Wednesday, December 13, 2023

Penthouse December 1981

Penthouse magazine
December, 1981
It's December, 1981, and the top single in the land is Olivia Newton-John's 'Physical'.
Let's all gather around the Christmas tree and open our presents.........including the December issue of Penthouse magazine !

We'll see advertisements for the must-have gift for the year: the Atari 'VCS' model gaming system ! (At my household, we didn't get an Atari, mainly because our TV was a modest little 17-inch black and white affair and, at $130, the Atari system was a little pricey).
Additional consumer electronics included a cutting-edge Sharp 'solar' calculator, and another 1980s must-have item, the Boombox.......especially one endorsed by Earth, Wind, and Fire, who happened to have the No. 3 single on the Billboard Hot 100: 'Let's Groove' !
For those of a more sensual bent, we had 'Denim', a macho men's fragrance, and 'Bodylicks' and the 'Original Mink Whip' ! Rowr, nasty !
One of the pictorials features the spectacular Gabrielle Sagan, who sports a vintage Louise Brooks hairstyle and a bronzed body that gleams in the sun.
Interestingly, Gabrielle since has become a Meme, at least, in the artwork of Linda Adair.........or perhaps it's a case of Synchronicity ?!
Champagne and Sunshine, by Linda Adair, 2022

The December issue has some funny cartoons that take advantage of the holiday theme.........
The subject of the Celebrity Interview is none other than Arnold Schwarzenegger, looking for cinematic success with the forthcoming release in 1982 of the movie Conan the Barbarian.
The articles section has some interesting items. There is a piece on Jerry Falwell, who earlier that year had lost a lawsuit against Penthouse.
UK socialite and writer Anthony Haden-Guest pens an article about crime and passion in New York City. The article is an excerpt from his 1983 book Bad Dreams.
There's an examination of the phenomenon of motocross racing, a sport rising in popularity.
There's an ad / article for Omni magazine, which by the end of '81 was a major outlet for science fiction writers. But Penthouse itself continued to showcase science fiction, as Gardner Dozois got a story in the December issue:
Let's close the pages of the December issue with a look at another pictorial, this one featuring a man-woman couple and imaged with such the 'gauzy filter' look that it's an exemplar of the Penthouse approach to photography.
And so we say goodbye to December, 1981................Merry Christmas and Happy New Year, everybody !

Sunday, December 10, 2023

Night and the Enemy

Night and the Enemy
by Harlan Ellison and Ken Steacy
'Night and the Enemy' was a collection of comics, graphics, and illustrated text bundled into an 81-page graphic novel from independent comics publisher Comico, and released in November 1987. 

The stories in 'Night' were adapted from the so-called 'Earth-Kyba' stories Ellison published from 1956 to 1987.
The Comico edition of 'Night and the Enemy' is long out of print, so Ellison enthusiasts were pleased when, in 2015, a trade paperback reprint edition (85 pp.) was issued from Dover. The 2015 edition reprints the entirety of the 1987 volume, and includes some ancillary material in the form of an 'Afterward and Pictures' section.
Canadian artist Ken Steacy (b. 1955) teamed up with Dean Motter to produce the comic, and later graphic novel, of 'The Sacred and the Profane' in the mid-1980s, so he was familiar with the process of composing and rendering science fiction content.
The stories in 'Night and the Enemy' all display Steacy's distinctive art style, both in color, and in black-and-white. Rather than speech balloons, dialogue is presented in a minimalist manner, as typeface with tails to indicate who is speaking.
As I noted in my review of 'The Sacred and the Profane', Steacy is not a traditional comic book artist in the sense of using art that lends itself to dynamic action. The artwork in 'Night and the Enemy' has a static quality, even in scenes of action, and while this works well for some of the stories, it is less effective in others. But the reader is invited to view the book and make their own judgments.
As for Ellison's writing, the Earth-Kyba stories were intended, in that inimitable Harlan Ellison style, to be vigorous repudiations of the sci-fi ideology of the postwar era, where virtuous Terrans battled malevolent alien invaders and won a noble victory. The tales in 'Night and the Enemy' avoid jingoism and remind us all, in a blunt way, that War is Hell.
There are a couple short stories included in 'Night and the Enemy'. 'Trojan Hearse' is a two-pager that gets the job done, while 'The Few, the Proud' takes the theme of the war hero and subverts it with a particularly caustic, 'surprise' ending.
Summing up, 'Night and the Enemy' is one of the better efforts to mingle Ellison's text with graphic art. It's on par with 'The Illustrated Harlan Ellison' from 1978, and superior to the comic book series 'Harlan Ellison's Dream Corridor' from 1996. So, if you're an Ellison fan, you'll want to have a copy of 'Night and the Enemy' in your library. 

