Showing posts with label body builders. Show all posts
Showing posts with label body builders. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 12, 2019

ELVIS WITH MUSCLES!!! by Dave Goode

ELVIS WITH MUSCLES!!!  by Dave Goode
Kirk Morris has been one of my favorite sinew & sandal stars from the time I discovered the genre as a preteen back in the 60s. Years later it hit me that he bore a slight resemblance to Elvis Presley. I can imagine a movie producer seeing his screen test and saying " He looks like Elvis with muscles. The girls will love him. "  Not an American import from Muscle Beach like a lot of the other stars from these flicks. He was a home grown talent. Born Adriano Bellini he was the winner of the Mr. Italia competition in 1961. And was discovered while working as a gondolier. Standing 6' 1" Morris was one of those peplum movie heroes who might have made a good Tarzan. Physique wise at least. Muscular. But not overly bulky.

His first movie TRIUMPH OF MACISTE (1961) a.k.a TRIUMPH OF THE SON OF HERCULES was one of my favorites. It's the old hero saves kingdom and girl friend from evil queen story. What makes it stand out are two feats of strength scenes. In one Morris arm wrestles 5 men at once. And wins. In the other he does the "Hercules Hold" resisting the pull of two horse drawn chariots. This was one of the better versions of this particular feat of strength.


Another favorite from 1961 was HERCULES VS. MACISTE IN THE VALE OF WOE. Morris once again plays Maciste. And Frank Gordon portrays Hercules. The story has two time traveling 2oth century wrestling promoters in ancient Greece trying to set up a match between the two strength heroes.

Morris portrays Maciste again in THE WITCH'S CURSE (1962). This was more or less a remake of MACISTE IN HELL (1925) that starred the original screen Maciste , Bartolomeo Pagano. This flick has the seemingly immortal strongman saving a 17th century Scottish village from a witch's curse by entering through the gates of Hell and battling the forces of evil.




One of Morris' best known movies is HERCULES, SAMSON, & ULYSSES (1963). In this one, which is a favorite of fans of the genre, Morris portrays Hercules. It's famous for the fight between Hercules and Samson. The biblical strongman is played here by Richard Lloyd.













After the peplum movie cycle came to an end Morris would star in a number of other adventure flicks. But he would be better known as the star of a series fumettis.

This week's blog features a new Golden Adonis comic by Dave Goode & Vance Capley inspired by the gladiator movies of the 1960s.




Dave and Vance make comics and you can get these comics here:


Tuesday, October 1, 2019

THE STRONGEST MAN IN THE WORLD? REALLY? by Dave Goode


  THE STRONGEST MAN IN THE WORLD? REALLY? by Dave Goode
My 2nd favorite giant ape movie , after the original King Kong of course, is MIGHTY JOE YOUNG (1948). A fun flick to be sure. But my favorite scene is when the giant gorilla, as part of a nightclub act, has a tug-of-war with ten professional strongmen/wrestlers. The strongmen, all dressed in leopard skins and Roman sandals,  perform feats of strength before they compete with the gorilla, who appears to be twice the size of an average gorilla. But there is no mention of Joe's abnormal size. Still a normal 5' 8", 450 lb. gorilla is about as strong as 12 men.
  In order the strongmen were Sammy Stein who breaks a chain. "Killer" Karl Davis bends a crowbar. Rasputin, the Mad Russian breaks a pair of manacles. "Bomber" Kulky lifts a heavy barbell with one hand. Sam Menacker tears a telephone book in half. Mac Batchelor bends a railroad spike. "Wee" Willie Davis bends a steel rod. Man Mountain Dean bends a horseshoe. The Swedish Angel breaks a 4x4 over his head. And the former heavyweight boxing champion of the world Primo Carnera snaps metal bands on his arms by flexing his biceps. Sadly no one breaks a chain through chest expansion.



