I'm just so glad he Yu was on issue 5. It's one of my all-time favourite X issues, and his art fits so well with that story. Not so well with some other issues, but perfectly with the story of 5.
I'm just so glad he Yu was on issue 5. It's one of my all-time favourite X issues, and his art fits so well with that story. Not so well with some other issues, but perfectly with the story of 5.
Mahmud Asrar is taking over. I am very pleased with this news.
I'm ready for luxurious, voluminous locks.
Lord Ewing *Praise His name! Uplift Him in song!* Your divine works will be remembered and glorified in worship for all eternity. Amen!
I really miss artists like Clay Mann and Oliver Coipel drawing X-Men. Mann should have been given the any main X-title he wanted, but he ended up on a Gambit series. I also just now found out that he himself is a friggin' superhero come to life!
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mann was the ONLY good thing about heroes in crisis lol
He's a great artist and one of my favorites. But he's really slow. He would always need fill ins.
But he did a run with Olivier Coipel and they rotated.
Now that would be bad ass.
Last edited by franckd; 06-01-2020 at 10:43 AM.
And i never said it wasn't rare. I said I missed those times. The fact it was 40 years is not relevant to the fact that I miss those times. Au contraire. I prefer when an artist is able to keep up with a writer's run. It makes the run more unique, more coherent.
Now, outside X-Men and/or Marvel, some artists are still out of those norms, like Erik Larsen writing and drawing Savage Dragon monthly since 1993 till... Now. Or Greg Capullo on Spawn. drawing 22 issues in a row. And Jim Lee can draw 11 issues in a row. he did it for x-Men, Batman (#608-619), Superman (#204-215).