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Post by Cei-U! on Dec 23, 2023 5:13:53 GMT -5
If any era of comics could be said to be my personal “Golden Age,” it would be the 1980s. So many of my all-time favorite comic book series, many of them the product of companies other than the Big Two, were launched in that decade: Love and Rockets. Neil the Horse. Nexus. Elfquest. The various Gladstone titles. And, of course, today's selection... 2. Crossfire
A spin-off of Eclipse's DNAgents, the book related the adventures of Jay Endicott, a Los Angeles bailbondsman who adopted the identity and costume of a deceased villain to solve problems for deserving people the law couldn't or wouldn't help. Despite the occasional guest appearance by the DNAgent named Rainbow, with whom Jay had a romantic relationship, scripter Mark Evanier tended to steer clear of the trappings of the super-hero genre (over time Crossfire abandoned everything from his costume but the mask). Instead, he drew on his experience as a writer for both live-action and animated television and his knowledge of Hollywood history to bring the book's setting—the seedy underbelly of LA in general and the entertainment industry in particular—to vivid life. And no one was better suited to depict that world and the colorful characters who inhabited it than artist Dan Spiegle, whose ability to draw a wide variety of physical types and realistic backgrounds never shone brighter than here. Crossfire was that rare comic book that was not only not hurt by a mid-run switch from color to black-and-white, it actually got better. (I would also be remiss if I didn't mention the fascinating and incisive text pieces Evanier included in every issue, which by themselves were worth the price of admission.) Crossfire ran for a total of 26 issues, plus a four-issue Crossfire and Rainbow mini-series and the 3-issue Whodunnit?, in which Endicott solved mysteries in his civilian identity. I can't recommend this series and its by-products highly enough. Cei-U! I summon the excursion to Raymond Chandler territory!
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Post by coke & comics on Dec 23, 2023 5:31:06 GMT -5
2. Silver Surfer
Silver Surfer #1-18, 1968-70, by Stan Lee, John Buscema, Jack Kirby, Joe Sinnott, Sal Buscema, Dan Adkins, Chic Stone, and Herb Trimpe My final two entries are dedicated to Slam Bradley. He was the herald of Galactus in Fantastic Four #48, by Lee/Kirby/Sinnott. Alicia taught him to be more. For his betrayal he was condemned to prison on the planet Earth. Kirby had likely imagined a creation of Galactus, a being of pure cosmic energy learning for the first time what it is to be human. Lee had other ideas. He imagined a person who had surrendered his humanity to save his world, and was now rediscovering it, while trapped in a world he never made. He misses a woman he left behind. He faces off against the devil incarnate. And he tries to find a place for himself in our world. Lee gives Kirby all the credit for creating Silver Surfer, but seemed to prize the character the most. Long after Lee stopped regularly writing, he picked up the pen every few years to tell a new Silver Surfer story. And there seemed an unspoken rule for 20 years that nobody but Lee would write Silver Surfer stories. Finally, that rule faded and Englehart told an excellent series of tales, succeeded by Jim Starlin, who brought the Surfer into conflict with Thanos.
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Post by EdoBosnar on Dec 23, 2023 6:04:33 GMT -5
I still really haven't decided which of my last two picks should be ranked no. 1 or 2, but the write-up for this one was easier, as I still haven't even written anything (or even found some images) for my other choice, so here goes: 2. Black Panther(as written by Don McGregor, in collaboration with a number of artists) Both Black Panther and McGregor’s run with the character in the pages of Jungle Action have appeared a number of times already, as I expected they would. So most of the main points have already been summed up. And while I agree that the sprawling epic told in the “Panther’s Rage” arc is the stand out, I want to take this opportunity to give a bit of a shout-out to the follow-up arc, the “Black Panther vs. the Klan.” Yes, it suffers by comparison to what came before, and it is unfinished (by McGregor anyway). However, it is laudable that McGregor decided to have a superhero, one who is a Black man from Africa at that, take on the Klan. And Billy Graham (with Bob McLeod inking) gave us visuals like this: I also think that both of the subsequent Black Panther stories written by McGregor in the mid-1980s and then early 1990s deserve mention and are well-worth reading if you liked "Panther's Rage." I personally think of them as chapters in the same lengthy saga. The first is “Panther’s Quest,” with art by Gene Colan and Tom Palmer, which originally ran in the pages of Marvel Comics Presents (#13-37) and involves T’Challa searching for his long-lost mother. Among other things, it can basically be described as “Black Panther vs. Apartheid.” (It was later collected into a tpb, cover below.) The second is the four-part Panther’s Prey (1991) with art by Dwayne Turner, which revisits some of the themes and characters last seen in “Panther’s Rage” (and brings back my favorite romantic partner for T’Challa, Monica Lynne).
