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Nerding Day: GORGO!

We need to talk about Gorgo, the troubled teenage Godzilla. You might have heard of the 1961 British Gorgo film if you're a true connoisseur of the arts, but did you know there was also a 23 issue Gorgo spinoff comic book? I was somehow miraculously able to pull this from a bargain bin at a used bookstore for only two dollars. Sure, it's a little bit damaged by both fire and water, but neither of those things can kill Gorgo, sucker!

I don't understand why more people aren't battling me for old, weird comics like this one. Gorgo #15 was released in 1961. It's basically a historical document at this point, but unlike the Declaration of Independence, it has rad lizards in it.

The plot of the original Gorgo movie is that Gorgo is discovered by a group of treasure hunters and put on display in London. Unfortunately for those Bozo's, Gorgo is a baby, and his much bigger mother shows up to whoop ass. I'm a big fan of the comedic beat where a big monster shows up, and then an even bigger monster appears and eats the first monster, thus breaking the spooky tension. It makes you laugh about how we are small and the universe is an endless expanse of escalating terror lol.

The ongoing question of the Gorgo comics is, what if Godzilla were a li'l scamp? Gorgo is a nepo baby who is constantly getting himself into trouble and calling on his mother to bail him out. It's adorable now, but in a few years, it'll be sad.

Our story begins with a zoologist named Carl, who's upset that his lame family is preventing him from going deep into the African jungle to search for dinosaurs. Luckily, this man's wife is completely insane, and she thinks a nice little jaunt into territory no man has ever traversed will be pretty chill. Her husband has some concerns about bringing their snack-sized human child into the jungle, but his wife is like, "What, babies love the jungle. There's so many new things for them to shove in their mouths as quickly as possible!"

That baby's face is the scariest thing in this comic. It looks like the artist has never seen a baby before, and he got a note from the publisher that said, "Just do girl head but tiny."

Also, that Benjamin Button ass baby is actually a toddler, which is a baby that can sprint away from you as fast as possible whenever they see something interesting, somehow an even worse age of human to take to the jungle.

So this toddler jungle jaunt works out perfectly for them, right? No, exactly eleven panels later, Alice is super duper dead, and baby Gloria is missing. Carl did find his dinosaurs, though, and honestly, who could have known taking a baby deep into an unexplored jungle full of dinosaurs was a bad idea?

Now is the part in the article where I have to mention there's a bunch of super bummer magical black people stuff in this comic. They strongly imply all black people in Africa have telepathy, and that's how they've avoided the dinosaurs that also live there. A group of native Africans knock Carl out, and it's implied they kill his wife and take his daughter, but it all happens off-panel. To be fair, they might have been trying to protect Carl's daughter from the madman who brought her to The Timelost Jungle of Daughter Eating.

At this point in the story, you're hankering for some Gorgo. I thought this comic was called Gorgo, not Carl The Criminally Negligent Father Who Abandoned His Baby To The Dinosaurs. That would be the worst hero ever. Gorgo doesn't enter the story until years later when he smells the other dinosaurs in Africa and decides to be a lil scamp and sprint away from his mother as fast as he can, like a normal kid.

We rejoin Carl, who's now an aged, angry college professor, reaming out one of his students for being spoiled and bad at zoology. I don't know how someone can be so terrible at zoology. Did the guy mistake an elephant for an aardvark or something? We will never know his crime, but for whatever reason, Jay Conners is getting banished from zoology for life. He sucks at Bird and totally failed Snakes. He's an embarrassment to the craft.

Carl then heads over to the explorers club in town to meet a famous adventurer who recently returned from Africa. The adventurer tells Carl that consistent rumors have come from the jungle about a "white goddess" who lives there because in 1961, white babies left in the jungle only had two career options-- King or Goddess. Suddenly, Carl is like, "Oh dip, should I not have abandoned my baby in the jungle? Am I a bad parent?”

