Over the years I've heard so much about Mick Anglo's contributions to UK comics that before reading this week's book I looked the man up. I found a fascinating, detailed article about Anglo's long career on Wikipedia:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mick_AngloI was relieved to learn that Mick's real name was Maurice Anglowitz. I could never quite believe the coincidence of an English artist named Anglo whose name also resembled Michel Angelo. In my Googling I encountered this overview of Captain Valiant himself, which explains many of the comic's idiosyncracies:
http://downthetubes.net/?p=16832The key paragraph is the reference to Captain Valiant having been created with merchandising in mind. No more need I wonder about the Space Stiletto, the anti-radiation shield, and the all-important Service Tie. The "Down the Tubes" article names Denis Gifford as scriptwriter. Though Anglo's studio packaged books using a number of artists, Anglo himself is credited with CV's art. While the artwork is a step above average, it shows signs of copious swiping from both comics and photos. I was amused to spot a Reed Crandall on page 26 panel 1. I don't know where it came from (Blackhawk?) but it's definitely RC.
The story is kind of loopy but entertaining. As Narf noted, the editing isn't all it could be, with several misspellings and occasions when a single phrase is reused several times on one page. The good Captain is rather arbitrary when deciding whether to wear his space helmet. Maybe in the first story he dons a Reussi helmet because his oxygen pill has run out. I can't understand why, in the second story, Cap and his crew don't use their flying belts until one of them finally complains about his feet. This story hasn't a plot; it's more of a travelogue, but it's fun.
I like the way the Reussi dialogue is sort-of-backward English, less obvious than Fred Guardineer magicians. "Police" becomes "E-cop" and they insult CV by calling him a "pig-e-(ra)t." On the other hand Falstar's endless ironic "er's" on page 11 drove me up the wall.
In sum, despite awkward writing Captain Valiant #50 (which was issue #1) is a fun read and I'm glad it appeared on the ComicBookPlus videoscopograph.