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Canterbury

http://www.digitalspy.co.uk/comics/news/a387730/grant-morrison-awarded-mbe.html



http://www.bleedingcool.com/2012/06/16/when-grant-morrison-mbe-stripped-queen-elizabeth-ii-naked/
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Canterbury

http://www.icv2.com/articles/news/23286.html

.... so... a reboot lite then...?



oh look ! Cable...

Cap's uniform is oddly similar to his movie costume...

.... and seems that Nick Fury Jr. is the full time replacement for Nick Fury sr then ....?! Whoever saw that one coming !

.. Jean Grey back from the dead again too ... !?

My stack of unread comics grows by the week.

Did read the latest The Boyz collection... which is.. well.... great if you like the series.

A tad predictable perhaps, but still highly entertaining.
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Canterbury

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nick_Fury

http://marvel.wikia.com/Nicholas_Fury_(Earth-616)

http://marvel.wikia.com/Nicholas_Fury,_Jr._(Earth-616)

This message was edited 2 times. Last update was at 2012/07/05 16:11:49


 
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Canterbury

One assumes that the Rocket Raccoon push is related to the Guardians of the Galaxy movie that marvel want before Avengers 2.



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Canterbury

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Groot

I'd happily watch 90 minutes of him alone.

The Abnett/Lanning run was superb, well worth picking up.


anyway...

http://io9.com/5923717/reality-check-there-are-only-about-half-a-dozen-a+list-superheroes

This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 2012/07/06 08:36:43


 
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..it wasn't that expensive when it was first released... must be OOP.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guardians_of_the_Galaxy_(2008_team)


I enjoyed them all very much, War of Kings was the best Marvel event in years. Great artwork, nice story, interesting cast of characters and t'was able to effect ( or threaten anyway) some real/long lasting changes.
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http://www.comicbookgrrrl.com/2012/07/05/glasgow-comic-con-grant-morrison-and-frank-quitely-in-conversation/
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http://www.bleedingcool.com/2012/07/10/marvel-ends-9-titles-as-marvel-now-begins/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+BleedingCool+%28Bleeding+Cool+Comic+News+%26+Rumors%29&utm_content=FaceBook


Though it’s been called a soft reboot by some, Marvel NOW! is looking like a definitive change in its first month of solicits, with 9 titles ending as the Uncanny Avengers begins what the solicits call “the greatest era of the Marvel Universe”.

Captain America, The Mighty Thor, Incredible Hulk, Invincible Iron Man, Fantastic Four, FF, Uncanny X-Men, New Mutants, and X-Men: Legacy will all be ending in October, according to Marvel’s Solicits.



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http://www.politicususa.com/wing-nut-rises-rush-limbaugh-claims-batman-film-obama-plot.html

On his radio show, Rush Limbaugh claimed the new Batman film The Dark Knight Rises is anti-Romney propaganda masterminded by the Obama administration.


http://www.bleedingcool.com/2012/07/18/chuck-dixon-rush-limbaugh-bane-bain-and-the-dark-knight-rises/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+BleedingCool+%28Bleeding+Cool+Comic+News+%26+Rumors%29&utm_content=FaceBook

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spoilers are spoilers so...


Spoiler:


... t'would seem he is an orphan.... raised in a Wayne Foundation Orphanage...

.... Bruce has got the stick as his knees/back/everything is fethed...

.. I'd be amazed if he didn't take over, even if only for a while.

A major point of this devising being how Batman , as a symbol, is far more important than the actual man.

Plus if Bruce is still broke -- thanks to bane and Co. doing a number on the stock exchange and the like -- he might well be too busy doing Wayne Foundation stuff too..?

If he lives.
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Canterbury

http://www.southernfriedscience.com/?p=13509




The horrifying physiological and psychological consequences of being Aquaman

Aquaman may not be everybody’s favorite superhero, but since his creation in 1941, he has been among DC’s most enduring icons. During the Golden Age of comic books, he held his own against Superman, Batman, and Wonder Woman. Silver Age Aquaman was a founding member of the Justice League. His powers, tied to the ocean, forced writers to create a compelling, complex hero with explicit limitations. In the early days, when Superman’s strength was practically infinite, and Batman’s brilliance was unmatched, Aquaman had to become more than just a superhero, he had to be a person.

