Still More (Really) Weird Heroes: El Diablo.(Weird) Sunday Funnies: Howard the Duck.Werewolf Week! Batman in "Moon of the Wolf".Werewolf Week Continues! Swamp Thing in "Monster O.WEREWOLF WEEK Rolls On! Solomon Kane in "The Silve.WEREWOLF WEEK Gets Out of this World with Man-Wolf!.WEREWOLF WEEK Concludes: Furry-ous First Friday pr.Weird Sunday Funnies: John Byrne's Rog-2000.Whatever Happened to Heroes Who Look Like Heroes?.Black and White Wednesday: "Wooden Cross" from Cre.Frightening First Fridays: Tower of Shadows #1.The Haunt of Horror: Marvel's Horror Prose Digest.So it took a lot of effort to get "At the Stroke of Midnight" from Steranko's drawing board to the spinner racks in July, 1969. Come back." And that's just what Steranko did. Steranko recalled that he started to laugh: "The whole thing was so utterly absurd." By this time, Steranko concluded, Lee was laughing as well and said, "Jim, you belong here. About a month later, Steranko got a call from Lee: "Hey, Jim," said Steranko, imitating Lee's easygoing tone of voice. Again, Stan Lee didn't get it and changed the dialogue and captions to fit the Marvel house style.īy this time, they were both infuriated and were arguing about whether Lee was firing Steranko or whether Steranko had quit. Naturally for "At the Stroke of Midnight," Steranko made the effort to write each caption and balloon so that it would run the whole length of the panel. Steranko disliked what he called "the five-sided panel," i.e., a panel that has a caption that does not extend all the way across the top, hence it now has five sides. Lee and Steranko were continually quarreling over Steranko's storytelling innovations. "So I lost and he won," Steranko concluded. Much conflict ensued before the two men settled on, "At the Stroke of Midnight.
Stan Lee, Steranko went on, didn't quite get the Lovecraft reference and came up with his own title for the story. Lovecraft, whose stories were being revived.
Steranko did a story for the series and gave it the title, "The Lurking Fear at Shadow House," which referred to H.P. And, Steranko quickly noted, "I never got paid for it."īack to "At the Stroke of Midnight." Steranko explained that DC Comics had just launched a couple of horror anthology titles, House of Mystery and House of Secrets, which were doing well, and Marvel decided to launch a similar magazine Tower of Shadows to compete with them.
The Steranko-designed logo is still used in the comics today and served as the basis for the movie logo. So they decided on Steranko's clash with Lee over the title of "At the Stroke of Midnight," the lead story that Steranko did for Marvel's Tower of Shadows horror comic in 1969.īut first there was a quick digression as Steranko recounted how he ended up redesigning the X-Man logo many years ago when the now wildly popular X-Men series was on the verge of being canceled. Here's the whole story, from Steranko himself, taken from Peter Sanderson's article "Steranko and Simon: Back to Back" in Publisher's Weekly, March 7, 2006:Īfter a bit of banter about a "cute redhead," Steranko suggested gossip and "fights with Stan Lee" as topics for the evening's public conversation. Lovecraft, nor the storytelling innovations (including caption placement and use of color) the gifted writer/artist used in the strip. Stan didn't like Steranko's cover (the red and black beauty on your left) he didn't like the story's original title ("The Lurking Fear at Shadow House") he didn't understand Steranko's intentions of homaging H.P. Like Steranko's Alley Award-winning (1969) story for Tower of Shadows #1. While Stan was smart enough to hire Jim Steranko way back in 1967.while Stan was smart enough to eventually turn Steranko loose on the Nick Fury strip in Strange Tales.Stan was smart enough to know that, if he wanted to create a new mystery mag to compete with DC's successful House of Mystery and House of Secrets, he'd need to get the best to kick the mag off namely one James Steranko.but Stan still had that "editor's itch" every now and then that made him want to meddle with things he didn't understand. And Stan deserves most every accolade he's ever received. I doubt anyone will ever convince Ol' Groove otherwise. You know, I believe Stan Lee is a pretty cool guy. Here we are, my Groovy Ghoulies! Halloween is here, and has Ol' Groove got some goodies for you! Put away the eggs and soap! Don't even think about tipping my outhouse! When you least expect it, all through the day, I'm gonna spring some supernatural surprises on ya! Up first is Tower of Shadows #1, featuring Jim Steranko's "At the Stroke of Midnight!"