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Post by Cei-U! on Dec 22, 2022 5:48:10 GMT -5
Several other people have already cited today's selection so I'm not gonna waste a lot of time beating around the proverbial bush. The bronze in badassery goes to 3. The Masters of Evil (Under Siege version)
We can debate the merits of this epic Avengers storyline from writer Roger Stern and the art team supreme of John Buscema and Tom Palmer all day long but I don't think anyone here would deny the brilliance of its central,conceit: that the only way to defeat the World's Mightiest Heroes is through surprise and sheer force of numbers. It's so obvious that it's amazing nobody thought of it earlier, but perhaps it took a villain with the hate-fueled obssession of second-generation super-villain Heinrich Zemo to put it in motion. Zemo's scheme, executed with ruthless cruelty by the army of powerhouses under his command, came perilously close to success. But what cinched this villain team's claim on my #3 slot is a single scene from the story's conclusion. In the battle's aftermath, Captain America discovers that Zemo broke into Cap's old Army footlocker and destroyed the only existing photo of Steve Rogers' mother. The sight of Cap weeping over its tatters while Captain Marvel tries to console him brings me to tears every time. As despicable as the Masters' actions were—and beating a helpless Jarvis nearly to death for shits and giggles is pretty damned despicable—it was this single petty but emotionally devastating move by Zemo that proved just how evil a super-villain can be. Cei-U! I summon the hankie!
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Post by Deleted on Dec 22, 2022 6:12:16 GMT -5
3. Angel Gang (2000 AD)The Angel Gang are a primal gang of thugs operating in the Cursed Earth, not far from Texas City. They have given Judge Dredd many problems over the years. While I can’t state what their current status is (I’m not really reading 2000 AD nowadays), I know they were a thorn in Dredd’s side for a while. My reason for their inclusion are similar to my reason for including the Dark Judges: Dredd’s opponents either end up in jail or dead. If Dredd can’t arrest someone, and a killing is lawful, then they’re dead. Whatever the current status of the Angel Gang - they could be dead for all I know - they have been a thorn in Dredd’s side for a long time, no mean feat.
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shaxper
CCF Site Custodian
Posts: 22,860
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Post by shaxper on Dec 22, 2022 6:21:23 GMT -5
3. The Council of KangsOccurred in Avengers #267-269 (May thru July 1986) By Roger Stern and John Buscema An amazing idea used poorly: what if, every time Kang altered time, he created an alternate time stream with its own version of him in it, each a little wiser or more foolish, weaker or stronger as a result of their actions? And what if those Kangs began working together to thin the heard, finding the strongest, most capable Kangs in the multiverse and killing the rest? I'm so glad that this concept got recycled into the Loki television series as it had so much more potential than it was given a chance to realize. As I've said before, I'm not much of an Avengers fan, but I can't get enough of Kang, so three Kangs working together to kill off countless other Kangs? I'm in.
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Post by EdoBosnar on Dec 22, 2022 6:23:21 GMT -5
3. The Headmenfirst appearance (as team): Defenders #21 line-up: Chondu the Mystic, Arthur Nagin, Jerry Morgan, Ruby Thursday (who joins in Defenders #32) Since M.W. Gallaher chose them yesterday, I’ll dispense with an overly lengthy write-up… These guys, especially the original trio, should be comic relief, but they ended up being tenacious and surprisingly effective adversaries for the Defenders, making their lives hell on and off over the course of 20 or so issues (with a final conclusion/showdown in Defenders Annual #1). Leave it to Steve Gerber to do some comics archeology and dig up a few throw-away characters from the pre-Marvel Age and turn them into damned effective team of villains, and then make them an even greater threat by adding Ruby Thursday, a new and no less weird character whose appearance, abilities and general demeanor also seem to straddle the line between comedy and horror. And we shouldn’t forget Chondu’s ‘enhancement’ by his colleagues in what seems like the ultimate evil scientist workplace prank… ( ...The full line-up, with a post-makeover Chondu...) The Headmen are truly among the most deceptively fearsome villains to appear in the 1970s, and part of what makes that era of Marvel so memorable.