If Superman existed to show us how high the human spirit could fly, and Batman to show us the darkness within even our most noble, Aquaman is here to show us the world that triumphs in our absence. The ocean is not ours, and no matter how great our technology, we will never master it as we have mastered land, but Aquaman has. Through this lonely ocean wanderer, we can experience a world that we can never truly command. In many ways, Aquaman was stronger than the Man of Steel and darker than the Dark Knight. He knew loneliness that the orphan and the alien exile never could.

Roll on, thou deep and dark blue Ocean – roll!
Ten thousand fleets sweep over thee in vain;
Man marks the earth with ruin – his control
Stops with the shore; — upon the watery plain
The wrecks are all thy deed, not does remain
A shadow of man’s ravage, save his own,
When for a moment, like a drop of rain,
He sinks into thy depths with bubbling groan,
Without a grave, unknell’d, uncoffin’d, and unknown.

Byron

Even though Aquaman had to fight harder, endure the jokes of other, less limited heroes, and find relevance in an ecosystem hostile to the humans that had to empathize with him, Aquaman was never forced to confront the truly horrifying consequences of life in the ocean.

The penetrating cold

Aquaman is, for all intents and purposes, a marine mammal. And, with the exception of a healthy mane in later incarnations, he is effectively hairless. As a human, we would expect his internal body temperature to hover around 99°F, or about 37°C. Even at its warmest points, the surface temperature of the ocean around the equator is only about 80°F/27°C. At the poles ocean temperature can actually drop a few degrees below freezing. In the deep sea, ambient temperature levels out around 2 – 4°C. The ocean is cold, and water is a much better thermal conductor than air. Warm blooded species have evolved many different systems to manage these gradients, including countercurrent heat exchangers, insulating fur, and heavy layers of blubber. This is what a marine mammal that can handle cold waters look like:


Elephant Seal. NSF, photo by Mike Usher

Aquaman. DC Comics. This is not a man familiar with the term “blubber”.
Aquaman is not just a human, he is an incredibly buff human. Look at his picture. If the man has more than 2% body fat, I’d be shocked. In contrast, warm-water bottlenose dolphins have at least 18 to 20% body fat. Anyone who SCUBA dives knows that, even with a 12 millimeter neoprene wet suit, after a few hours in 80°F water, you get cold. Aquaman, lacking any visible insulation, should have slipped into hypothermia sometime early in More Fun Comics #73. He is better built for the beach than the frigid deep.

Concentration gradients are not for the faint of heart

This raises the next issue with life in the water, osmotic pressure. The human body is hypotonic compared to seawater. That means that there are more molecules in seawater than in our cells. Assuming Aquaman is drawing seawater into his lungs, sinuses, and other air chambers, he must maintain internal equilibrium within his body for his cellular transmembrane proteins to function. So his cells begin expelling water to increase their internal molecular density. As he loses water, his cells shrivel and begin to lyse. The kidneys, likely, will be the first to go, but most of his internal organs, especially those in the respiratory and circulatory system will fail. If he hasn’t frozen to death, he will dehydrate, ending his Justice League tenure as shriveled human jerky.

Water, water, every where,
And all the boards did shrink;
Water, water, every where,
Nor any drop to drink.

The Rime of the Ancient Mariner

The only silver lining for this Silver Age hero is that without efficient ion-exchange pathways, his brain will shut down as his blood becomes saturated with sodium.

