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Post by Deleted on May 6, 2016 22:55:29 GMT -5
I stumbled across these while still in New England... a Jason and the Argonauts adaptation from Tome Press (it was affiliated with Caliber somehow not sure exactly how) featuring Patick Zircher art very early in his career (not sure if it was his first pro gig or not). It ran 5 issue sand I have 2 of them and have never seen the other three in a shop or con (though Lonestar seems to have them). -M
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Post by Ish Kabbible on May 6, 2016 23:21:54 GMT -5
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Post by Deleted on May 6, 2016 23:29:47 GMT -5
^^^^^ Saw one of those for the first time at a con 2 years ago in June. Still the only one I've seen in the wild. It was huge standing tall on the top rack of his wall of books behind his table.
-M
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Post by DubipR on May 6, 2016 23:31:43 GMT -5
Great looking artwork on this underground....
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Post by Arthur Gordon Scratch on May 7, 2016 6:18:18 GMT -5
I remember Swiftsure very well, I wasn't aware it was considered obscure. Great series. Never saw those. Can you tell some more about it, my curiosity just got up several scales.
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Post by Arthur Gordon Scratch on May 7, 2016 6:24:34 GMT -5
Great idea for a thread and nice to see that some weird and wonderful comics have been posted already. I'm not sure I really have anything all that weird or obscure in my longboxes, but a few things that might qualify are... The Three Dimensional Alien Worlds one-shot from Pacific Comics. This features one of my all-time favourite covers, ever! I guess Alien World, Alien Encounters, Terror Tales and the bunch aren't obscure for comic fans who started ut in the 90ies or earlier, but more recent fans probably might have never heard or encountered those. Pacific probably would have been the favorite publisher of my 13 year old self, great art, great twist stories often handled by Bruce Jones at his peak, lots of Corben, Bolton, Mike Hoffman, Scott Hampton, Alex Nino art, mostly just great timeless comics.
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Post by tingramretro on May 7, 2016 6:59:28 GMT -5
I remember Swiftsure very well, I wasn't aware it was considered obscure. Great series. Never saw those. Can you tell some more about it, my curiosity just got up several scales. It was published by Harrier, a small company run by a guy named Martin Lock, back in 1985, and I think lasted just 18 issues. Like most of Harrier's titles, it was black and white, but the art was beautiful (IMO, obviously). The same company also published Redfox, another title I loved. Redfox was barbarian fantasy, Swiftsure was an SF anthology.
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Post by Arthur Gordon Scratch on May 7, 2016 7:30:04 GMT -5
Never saw those. Can you tell some more about it, my curiosity just got up several scales. It was published by Harrier, a small company run by a guy named Martin Lock, back in 1985, and I think lasted just 18 issues. Like most of Harrier's titles, it was black and white, but the art was beautiful (IMO, obviously). The same company also published Redfox, another title I loved. Redfox was barbarian fantasy, Swiftsure was an SF anthology. Yes, I got a few Harrier comics, also a Redfox one by Neil Gaiman (though I'm not sure it was published by Harrier...). But I just never heard or saw Swiftsure. How were the story like? Any references? Any writer there that achieved anything elsewhere in comics?