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Post by Deleted on Dec 22, 2022 6:43:13 GMT -5
3. The Council of KangsOccurred in Avengers #267-269 (May thru July 1986) By Roger Stern and John Buscema Clever choice! I want to dig out these comics, and I am 100% sure I have the issues in a box. One of the best Kang tales.
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Post by Jeddak on Dec 22, 2022 6:48:09 GMT -5
#3. The Sinister Six Amazing Spider-Man Annual #1 Oh, how I loved this book when it came out. It hit all the high points - Spidey's guilt over Uncle Ben and concern for Aunt May, Spidey losing his powers, JJJ being a jerk, Betty being sweet, Aunt May worrying about Pete and trying to help (while being clueless about Doc Ock's true nature), cameos from just about everybody else Marvel was publishing at the time. And of course, 6 of Spidey's baddest enemies teaming up to take down their nemesis once and for all. Some I was familiar with, some this book was introducing to me. But each one seemed capable of taking our hero down on their own. So how could their combined might fail? Okay, so their plan wasn't too involved. They just made Spider-Man face them one at a time, running a gauntlet. But that simple structure made for a non-stop action story, as Spidey faced one challenge after another, overcoming the odds with a cool full-page splash for each of the six. (Yay Ditko!) This one was just one wild roller-coaster, folks. And I loved the ride.
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Post by Icctrombone on Dec 22, 2022 6:49:02 GMT -5
#3
Superman Count Nefaria / Lethal Legion Avengers # 165-166 Marvel Comics ( 1977) Writer: Jim Shooter Artist: John Byrne Inker: Pablos MarcosIn General the Jim Shooter era was among the top runs in this book. In my opinion it rates right after Stan Lee and Roy Thomas. In particular , I consider this story arc to be his top action packed tale filled with action, mystery, team conflict and maybe the Avengers most formidable foe. In a nutshell- Count Nefaria who has fought the Avengers and the X-men primarily , decides that he wants to finance the augmentation of the abilities for the Whirlwind, the Living Lazer and the original Powerman. The trio take on the Avengers but during the fight, their increased powers fade . Turns out the process was in reality meant to drain them in order to combine and give Nefaria unbelievable powers. Nefaria takes on the Avengers and beats them rather easily. It isn’t until Thor shows up that the tide turns. A few points about the book:Byrne does a great job aided by wonderfully complimentary inks by underrated Pablo Marcos. I have looked back on his work over others like George Perez and he never disappoints. During the Thor confrontation , Nefaria catches and stops Mjolnir. Maybe the first time it happens and it is copied in JLA vs Avengers and most recently in the Movie Thor: Ragnarok. Thor's appearance in the end of part two is dramatic but it is also a plot point that leads to the Korvac saga. Peter Gyrich is introduced in this story and is soon to be the team's royal pain in the neck as their government liaison. Nefaria recruits Eric Josten on the promise that with his powers increased he can regain the name Powerman , which has been taken by Luke Cage
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Post by MWGallaher on Dec 22, 2022 7:44:46 GMT -5
3. The Brotherhood of EvilSo I asked myself, out of all the villain teams you love, which ones would you really want to read about in their own comic, just following them around doing their villain thing, hanging out in whatever they do in their daily lives? The Brotherhood of Evil, that's who! They were already a lock on my list, but that realization rocketed them high up the rankings. M. Mallah and The Brain, Madame Rouge, and anyone else they recruited, that imaginary series would be right up my alley. I loved the Doom Patrol from my first exposure in an early 70's reprint, and I eagerly snapped up every other reprint that hit the stands. A 6th-grade classmate brought a copy of #121, the final conflict between the Brotherhood and the Doom Patrol, but I wasn't able to get much more than a tantalizing glimpse and the unbelievable assurance that yes, the DP did in fact die in this issue! Oh, the cruelty stays with me to this day... One of the really cool things about the Brotherhood is how European they felt. I see these guys in a high budget Italian crime movie from the 60's, yachting in Monaco, plotting in the Alps, holding the Eiffel Tower for ransom... I'm certain a lot of that vibe came from the participation of Italian artist Bruno Premiani, whose unique style was perfect for the DP and for the Brotherhood.