And then you get bent…

Let assume that, through the magic of comics, Aquaman has managed to overcome the challenges of temperature and osmotic pressure. He still must face the dreaded threat of all divers – decompression sickness: the bends. Aquaman has gills, which means that he is extracting oxygen from seawater and pumping is across a membrane. At pressure, such as what you might experience a few hundred feet beneath the surface, oxygen is toxic, even fatal. Divers breathing pure oxygen suffer traumatic injuries. Even if he somehow manages to extract an appropriate mixture of oxygen, carbon dioxide, and nitrogen, Aquaman still must contend with the crippling effects of gas expansion in his blood stream. As he changes depths, bubbles of nitrogen come out of solution, clogging his circulatory system and causing possibly fatal embolisms.


A spherical lesion found in a rib of a dead sperm whale that beached on Nantucket was likely caused by nitrogen bubbles that formed when the whale rose too rapidly from high-pressure depths. The bubbles obstruct blood flow and lead to bone damage. (Photo credit: Tom Kleindinst)
Even deep-diving marine mammals suffer from the bends. Sperm whales cope with gas accumulation by depositing excess gasses in their bones, creating a porous, brittle skeleton, riddle with osteonecrosis — patches of dead bone. For a superhero, bones that snap like a sponge are not conducive to fighting evil. And Aquaman fights, and swims, and pushes his body to its supra-physical limits.

Calories out must equal calories in

Aquaman is one of the fastest swimmers in the ocean. He chases German U-boats, out-swims dolphins, can even catch up to a torpedo. The Justice League reports that Aquaman can swim at 10,000 feet per second. 10,000 feet per second is more than 3 kilometers per second, or 6,800 miles per hour. We’re talking Superman speeds, here. For comparison, Olympic swimmer Michael Phelps can sustain a speed of 4.7 miles per hour. To maintain that pace, Phelps burns about 1,000 calories per hour while racing, up to about 6,000 calories a day. If Aquaman were to spend an hour swimming at full speed, he would burn 1.4 million Calories. Even to survive a day strolling at a leisurely 10 miles per hour, enough to travel from Beaufort, North Carolina to Bermuda in about 3 days, Aquaman would need to replace 48,000 Calories each day.

Th ocean is full of food. Tuna contain a hearty 1440 Calories per kilogram, so Aquaman could get away with eating a bit more than 33 kilos of tuna per day. Unfortunately, tuna are fast. Aquaman would have to burn even more energy chasing them down. And that’s assuming he wants to eat a dense, energy rich fish. Knowing Aquaman, he probably understands tuna over-fishing better than most. Odds are, our hero is eating from the bottom of the food chain. Actually, Aquaman may not have a choice in the matter because, as the ocean acidifies, the enamel in his teeth will literally begin to dissolve. Since he won’t be digging his pearly whites into anything substantial, it looks like plankton soup is on the menu. This means that, just to stay alive (let alone do battle with the Legion of Doom), Aquaman must eat pretty much continuously.

The constant eating would also contribute to the single most horrifying aspect of being Aquaman…

The constant, unceasing screams of dying marine life

Golden age Aquaman can talk to sea life. Modern iterations can communicate telepathically with ocean creatures. Even excluding humans, the ocean is a brutal place. Aquaman, alone is consuming untold thousands of animals to sustain his svelte, 48,000 Calorie-per-day, figure. Seeing as he must continuously eat, there’s little time for cooking, or even humanely killing his prey. He is surrounded by the psychic screams of every zooplankter that enters his cold-hearted gullet, each one, begging for mercy as it plunges into his hypertonic stomach.

His victims aren’t the only ones he is forced to hear. Throughout the ocean, predators stalk their prey, parasites consume the eyes, tongues, and gonads of their unwilling victims. Superman avoids the screams of the suffering by being a callous jackass with some hyper-narcissistic code that forbids him from “interfering” with the path of human history (which is why he’ll swoop in to stop a mugger, but has no problem letting Adolf Hitler march across Europe). Aquaman, however, loves the ocean with every porous, necrotic bone in his body. He is its protector. Which means that every dying sea creature breaks his tachycardic heart.

