I know that this might sound odd but I spent the better part of an hour last night reading a calendar. The 1975 Mighty Marvel Calendar to be exact. Well, it was also the 2025 calendar, facsimile mind you, in which the dates for last year just happened to coincide with the dates for 1975. Now that I think about it, the calendar was maybe 99 and ⅜ facsimile as there was no such thing as Martin Luther King Birthday yet and I highly doubt that the original edition of this calendar listed things like Diwali or Juneteenth.
I had seen images of this fabled calendar for years, no decades. Along with an annual posting on various comic book groups on social media (typically with each coming new year), I remember seeing ads for this in the pages of Marvel back issues from 1974 and wishing I could have had one. December of 2024, I finally got my wish.
Apparently, holding onto calendars to reuse later on down the road is a thing. A local radio morning show I listen to has talked for years about this as they have a colleague who will use an old calendar for a current year. This guy notes 'that the dates lineup.' He's got about a dozen calendars that he recycles and seems to haven't bought a new one since the mid-90s. One of the DJs thinks its rather brilliant. The other says that this guy is 'sticking it to big calendar.' I'm hoping the trend continues for at least one more year.
I received the 2026 calendar, which reprints the 1976 edition in all it's patriotic glory. Plus a day, actually. 2026 is a leap year while our nation's bicentennial was not. (The '76 calendar has an overall patriotic theme.) Anyways, I really hope this trend of reprinting all of the Mighty Marvel Calendars continues because the next one would be a reprint of 1977 and that's the year I was born! Selfishly, I kinda hope DC jumps on the bandwagon, because I really want a copy of their 1977 edition, which was Super-Heroes' vs Villains themed.
So why did I spend a night that I could have been reading comic books reading a calendar that is essentially 50 years old? 51, now as of yesterday. It's because of all the snarky little things that are peppered throughout the whole thing. Along with important moments in Marvel Comics history like when the first issue of Amazing Spider-Man debuted, there's a celebration of writers and artists from the Marvel bullpen and their birthdays as well as 'humorous' reminders of what you might see written on a superhero or villain's day planner. All done in the Mighty Marvel Manner; which means they're self-deprecating and full of dad jokes. And I loved all of it.
There's also some fantastic artwork. John Buscema, Barry Windsor Smith, and John Romita, Sr contribute some masterpieces. Too bad that not all of the months give attribute to the artist. Man, does Barry Smith have a killer signature!
I'm torn as to whether dismantle this in order to decorate my office or if I should hold onto this until 2031, the next year that this calendar can be reused accordingly.
Worth Consuming!
Rating: 10 out of 10 stars.

.jpeg)




