RETRO HOT PICKS! On Sale This Week — in 1982!

Scott and Dan hit up the comics racks from 44 years ago…

This week for RETRO HOT PICKS, Scott and I are selecting comics that came out the week of April 8, 1982.

Last time for RETRO HOT PICKS, it was the week of April 1, 1950. Click here to check it out.

(Keep in mind that comics came out on multiple days, so these are the issues that went on sale between April 5 and April 11.)

So, let’s set the scene: Argentina this week launched an invasion of the Falkland Islands, sparking an (undeclared) war between the South American nation and the United Kingdom that lasted 2 1/2 months. Pretty much everyone not paying attention to the simmering tensions behind the conflict — which is to say, pretty much everyone not from either country — was completely baffled by it all.

The war grew from centuries-long disputes over the control of two related territories: the Falklands and South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands. Needless to say, it’s complicated, but basically the territories had long been under British rule and the islanders, largely descendants of the colonists, wanted it to stay that way.

Brits ship out from England on April 5, amid cheering throngs.

Argentina considered the area theirs and the British government in the past was willing to cede control. Diplomatic efforts failed for years, however, and finally Argentina invaded, prompting the British response. (The Argentines lost and the islands remain a British Overseas Territory.)

The highbrow comedy of manners Porky’s was the biggest movie in America because, y’know, boobs. It was in the middle of an eight-week run at the top(less). Other hits included the uproarious Richard Pryor: Live on the Sunset Strip; the intergenerational Fonda vehicle On Golden Pond; Blake Edwards’ Victor/Victoria, starring Julie Andrews; and two Disney re-releases: Robin Hood, and the greatest animated feature of them all, Fantasia.

Dallas, MASH (in its penultimate season), 60 Minutes, The Jeffersons, Alice and Three’s Company were among the big TV hits.

The most popular songs — all in heavy rotation on the burgeoning MTV — included I Love Rock ‘N Roll by Joan “The Perfect Woman” Jett and the Blackhearts; We Got the Beat, off the top-selling Go-Go’s album Beauty and the Beat; the J. Geils Band’s Centerfold and Freeze-Frame; Vangelis’ theme from Chariots of Fire; and, Huey Lewis and the News’ breakout Do You Believe in Love.

Freeze Frame (sans hyphen), Chariots of Fire, and supergroup Asia’s self-titled LP were also making noise on the Billboard 200.

Scott Tipton, contributor-at-large, 13th Dimension

The Avengers #221, Marvel. I bought this comic off the racks at Quik-Stop, and I was hoping the new Avengers would be Rom and She-Hulk. As it turned out, I was half-right.

The Uncanny X-Men #159, Marvel. Bill Sienkiewicz on cover art here; loved his Dracula.

Justice League of America #204, DC. Wonderfully intricate cover work by the mighty George Perez. Always loved when he’d draw the Royal Flush Gang.

Dan adds: Every time the Royal Flush Gang shows up, I am there. (Don Heck pencilled the interiors.)

DC Comics Presents #47, DC. Back in the spring of ’82, seeing He-Man fighting Superman was a pretty big surprise.

Dan adds: Written by our pal Paul Kupperberg, even! One of these, unslabbed, went for almost $240 on eBay recently.

Dan Greenfield, editor, 13th Dimension

Marvel Fanfare #3, Marvel. Mandela Effect in effect: I always think this is the cover to Issue #1. It’s not. This is.

Marvel Tales #141, Marvel. Can we all agree that Marvel Tales was great? It was like getting a classic Spider-Man Facsimile Edition every month. Kind of. Sort of. You know what I mean.

Best of DC #26, DC. The Digest Era! For your 95 cents, you got Haney/Adams Batman and Deadman, plus solo stories starring early-days B&B big-shots Task Force X, the Viking Prince, the Silent Knight and Cave Carson (in a three-parter). Even Robin Hood!