And we haven’t even touched the consequences of an ocean exploited by human beings. Aquaman can see the scars left by every trawl, can feel the life being sucked out of the ocean, knows the name of every fish, dolphin, and crab whose life has been taken by our nets and lines. His life is the constant, horrible drone of unspeakable, unstoppable death.

No wonder he drinks like a fish.




.. well.. maybe

. course he can and would kick your ass so...
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Canterbury

http://eschergirls.tumblr.com/post/27398112147/insight-into-the-comic-book-industry

.. well... that's kind of depressing.

Honest though one has to say.
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Manchu wrote:I genuinely despise that "durr let's apply REAL SCIENCE to comics" mumbo jumbo. Also, who the feth cares about this "realistic anatomy" gak? It's good, however, that these two things have come up in such close proximity (thanks reds8n!) because it highlights that the same misguided obsession with "realism" -- what I'll call, to borrow a phrase, the mind killer -- underlies both.



“In Wetham’s diagnosis, then, children were too underdeveloped to separate the outlandish fantasy in their comic books from everyday reality, and this made them vulnerable to barely concealed homosexual and antisocial content.
I tend to believe the reverse is true: that it’s adults who have the most trouble separating fact from fiction. A child knows that real crabs on the beach do not sing or talk like the cartoon crabs in THE LITTLE MERMAID. A child can accept all kinds of weird-looking creatures and bizarre occurrences in a story because the child understands that stories have different rules that allow for pretty much anything to happen.

Adults, on the other hand, struggle desperately with fiction, demanding constantly that it conform to the rules of everyday life. Adults foolishly demand to know HOW Superman can possibly fly, or HOW Batman can possibly run a multibillion-dollar business empire during the day and fight crime at night, when the answer is obvious even to the smallest child: because it’s not real.”

—Grant Morrison, Supergods.


.. sa for the Batwoman thing..

..hmm.. whilst I'm aware that comic books have unfeasible physiques for both male and female participants, I do think the description of her as being too fat and not " top heavy" enough was somewhat telling. There's a far wider variety of ( in comic book terms) acceptable and diverse male body types in comic books than there are for females it's seemed generally. This really just seems to suggest that this slim focus ( excuse the pun) is quite deliberate.

And I don't think that's healthy either in a wider societal context or for the industry itself perhaps.
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Hmm.. really ?

I'd also point out we get 9 top of my head) The Thing, Hulk, Harvey Bullock, James Gordon, Plastic Man, Elongated Man...

.. hell go to some of the..wackier.... elements from the LoS -- Bouncing Boy ? matter eater Lad ? --- and they're still heroic often despite their build ( or the ludicrousness of their powers.. but that's a whole other argument ) .

Alfred the butler normally has his moment in the spotlight in each and every big story-arc

IIRC there was an ongoing story back in the day about Blue Beetle being a bit fat and his efforts to lose weight.

.. now compare that to the female characters...

... we used to have Amanda Waller

who used to look like



-- great character, used to full affect in many memorable stories

and now.. well



oh look ! Supermodel build.

.. I appreciate this ( perhaps) is to do with the Gl film -- what a success that was eh ? -- but.. where are the even slightly non supermodel type female characters ?

Last one I can recall was Monstress



and that turned out well eh ?

Spoiler:






I appreciate that -- see above ! -- we're in the realms of fiction and that people who are active, out and about, fighting crime etc etc are hardly going to be lard arses but some variety would be both nice and desirable perhaps ?

..that said I guess we wouldn't have Femforce et al if this was true eh ?




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Manchu wrote:
reds8n wrote: I'd also point out we get 9 top of my head) The Thing, Hulk, Harvey Bullock, James Gordon, Plastic Man, Elongated Man...
Um ... you mean a bunch of monsters and a crooked, slobby cop?.



.. all of whom are viewed as heroic despite not being good looking, a far cry from " evil, hideous, and otherwise vile.".

.. the female counterpart to this is..... ? ...