Thursday, December 7, 2023

Book Review: Landis: The Story of a Real Man on 42nd Street

Book Review: 'Landis: The Story of a Real Man on 42nd Street' by Preston Fassel
4 / 5 Stars

'Landis: The Story of a Real Man on 42nd Street' (145 pp.) was published by Encyclopocalypse Publications in 2021. Author Preston Fassel is a writer of fiction and nonfiction works on horror, alternative cinema, and pop culture.

Bill Landis is one of the more interesting figures in the fringes of 1980s pop culture, as well as the Founding Father of the practice of appreciating 'trash cinema', that is, low-budget, transgressive movies. 

Landis began it all in June 1980, with the first issue of a newsletter / magazine called Sleazoid Express, aimed at the patrons of the grindhouse theaters on 42nd Street, and the hipsters attending events at the 'Club 57' art cafe in the East Village.

Before there was Shock Cinema, Psychotronic Video or Deep Red, before there was Quentin Tarantino or Robert Rodriguez, and only a year or two after Josh Alan Friedman began chronicling Times Square, there was.…Sleazoid

The wave of reviews and analyses of schlock and sleaze cinema that arrived in the 1980s, and coincided with the rise of VHS tapes, took inspiration from Landis and his newsletter.
Jimmy McDonough (left), unidentified patron (center), and Bill Landis (right) at a theater on 42nd Street, photo by Yara Cluver

Sleazoid quickly became a must-read among hipsters and film fanatics. I remember finding out about it late in 1984, perhaps from some column or article in the magazine Film Comment. I placed my order early in 1985, and got a bunch of issues before Sleazoid ceased publication later that year.
Issue of Sleazoid Express, circa 1985

The success of Sleazoid opened a path for Landis to write pieces for aboveground publications like Fangoria, Variety, Screw, and The Village Voice during the 1980s and 1990s. 

Landis's 1986 Voice piece, 'Using and Losing on Times Square', about down-and-out Times Square hustlers in the era of AIDS, was particularly memorable.
 
Article by Bill Landis for the February 1982 issue of Fangoria

Later in the 1990s, Landis and his wife Michelle Clifford revived Sleazoid, and issued a new magazine called Metasex.

In 2002, Landis and Clifford published a book called 'Sleazoid Express: A Mind-Twisting Tour Through the Grindhouse Cinema of Times Square', which was a retrospective of Landis's days as a movie fan and critic, as well as a primer on sleaze cinema. Issues of Sleazoid continued to be published, before tailing off as the decade began to close.
In 2008, Landis died of a heart attack; he was only 49, estranged from friends and family, and living in drugged-out squalor in an apartment in Chicago.
Unidentified Sleazoid staffer (left) and 'Gummo', New York City, mid-1980s

In 'Landis: The Story of a Real Man on 42nd Street', Fassel gives a very readable account of Landis's life and times. While Fassel is an unashamed Landis fanboy the book is not a hagiography, recounting Landis's faults (he frequently was not a very nice person to be around) with candor. 

Fassel also doesn't shy from relating his subject's descent into self-abuse and self-degradation in the mid-80s, when Landis became a live sex-show performer and porn actor under the stage name 'Bobby Spector'. 

And Fassel acknowledges that Landis was a bullshitter, and much of Landis's autobiographical writings must be taken with a degree of skepticism.