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Post by Icctrombone on Dec 23, 2023 6:05:48 GMT -5
#2
Hitman First appearance: Demon annual # 2( 1993) Creators: Garth Ennis/ John Mcrea Series covered : Hitman 1-60 (1996) Series Team: Garth Ennis/ John Mcrea
Introduced in the truly putrid Bloodlines crossover series from DC , it might be the only saving grace of that event. The event has an invasion by some creatures that are feeding on the population and the side effect for those who survive is super powers. ( you gotta like comics, man). He's receives powers like mind reading and x-ray vision , which Ennis, quickly jettisons in the regular series after a few issues. The 60 issue series follows the life of a paid assassin Called Tommy Monihan that resides in Gotham city as he draws you in by force of his personality. Quintin Tarentino made you like gangsters in the movie Pulp Fiction and this series likewise brings that charm to Tommy and his acquaintances . This over the top violent book doubles as a humor title which serves to make the relationships more real to the readers. His first issue has him cross paths with Batman and throw up on his boots.
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Post by MWGallaher on Dec 23, 2023 7:37:53 GMT -5
2. CROSSFIRE, Eclipse Comics, CROSSFIRE #1 (May 1984) - #26(February 1988)
By Mark Evanier and Dan Spiegle
Spun-off from DNAGENTS #9 (February 1984) via DNAGENTS #4 (July 1983)
Jeff Baker, super-villain (but not assassin!) for hire, debuted as the gliding opponent of the DNAgents in their fourth issue. In the ninth and tenth, including an origin chapter drawn by guest artist Dan Spiegle, Crossfire’s costume, equipment, and landline are appropriated by Jay Endicott, a bail bondsman and all-around good guy who relies on impersonating the villain to assist the DNAgents.
In the letters page of the ninth issue, Evanier remarks that he and Spiegle, who were contemporaneously doing BLACKHAWK for DC, had been looking for another project to do together centered around Hollywood and show business, and that “after we got this issue all plotted, it dawned on me that without intending it, I’d set Crossfire up for business in Hollywood. Hmmm…sounds like a new Eclipse comic to me.”
Most likely, the spin-off was set up a little more intentionally than Evanier implies, as he must have seen the writing on the wall that BLACKHAWK wasn’t going to last much longer. As much as I was loving Mark and Dan’s WWII aviators, trading that title for this one was absolutely worth it.
The premise is itself a strong one, one I could easily see sustaining an 80’s tv series: bailbondsman masquerades as a legendary crook-for-hire to work from the inside of criminal operations. But the premise was just something to hang terrific stories on (as opposed to stories written to emphasize the premise), and Evanier had some incredibly entertaining stories derived from an industry full of them, behind-the-scenes kinds of stories that the public either never gets or gets highly fictionalized versions of.
Evanier’s strong on genuine humor, Eisneresque plots, engaging supporting characters, and solid mysteries. There were some incredibly impressive creative approaches, like #21’s story told with the chapters in reverse chronological order, and he looked to unexpected real world characters like Michael Jackson and Howard Hughes for plat inspiration. Spiegle brings his mastery of “character actors” the likes of and physical variety of which no one else in comics could match as well as what was, at least at the time, a peerless dedication to rendering richly drawn and highly convincing sets.
CROSSFIRE holds up well to re-reading; there’s so much variety in plot across its run, but all of it is coherent. You feel like you’re reading the same comic, but you’re reading a fresh, different story than last issue, not just another round of the same thing. And Evanier’s Show Business columns are always a meaty delight to read.
CROSSFIRE is my desert island kind of book, one that would remind a castaway MW of humanity in its breadth, its concerns both mundane and serious, and its convincing set depictions would refresh my memory of the architecture, technology, styles and accommodations in the culture I’d been separated from. If Cei-U! and I are stranded together, we can share and bring more comics! CROSSFIRE could easily have been my #1 pick this year, but I’ve got an even more important comic to acknowledge tomorrow.
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Confessor
CCF Mod Squad
Not Bucky O'Hare!
