Comic Browser:

#39
#40
#41
#42
#43
#44
#45
#46
#47
#48
#49
#50
#51
#52
#53
#54
#55
#56
#57
#58
#59
#60
#61
#62
Selector

Tomb of Dracula #44: Review

May 1976
Marv Wolfman, Gene Colan

Story Name:

His Name is Doctor Strange

Review & Comments

Rating:
4 stars

Tomb of Dracula #44 Review by (July 27, 2021)

Review: A nice match-up, the Sorcerer Supreme versus the Vampire Supreme and only one can win. Their duel is surprisingly short: Strange is quickly overcome and set to be vampirized and we are referred to Dr. Strange’s comic for the conclusion of the epic. Seems odd, Strange should have been more formidable but, after creeping Dracula with an impressionistic recounting of his origin, he goes down rather easily. We all have bad days, at least Strange’s bad day isn’t in his own book. And we get the welcome return of Hannibal King, more on whom next issue. Oh yeah, the cover was more colorful than usual for a neat effect.

Comments: Dracula’s origin was recounted in DRACULA LIVES #2. This is the second appearance of Hannibal King, introduced in issue #25; he becomes a regular character in this series for a while. Aurora mentions “Charlie,” a popular—and heavily advertised—perfume of the era. The letters page includes one by T.C. Pouncey, future contributor to Geeks of Doom.





 

Synopsis / Summary / Plot

Tomb of Dracula #44 Synopsis by Peter Silvestro

Doctor Strange is concerned that he cannot find his servant Wong; he conjures up a vision of Wong and he appears dead. Enlarging the image shows two fang marks on the man’s neck; Strange swears vengeance against the vampire who killed him. Using the Eye of Agamotto to put the dying Wong into a stasis to hold off his dying, Strange puts himself into Wong’s mind, seeing his memories and discovers that Wong interrupted Dracula feasting and was killed by the Lord of the Undead. Strange sets out to find him….

Harold H. Harold arrives at his publishers office to discover that brainless secretary Aurora Rabinowitz has sold them her story of a romance with Dracula, which frustrates him. Aurora refusing his requests for a date also upsets him….

Dracula returns to the Boston lair of Dr. Sun, unaware he is being watched by the still unnamed Deacon Frost. There he gloats over his defeat of Sun (issue #42) but is yet unsatisfied….

Dr. Strange uses the Eye of Agamotto to trace Dracula’s life essence to Sun’s mansion where the vampire lies in his coffin; Strange crashes through the walls and attacks Dracula, encircling him with the Rings of Raggador and the Crimson Bands of Cyttorak together—but Dracula escapes by turning into mist. Strange wants Dracula alive so he can probe his secrets but the vampire fights back more fiercely. Strange attacks through Dracula’s fears; Dracula’s memory goes back to his lifetime as a warrior, armed and mounted on a steed. His enemy Turac takes on Dr. Strange’s form to assault and overcome him; Turac takes Dracula to the old witch Lianda, who bites him and turns him into a vampire—but Dracula realizes it is but a nightmare. Strange demands to know from Dracula how to resurrect Wong; Dracula is astounded that anyone would care that much about the life of a servant. Dracula pushes his way through Strange’s protective magicks and hypnotizes the sorcerer, then bites him on the neck and drinks his blood, leaving him to become a vampire himself in three days’ time….

Blade, seeking the vampire who killed his mother, traces Deacon Frost to a darkened apartment where he finds a vampire but it isn’t his quarry, it is vampire private detective Hannibal King….

Story continues in DOCTOR STRANGE (1974 series) #14.



Gene Colan
Tom Palmer
Tom Palmer
Gene Colan (Cover Penciler)
Tom Palmer (Cover Inker)
Tom Palmer (Cover Colorist)
Letterer: John Costanza.

Characters

Listed in Alphabetical Order.

Blade
Blade

(Eric Brooks)
Doctor Strange
Doctor Strange

(Stephen Strange)

Plus: Aurora Rabinowitz, Deacon Frost.

> Tomb of Dracula: Book info and issue index

Share This Page


Elektra