Book Review The Mad Archives 1
@arthurchappell (44998)
Preston, England
May 27, 2019 6:17pm CST
2002. DC Comics.
Wonderfully daft book collection of the first ever Mad publications, a precursor to the subversive satire driven Mad Magazine (which emerged from this magazine) that would present is in time with Spy V Spy, Alfred E Neumann, and Don Martin.
The familiar characters have yet to materialize in these early comics, which are a superb parody of the clichés of 1950’s comic book pulp literature, with savage spoofs of crime, romance, and science fiction tales. Letters and ads from the issues are also lovingly preserved.
There are great takes on many well-known figures - King Kong is brought back to a New York that doesn’t even give him a second glance. Tarzan (Melvin Of The Apes, the only recurring character in these early issues) proves to be such a lummox when he goes to England to recover his estates that the rest of the family flee to the jungle and leave him to it.
The name Melvin becomes a running gag, inserted into most stories and strips given. It shouldn’t be funny, but it is.
The horror spoofs manage to be both funny and genuinely scary in a Tales From The Crypt fashion. In one, a Swamp Thing type blob, made of rubbish, and known simply as Heap, destroys its creator and his swamp house (absurdly propped over the miré with a single broomstick), when the creator denies the creature from falling in love with another garbage pile. The sight of the Heap wearing a Zoot Suit is strangely touching.
This is a very funny book, which rarely feels dated or anything less than fresh and vibrant and yet it still gives a sense of holding a piece of genuine comic-book history in your hands.
Arthur Chappell
9 people like this
8 responses
@arthurchappell (44998)
• Preston, England
28 May 19
I have seen the films and some of the comics
1 person likes this
@LindaOHio (178870)
• United States
28 May 19
I used to have a subscription to Mad Magazine; so I know what you're talking about!
2 people like this
@RasmaSandra (79929)
• Daytona Beach, Florida
28 May 19
Sounds interesting and kind of fun. I used to love reading MAD magazine and loved watching the Tales of the Crypt.
1 person likes this
@JESSY3236 (19941)
• United States
28 May 19
I think I only read one Mad magazine. I loved Tales From the Crypt. Speaking of DC Comics, I watched Wonder Woman yesterday. It was really good.
1 person likes this
@arthurchappell (44998)
• Preston, England
28 May 19
@JESSY3236 Not seen Wonder Woman yet
1 person likes this
@arthurchappell (44998)
• Preston, England
28 May 19
@Ronrybs more recent issues are not so good
1 person likes this
@Ronrybs (19363)
• London, England
28 May 19
@arthurchappell I did buy a copy a good few years ago, but it wasn't the same
1 person likes this
@arthurchappell (44998)
• Preston, England
1 Jun 19
@nela13 A very popular satirical comedy comic / magazine - often very funny http://www.madmagazine.com/
1 person likes this
@nela13 (58667)
• Portugal
1 Jun 19
@arthurchappell for your link it seems quite funny but unfortunately it is not popular in my country.
1 person likes this
@xander6464 (44250)
• Wapello, Iowa
28 May 19
I love the early years of MAD, too. collections like this are great.
1 person likes this
@asfarasiknow (3340)
• Bournemouth, England
7 Jun 19
I loved MAD as a teenager. I realised later that it was a huge influence on me Many of its spoofs were of TV shows we never saw in the UK but were so well-written that I got all the humour anyway. I remember newsagent's shops in the 70s having loads of the spin-off books.
It's no longer sold in shops here but I'm toying with the idea of taking out an international subscription.