shaxper
CCF Site Custodian
Posts: 22,860
|
Post by shaxper on Aug 4, 2017 22:59:27 GMT -5
Pssst...Make sure to check out the Advance Warning Thread before jumping in with your selection!6. Chris Claremont's X-Men (1975-1991)By: Chris Claremont, Dave Cockrum, John Byrne, Len Wein, and others Originally published in: Giant-Size X-Men #1, X-Men #94-280, X-Factor #65-70 It's nowhere near a perfect run. Some will argue the quality dropped off around the time of Secret Wars II, others that only the John Byrne issues were good, and some true purists will even argue it was never the same after the death of Dark Phoenix. But none of that is really the point to me. While continuity is nothing new in comicdom, it's extremely rare to see it done well. Roy Thomas was rocking continuity back when Claremont was still an unknown copy editor for Marvel, making his readers feel a little closer to the material by repeatedly referencing past events they'd recall, often for no good reason, but Claremont took it to a whole new level with the X-Men. Really starting with the death of Jean Grey (which Claremont had neither intended nor wanted), he began using continuity to create real emotional repercussions for his characters, allowing them to grow and change organically across issues in response to events they endured. Continuity was referenced endlessly to the point that it was often overwhelming for any but the fiercest of loyal fans, and yet that continuity mattered and carried true weight. X-Men was a series that truly rewarded you for being along for the ride, growing alongside these characters and often getting to know them better than the important people in your own life because you understood where they'd been, how they felt about where they'd been, and how where they'd been had transformed them since. You knew what made them tick, understood their transformations, and knew full well that nothing was sacred or off the table in the long run. It was essentially one massive, super-powered soap opera, and I love it for that. It was also the first mainstream superhero book where the female characters got just as much representation on the team and in the limelight (sometimes more). Sure, the quality does dip tremendously around issue #200 or so, but the growth, drama, and history continue forward, exciting new characters and new directions being introduced even while the individual stories are often quite forgettable. All that growth and sense that nothing was sacred ultimately took the title in some weird and really unpopular directions that other writers pulled the franchise out of with X-Factor #65-70 and X-Men #279 and #280, bringing a somewhat fitting conclusion to Claremont's saga that Claremont himself never would have been able to find. Still, all those post-issue #200 events counted and continued to matter after the fact, adding to the vast tapestry that was the ever-growing saga of the X-Men. And therein lies the true appeal of this run. Nearly twenty years under the control of a single creator, the X-Men's became the most coherent, memorable, and well-preserved continuity in all of mainstream comicdom, still mined for gold and generally well-adhered to long after Claremont was gone. First getting into the franchise at the tail end in 1990 and continuing on after Claremont left through around 1994, that continuity was the stuff of mythology for myself and my friends. We prided ourselves on the trivia and tidbits we knew, and I remember collecting those X-Men trading cards largely because it was convenient reference material for following that dense but rewarding continuity. Some can't stand all the continuity and work required to follow Claremont's X-Men, and I can't fault them for that, but, for me, it's absolute crack.
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on Aug 4, 2017 23:28:33 GMT -5
6. Lone Sloane by Philippe Druillet (1966-2000) cover to book 3 Chaos behind spoiler tags Druillet's Lone Sloane Ourvre began in 1966 began with his comics debut Mystere des Abimes, continued in issues of Pilotte and later Metal Hurlant, being revised and revamped along the way and concluded with the final Lone Sloane volume Chaos published in 2000. They appeared in English in various places including Dark Horse's Cheval Noir and Heavy Metal and were collected into a series of graphic albums along the way. I am specifically including the 3 such volumes I have: The Six Voyages of Lone Sloane, Delirius and Chaos. Druillet's epics are a mind-blowing cosmic trip and grand adventure. I've been avoiding a lot of images in previous write ups, but sometimes words can do no justice and this is one such time... The art sweeps you up and carries you away into the epic and there is just so much to digest on every page and in every panel. The art is eye candy to be sure, but the experience is mind candy. Just read it. -M
|
|
|
Post by Icctrombone on Aug 5, 2017 4:08:14 GMT -5
6. Elektra saga
Daredevil 168-182
Frank Miller/ Klaus Jansen
Frank Miller made his name on a bi-monthly title close to cancelation and it really took off when he introduced Elektra into the book. What followed was an excellent mob/crime/street tale that culminated in a showdown between his greatest enemy ( Bullseye) and his first love ( Elektra). But along the way we are introduce to many new fresh Characters like Stick, Ben Urich , a JJJ with integrity who I didn’t hate, and a rejuvenated Kingpin. Man, those were good books. The Ninja aspects were well done and even the redefining of Daredevils True powers ( everyone has radar but it gets deadened because of sight) worked. Issue # 181 has Elektra die at the hands of Bullseye thus ending her story. Or did It ? Stick helps DD regain his radar that was lost during am explosion Showdown between Bullseye and Elektra
|
|
|
Post by Icctrombone on Aug 5, 2017 4:20:07 GMT -5
6. Lone Sloane by Philippe Druillet (1966-2000)
cover to book 3 Chaos behind spoiler tags Druillet's Lone Sloane Ourvre began in 1966 began with his comics debut Mystere des Abimes, continued in issues of Pilotte and later Metal Hurlant, being revised and revamped along the way and concluded with the final Lone Sloane volume Chaos published in 2000. They appeared in English in various places including Dark Horse's Cheval Noir and Heavy Metal and were collected into a series of graphic albums along the way. I am specifically including the 3 such volumes I have: The Six Voyages of Lone Sloane, Delirius and Chaos. Druillet's epics are a mind-blowing cosmic trip and grand adventure. I've been avoiding a lot of images in previous write ups, but sometimes words can do no justice and this is one such time... The art sweeps you up and carries you away into the epic and there is just so much to digest on every page and in every panel. The art is eye candy to be sure, but the experience is mind candy. Just read it. -M Sorry man, but what's the plot , what's it about?
