Kashgar wrote:Speaking of colour in the IPC comics the 'king' of these was surely the revived Knockout which was in fact promoted as 'the all-colour comic'. It was all a bit of a swizz as it turned out though as most of the colour was just a single wash added to almost every page.
And on such thin paper that the colours often meant you could see the strip on the other side of the page showing through, sometimes making reading difficult!
I suspect Knockout was an attempt to do a D C Thomson style comic - just 20 pages of quite solid characters with (usually) no ads and a cheaper price.
Does anyone else think the 70s Knockout is somewhat underrated? Some of the more popular later 70s Whizzer and Chips strips were all from Knockout - Pete's Pockets, Beat Your Neighbour, Fuss Pott, Joker, The Toffs and the Toughs; the comic's 'The Full House' cover feature was an inventive idea, showing what was going on in every room of a house, making for some of IPC's most striking and creative humour comic front covers; The Toffs and the Toughs was prime Reg Parlett, and Sid Burgon was at his best with The Haunted Wood.
I'd like to know who drew the manic Little Devil strip. And who drew the equally hyper Hot Dog and Cool Cat in later issues. Could be the same artist as they have a very similar style.