The Summer 1987 issue of Heavy Metal Magazine was noted as the "10th Anniversary Issue":
(Image from www.heavymetalmagazinefanpage.com/hmlist87.html)
A little corner banner reads: "Inside! Construct Your Own Monster!"
That monster is "PHFMEH, The Reader Eater":
A build-your-own monster in the pages of Heavy Metal Magazine. From almost 40 years ago.
I'm quite tickled with myself for constructing this. For actually doing it. Years ago it occurred to me to photocopy the pages in the magazine on heavy stock, so I could make Phfmeh without cutting up my only copy of this HM issue, and I had them, unused, for a long time. Weeks ago I actually started cutting things up and gluing them together. It was challenging, to cut out all the pieces with the little tabs, and to glue those tabs one or two as a time, to bend the pieces and hold them in place (finally figured out to use removable tape, even though it pulled up some of the print in spots). And my eyesight and dexterity are decades older than they were in my "prime". But I still liked it. And it worked!
A fearsome sight indeed. It's weirdly serpentine centaur kind of creature, with unsettling mammalian nipples above the snakelike belly, reminding me too much of the Maw of Moloch in Metropolis.
The note in the article is credited to Peter X. Kleinman, "Interplanetary Death Squad Supervisor". Mr Kleinman designed the HM logo of course, and was also the mag's Design Director at the time. On the Contents page, it's strangely noted as "Fmeh: The Monster From Outer Space", illustrated by Stephen Hall.
They both deserve a lot of credit for making this exist.
Phfmeh also appears on the back cover:
(Also from www.heavymetalmagazinefanpage.com/hmlist87)
And the design is ingenious, making curves and contours and shapes from flat material. They are printed on heavier stock than the rest of the magazine, thoughtfully. The parts fit together very well, surprising me for an apparently hand-drawn pattern. I enjoyed a few small modifications, making the ears a bit less puppy-dog-like, and using some tabs for more teeth, and making a little hat for the Reader so he can go for a ride, with Phfmeh the Reader Eater, instead of being tormented in the clutches of the interplanetary demon. Yee-haw, little buckaroo, Yee-haw.
I'm enjoying it now even more putting this post together. I'm sure I'm not the first, but oddly I find nothing on the interwebs of someone having done this, putting Phfmeh together and letting the world know. But I'm sure it's happened. To those who have come before me, I salute you.
10 comments:
Dedication in service to the readership, to mutilate a vintage copy of HM !
Ha! but heck no, not cutting up my only copy, I made photocopies and cut those up.
Not to mention Daniel Torres’ “Rocco Vargas”, Ghini’s completely odd “Sillavengo”, another instalment in Angus McKie’s “So Beautiful And So Dangerous” saga, and a random bit of Moebius just to round things off.
True. I had forgotten about the densely wordy coda to McKie's “So Beautiful And So Dangerous”, six years after the movie. This great issue also had "Tex Arcana: The Ballad Of The Witch's Daughter" by John Findley, one of my favorites. And I dug "Sillavengo".
thanks
how cool Fred unfortunately here in Brazil we had few editions of hm from July 1995 to September 1998 have you seen the Brazilian editions of hm
No, I have not seen non-US editions of Heavy Metal Magazine. I did not know there was a Brazilian edition. I would enjoy seeing a picture if possible. I knew about other European versions from Lostboy's heavymetalmagazinefanpage.com, on the Collector's List page, from Sweden, Germany, Finland, etc, but I haven't seen them.
thanks
here on the fred link are the photos of the brazilian editions https://http2.mlstatic.com/D_NQ_NP_2X_12080-MLB20052891517_022014-F.webp https://http2.mlstatic.com/D_NQ_NP_2X_12046-MLB20052891066_022014-F.webp https://http2.mlstatic.com/D_NQ_NP_2X_12084-MLB20052891621_022014-F.webp https://http2.mlstatic.com/D_NQ_NP_2X_12073-MLB20052891632_022014-F.webp https://http2.mlstatic.com/D_NQ_NP_2X_12024-MLB20052891640_022014-F.webp
wow, those are so very cool! Evidence of Heavy Metal Magazine published in Brazil in the early Eastman era! Some covers I recognize, some not, I liked how the "20th Anniversary" edition here, which was the Fall 1977 edition in the USA, changed the Julie Strain character's skirt to "20 Anos". I'm curious about the content and how these were structured and released. Thanks for sharing, if you want to share more info via email, it could be cool to make a post together discussing these magazines, if you're interested.
apologies, the 20th Anniversary edition was from Fall 1997.
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