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on Aug 5, 2017 5:13:51 GMT -5
#6.Aquaman: Death Of A Prince. Adventure Comics#435-437, 441-452 and Aquaman #57-63.
Written by Paul Levitz, Gerry Conway, Steve Skeates, David Michelinie, Martin Pasko and Paul Kupperberg. Art by Jim Aparo, Mike Grell, Carl Potts, Joe Rubinstein, Dick Giordano, Juan Ortiz, Vince Colletta, Don Newton, John Celardo, Bob McLeod and Dave Hunt. This storyline deeply affected me back in the 70's when it came out. It was pretty brutal. Black Manta destroys Aquaman by killing Aquaman's son. Up to that point I had not read anything in comics that heinous. It affected Aquaman & Mera to the point where they separated. Aquaman was alone to deal with his grief. This story started in Adventure as back ups then led to a revival of Aquaman's own solo series. It also had some great art by Grell, Aparo & Newton.
|
|
|
Post by Icctrombone on Aug 5, 2017 6:17:52 GMT -5
#6.Aquaman: Death Of A Prince. Adventure Comics#435-437, 441-455 and Aquaman #57-63.
Written by Paul Levitz, Gerry Conway, Steve Skeates, David Michelinie, Martin Pasko and Paul Kupperberg. Art by Jim Aparo, Mike Grell, Carl Potts, Joe Rubinstein, Dick Giordano, Juan Ortiz, Vince Colletta, Don Newton, John Celardo, Bob McLeod and Dave Hunt. This storyline deeply affected me back in the 70's when it came out. It was pretty brutal. Black Manta destroys Aquaman by killing Aquaman's son. Up to that point I had not read anything in comics that heinous. It affected Aquaman & Mera to the point where they separated. Aquaman was alone to deal with his grief. This story started in Adventure as back ups then led to a revival of Aquaman's own solo series. It also had some great art by Grell, Aparo & Newton. I've never read the story, it sounds pretty terrible.
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on Aug 5, 2017 6:55:46 GMT -5
#6.Aquaman: Death Of A Prince. Adventure Comics#435-437, 441-455 and Aquaman #57-63.
I've never read the story, it sounds pretty terrible. Not sure what you mean by terrible...
It was a well written story that made you think. After the death of Gwen Stacy a few years prior comics lost some innocence. The heroes paid a high price to fight evil. Then this story line took a happy family & caused you to think about every parent's worst nightmare...the death of a child. It was a very sobering story that I still think about decades later. In that sense it challenged you to look beyond the story as entertainment & apply it to your real life experiences.
|
|
|
Post by Arthur Gordon Scratch on Aug 5, 2017 7:12:55 GMT -5
Ronin - #1-#6 Writer & Artist : Frank Miller This is probably my favorite work from Miller. This tale spans through centuries, mix the best of US comics and mangas, and has Miller stretch his muscles like never since or before. It also has a great conclusion, and great re-read value. When I first read it, I can guarantee it went in directions I never expected : this is not Miller's take on Lone Wolf and Cub, as it is a 100% original story, and probably what you'd have expected from Miller if he was a Heavy Metal creator, and one of the top 3 ever for the matter. Dirty Sci-Fi crossing over to other genres, resulting in one of the most important american comic books of the 80ies, cetrainly one of the most influential outside the US... I know that people mostly celebrate his DKR, Sin City and Daredevil, but this is IMHO where Miller peaked, where he was the most ambitious in his storytelling, and where Lynn Varley and him essentially became one.