..maybe Lady Frankenstein I guess one could argue ? And even then -- physical additions and oddities aside ( plus the whole technically dead thing) -- she's pretty svelte.
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Morathi's Darkest Sin wrote:Wow, just saw the Man of Steel teaser... normally I'm not a big fan of Superman, but for some reason, the hairs of the back of my neck stood up at the end.

Interesting, with Zod as well.. I'll be off to the cinema next year.


Yeah. Did seem good indeed.

... http://www.bleedingcool.com/2012/07/22/zack-snyder-uses-grant-morrisons-words-for-man-of-steel-trailer/

.. oh, that explains it then
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KamikazeCanuck wrote:I'm not so sure. Anyway, we've discussed how we all view fiction through or own cultural experiences and I must say I've never thought of Superman as Jesus.



Virgin birth.
Came " from above".
Died and came back...

... I would suggest it's something to do with the construction of his story tapping into several "mythological"/religious archetypes. Which is, possibly, why the character is so successful.

Possibly.

.. when Rush was droning on about how the new Batman film is an attack on Republicanism/Romney I was waiting for someone to point out that Supes is, essentially, an aillegal immigrant.

-- he's not of course, he's been granted full USA citizenship several times, pays his taxes and even has a social security number.

.. well Clark has the latter anyway, Mark Waid has it memorised.

He seems a lot punchier than Jesus.


.. well it's a modern American Jesus.. be grateful he's not using a six shooter.


There's no biblical equivilant to Krytonite that I can think of. I don't seem the similarities between the two personally.


I would suggest sin or evil perhaps ? Especially some of the more interesting affects some of the different coloured types have.


meanwhile...

http://www.bleedingcool.com/2012/07/23/dc-comics-postpones-batman-inc-3-for-a-month-over-content-that-may-be-perceived-as-insensitive/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+BleedingCool+%28Bleeding+Cool+Comic+News+%26+Rumors%29

In light of the recent events in Aurora, and in consideration of the victims and the families of the shootings, DC Comics has decided to postpone the release of the third issue of Batman Incorporated because the comic contains “content that may be perceived as insensitive in light of recent events”. They are asking any retailers who do receive copies not to put them out for sale.

The comic was originally intended to go on sale on July 25th. The sale date has now been postponed until August the 22nd.
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.. I had a whole thing about how Krypton could also represent a (secular) Garden of Eden.. a scientific land of perfection and plenty, destroyed through ignorance and an unwillingness to confront the unknown.

How he can never, ever return there -- except in imaginary stories in the the future when he's done X/Y/Z -- much like "we" can never return to Eden/our sinless state.

In fact if he does go there or come near it then it's affects are fatal ( or they change him), much like how the light of heaven, or even the mere presence of God is too much for mortals to bear.

Then there's the whole "..el " thing that echoes through the superman mythos.

In classic Judaic/Christian theology the letters " ..el " normally symbolising the angelic or those " from the lord " ( IIRC it does translate as " the shining ones" in... err... some language from around that area of the world :

Michael
Raphael

-- Ariel, Azrael, Chamuel etc etc and so on.



Then you come across the peculiar number of L L characters in the books -- Lois Lane, Lex Luthor, Lori Lemari ( although alliterative names are common in comics, often ( according to Stan Lee) as they're easy to remember or recall ).

Of course Lex Luthor -- a mortal man, who who through science and ego could, perhaps, achieve dominion over the mortal world... if that dratted Superman -- who never kills Lex as he believes that, ultimately, deep down inside him, there is something good, someone (.. or something dun dun duh! ) that's worth saving.

And his name starts with a reversion of the "heavenly" "el", so it suggests that he is the opposite of the angelic/superman.....


This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 2012/07/24 14:24:04


 
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Manchu wrote:

See John 8:3-11 for a great Superman story. If I were going to write a Superman story, I would start with that.



.. hmm.... needs more Krypto and Streaky the superhorse but...
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... hell yeah !

.. best one...


Spoiler:


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Despite all the time travel and powers he can never go back and prevent the destruction of Krypton/The fall.