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Post by adamwarlock2099 on May 7, 2016 9:50:13 GMT -5
Here's one I had forgotten about. I had it years ago when eBay was pretty new and I bought my first lot of comics. This one in there. I remember skimming it but never read it all. Seems like political satire not one of my biggest interest, or politics in general. imgur.com/a/8Up77
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Post by Deleted on May 7, 2016 10:27:19 GMT -5
It was published by Harrier, a small company run by a guy named Martin Lock, back in 1985, and I think lasted just 18 issues. Like most of Harrier's titles, it was black and white, but the art was beautiful (IMO, obviously). The same company also published Redfox, another title I loved. Redfox was barbarian fantasy, Swiftsure was an SF anthology. Yes, I got a few Harrier comics, also a Redfox one by Neil Gaiman (though I'm not sure it was published by Harrier...). But I just never heard or saw Swiftsure. How were the story like? Any references? Any writer there that achieved anything elsewhere in comics? Here's a link to the Swiftsure index page at the GCD, from there you can check out the issues they have indexed to see story titles and creative teams. -M
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Post by Bronze Age Brian on May 7, 2016 11:15:04 GMT -5
Pssst! Magazine #6 (Never Limited, 1982)Pssst! was a UK sci-fi magazine that resembled Heavy Metal. The stories were way out there, and the artwork was great to boot. I believe there are some early works by the likes of Grant Morrison and others. I have Issue #6 and one of the stories in it is just phenomenal, but I can't for the life of me find the issue at the moment, and it seems that no one has ever scanned any of the fabulous interior pages most of the Pssst! magazines behold. In fact, they seem to have become quite rare, as I can't even find anything about them on the web anymore. Worth a look if you ever see one in the wild.
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Post by Deleted on May 7, 2016 11:22:47 GMT -5
Fantasy Illustrated #1 -the first and only issue of a comic fantasy magazine by a publisher called New Media Publishing. It featured work by P.Craig Russell, Steve Ditko, Steve Englehart, Don McGregor, Mark Evanier, Steve Leialoha, Mike Sekowsky, Tom Sutton and Al Gordon-a lot of talent but it went nowhere (as did the company). Magazine sized, black and white book with color cover released in 1982. I stubled across it in a Goodwill Store about 3 years ago. It followed on the heels of a similar star-studded but unsuccessful venture by the same publisher called Adventure Illustrated... in 1981, this time with a Starlin cover. This one I have never run across and am still looking for a copy. -M
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Post by Bronze Age Brian on May 7, 2016 11:34:30 GMT -5
^^^ I had both of those issues at one point. Here was my review of Adventure Illustrated:
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Post by Ish Kabbible on May 7, 2016 11:34:44 GMT -5
Fantasy Illustrated #1 -the first and only issue of a comic fantasy magazine by a publisher called New Media Publishing. It featured work by P.Craig Russell, Steve Ditko, Steve Englehart, Don McGregor, Mark Evanier, Steve Leialoha, Mike Sekowsky, Tom Sutton and Al Gordon-a lot of talent but it went nowhere (as did the company). Magazine sized, black and white book with color cover released in 1982. I stubled across it in a Goodwill Store about 3 years ago. It followed on the heels of a similar star-studded but unsuccessful venture by the same publisher called Adventure Illustrated... in 1981, this time with a Starlin cover. This one I have never run across and am still looking for a copy. -M I bought those magazines when they appeared in the early 80s. If I recall correctly, with the direct markey beginning to kick in, the two Shuster Brothers (Hal and the other name escapes me) thought there was money to be made with a line of professional looking fanzines. They started up a few (LOC or Letters O f Comment abbreviated was one) and then thought to add a few magazines with original material. That's what those two were and maybe one or two issues of each were produced. They were all sold in comic stores or at conventions.The Shuster fanzine empire died away after about 2 or so years. Unfortunately, once I sold off my collection a few years back, I also disposed of all my notes, indexes, checklists and what have you and just rely on memory
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Post by Rob Allen on May 7, 2016 20:03:54 GMT -5
I first became aware of Jim Craig from a Canadian mag called Orb, of which I only ever saw 1 issue on our local stands: That's Craig's cover and he also drew an interior story that quoted a line from the then-recent Pink Floyd album Wish You Were Here ("Shine on you crazy diamond!"). As with most anthology mags the quality was variable but on the whole I was intrigued and would have continued to follow the series had I seen any more of it. I was excited by the idea of a Canadian comic, something we had almost nothing of back then. I never did see another one, though, and years later the internet informed me that this was the 6th and last issue of a sadly short-lived series. Orb is one the list of things I was planning to mention in this thread.
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