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on Aug 5, 2017 9:27:49 GMT -5
6. Lone Sloane by Philippe Druillet (1966-2000)-M Sorry man, but what's the plot , what's it about? It helps if you trim image heavy quotes down to just the text if the response is only 1 line since it is easy to miss the line after the large block of quote. Don't read this if you want to experience Lone Sloane as it should be, with a blank slate going in. The plot-sometime in the future after a great catastrophe, Lone Sloane was taken by a cosmic entity after his ship is destroyed and transformed and he now wanders the universe as a kind of freebooter with strange and cosmic/psychadelic powers and caught in a larger cosmic struggle. A bit of Ulysses mixed with the Galactus/Surfer vibe but they both debuted in 1966 in different continents so a bit of parallel development, but it would be Surfer as done by a Starlin/Gerber/underground hybrid, I avoided a detailed plot synopsis because it is best if you open up the book and let the pages suck you in and carry you along and figure it all out as you go along without any preconceptions of expectations. -M
|
|
shaxper
CCF Site Custodian
Posts: 22,860
|
Post by shaxper on Aug 5, 2017 10:46:36 GMT -5
I've never read the story, it sounds pretty terrible. Not sure what you mean by terrible...
It was a well written story that made you think. After the death of Gwen Stacy a few years prior comics lost some innocence. The heroes paid a high price to fight evil. Then this story line took a happy family & caused you to think about every parent's worst nightmare...the death of a child. It was a very sobering story that I still think about decades later. In that sense it challenged you to look beyond the story as entertainment & apply it to your real life experiences.
Wow. I'm a little amazed I've never heard of this before.
|
|
|
Post by thwhtguardian on Aug 5, 2017 11:16:45 GMT -5
Prince Valiant Written and Illustrated by Hal Foster King Features Syndicate, Sunday (Saturdays in 1937) strips from 1937-1942 This is a book that has only appealed to me recently, despite being a voracious reader in addition to loving comics growing up I would always skip Prince Valiant in my perusing of the Sunday funny pages because with it's stoic images and blocks of text it just looked boring to me...but man was I wrong back then as contrary to my views then I've found the strip to be vibrant, colorful, action-packed and gosh-darned fun. It's so odd that I never picked this up before seeing championed in one of our classic christmas events back at cbr, because I've always loved the stories of King Arthur and this comic really gives those stories a fresh new look, and Foster's art really tells the stories well. Rather than being static and dull his images are packed with detail and the layouts move the narrative forward with out the real need of text.
I thought about doing Hal's whole run from 1937 to 1971 but decided against it for two reasons; I love the early more "fantastic stories full of monsters and magic...and perhaps more importantly I've only read up to 1964 as that's all that's been reprinted by fantagraphics so far!
|
|
Crimebuster
CCF Podcast Guru
Making comics!
Posts: 3,958
|
Post by Crimebuster on Aug 5, 2017 11:39:56 GMT -5
#6: Usagi Yojimboselected issues of Critters, Usagi Yojimbo #1-38, Usagi Yojimbo #1-15, Usagi Yojimbo #1-present I don't have time at the moment to do a proper write up that does this series justice, but that's fine, because I know other people are going to have this much higher on their lists and be a lot more eloquent about it. Suffice it to say, this is one of the best works in comics, period, and Creator Stan Sakai has developed a world full of characters that provide an endless array of gripping story possibilities. I realize that's super vague, but it's just... you need to read it to get it, so go out and read it!
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on Aug 5, 2017 12:15:15 GMT -5
Not sure what you mean by terrible...
It was a well written story that made you think. After the death of Gwen Stacy a few years prior comics lost some innocence. The heroes paid a high price to fight evil. Then this story line took a happy family & caused you to think about every parent's worst nightmare...the death of a child. It was a very sobering story that I still think about decades later. In that sense it challenged you to look beyond the story as entertainment & apply it to your real life experiences.
Wow. I'm a little amazed I've never heard of this before. The first 3 parts were back ups in the Spectre Adventure issues. Then after Spectre Aquaman became the lead in Adventure.
|
|
shaxper
CCF Site Custodian
Posts: 22,860
|
Post by shaxper on Aug 5, 2017 13:28:16 GMT -5
Wow. I'm a little amazed I've never heard of this before. The first 3 parts were back ups in the Spectre Adventure issues. Then after Spectre Aquaman became the lead in Adventure. More amazing still. I have those spectre issues. Thanks for this.
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on Aug 5, 2017 13:31:26 GMT -5
The first 3 parts were back ups in the Spectre Adventure issues. Then after Spectre Aquaman became the lead in Adventure. More amazing still. I have those spectre issues. Thanks for this. Now I know what my next review will be. Probably start it in Sept...
|
|