In case he hasn't noticed, the edge of the roof is under his foe's feet!
I knew that, Kid, but what a dull poster it made!
If we're popping the top off the jug containing John Carter and the white apes, then we certainly will be able to fill many a cup from when Marvel took a turn with "Tarzan, Lord of the APES".
Murray, quite!
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