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Post by thwhtguardian on Dec 17, 2018 9:47:52 GMT -5
Star Wars: Splinter of the Mind's Eye
This is one I'd really love to eventually read; back in the day, in the years just after Star Wars came out, I was a huge fan and ate up anything and everything Star Wars, so I bought the novel and devoured it (I recall there being some buzz for a while that the story would even be adapted into the sequel rather than Empire). I'm nowhere as big a Star Wars fan now (I'm basically Team Trek), but I still have soft spot in my heart for Splinter of the Mind's Eye. Yeah, it started out as a treatment for a low budget sequel if the original didn't go over well.
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Post by Deleted on Dec 17, 2018 11:05:03 GMT -5
9. WWF BattlemaniaPublished by Acclaim/Valiant from 1991 to 1992, WWF Battlemania only ran for 5 issues. But it was a pretty good run, if you ask me. It's debatable whether wrestling is still as popular now. It certainly does well financially, but we are at saturation point with the likes of WWE putting out a weekly three-hour show, monthly events, SmackDown, etc. We truly are in the wrestling era of saturation. In the early 90s, the WWF had a few syndicated shows, which ran for about 42 minutes once you took out the ad breaks. And they put out four PPV events a year (a fifth was added in 1993). So for those of us who couldn't quite get enough WWF action, WWF Battlemania provided us with a "fix". The stories pretty much took place outside the wrestling ring (there were ring scenes, though). It was quite a novelty, seeing wrestlers battling outside the ring, whether it be two tag teams battling in a restaurant, two wrestlers battling in the wilds of Canada, or two of the top wrestlers of the time battling in a parking lot. The art was very good. There was also the fact that the Undertaker's word balloon had a black background. Gimmicky, yes, but that can be commonplace now, what with the likes of Deadpool having yellow word balloons. And, like the WCW Comics I mentioned elsewhere, whoever was tasked with writing these clearly had a handle on the characters. It might have been tempting for a publisher to churn out a wrestling comic solely to make a quick buck, but there does appear to be a lot of effort here; it's sad the comic lasted a mere five issues as it was very entertaining.
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Post by Slam_Bradley on Dec 17, 2018 11:14:44 GMT -5
Zorro by Alex Toth (Dell 1950s)And as usual I'm behind. Which is pretty standard on the weekend. Luckily I can half-ass this one as it has been adequately covered a few times already. Needless to say that Toth hit all the right swashbuckling notes on this fabulous adaptation of the Disney television show.
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on Dec 17, 2018 11:21:43 GMT -5
I talked about it in my other Guys thread; that's what happens when you don't do the required reading! Eclipse reprinted it in their Star*Reach Classics, which reprinted stories fro Star*Reach, Imagine, and Quack. There is also a three volume "The P. Craig Russell Library of Opera Adaptations" which I discovered by googling this work. Guess what is now on my Amazon wishlist
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on Dec 17, 2018 11:41:46 GMT -5
It might have been tempting for a publisher to churn out a wrestling comic solely to make a quick buck, but there does appear to be a lot of effort here; it's sad the comic lasted a mere five issues as it was very entertaining. Valiant's initial output, before they had the funds to launch their own superhero universe, was licensed comics for Nintendo and the WWF. These weren't exactly labors of love, but they took the jobs seriously as the future of the company depended upon the initial success of these outings.
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Post by Deleted on Dec 17, 2018 11:43:39 GMT -5
Thanks for that context. Yes, I guess they did take the jobs seriously. The characters sounded like the TV versions. Maybe it was luck, but it certainly *felt* like they were trying to get a handle on the characters.
Incidentally, I don't recall seeing a single Valiant title on the shelves here in England (I bought those WWF books around 1993 as part of a collected edition in a bookstore).
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on Dec 17, 2018 11:59:46 GMT -5
Incidentally, I don't recall seeing a single Valiant title on the shelves here in England (I bought those WWF books around 1993 as part of a collected edition in a bookstore). I could be mistaken, but I don't think the WWF and Nintendo titles were actually sold in comic shops and on spinner racks. I believe the WWF books were sold at wrestling events, and I'm not sure where/how one got the Nintendo mags.
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Post by hondobrode on Dec 17, 2018 13:39:36 GMT -5
I never saw any of the pre-superhero Valiants in shops at the time.
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Post by codystarbuck on Dec 17, 2018 13:55:22 GMT -5
It might have been tempting for a publisher to churn out a wrestling comic solely to make a quick buck, but there does appear to be a lot of effort here; it's sad the comic lasted a mere five issues as it was very entertaining. Valiant's initial output, before they had the funds to launch their own superhero universe, was licensed comics for Nintendo and the WWF. These weren't exactly labors of love, but they took the jobs seriously as the future of the company depended upon the initial success of these outings. They also had a ton of headaches from the WWF, regarding likenesses. They had a cover with the Ultimate Warrior, taken directly from a promotional photo . First, they complained about his arm ribbons being the wrong color, so they had to fix that in production. Then they said his nose was too big. Shooter showed them the photo and the tracings made of it, to show it was exactly as in the photo, which was his real nose. Didn't matter; change it! Shooter told the gang to keep it as is and they printed and shipped it. The licensing person at the WWF said it looked better. He had more headaches with them, when they were cooperating for Broadway Comics. The WWF reneged on most of their promises with Valiant (selling the comics at house shows, promoting it on tv, etc) and were still doing the same with Broadway.
