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Showing posts with label Faceache. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Faceache. Show all posts

Thursday, May 23, 2024

Scrunge or Scrunch? The Many Sounds Of Faceache


Following on from the Ken Reid post the other day, here's an interesting piece of comic history that Fleetway editor Dez Skinn shared to Facebook recently. It's a letter from Ken to Buster editor Len Wenn, in which he complains that somebody has been changing Faceache's sound effect from 'scrunch' to 'scrunge' when he changes his face.

Here's what Dez wrote about it online:

"Here's something for anybody who read British comics in the 1970s... specifically Faceache in Buster. I've just unearthed a letter from writer/artist Ken Reid to editor Len Wenn complaining that somebody in the office changed his sound effect "scrunch" to "scrunge" every week. Now I can confess, 'twas I, as Len's number two - being responsible for everything beyond the scripts, which he was in charge of.

"And I must admit, while I still think scrunge sounds better, scrunch was the more appropriate term. Sorry, Ken."

Interestingly though, 'scrunch' wasn't even the original term! When Faceache first appeared in Jet comic in May 1971, the first strip had him 'twang' and 'boyn-ng'. 


Incidentally, 'scrunch' did appear later on, from issue #21, but for much of Jet's run it was actually the word 'squoylp' that appeared to be the sound effect of choice.

The very first
'scrunch', from Jet #21.
 
From the one and only Jet annual, 1973.

I don't have my 70's Buster's to hand, but based  on this and Ken's letter, 'scrunge' must have taken over after Jet merged into Buster in October 1971, after just 31 issues. This would of course be when Dez got his hands on the strip, and although Ken is of course a comic genius I think that just for once he may be wrong here - in my opinion 'scrunge' is the funnier word!


For those interested, I actually shared all of Faceache's appearances in Jet on this blog a few years ago, spread over three posts. Part one can be found here.

Monday, August 4, 2014

Faceache in Jet - Part 3 of 3

Episode 16

It's now time for the third and final part of Faceache's strips in Jet. This includes the remaining seven episodes from the weekly Jet comics and the strip from the one and only Jet annual - a two-pager that is Faceache's only Jet strip with any colour. As ever the excellent Ken Reid illustrates them. Number 18 is my favourite here, although number 21 is also good as it features a Frankenstein model and a character which looks a bit like Mickey from the Frankie Stein strip - a reference by Ken, perhaps?

Episode 17

Episode 18

Episode 19

Episode 20

Episode 21

Episode 22



Sadly that concludes this short series but if you'd like to read more Faceache strips Irmantas showed all the Christmas episodes over on his excellent blog Kazoop. The first part can be found here:

http://kazoop.blogspot.co.nz/2012/12/faceache-christmases-part-one.html

Other parts in this series:

Part 1:

https://whackycomics.blogspot.com/2014/07/faceache-in-jet-part-1-of-3.html

Saturday, August 2, 2014

Faceache in Jet - Part 2 of 3

Episode 8

It's time for the second installment of all of Faceache's strips in Jet, as illustrated by Ken Reid. Here we also meet Dad for the first time, who appeared in the thirteenth episode - a coincidence, do you think?

Come back soon for the third and final part, which includes the remainder of Faceache's weekly Jet appearances and his appearance in the one-off Jet annual from 1973.


Episode 9

Episode 10

Episode 11

Episode 12

Episode 13

Episode 14

Episode 15

Other Parts In This Series:

Part 1:
https://whackycomics.blogspot.com/2014/07/faceache-in-jet-part-1-of-3.html

Thursday, July 31, 2014

Faceache in Jet - Part 1 of 3


Jet, launched on 1st May 1971 (the cover date for issue one, it was most likely released a week earlier), is a short-lived comic best remembered, when remembered at all, for the introduction of Ricky Rubberneck, or Faceache, as he is best known. Faceache first appeared on page 29 of issue one of the "great new picture-story paper for boys". Illustrated by the great Ken Reid, Faceache would survive Jet's amalgamation into Buster and continue on until 1988, illustrated for the last few years by Frank McDiarmid after Reid passed away in 1987. 

Jet lasted just twenty-two issues and I will be showing all of Faceache's appearances in the comic, broken down into three parts so that each post doesn't become too lengthy. Here are the first seven episodes, and as always click on the images to view them in full size.