All of these feats of strength had been performed in carnivals and circuses by professional strongmen who billed themselves as the "Strongest Man In The World". When Sam Menacker tears the phone book in half it reminds me of an episode of  The Adventures of Superman. In The Girl Who Hired Superman (Season 4 Episode 7) Superman is performing at a dinner party for charity. At one point he tears a phone book in half. One of the guests is unimpressed remarking that he has seen other strongmen perform the same trick. Superman then takes the two halves , puts them together and tears them in half. The guest then says he has never seen anyone do this before because it's impossible. Another guest tells him the Man of Steel just did it. But he says he doesn't care. It's still impossible. Which brings up something I've pondered for years. How do professional strongmen in a comic book universe bill themselves as the Strongest Man In The World? Especially when the world they live in might have someone who can literally "change the course of mighty rivers" among the populace. Or even someone who just has the proportionate strength of a spider?

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Tuesday, April 16, 2019

MARK...THE MAGNIFICENT! by Dave Goode




No other actor other than Steve Reeves himself is probably more identified with the sinew & sandal movie genre than Mark Forest. Born Lou Degni in Brooklyn , New York in 1933 he began bodybuilding as a teenager and competed in and won a number of contests. The story goes that a Hollywood scout saw his photo on the cover of a physical culture magazine and invited him to Hollywood to audition for the role of " Tarzan ". He didn't get the role. But he got a job working in Mae West's night club act. He would also work for a time in the night club act of ecdysiast Lilli " The Cat Girl " Christine. At the peak of the peplum movie cycle Forest would pack up his muscle shirts and head to Europe and become a star. Mostly playing Maciste , the character originally played by strongman Bartolomeo Pagano. Pagano would portray the character in over a dozen movies beginning in 1914 in the silent film epic CABIRIA. He would even legally have his name changed to Maciste. Mark Forest would be the only other actor as identified with the character.The Forest peplum flicks are some of the most entertaining from the genre. But there are four that I recommend above all the others.

 
 
GOLIATH AND THE DRAGON ( 1960 ) was Forest's first muscleman movie. And a pretty cool fantasy film. What's interesting about this one is that it was originally a " Hercules " movie. In most of his movies he portrayed Maciste and they were re-dubbed and re-titled so that he was playing more familiar characters ( to American audiences ) like Hercules and Samson. Those familiar with mythology realize that the character Forest is playing here is Hercules because the plot has the character performing a several of the 12 Labors of Hercules. And the movie's villain , portrayed by Broderick Crawford , is King Eurysteseus from the Hercules legend.

 
In SON OF SAMSON ( 1960 ) Forest plays Maciste for the first time and co-stars with the sexy Chelo Alonso , the Queen of the Sinew & Sandal genre. The character is given an origin as being the " Son of Samson ". And considering what a womanizer the biblical strongman was it's not hard to imagine that Samson had a child or two. Even if the Bible never mentions any offspring. Over the years though some historians have speculated that Phillistine women had their way with Samson after he had been blinded and made a prisoner. Hoping to have his strength passed on to their children. This theory speculates that the Phillistine giant Goliath may have been Samson's grandson.

 
MOLE MEN AGAINST THE SON OF HERCULES ( 1961 ) has Forest co - starring with beautiful Moira Orfei who plays the evil queen of an underground nation. Also in this film is bodybuilding champion Paul Wynter as Bangor , Maciste's sidekick.It's interesting to compare Forest's physique to that of a Mr. Universe winner. Forest also does battle with an ape -suit actor. This is a fun flick. But any flick instantly becomes better with the inclusion of an ape - suit.
 

 
 
And of course there is THE TERROR OF ROME AGAINST THE SON OF HERCULES ( 1964 ). In this one Forest fights against Christian persecution. But only after he falls in love with a Christian woman. Beautiful Marilu Tolo is the patrician woman who loves the muscular hero. And who gives up her life for him even after he chooses the Christian heroine over her. There's plenty of gladiatorial combat in this one. Including Forest fighting another ape - suit actor. This gorilla suit is one of the cheesiest ever seen onscreen. It barely resembles a gorilla. Which has led some fan-boys to imagine it was actually a " mangani " from the Edgar Rice Burroughs' Tarzan books. An interesting theory.