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Post by foxley on Dec 22, 2022 7:58:28 GMT -5
Because hail, hail, the gang's all here... #3. "All My Enemies Against Me" (Detective Comics #526, 1983)(Joker, Black Spider, Captain Stingaree, Catman, Cavalier, Clayface (Matt Hagen), Gentleman Ghost, Getaway Genius, Killer Moth, Mad Hatter, Mr. Freeze, Penguin, Riddler, Scarecrow, Signalman, Spook, Tweedledee & Tweedledum, and Two-Face) Confessor has already done an excellent write-up on this story, so I won't rehash the details. So what remains is to explain why I chose this particular team-up. And it turns out I had already done so back in the 2014 12 Days, so I'll just reuse that. ('Work smarter, not harder' I'm always being told.) Batman is my favourite comic book character. One of the (many) reasons for this is that he has the coolest rogues gallery in comics, bar none. What could possibly be cooler for the 13 year old me than seeing all of them assembled to take on Batman? Answer: nothing. This issue even introduced to me to some Batman villains I'd never encountered before, like Black Spider and the Getaway Genius (okay, so they can't all be classics). But 13 year old me will not allow this issue to not be on my list. And just look at this 'convention of wanted posters' as the Penguin puts it. Now that's a rogues gallery!
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Post by commond on Dec 22, 2022 8:20:37 GMT -5
For today's pick, I'm going with DC's Dirty Dozen. 3. Suicide SquadFor some reason, I can't resist listening to the A-Team theme while typing this. The late 80s were my era of comics. I have a love-hate relationship with them now, as I'm sure many people do with the things they grew up on, but back then it was my whole world as far as comics go. I didn't read Suicide Suicide when it was coming out. There's only so much money a kid can scrounge together to buy comics, and I'm not even sure if Suicide Squad was on the newsstands let alone on my radar. However, I did read all the free monthly newsletters that were available from the comic stores cover-to-cover and felt intimately acquainted with most books simply based on their blurbs. Several years ago, I went on a nostalgia kick where I revisited the comic books from my youth, and from there I branched out and read some of the books from the same era that I didn't collect at the time. I loved everything about the Suicide Squad, from the concept, to John Ostrander's clever writing, Luke McDonnell's rough looking pencils, the ups and downs of the series as a whole, and the march towards its cancellation, which I think is a fascinating period in any comic title. I'm not sure how I'd feel about it now. There was a time when I thought Ostrander was one of the best writers of his era, but I am loathing a lot of what he did with the Spectre in my current re-read (sorry, I know there are a lot of fans of the run here), and I'm struggling to make my way through Grimjack. So, I think I'll leave it as a pleasant memory of great series from the 80s. And i'll be damned if Amanda Waller isn't one of the best characters ever.
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Post by Prince Hal on Dec 22, 2022 8:25:34 GMT -5
10. Ir, Ur and Ar, the Mutants from Doom Patrol 115 -116 (Nov-Dec 1967)
"Three Against the Earth"* These guys were just about the freakiest looking creatures I'd ever seen in a comic book. The guy with eyes in the palms of his hands got the best of the mutations caused by -- what else? -- atomic radiation. (Turns out the three were born near the first atomic tests in 1945.) Those other two? I could never decide who'd got the worst of it. And who cared that "Chestface" decided to wear his yellow jammie bottoms for whatever reason? You never even noticed those because of the grotesqueness of the anomalies that cursed these poor guys. From Arnold Drake's opening narration: "What terrifying cauldron could have spewed out this witch's brew? " Or Robotman's first reaction: "YICHHHH! Look at those things They look like people that got made in a Mix-Master!" And Neg-Man's response: "Operated by a cockeyed cook! BLEUCHH!" Of course, leave it to Rita to bring these two up short: "The Doom Patrol -- Outcasts of the world -- fabulous freaks -- poking fun at someone else's strangeness?... Cliff, who hasn't quite caught the irony yet, says, "Honey, these aren't strange -- I mean they're stomach-turners!" At which point Rita lifts Cliff high into the air and drops the hammer: "Really? And what about us -- a walking mummy, a rubber girl and a tin man! You don't think we've killed a few appetites?" These three refugees from a Basil Wolverton comic have haunted me ever since I first saw them in all their simple, horrific glory. Don't know if it was Arnold and/or the great Bruno Premiani who designed these poor guys, but all praise to both of them! The three brothers were angry, arrogant, vengeful creatures, naturally, as who wouldn’t be if he looked like one of them. What was interesting here, however, was that as their