DC Special Blue Ribbon Digest #23, DC. Another great deal for your 95 cents — 10 classic GA stories, by Jack Kirby, Denny O’Neil, Neal Adams, Ed Herron, Lee Elias, Bob Haney, Mike Grell, Elliot S! Maggin — and more! Plus, a framing sequence by Mike W. Barr and Dan Spiegle. I’d go track a copy down, except I’d need a magnifying glass to read it. These ol’ peepers don’t take too kindly to digests no more.

The Fury of Firestorm #2, DC. I didn’t read the original Firestorm series, but something compelled me to read this one. I don’t know why, because he wasn’t exactly the kind of character I gravitated toward. I dug it though, and stayed with it for quite some time.

MORE

— RETRO HOT PICKS! On Sale The Week of April 1 — in 1950! Click here.

— RETRO HOT PICKS! On Sale The Week of March 25 — in 1980! Click here.

Comics sources: Mike’s Amazing World of Comics and the Grand Comics Database.

Author: Dan Greenfield

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10 Comments

  1. 1982. We’re still a year off from when I can affirmatively swear I bought my first comic book (July 1983). I’m not sure if I should anticipate or dread when we get to that year.

    I’d love to see this channel do a retrospective on Marvel Tales. I’m a little surprised to see that #141 was a reprint of ASM #4, which tells me the book cycled through a lot of earlier issues of ASM and then decided to start over. I really only knew MT as the “Spider-Man reprint book,” which was nonetheless a great way to access old, out-of-print stories in an era where trade paperbacks were still uncommon.

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    • I was surprised when MarvelTales went all the way back to the early years of Spider-Man. I was more surprised when I realized they made subtle changes in the dialogue in an effort to update certain references. For example – in one issue Aunt May was upset that she was missing The Dukes of Hazzard – a show that didn’t exist when the story was originally printed.

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      • This would be a great retrospective item to cover.

        Another one would be the fact that Marvel Tales was covering reprints of Amazing Spider-Man into the late 200s–the final issue (#291) got up to ASM #283. Crazy that it went *that* far into Spider-Man lore–those were issues I was reading in elementary school and I wasn’t terribly older when the series finally axed.

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  2. Firestorm is one of my favorite characters. Ronnie Raymond is an ‘Everyman’ with familiar everyday problems.
    Conway hit it out of the park.

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  3. That Asia album was a favorite play! Even today…still holds up and brings the memories to life.

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  4. I’m at odds and ends about my DC digests for a few years. They are close to impossible to read at my age, but they were so important to me as a kid it’s hard for me to give them up. Maybe if I reach a point where I need the money.

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    • I would snatch DC Digest reprints up in a heartbeat purely out of nostalgia, but they would have to be reprinted in full size for those of us of a certain age.

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  5. I miss those DC Blue Ribbon Digests. I had a few of them, but got rid of them a long time ago. I also had a couple of the Marvel paperbacks, such as the ones reprinting Fantastic Four 1-6 and Spider-Man 1-6. I recall ripping them apart to make mini-comics. I still do have a few of the later Marvel paperbacks: Spider-Man (colour, with red border on the cover); X-Men (b/w, reprinted Giant Size 1?), Avengers (Vision is coming out of the wall), and Fantastic Four (purple border on the cover).

    For some reason, I bought the first Marvel Tales when they rebooted and started with Amazing Fantasy, but sadly, I stopped buying 🙁 . Wish I had them now. I have recently acquired some early Marvel Tales, which were the giant sized issues. Love reprints and love facsimiles!

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  6. Ordinarily, I’d say I remember all of these from that year but I don’t think I saw the digests! I would have snapped them up. And I WISH I’d bought the Supes/He-Man book when it came out. But it took watching reruns to appreciate “He-Man.” Hmmmm…Filmation/DC tram-ups, think of the possibilities… Zatanna/Mission:Magic. Martian Manhunter/My Favorite Martians…Doctor Thirteen/The Ghost Busters…okay, I’ll stop…

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    • The Legion of Super-Heroes and Space Academy… Green Lantern and Jason of Star Command… Komandi and Ark II… Shazam and Isis- oh, never mind.

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