Episode 1
Episode 2

Episode 3

Episode 4

Episode 5

Episode 6

Episode 7

Other Parts In This Series:

Part 2:
https://whackycomics.blogspot.com/2014/08/faceache-in-jet-part-2-of-3.html

Tuesday, December 17, 2013

Jet Annual 1973


There was no Christmas issue of Jet because the comic folded before it was able to reach the December of 1971 so the only Jet comic a child was likely to receive on Christmas morning was the one and only Jet annual, would have found its way in stockings and under trees on the Christmas day of 1972 (the annual was dated 1973).

I won't be showing any adventure strips from the annual due to their length but I will show you the two-page Faceache strip illustrated by Ken Reid.



I'll also show the four-page Kids Of Stalag 41 strip. In the weekly this strip was normally illustrated by Tony Goffe (except in issue 1) but he isn't the artist here I don't think, but is instead the work of a "ghost artist" trying to imitate his style (even though Tony himself was told to imitate the style of Leo Baxendale).





I'd recommend trying to pick up a copy of this annual if you can. Although it's not the easiest annual to find there are some good strips in there, one or two with festive themes. A good buy if you can come across it at a good price.

Thursday, August 8, 2013

Ken Reid's Last

Today I bring you a sad strip, not because it has a sad storyline but because it was the last published work of the great Ken Reid. The strip is Faceache, and it appeared originally in Jet but survived for many years in Buster. This episode appeared in the issue dated 14th March 1987, a little over a month after his death, but he did (of course) work ahead. Anyway, I shan't keep you waiting a moment longer, so here is his last page!



There is, however, one more Faceache strip by Ken Reid, but he passed away before completing it. His passing was a huge blow to the world of British comics, and there was never anybody else like him before, and it's unlikely there ever will again.

Saturday, July 27, 2013

Blub Meets Faceache

My apologies for being a bit quiet lately, I've been doing a lot of writing and drawing this week (amongst other things), but more about that soon. Today though, I bring you a treat, as here we have a crossover between Faceache and Blub The Sub, as illustrated by the one and only Ken Reid. Both of these characters appeared in Buster with Faceache drawn by Reid (and occasionally Frank McDiarmid) and Blub by Mark Bennington. As always, click on the image to enlarge, and then again to view in full size!



Blub was always upset because he was never first in anything. He was the fifth substitute in the school's football team and would often try to get the other four subs in hospital or out of the way, just so he could play a game. It wasn't just football he wasn't first in though, as this strip proves.



This Faceache strip can be found in Buster dated 13th December 1986, and here's the cover, sporting an illustration by Tom Paterson (what a line-up of artists Buster had, eh!).



Sunday, May 12, 2013

A Three Part Faceache!


It wasn't often that Ken Reid's Faceache lasted any longer than a page a week, but this changed for a few weeks in 1980 when a special adventure lasted not one, not two, but three weeks! The artwork is incredible; it is simple but so detailed (that makes sense in my head)! Enjoy...




Saturday, July 7, 2012

Buster Holiday Special 1997

Now, I've noticed that my previous few posts have been focused mainly on the 70's, and I know that you like this blog because I cover lots of different era's. So this time it's about the 1997 Buster Holiday Special, which we have seen very briefly before on this site here. Since this was published towards the end of Buster's life, the entire comic was reprints from previous issues - even the cover! But first of all I thought I'd give you a bit of a history lesson about the Buster Holiday Specials - The first one came out in 1969, six years after D.C Thomson released their first Beano and Dandy Summer Special. The final one came out in 1998, and the first (and only) Winter Special was published at the end of that year. All Buster Special's that came out for summer were called Holiday Special's, not Summer Special's.

As if to prove that this is a full reprint comic, here's a Faceache strip by the ledgendary Ken Reid, who had died just over ten years earlier than this publication was released!
Despite this been a Holiday Special, very few strips had anything to do with the summer holiday's. However, this Blub the Sub strip  showed that our pathetic pal really didn't get along with animals, especially this donkey at the seaside! Illustrated by Meryvn Johnson.

Of course, the main character would have to have a seasonal strip, and that's exactly what Buster gets on this two page centre spread!
A nice little summer feature was this Summer Smiles jokes page by Paddywack artist Jack Clayton.
The final summer strip appears on the back cover in full colour, probably to make readers think theres lots of stories inside based at the beach. Well, that is what summer is all about isn't it?! The character in question is Chalky, by his final artist Gordon Hill.
Sadly there weren't "52 Pages Full Of Summer Fun" as promised on the cover, but a great comic none-the-less!