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Tuesday, December 11, 2018

Masks, Muscles, and Myth by Dave Goode

Just the other day I was marveling on the overall coolness of posters from the sinew & sandal and masked wrestler movie genres. Illustrations from either would make great comic book covers. Flicks from both genres can rightfully be considered superhero movies. And then I got to thinking once again why there was never a team - up between say el Santo and Maciste. After all if you can have a movie starring el Zorro and el Maciste you can have one between Maciste and Santo or one of the " Man in the Silver Mask's " ancestors. What I really wonder about is why Mexico never had many entries in the peplum film genre.

The most notable exception was THE RAPE OF THE SABINES ( 1962 ). The movie is a retelling of the story of the Sabine women and stars Wulf Ruvinskis as Romulos , the same character that Steve Reeves portrayed in the sinew & sandal flick DUEL OF THE TITANS ( 1961 ). Ruvinskis , the wrestler turned actor , is probably better known to some of you as the star of the Neutron movie series where he played the black - masked crime-fighter.

I was thinking about a mash - up movie featuring Mil Mascaras. Heck! Mascaras had the physique to star in a Mexican - made Hercules movie himself. But here he would have played himself. With say Alan Steel as the immortal Maciste. The plot would involve Maciste in the 20th century taking a job as a pro wrestler , like Arnold did in HERCULES IN NEW YORK ( 1970 ). In between bouts the two musclemen would have several comic book adventures. To give you some idea how that might look my buddy Vance Capley has provided a faux comic book cover featuring the Man of a Dozen Masks, Mr. Incognito and Brad King the Golden Adonis.

http://www.vancecapleyart.com/

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Tuesday, November 6, 2018

THE SPAWN OF ATLAS






If you're a comic book reader of a certain age then the name Charles Atlas is as familiar to you as Superman or Batman. Looking very tarzanic in his trademark leopard-skin Atlas was the  master of dynamic tension , the secret training regimen that gave the former 97 lb. weakling the physique of an Olympian demi-god. There are many fans of heroic pulp who believe that Doc Savage, the Man of Bronze used a similar training program. And his comic book ad " The Insult That Made A Man Out Of Mac! " was as well known to comic book fans as that of any superhero. It was sheer brilliance to advertise his exercise program in comics whose readers were fantasizing about being physical supermen. It only made sense then that there were three comic book heroes during the 1950s that seemed to be inspired by the " World's Most Perfectly Developed Man "



First up was MR. UNIVERSE (July 1951) from Media Publications. This title ran
for five issues and featured the adventures of athlete Tommy Turner who wins the Mr.Universe title and then becomes a pro wrestling star. The series was written by Harry Kanter and illustrated by the tag-team of Ross Andru (pencils) and Mike Esposito (inks).












There was a movie titled MR. UNIVERSE also from 1951 that starred Vince Edwards, Jack Carter, Janis Paige, Bert Lahr, and Maxie Rosenbloom. Supposedly the film and the comic book have nothing to do with each other. But it's an amazing coincidence that in both the comic book and movie the wrestler's manager is named Jeff Clayton. By the way the winner of the 1951 Mr.Universe competition was Reg Park who would go on to star as Hercules in the movies.








Then there was Magazine Enterprises' STRONG MAN by Bob Powell.The 1st
issue was cover dated March-April 1955 and ran for 4 issues. Interestingly Powell's father was the manager of several pro wrestlers. Strong Man , who was never given any other name , was exactly that. A professional strongman complete with a leopard-skin and Roman sandals who was also a bodybuilding instructor who fought crime in his spare time. The coolest thing about this feature was that the Charles Atlas-like hero performed feats of strength that were based on actual feats performed by professional strongmen.There were also physical fitness and strength building features where Strong Man taught the readers to build themselves up.






And then there was MR. MUSCLES from Charlton Comics. There were only two issues of this title. The first issue appeared in March of 1956 and the second in August. Ben Carson uses bodybuilding to overcome polio. He then becomes a physical culture instructor and pro wrestler who again fights crime in his spare time. He has two sidekicks , Kid Muscles and Miss Muscles. This feature was created by Jerry Siegel , the co-creator of Superman. The first issue was illustrated by Bill Fraccio and had a pretty neat cover illustrated by a young Dick Giordano. Later issues were illustrated by Charles Nicholas ( pencils ) and Vince Alascia ( inks ). The stories weren't great. They weren't too awful either. But the art really took away from them.




