That's exactly my point. What happens in our world has nothing to do with what happens in a another world, which happens to be a hell dimension. People suffer in Hell. Granny playing the "I'm a woman...
Type: Posts; User: Great O.G.U.F.O.O.L.
That's exactly my point. What happens in our world has nothing to do with what happens in a another world, which happens to be a hell dimension. People suffer in Hell. Granny playing the "I'm a woman...
No, he didn't. Only Barda clearly denounced Darkseid and Granny in Kirby's work, and then 4 of them (Lashina, Stompa, Mad Harriet and Desaad's sister) stuck around her for some time. During that time...
The idea that someone is very evil doesn't mean that they would sexually harass other people because that is evil as well. That's like saying that Darkseid is also racist because “hey, he's evil”....
A great artist that excelled in superhero action but he was also one of the best at conveying subtle facial expressions and body language. I really believe he was one of the best visual storytellers...
I second that.
I would also like to see Maggin's "The living legends of Superman" reprinted as a whole (I think parts of it have been reprinted) either as a special or in a trade collection of...
Double post
I thought that was true in the original Golden Age comics as well and that Captain Marvel being a kid in an adult's body was a post-Crisis reinvention.
May he Rest In Peace.
He was a rare genius, a visionary illustrator whose quirky style initially put me off, yet couldn't get enough of it later. He was also an underrated plotter whose long-term...
Roger Stern is responsible for my favorite Spider-man run after the original and I think he was more consistently good than Michelinie and had less divisive ideas than Straczynski.
About Ditko,...
I think this piece from a Cary Bates interview is the closest as an answer to your question:
https://speedforce.org/2011/05/interview-cary-bates2/
Just to be fair, I think Eisner was better than his contemporaries in the dialogue department. I feel the same for Carl Barks who was very adept at the combination of words and pictures. Of course...
I was thinking more in the sense that most people aren't going to put down "Moby Dick" as boring even though they'd rather read something by Dan Brown instead, because they know that "Moby Dick" is...
You can say that for a lot of great things, if not most.
Here's what Grant Morrison said about the subject in his intro for the first volume of "Jack kirby's Fourth World Omnibus"
Kirby's dialogue never bothered me. It can be goofy but it can be fun and at times emotionally honest on a rare level for the comics of the times. For me, the Fourth World comics are some of the few...
I grew up watching the Superman films on TV so I don't know if her Lois was the best or the most accurate, but it was definitely the one that first made me like the character. Still my favorite. I...
He certainly is in the MCU history.
In this article Starlin says he has now a fair deal with Disney:
http://www.vulture.com/2018/04/jim-starlin-creator-of-infinity-war-thanos-hates-marvel.html
To be honest both the break-up of Johnny and Crystal in FF #95, and their reunion in #99, felt kinda hasty to me. It felt like Lee and Kirby didn't know what to do with their relationship in the long...
I haven't read much Lovecraft but I'm familiar enough with his work to know that Carpenter's "In The Mouth of Madness' had Lovecraftian inspirations. I quite liked it myself. What do Lovecraft fans...
It was an OK episode but not a standout considering the standards of the series. The comic from which it was adapted (by Len Wein himself and Neal Adams) was much better in my opinion.
Even in DKR Bruce exhibited bits of humor.
62591
As a version though my favorite is BTAS before the change in visuals, pretty much Bronze Age but with even better stories (IMO).
This is the first scene that came to mind when I read the opening post:
62518
Alan Moore's Swamp Thing
Wolfman-Perez's "The New Teen Titans"
Alan Brennert's few stories in various DC titles
Flash #300
Detective Comics #500, great anniversary issue featuring many characters...
The Superman 4-parter from issues 296-299 that starts with "Who took the Super out of Superman" is one of my favorite Superman stories of all time. To me it's the quintessential Bronze Age Superman...