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Post by Deleted on Dec 17, 2018 14:04:49 GMT -5
Interesting.
I wonder if they had any issues with Hulk Hogan. Still arguably the most popular WWF wrestler of the time (even if his popularity had waned since the 80s), he never appeared in any Battlemania issues. I found that odd.
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Post by Paste Pot Paul on Dec 17, 2018 16:26:29 GMT -5
The Shadow DC Comics 1987 Andy Helfer, Bill Sienkiewicz, and Kyle Baker Actually I would also include Chaykins mini from the year before, and the Shadow Strikes that followed with the beautiful work by Eduardo Barretto(though this was a more traditional take IIRC). Just look at that cover, theres the Shadow right there, guns blazing, kicking ass, and takin' names. But wait, theres more...so much more. Helfer and Baker take us on a crazy trip, a trip so different you remember their Shadow over that of Howard Chaykin or Bill friggin Sienkiewicz, even 30 years later.
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Post by Prince Hal on Dec 17, 2018 16:46:15 GMT -5
9. Rocky and his Fiendish Friends #4 (June 1963)I’m guessing just a bit on this because my memory is a bit hazy going back 56 years. What I do know for sure is that my grandmother bought me a Rocky comic off the spinner rack in a candy store in early 1963, just after I’d started to fall in love with comic books. The first couple of issues of this titles were 25-cent 80-pagers, and I think I would have remembered such a big comic if it had been one of those. I’m settling on issue #4 because the cover strikes the gentlest of chords in my memory and because it was not a winter day when we were in that candy store. So now you’re probably saying, “Well, prince hal, that must have been one hell of an adaptation if that’s best you can do for a memory of it!” Bear with me. I chose this Rocky title because I know I had at least one of them, and I would have wanted it because I loved the Rocky and Bullwinkle cartoons. If you read my write-up about MAD you’ll know what I mean when I say that these cartoons (and hence the comic book versions of them) were very much like MAD for younger kids, minus the snark. They were the Horatian satire where MAD was Juvenalian, not bitter or acerbic, but gentler and more tolerant of human weakness. Which made them no less humorous. They poked fun at just about everything: Russian spies; the Cold War; old-time serials; movies and TV shows; the space race; celebrities (supposedly, professional sidekick Durward Kirby was furious that they Spoonerized his name to designate the magical hat known as the Kirwood Derby); politics; and historical characters. The stories were anarchic, goofy, and post-modern before that term existed. The dialogue was laced with allusions of all kinds, self-referential remarks, more than a few smashings of the fourth-wall, and of course, puns, puns and more puns. ("Boris Badenov" being the most famous example.) All of it is still funny, trust me. Anyway, I knew Rocky from the cartoons and that led me to the Rocky comic, which I remember not for what I read, but for how I read it. And how I read it was in a state of complete enjoyment. Dudley Do-Right, Captain Peter Peachfuzz, Mr. Peabody and the stars themselves were just as engaging and funny in print as they were on television. And for all those fond memories, and for being yet another reason I am the cynical, pun-loving wreck I am today, I pick Rocky’s Fiendish Friends as my Number 9 choice. PS: Here's a page of punny stuff, but it's from issue 5, a spoof of the poem "Barbara Frietchie." (Couldn't find any pages from issue four, I'm afraid.) You can't help but hear those perfect cartoon voices...
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Post by Reptisaurus! on Dec 17, 2018 17:00:00 GMT -5
Fangs for the Memories Dept. 4. Tales of the Slayers (Dark Horse, '02) I'm a hyuge fan of the Buffy tv show, and this is just really freaking good. This isn't a Buffy the Vampire Slayer comic, it's a collection of short stories about other women who have had Buffy's job. This isn't an inferior copy of the TV show in a medium it wasn't designed for... This expands on the continuity of the (*ahem*) Buffyverse while giving you a buncha comic short stories that are designed to work as comics. And wow, they got some artists on this thing! Tim Sale! P. Craig Russel! And the number one all time vampire guy himself, Gene Colan. And I believe that's a Mignola cover. And this comic is written by folks that actually worked on the TV show, who - oddly- all seem to be able write comics like comic writers. (Or the artists were good enough to fix the scripts, who knows?) Honestly, even if you're turned off by the "Buffy" name this is a really strong and surprisingly diverse anthology. Horror, sure, but also Sci-Fi, poetry, Blacksploitation... there's a lot of varied content here, and it almost all works.
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Post by wildfire2099 on Dec 18, 2018 1:01:54 GMT -5
Frost Giant's Daughter, By REH Adapted by Busiek/Nord/Stewart Dark Horse 2004 This is my favorite version of my favorite Conan story.. and they nailed it. I don't always love Cary Nord, but he was sure amazing here:. I'm sure just about everyone here is familiar, so I'll just post some images
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Post by Roquefort Raider on Dec 18, 2018 5:48:52 GMT -5
Frost Giant's Daughter, By REH Adapted by Busiek/Nord/Stewart Dark Horse 2004 This is my favorite version of my favorite Conan story.. and they nailed it. I don't always love Cary Nord, but he was sure amazing here:. I'm sure just about everyone here is familiar, so I'll just post some images Nord brought something very rare and (to me) very precious to the character and his world: verisimilitude. His designs for clothes, buildings and characters looked ancient and authentic, as if this were based on actual archaeology. Howard brought the same quality to his stories, but that’s an aspect too often dropped in favour of pure fantasy. I miss Nord!!!
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