Aside from these three comic book characters the Charles Atlas comic strip ad was parodied dozens of times. And The Golden Adonis comic strip that sometimes appears in this blog spot was inspired in part by Charles Atlas.

Originally presented in Judo Comics
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ITEM: JUST IN TIME FOR HALLOWEEN!! IT'S MONSTER MAGAZINE! GRAB OUR FIRST ISSUE AND OUR 2ND ISSUE, CREATURE CREATURE FEATURE WITH BUTCH PATRICK, DR. PAUL BEARER, AND RICOU BROWNING! Remember the Creature this Halloween along with Spider Island Slim Carody, Joseph I. Cosby, Dave Goode, David Walker, Johann Schmidt, Will Keppel, and Vance Capley. With a "fang"tastic Creature cover by artist Ricky Blalock! You can read more here:

Tuesday, January 2, 2018

THE NEVER ENDING DEBATE by Dave Goode

If you put a group of Tarzan fans together in a room inevitably a debate will break out about the Lord of the Jungle's physique and how Tarzan should be built. The reason there is a debate is because Edgar Rice Burroughs never wrote how much Tarzan weighed. He said that he was slightly over six feet tall. But never gave his literary hero an approximate weight. One group declares that since Tarzan is strong enough to wrestle a gorilla he should look strong enough to wrestle a gorilla. To many that means being built like a Mr. Olympia winner. The members of the other group imagine Tarzan being built like a decathlete. I'm a member of the latter group.


Tarzan of the Apes was first published in 1912.That was the year legendary Native-American athlete Jim Thorpe earned the unofficial title of the " World's Greatest Athlete " for himself and generations of Olympic decathlon champions to follow. He placed first in four of the decathlon's ten events. And never placed lower than third in any of the other events. He also won the pentathlon. In that competition he won four of the five events while placing third in the javelin.My point being Burroughs described Tarzan as being the " world's greatest athlete ". Thorpe stood 6' 1" and weighed 200 pounds depending on what he ate for breakfast.


You want someone who was a bit larger? How about heavyweight champion Jack Johnson? In 1912 Johnson was in the fourth year of his reign as world champion. Johnson is listed in his prime as standing 6' 2" and weighing 215 pounds.








And then there was Eugene Sandow a.k.a The Great Sandow. A professional
strongman who was even better known for his physique. Sandow looked as if he had been carved out of marble. If the 5' 9" 190 pound strongman had been taller he might have been a match for Tarzan. Charles Atlas could have fit the bill as well. But like Sandow the " World's Most Perfectly Developed Man " at 5' 10" might have been a bit too short to portray Burroughs' jungle hero. I guess the point I'm trying to make is that in 1912 you were not going to find someone built like a Mr. Olympia. So why would you expect Burroughs to create a character who looked like one.

I'm not saying Tarzan shouldn't be muscular. He should be. I just don't think he should be hugely muscled. Look at Mike Henry. I mean seriously look at him. Considered to be one of the best built actors to play Tarzan he doesn't have 18" arms outside of the dreams of a size queen or a studio publicist. But the former NFL linebacker is very muscular. He reminds one of the illustrations of Tarzan comic strip artist Burne Hogarth.









I think Mr.America, Mr.World, and Mr.Universe winner, Steve Reeves, could have been great posing as Tarzan for paperback photo covers. He did portray Kimbar , a Tarzan-like hero in a television pilot. Standing 6' 1 1/2" tall and weighing 215 pounds he was known for his symmetrical physique. Like Sandow , Reeves sought to obtain the " Grecian ideal " and not size for size sake. Burroughs describes Tarzan as being more Apollo than Hercules. That's a description that fits Reeves perfectly. Which is kind of funny when you consider that Steve Reeves is most famous for portraying the demigod Hercules on the big screen.


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