He returns to the jungle to double check the whole baby thing. When he arrives in Africa, he's shocked to find none other than Jay Conners, the world's worst zoologist, getting ready to hunt some animals for sport. Jay decides he will prove to Carl he's not spoiled by killing a goddamn dinosaur. "I'm so good at zoology. Look at all these dead animals!" Jay Conners will triumphantly declare.

Jay Conners, the hero of this story, heads into the jungle alone and runs into Gorgo, also the hero of this story. Fortunately, he manages to restrain himself from ending the Gorgo comic at issue 15 immediately. Gorgo will go on to live for a whole eight issues after he meets with Jay Conners.

Carl has decided that if he finds a blond white woman in the jungle, he will know it's his daughter if she has the gold necklace her mother gave her. I feel like the presence of a teenage white girl in the middle of this jungle is a pretty strong indicator of paternity. No other father was irresponsible enough to lose a child in the jungle, Carl, but call Maury Povich if you really must, my guy.

The natives of the jungle once again attack Carl, and instead of giving him a bonk on the head, they drag him to their white goddess. Surprise, she has the necklace, Carl, you are the father! Thankfully, Gloria grew out of her Benjamin Button phase into a beautiful teen girl who, for some strange reason, does not hate her father.

Gloria is a stronger woman than me. I was fully expecting her to say, "Yep, that's my dad. GET HIM! Arrest him for child endangerment!" Luckily, white men couldn't make mistakes in 1961, so Gloria is just happy to see her dad, happy to be included in this comic at all, frankly. Of course, right as she is forgiving her father, their reunion is rudely interrupted by a Tyrannosaurus rex.

Don't worry, though; because right behind the T-rex is none other than the world's worst zoologist, Jay Conners, and he's got a shotgun. Unfortunately, a shotgun is pretty much useless against a dinosaur. It turns out Jay is as bad at hunting as he is at zoology. Carl was right about Jay all along. He's a real chump.

Luckily, Jay brought an awkward friend to this dinosaur party, and that friend is none other than Gorgo! Gorgo tracked the smell of other dinosaurs all the way from the ocean. He's so excited to make new friends that his energy is too intense. Gorgo is like the weird homeschooled kid you meet at the playground, and none of the other dinosaurs want to try his healthy snacks or learn about Jesus's less forgiving half-brother, Lester. Gorgo's lack of chill causes a multi-dinosaur bar fight.

Everyone wants a piece of Gorgo. The fucking weirdo has come running out of the ocean screaming about how thick the air is with new friend musk and the entire jungle hates it. This poor basement baby is getting his ass handed to him, but when Gorgo's in trouble, we all know his helicopter mom won't be far behind. And sure enough, she rescues her son from this unsuccessful playdate and distracts everyone long enough for the humans (and white goddess) to escape.

Thanks to Gorgo's mother's questionable parenting style, everyone makes it out of the jungle and onto a ship home. Since this comic book could only end one possible way, Jay Conners proposes to Gloria. A seventeen-year-old girl who was raised in the woods will make the perfect bride! It's a happy ending for all, and the moral is that consequences are for losers. Have a big lizard eat all of your problems; it's radical.

What more could you ask for in a comic book? I can't get enough Gorgo. I love my incompetent lizard son.

This article was brought to you by our fine sponsor and Hot Supreme: Vooster who, when threatened, calls in a much bigger Vooster. 

You can read this article and every other one on the much better in every way 1900HOTDOG.COM.

Comments

Something something Dorkin

Scribbler Johnny

Ah. Charlton was the publisher behind Blue Beetle and Atom that was bought by DC. My mistake.

Dave Dalrymple

The artwork is by Steve Ditko, just a year before he created Spider-Man. Imagine if he had stayed with Charlton and we hot Jack Kirby's version.

Bill Culbertson

Look, it's obvious- they need to learn to fight by themselves so that they can still win if/when their ultimate weapon is inaccessible. SPOILER: They never learned to fight by themselves, they never won without the ultimate weapon, and that weapon was always available freely until [insert series here] was cancelled.