Posts: 10,197
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Post by Confessor on Dec 23, 2023 8:26:49 GMT -5
#2 – Star Wars: Dark Times #1–33 [featuring Dass Jennir] (2006–13) Set in the immediate aftermath of Star Wars: Episode III – Revenge of the Sith, issues #79 and #80 of the Star Wars: Republic series told the story of several Jedi warriors who survived the initial few hours of the Emperor's Jedi purge. One of those was Dass Jennir, an everyman Jedi Knight who befriends the Nosaurian warrior Bomo Greenbark, though the two were actually fighting on opposite sides during the Clone Wars. Jennir proved so popular with readers that he was brought back to star in his own series, Star Wars: Dark Times. Though Jennir himself is a great character to follow as he tries to make his way through the galaxy, while always striving to hide that he is a former Jedi, it's really the ensemble cast of Bomo and the crew of the freighter Uhumele that made this such an enjoyable series. Randy Stradley's writing is really top notch and often as thought-provoking and moving as it is action-packed. As if that wasn't enough, artist Douglas Wheatley's work on the series is absolutely breathtaking: his pretty pictures alone are worth the price of admission. I've read an awful lot of Star Wars comics in my time, but I'd have to say that Dark Times really is one of the very best series ever from that franchise.
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Post by DubipR on Dec 23, 2023 8:52:17 GMT -5
That sweet soft lisp #2- Luba's Comics & Stories (2000-2006)Gilbert Hernandez's world of Palomar throughout 40 years of comics has changed but stayed the small Central American town its given the world. Its people are as colorful as the culture, with Luba being one of his central characters. As the series progressed, Luba founds out that her family was bigger than expected. She has two half-sisters in the United States, Petra and Rosalba Martinez. As Luba got older, she immigrated to the US and settled down for a very prosperous life, also being part of Petra and Rosalba's life. From there Gilbert changes gears and Rosalba, aka "Fritz" takes centerstage and begins as the new Luba in his writings. Fritz and Petra were Love and Rockets 2.0, at least to me, slightly before the relaunch of Volume 2 in 2001. Here we see a shift from non-Palomar stories and creating something different than the main story from Beto. He's done side tales of Palomar (New Old Tales of Palomar, Julio's Day, etc) but Fritz, who is smart, sensitive, sexual and a mother/aunt figure to those in her world. From her beginnings as a troubled punk rocker to her becoming a psychiatrist and then making the strangest turn in becoming an B movie actress who's cult of personality is so massive, she has daughters that follow in her stead, lookalikes, and a series of hardcover books that are actually her movies. I could've done another 4 more entries from Gilbert's creations alone but wanted to give my number 2 to Fritz.
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Post by MRPs_Missives on Dec 23, 2023 10:20:39 GMT -5
The Eleventh Day of Christmas: A Rose by any other name…Spinning off from the Pages of Bone, is a tale from the past featuring Rose Rose #1-3 by Jeff Smith and Charles Vess is the epic tale of Rose’s adventures which set up many of the conflicts and backstory we discover throughout the pages of Bone, but is a gorgeous standalone story in its own right. Every page by Vess is to marvel at, and Smith’s storytelling is always on point. This just missed my top spot.
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Crimebuster
CCF Podcast Guru
Making comics!
Posts: 3,958
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Post by Crimebuster on Dec 23, 2023 11:04:47 GMT -5
2. Jack Knight - Starman1st Appearance: Zero Hour #1 Choice Run: Starman #0-81 One of my favorite comics of all time, and one of the reasons the late 90s is maybe my favorite era from the 40 years I've been reading and collecting comics. A great story about parents and children, while weaving together a bunch of great classic DC continuity that wouldn't seem to fit together at all.
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Post by Deleted on Dec 23, 2023 11:07:54 GMT -5
Day 11 Betty Cooper
First appearance: Pep 22 Dec 1941
Spinoffs: Betty and Veronica, Betty & Me, Betty's Diary, Betty....
If my picks for this 2023 event were in a family tree, Betty would be its matriarch. She first appeared, in the page above, an astounding 82 years ago in Pep 22 (cover dated Dec 1941). She was with Archie on the very first page of the very first Archie story. She gets my nod as the ultimate support character in the Archie universe.
And throughout her long history in the Archie universe, she's done it all. Initially she was portrayed as the archetype of the scheming “wacky blonde” and acted as the primary female antagonist, depicted as a character even more boy-crazy than Archie was girl-crazy and willing to do whatever is necessary to ensure that she snagged him as her boyfriend. This didn't last. She morphed into the sweet, reliable, kind, helpful, caring & selfless everyday 'girl-next-door that we all know today...a smart, talented, tomboyish yet beautiful girl with blonde hair. Despite making her first appearance before Veronica, she's now generally subjugated to being Archie's backup romantic interest.
As she appears in many multiple short stories in each Archie issue, her depiction changes somewhat on the needs of the story. She may be shown as both the academically oriented student with above-average intelligence and the fun living teenager. Or a great cook. Or a sportsgirl. Or a mechanic. Or a skilled ski-girl. Or a musician. Her many talents and accomplishments often make her friend Veronica jealous, who then tries to sabotage Betty to steal her glory and make her look bad.
