Archie 80-th Anniversary Jumbo Comics Digest #2
I bought the first issue of this year-long series in 2021 off the newsstand (3-5-21). I wasn’t very impressed with it at the time, but I got three of the other four issues of the set used at Coas Books. (Number 3 wasn’t there.)
This issue starts with a Kennedy Brothers illustrated story featuring multiple versions of Archie. The previous issue opening story featured different Archie concepts. This one is just the different standard versions of Archie.
Unfortunately, most of the rest of the stories are just sort random and not that great. Then we have this story with Little Archie taking a blow to the head and suddenly seeing the future. He foresees Veronica getting hit by a car and manages to save her. Some of these Little Archie stories are a bit dark, but wait for an upcoming story.
We have this Pureheart the powerful superhero story. Archie is a superhero, but still a klutz. There’s also a Hot Dog solo story.
In the older material section, there’s a selection of “Crazy Betty” stories, where she’s trying to snare Archie. Why is he resisting?
Finally, Jughead tries out some candy that makes him fearless, as he takes to the gridiron. I just like these Samm Swartz action panels. Okay, this volume is a bit disappointing.
Archie 80-th Anniversary Jumbo Comics Digest #4
The opening story features the Archies.
Veronica imagines herself as a lounge singer, admittedly a great look.
This startling panel begins another story where Archie takes a blow to the head and starts seeing the future. I wonder if you could do a whole digest full of stories that all have a similar, wacky premise.
The Archies win an “NTV” music award, only to be upstaged by “Kenny East” taking over their acceptance speech. The Archies get him back by playing Sugar, Sugar over his musical number. I like when Archie is being topical, but still being Archie.
A beautiful Dan Parent fashion layout. I’m a sucker for these. I don’t know why.
Autumn Daze is a long, multi-part story with a statue of Riverdale’s first mayor watching the kids prepare for fall. He enjoys the spectacle.
There’s an Archie 3000 trade in the Archie store that I’ve thought about getting, but the stories I’ve seen haven’t really sold it to me. It does take until the Year 3000 for the mullet to make a comeback.
The girls meet a creature like the Loch Ness Monster. Of course, he falls for them.
Reggie dresses up as a Jughead robot and starts kissing all of the girls. (It’s high concept, I know.) Betty seems to be okay with it. Moose is not okay with him kissing Midge and disassembles him. Again, this volume isn’t exactly a “greatest hits” parade.
Archie 80-th Anniversary Jumbo Comics Digest #5
The final volume begins with the Kennedy Brothers drawing a story going back to the first Archie story.
Archie and Jughead go back in time and accidently disrupt the first Archie story and have to make things right before they can make it back to their present. It’s clever and frenetic.
Finally, we get a Jingles story in this series. The Sugar Plum Fairy is with him, along with a cameo by Sabrina. There are several Christmas stories in this issue.
This is a long story I’ve seen before. Archie loses the big game, but gets some counseling from Principal Weatherbee and gives Archie the motivation to keep trying. It’s good to see the Bee being more than just a disciplinarian to Archie.
Okay, I warned you that Little Archie was dark. This might be the darkest Little Archie tale ever. If it isn’t, I don’t wanna read it. In this tale, Archie’s dog, Spotty, gets shot! Oh, my God! Don’t worry. A raccoon that Little Archie had been kind to gets help and Spotty saved. I actually took this work and told a friend there to read it. He had exactly the same reaction I did. What did this story do to children who read it?
In the 40’s section, Archie runs afoul of twins again. I saw a similar story from that era in the Archie Jumbo Magazine (6-15-26). It’s a different set of twins, but the same result.
The series finishes by reprinting the first Archie story. Archie meets Betty and tries to impress her. Instead, he gets in trouble with her dad. Archie and Jughead end up helping out the circus trying to get back into his good graces. It’s a small beginning and silly, but it struck a chord that’s still playing the same tune 80 years later.
This series was a great idea, but not well-handled with the material they reprinted. I’m not the sure what the criteria was for picking the stories. There didn’t seem to be any. The new stories added that called back to the history of Archie were the best part. If I find the other issue, I’ll probably still get it.































