The Parallel Viewmaster

Note that if the home team monster is the same size as baby Gorgo, then the third act resolution is *ALWAYS* going to be to summon mommy Gorgo. This comic laid the groundwork for shows like Thundercats and Voltron, where due to a combination of lead-based paint and lack of carbon monoxide detectors in the Castle of Lions, the characters always seem forget that they have access to a weapon that can end any fight instantly until near-death trauma eventually forces their oxygen-starved brain to recall that they once mastered a technique more effective than "charge enemy blindly... get ass kicked."

Troy Wood

You can read all 26 issues of the Gorgo comic here: https://comicbookplus.com/?cid=764 They eventually end up separating him from his helicopter mom by way of a time travel plot that sends him (and a scientist buddy) hurtling back to prehistoric times... because there are only so many times you can do the lost island of dinosaurs plot to explain why Gorgo and/or his mom have to beat the crap out of another monster conveniently the same size as them.

Troy Wood

Needs an extra panel where Gorgo mum appears out of the water, says "NOPE," and eats him. Everyone loves a happy ending.

Matt Edwards

That would crossover really well with my Airwolf theory. Airwolf could shoot down some MiGs while Gorgo and mum mop up the ground troops. Tell me that wouldn't improve something like the Sex and the City movie.

Matt Edwards

Gorgo was the VHS you borrowed from the library as a kid when you needed to emotionally recover from Godzilla's death. But let's be honest, you kept going back to Godzilla. Somehow, your brain craved his dramatic abuse more than Gorgo's bland love. And this is why you have problems maintaining healthy relationships as an adult.

Devin Eagles

First: this could and should also be a plot for a original series Star Trek episode. Second: this basically WAS the plot of the old Godzilla cartoon, the one with Godzooky. Third: I don’t know who’d wreck more shit if I called that number—Gorgomom or vintage 90’s Sting. STINGER SPLASH!!

Chris “Ace” Hendrix

That creep "teaching" her about marriage is arguably a greater crime than leaving her in the jungle.

Skebotron

yes well i once almost crossed a lot of my own red lines at a bonomo turkish taffy function and i really dont think they should be advertisin about that in kids magazines

sissyneck

What is it with classic pulp and the specific combination of wildly irresponsible parenting and jungle expeditions?

Swift Justice

I was wondering where that name was familiar from.

Swift Justice

This comic book is the reason CPS was formed.

Kevin Hanlon

The other main plot in all the Charlton monster comics was that a Communist general would find out a monster existed, would order troops to kill it, and then the monster would "instinctually" find the exact building where the Communist general was, no matter how far away, and destroy it.

Scott David Hamilton

I've noticed that book stores and antique stores never understand the value of comics. In both directions. You might actually find a vintage 70s horror comic for $1. Or you might find the most overproduced 90s comics for $5 each. For an antique store owner who is used to dealing with boxes of commemorative plates and matchbox cars that people found in Aunt Linda or Uncle Pete's attic, House of Mystery #1 and Alpha Flight #58 look much the same.

Matthew Harris

Charlton and Marvel were not the same company. Ditko was just working for both at the same time (though he did seem to take a break from Charlton during his most creative years for Marvel, 1962-63).

Scott David Hamilton

Was every Gorgo story like this? Just a tale of unrelated shitheads fucking up until Gorgo and his mum show up to wreck stuff and let the shitheads escape? Because I am totally on board with that. It's a monster variation on my theory that any bad film can be improved by changing the ending so Airwolf shows up to shoot down some helicopters.

Matt Edwards

Yes. Ditko pencilled about a third of the Gorgo issues, and most of Charlton's adaptation of fellow British kaiju Konga. He took a pass on the adaption of Reptilicus/Reptisaurus, which is a shame, because I think that series is the most fun of these Charlton monster mashes.

Scott David Hamilton

No question. "Charlton" is what Marvel comics was called in 1961

Dave Dalrymple

That is 100% Steve Ditko art right?

No name

I remember Gorgo from MST3K 'cause I'm that kind of nerd.

Talking Alpaca


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