two-part saga went on, the violent mutants became increasingly sympathetic characters. Rita, the heart and soul, as well as the common sense of the DP, realizes that these are not evil monsters, but “the first children of the atomic age! No wonder they’re angry – the poor things!” However, the three brothers defeat the DP and use their powers to draw a comet closer to Earth, setting off a slew of global disasters, intending to immolate the planet. Ur declares, “The world that made us this way – ugly, horrifying – shall die at our hands. And before everyone on this planet dies in one blinding flash – all shall know that those whom they rejected – destroyed them!” When the Earth is 17 minutes from utter destruction, Rita confronts Ur and tells him the DP is very much like the mutant brothers, explaining that “we were outcasts, too! Then a great man showed us how to be accepted by the world again!” I don’t know if young readers were supposed to realize it, but given the usual turn of events in many a Doom Patrol story, she was at the very least exaggerating and at worst, lying… for a good cause. The Doom Patrol were referred to as freaks, even called themselves freaks, acted out against each other, were almost always just a “freak” away from tearing each other or the city apart. (Rita was much less susceptible to this kind of anger, but she often lost it with her three male compatriots.) To tell you more about the fate of the Earth and the mutants would spoil the ending, which seems at first to be headed toward a standard ending via a deus ex machina, but the three brothers prove more gallant than anyone would have guessed. I wish the story could have been just a few pages longer, but for whatever reason, the first chapter was shorter by a few pages to accommodate a Beast Boy back-up story, which could have gone anywhere. The story has stuck with me since I first read it back in 1967, partly because of the mutants’ genuinely frightening appearance, and also because of the cleverness of Drake’s writing. Whoever designed Ur -- Drake, artist Bruno Premiani, or both -- seems to have realized that Premiani could draw his enormous eye to show a wide range of emotions, from looking vengeful in one panel to looking hurt a few panels later. And the same is true of Ir and Ar. Like other characters considered monstrous as a story begins, Ur, Ir and Ar soon became less repulsive and more attractive thanks to Drake and Premiani and created a beautiful, unforgettable story. At least I find it to be, and that’s what counts here, right? *My Greatest Adventure 82
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Post by Icctrombone on Dec 22, 2022 8:26:12 GMT -5
I get confused whenever the suicide squad makes it here. They do good things but they are criminals.
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Post by DubipR on Dec 22, 2022 8:40:35 GMT -5
#3- Harley Quinn & Poison IvyWhat makes Harley and Ivy so beloved by fans? Yes, their across the board fanbase is appealing to a wider audience but what makes them such a great villainous duo? It's two opposite forces of evil that make for compelling reading. You have a junior X-factor of crazy in Harley to bounce off of a calm and collected Ivy. I think what goes away from the modern reader's mind is that their both accomplished doctors, which makes them even more dangerous. The dangerous toxins created by a master botanist that can kill, thwart and alter people's minds and bodies; that's pretty lethal! Dr. Quinn is a psychiatrist that was bend men to her will. That's an insanely powerful duo. Going back to the opposite forces aspect, which what makes the duo so loveable comes to their crimes. It's rare to have strong female antagonists, let alone two of them that can hold the readers enjoyment as they mess with the Bat family and the DC Universe.
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Post by commond on Dec 22, 2022 8:45:03 GMT -5
I get confused whenever the suicide squad makes it here. They do good things but they are criminals. Well, y'know, they're not really doing it of their own free will since they have microbombs planted inside their heads to ensure their obedience. Also, I'm not sure if carrying out covert military operations for the government constitutes doing good things. It's extremely shady.
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Post by DubipR on Dec 22, 2022 8:46:55 GMT -5
I get confused whenever the suicide squad makes it here. They do good things but they are criminals. Well, y'know, they're not really doing it of their own free will since they have microbombs planted inside their heads to ensure their obedience. Also, I'm not sure if carrying out covert military operations for the government constitutes doing good things. It's extremely shady. That's my thought as well. Doing bad things for government and trying to cover it up seems rather bad to me. My Number 2 falls in this territory. I'm still going to post it regardless the rules or not.
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