Despite all his powers he can't destroy kryptonite/evil.

It can alter people in many ways, even good people... and yet the staunch everyday man or woman is capable of resisting it in a way that Superman can't, its mere presence often an anathema to him.

.. well... maybe anyway

sometimes a plot device is just a plot device after all.
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http://goodcomics.comicbookresources.com/2012/07/26/top-five-british-comic-characters-off-the-top-of-my-head/

Johnny Red was pretty cool

Read a few Oor Wullie comics when I was a bairn -- Ennis did a whole riff on it in his "highland Laddie" arc which tickled me no end but I can only assume left overseas readers as baffled as they were when/if they picked up that Knight and Squire series
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yeah, much of it was obscure even for a sadcase like me.

But when you look at the list of characters, most of whom he made up for the book

http://www.comicbookdb.com/issue.php?ID=230226

things are going to get weird.



best villains ever...?


God no, but funny.






Not many series where most of the "action" takes place in a pub.
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http://io9.com/5928142/rare-batman-comics-that-everyone-should-read?utm_campaign=socialflow_io9_facebook&utm_source=io9_facebook&utm_medium=socialflow

Good choices, the Milligan written trilogy -- Dark Knight, Dark City -- is superb, very dark mind, even for a Batman tale -- and well worth checking out.

Looking at that I'd forgotten quite how cool the DC 1Million stuff was.. gonna have to either dig those out ( not happening if I'm honest ) or grab some trades which I'm sure were done at some point or other.

.. Amalgam stuff had its moments too.

.. which leads me nicely to...

Right then chaps : your most underated or deserving of higher praise arcs/characters/series then...

I'll start off with Messner -Loebs run on Dr. Fate which he took and ran with for a good few years, in many ways -- age and nostalgia perhaps -- the era of that series represents something of a golden age in DC comics for me. Oh to be young again.

He came after a very interesting run see here -- http://goodcomics.comicbookresources.com/2010/08/31/comics-you-should-own-flashback-dr-fate-1-4-1-24/ which dealt with things I don't think a mainstream regular superhero book could touch today.. alas...

-- and totally made it his own. He goes in a different tack but the stories overall are funny, heart warming and just work.... I'm going to have to dig'em up when I'm on vacation in a couple of weeks now. It's only about 16 issues or so IIRC before the series ends...

.. but the ending... especially the bit with .. aahh.. no spoilers I think still brings a smile and a slight tear to my cynical mug to this very day.

Art worked well for me, YMMV of course, but some of the covers especially were great -- #s 35 and 39 especially.

http://misc.thefullwiki.org/Doctor_Fate/Covers

plus... well.... I just think Dr. fate is a cool character, costume works, the mask/helmet is pretty funky and magic in superhero comics is just cool.

Wasn't keen at all on the mercifully short lived "Fate/Jared" era or character .. but I had a mate who loved it and we spent many a happy hour shooting the breeze back and forth and writing rules for the character for our RPGs.

.. good times..

I'd imagine the Dr. fate issues can be picked up quite cheaply, they were certainly cheap as chips a ( fair) few years back when I filled in a few holes in the run.

.. anyway enough from me... I'm sure I'll bore you all some more soon with further haranguings ... I'll even go out on a limb and say there's some Marvel runs/series I want to go on about as well !

Spoiler:
AS well as how fething awesome the Bart Sears era Jutice League Europe era was... those issues with the original -- and best -- Extremists are wickedly good
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That Ragman series is also a favourite of mine, it's exactly the sort of update and reworking of a character that Giffen does really well and that DC used to be great at.
As it happens you've shown my favourite cover of that series , IIRC that story was the first one where I becae aware of the Jewish Golem myth/story/history ( let's not dive into that kettle of fish yeah ), and I shamelessly lifted from it for many years in roleplaying campaigns and the like.

.... what ? All GMs are essentially show offs ?!

I picked up the Ghost Rider 2099 series for a bit... in fact wasn't the spider-man of that era non Caucasian ? Dont recall there being a big fuss and hullabaloo about that at the time.

