FANTASTIC GIANTS #24Issue number 24? Not really. The numbering continues from the
Konga comic series.
KongaDitko drew the first 15 issues of
Konga. Each has many good moments but artwise none compare with this movie adaptation. Ditko pulls out all the stops: careful rendering, vignetted panels, imaginative layouts. As the Panther points out, along with Jack Kirby, Steve Ditko was one of the Kings of the Monsters.
For some reason I've never seen the movie. However a review on YouTube showed enough scenes for me to get a sense it. It was posted by someone calling themselves "Dark Corners" and suffers from a common YouTube malady, the "I'm so clever and funny" syndrome.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J2w1INr4fTMYT also has the original trailer:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5bsdT9_PjdIThe first thing I thought of was how a comic with a good artist can make a low-budget movie look like a mega-million-buck masterpiece. This first occurred to me way back when I read Dell's adaptations of Steve Reeves movies. The Crandall-Evans art made everything look grand and exciting. When I saw the movies everything looked cheap and shoddy (and badly-dubbed). Ditko's unlimited "budget" turned an okay film into a classic. I love Konga's big finish on our page 24, panel 1.
Not having seen the whole movie I'm unsure how the adaptation's script matches up. The comic obviously drops a few items to streamline the story. For instance Decker doesn't try to rape his assistant. But the review and the trailer suggest that Dr Decker deliberately used Konga to murder his competition while the comic shows Decker's thoughts activating Konga without the scientist's realizing it. If you've seen the movie, please clear this up for me. The movie Decker seems a lot like a standard mad scientist while the comic Decker is more sympathetic.
Ditko doesn't seem to have had much reference, if any, to work from. Dr Decker looks nothing like Michael Gough. This isn't unusual. In correspondence Frank Thorne and George Evans told me that many times they drew the comic before the movie was even finished. Often the studios provided very little by way of visual reference.
GorgoI'd never seen the
Gorgo movie, either. Fortunately YouTube has a nice, full-length print:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XoAjSuk9i1QThe film is a heckuva lot more impressive than
Konga. Higher budget, obviously, well-lit and well-directed. The whole thing looks like an upscale British version of a Toho kaiju film, right down to the guy in a rubber suit. Even the model work is reminiscent of Godzilla films, just done better. I enjoyed it.
When drawing the comic Steve Ditko obviously had pictures of Gorgo and nothing else. Everything and everyone else came out of Ditko's imagination. In one case this was a good thing. Ditko's dour teenage Sean fits the story better than the fresh-faced grade-schooler in the movie. Once again Ditko delivers a top-notch job. The underwater action sequences overcome the lousy Charlton coloring and jump out of the page. One thing Ditko tossed in made me smile: in the last panel two little roars are written above the horizon line.
The movie had a simple, straightforward plot with minimal characterization and explanations. The script transferred easily to the comic page. It was necessary only to cut down on details.
Charlton's
Gorgo comic had a surprisingly long run, some 26 issues. A few later issues were drawn by Ditko but his contributions were more slapdash than his
Konga sequels. Joe Gill, desperate for plots, turned the poor mama monster into a dedicated Commie fighter.
The Bonus Monster StoriesWith the Help of Hogar is a visual treat. Ditko dreamed up quirky monsters unlike anyone else's. Some of them, like Hogar, border on the silly-looking, but Ditko's dramatic storytelling makes them believable. The trick ending of the story isn't very satisfying. I wonder why the writer chose to tell the story Prince Valiant style in captions rather than using balloons.
I liked
The Mountain Monster better. The idea of the creature running from himself is a nice one. While both of these stories have capable artwork, they're done in "standard Ditko" and pale beside the grade-A work Ditko did on the feature stories.
A great comic overall. I bought it off the stands and, not having read the earlier printings of the lead stories, I was blown away by Sturdy Steve's renditions of these second-team movie critters.