She also appears in a '90s one-shot with a ruthless character...who will be the patriarch in my family tree. Stay tuned....
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Post by Roquefort Raider on Dec 23, 2023 11:28:42 GMT -5
2. Legion of Super-heroesI discovered the Legion as the fill-in material offered in Éditions Héritage's Kamandi comic. The first story I read was also the first Jim Shooter wrote, coincidentally. I thought it was a little childish (and no wonder, since the lad was 13 at the time) but it had a certain spark that made me like it a lot. Months later I bought a translation of the Treasury Edition in which Lightning Lad married Saturn Girl. (That's actually one of the few comics I lost. I lent it to friends who lived in a different city and it never came back; when I asked about it they had completely forgotten about it and didn't know where it had gone. Sigh.) That marriage story wasn't especially interesting, but I thoroughly enjoyed the back pages listing all the Legionnaires. So many names! So many costumes! It was a cornucopia of comic-book goodness! That's why I never understood editors of team books who sometimes insist on "smaller and tighter" groups. The more characters the better, I say! I became a real Legion fan with the Great Darkness Saga. Then again years later with the 5YL era. Then again with the Archie Legion. And finally once more with the gripping Legion of the Damned storyline, by Dan Abnett, Andy Lanning and Olivier Coipel. I'm no longer a fan of doom and gloom comics, and I thought the Legion had already been through enough anguish with the destruction of Earth in the 5YL storyline. But in this case, I could forgive the mag just about anything. The Legion titles were about to be cancelled, we readers all knew that, and so the Earth-shattering events of Legion of the Damned could very well be permanent; maybe everybody would die and the title be rebooted from scratch (something that would indeed happen a few years later). To anyone caring about this incarnation of the characters, the stakes were very high indeed. Plus, the art looked great. I had never seen someone draw quite like Coipel, part E.R. Cruz and part Katsuhiro Otomo. The Legion Lost miniseries that followed maintained my interest, especially when it introduced the best design ever for Wildfire (Drake being my favourite Legionnaire). I have never been as big a fan of the Legion as I have been of the X-Men, but I don't think any other team book managed to maintain my interest for so long. It might hit a low point from time to time, but it would always rebound from it.
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Post by Rob Allen on Dec 23, 2023 12:10:22 GMT -5
2. Howard the Duck
The right duck at the right moment in history and in my life.
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Post by Jeddak on Dec 23, 2023 16:04:10 GMT -5
Day 11 - Nick Fury, Agent of S.H.I.E.L.D.First appearance - Fantastic Four #21 1968 series 1-3, 5 Nick Fury as a present-day secret agent first appeared in the FF. That's my story, and I'm sticking to it. He then got recruited to S.H.I.E.L.D. in the Strange Tales series. I really enjoyed that first story arc, the first Hydra story. But after that, I felt like the series lost its way, and my interest waned. So I wasn't reading when Jim Steranko took over. But the series got its own book, and I picked one up to see how things were going. I was freakin' blown away. By the third issue, this was one of my favorite books. Of course, after a fill-in in the fourth issue, the fifth would be Steranko's last, cause that's the way my world works. But I still love those 4 issues. A spy drama intermingled with a Las Vegas crime story, introducing a more personal villain for Fury in Scorpio. A more traditional superheroic tale, complete with dinosaurs. A gothic take on the Hound of the Baskervilles. And a sequel to the first issue, exploring the mystery of Scorpio. Let's talk about the artwork. It was mind-blowing, vibrant, energetic, with innovative coloring and wild new, bizarre, but always readable layouts. Stunning stuff. This is still one of my favorite runs of any comic, any publisher. And since we have such a knowledgeable bunch here, let me ask a question that still bugs me. Did they ever explain why both Scorpio and Centurius talked about the Parable of Doom?
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Post by DubipR on Dec 23, 2023 17:11:30 GMT -5
2. Jack Knight - Starman1st Appearance: Zero Hour #1 Choice Run: Starman #0-81 If Zero Hour #1 was his first appearance, and let's say #0 was the second.. what's the third before Starman #0? Did he pop up in any of the tie-ins?
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Post by commond on Dec 23, 2023 17:25:48 GMT -5
#2 Gotham Central #1-40 (2003-2006)Spun out of the Batman books. Greg Rucka and Ed Brubaker reimagine the GCPD as The Wire, and it is awesome. Unfortunately, the book had sales problems as surprisingly people would rather read about grown men in spandex than detectives doing police work, but I can't think of a book that better fits the spirit of this year's topic. A bunch of supporting characters thrown together in their own book, exploring the toll that supervillain crime as on ordinary folk and the regular heroes who put their lives on the line each today to protect and serve. Great series!
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