.. then again maybe there was, I wasn't online and only really read a couple of comic related magazines.

Think I read the first of the vampire Batman series there..... is Kelley still in the industry ? His covers for Batman were definately iconic and stand out. Might have to check out the other 2 books in the series then.

.. I;d totally forgotten about that storyline in the spiderman series.... Dusk kind of resembles Black Bolt to me. I seem to remember thinking it seemed a bit too much like the REturn of Superman storyline... 4 new identities ?.... but seeing as DC then lifted the "identity crisis" name X years later all's fair I guess.

It is odd how some stories, even if when one is brutally honest, stay with one and can still have an affect even years later. Much of it is just nostalgia one supposes, and it's not just comcis that do this of course. I must confess to an embarrassing enjoyment no no... love even of ( most of ) "The Headless Children" by W.A.S.P. mainly because, I think, that's what I was listening to the first time I read the HH stuff in the then newly released ( and long anticipated) RoC "Lost and the Damned" book.. to this day whenever I read anything about Horus I hear "Thunderhead" from that album.
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the 5 year gap legion is my all time favourite run of them, possibly of a series ever.

incidentally..

DCDigiWatch: The Five Years Later Legion of Super Heroes reboot stuff is now available on ComiXology – the first time they’ve been available since the original monthly comics were printed, up to issue 9 and only 99 cents each. It’s almost as if DC are somehow ashamed and don’t want to bring attention to them. Like the final Spirit issue of New Wave. Also, we know that ComiXology released Green Lantern #11 early by mistake last week, until Bleeding Cool pointed it out. But this week, when it is out properly, they aren’t listing it in this week’s releases and you have to search to find it…. an overreaction in the other direction?


Defended it, to the death ( more or less) a few times.

No chance of explaining it to anyone who'd never read the preceding series and the absence of Wildfire did pain me, but I enjoyed every minute of it.


I said I'd do it so...

Byrne' s run on She Hulk was well ahead of its time, no Deadpool without it IMO.

Also the first... ooh... 4 years or so the Volume I of "The New Warriors" was pretty damn good as well. Only spoilt really when -- as they always did back then -- lots of the characters spun off into their own titles and the original writer left. Though Darkhawk and the later additions to the team worked very well indeed, and Bagley's artwork was fine indeed.

.. few too many gatefold, 3d holographic covers perhaps but them was the days.
Made in gb
[DCM]
Et In Arcadia Ego





Canterbury

http://goodcomics.comicbookresources.com/2012/08/16/i-love-ya-but-youre-strange-justice-league-antarctica/#more-117874

..ahh.. them were the days.

Good stuff.

.. I'm almost embarrassed to admit that I've shamelessly stolen the basic plot of this story for RPGs a few times.
Made in gb
[DCM]
Et In Arcadia Ego





Canterbury

Mentioned his run on Dr. fate a wee while back, same author also did a nice run on Wonder Woman too, with some distinctly odd elements that ( for me anyway) worked well.

http://goodcomics.comicbookresources.com/2012/04/12/i-love-ya-but-you%E2%80%99re-strange-that-time-wonder-woman-worked-at-taco-bell/



Lovely Bolland cover.
Made in gb
[DCM]
Et In Arcadia Ego





Canterbury

http://braveandboldlost.blogspot.co.uk/

some of these need to be made





.. yes please !

and just for Mr. manchu..

This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 2012/08/30 10:50:03


 
Made in gb
[DCM]
Et In Arcadia Ego





Canterbury

Don't worry about it, but that is indeed an infamous bit of comics history.


meanwhile...

http://robot6.comicbookresources.com/2012/08/reddit-users-retailer-and-creators-rally-to-help-karl-kesel-and-family/

good for all concerned, hope things work out for them.

In less pleasant news ... http://www.bleedingcool.com/2012/09/01/comics-vs-mistere2009/

what a douche. Hope he gets what is coming to him.
 
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