One area where 'The Story of a Real Man' falls a bit short is in the lack of graphics; save for a black-and-white photo of Landis, there's no other illustrative material in the book. Some scans of Sleazoid, stills from some of Landis's X-rated films, and portraits of Landis taken over the years, all would have helped round out the book. Fassel has indicated that the rights to reproduce Sleazoid are stalemated by a uncommunicative Michelle Clifford, but still, some visual content would have helped lend more perspective to the Landis phenomenon.   

Who will want a copy of 'Landis: The Story of a Real Man on 42nd Street' ? Aside from the obvious answer of Landis fans and trash cinema fans, I believe anyone interested in New York City's seedier side, as it was in the halcyon days of the 1960s through the 1980s, will find the book engaging. 

Tuesday, December 5, 2023

Fifteen years of the PorPor Books Blog

Fifteen Years of 'The PorPor Books Blog'

When I started this blog fifteen years ago I wasn't anticipating it would be so much fun that I'd do it for fifteen years, but somehow that has turned out to be the case. 

Back when I started things were a little different when it came to acquiring media with nostalgia value. 

You could go on eBay and buy a box of old DAW books for $30, plus $10 shipping. Or you could find a collection of National Lampoon magazines from the 1970s, for $25 plus shipping. At amazon, you could get a copy of Pierce Nace's schlock masterpiece, 'Eat Them Alive', for five bucks. You could get an original mass market paperback edition of Stephen King's 'The Stand' for under $10. You could go to the comic book store, and in a cardboard box out in front of the store, find a heap of old Marvel Vampire Tales black and white magazines from the 1970s on sale for a couple of bucks each. And inside, they'd have some back issues of Heavy Metal magazine on sale for three dollars each. Stuff that the fanboys, coming in for their pulls of 25 issues of X-Men comics, ignored. But nowadays, you're going to pay a little bit more for such things (if you can find them).

I thank all my readers who continue to visit the site ! While Google Analytics 4 is not a very user-friendly application, it says my Page Views for the past month numbered 6,652, or about 220 page views per day. So there are people who find the blog worth visiting.

It's enough of an inducement to continue the blog for another five years. Fingers crossed !

Sunday, December 3, 2023

National Lampoon December 1977

National Lampoon 
December 1977
December, 1977, and Andy Gibb's song 'Love is Thicker than Water' is in heavy rotation on FM radio's pop and Top 40 channels.

The latest issue of the National Lampoon is out, and with P. J. O'Rourke as editor, the magazine has a more biting, edgier tenor to its humor. And the December issue is a good issue.

An 'alternate' cover presents the bloodthirsty Ugandan dictator Idi Amin as Santa Claus..........! The picture rewards careful scrutiny. Truly, an exemplar of bad taste.
An advertisement for Heavy Metal magazine tells us all we need to know about that seminal publication.
There is a satirical depiction of the American Legion's membership as constituting thoroughly upright, all-American, upstanding white men who are the pillars of their communities. Although a  little bigoted, perhaps.
A sidebar article derives cruel amusement from the plight of starving Ethiopians.
There are some cartoons about Santa.
'Ming Fu Boogaloo', by Joe Schenkman, is a rather chaotic comic that makes fun of Asian people, punk rock, and the broken English used by Asian people ('grue' = glue, 'dlink' = drink, 'Roritta' = Lolita........you get it). I am ashamed to admit that I laughed out loud while reading 'Ming Fu'.
A feature article on 'Texas' manages to offend both Asians and Mexicans.
 Shary Flenniken's 'Trots and Bonnie' takes aim at a sanctimonious feminist.
'The Appletons' makes fun of gay people.
And the Lampoon doesn't shy from offending black people, with the comic 'Goobers'.
We'll close this 46 year-old cavalcade of transgressions with a batch of advertisements from the end pages of the magazine, where rates were low, camera resolution poor, and the counterculture most in evidence. And.............can you believe, that back in 1977, Haiti was a vacation destination ?!
Merry Christmas 1977, and a happy 1978 !