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Marvel Comics

The Adventures of James Bond Jr., Sequential Art, and a 12-Issue Marvel Comics Series... [Pg.349]

The oidy direct connections between James Bond, Jr. (to novel) and the James Bond Jr. of the television series and comics are the name and his famous imcle. EON Productions commissioned Marvel Comics to produce sequential art books as a companion to the television series with to first issue in 1992. Marvel Comics was no stranger to the Bond franchise as they produced, in 1981, a two issue series adopted from the film. For Your Eyes Only, (also released as a Marvel Illustrated Paperback and an oversized magazine, Marvel Super Special 19). Another decade passed before Marvel tapped into the Bond market again with a Bond Jr. comic... [Pg.350]

Lee S (1962) Spiderman, Amazing fantasy 15. Marvel Comics, New York... [Pg.274]

Cover of Spider-Man Unlimited 1 (Marvel Comics, May 1993). Spider-Man was the greatest ot the atomic-themed superheroes who have emerged from the 1960s forward, most ot whom conveyed atomic information as a by-product of their adventure tales. Spider-Man, Marvel, TM and Marvel Entertainment,... [Pg.120]

Gerber, Ernst. Tltc P/ioto-/ouraal Guide to Marvel Comics. 2 vols. Minden, NY Gerber, 1991. [Pg.158]

Top Cow Productions (TCP) is a comic-book publishing company founded by top comic-book creator and artist, Marc Silvestri. TCP currently publishes its line of comic books in 21 languages in more than 55 different countries. The company has launched 21 original franchises in the industry s Top 10, with seven at 1, a feat accomplished by no other publisher in the last two decades. With retail sales topping 250 million and more than 100 million units published, TCP is the most aggressive and innovative comic-book company created since the founding of industry titan Marvel Comics in 1963. [Pg.547]

Cover of Captain Marvel Jr. 53 (Fawcett, September 1947). This issue illustrates what emerged in the late 1940s and 1950s as a standard plotline in atomic-themed comics an established super hero thwarts a villain s attempt to steal or use an atomic device. [Pg.57]

The second most popular superhero of the day. Captain Marvel, faced a similar dilemma, but with one exception he had better writers. The Adventures of Captain Marvel and Whiz Comics provided the most imaginative comic book treatment of atomic themes for the entire postwar era. Many of the approximately five hundred Captain Marvel stories were written by former pulp fiction writer Otto Binder and usually drawn by master artist C. C. Beck. They combined their talents to create a kindly, often obtuse, even whimsical superhero whose sales eventually topped those of Superman in the late 1940s. (His enemies called him "the Big Red Cheese.")... [Pg.60]

Overall a gentle satire infused the world of these comic book animals. For example. Red Rafifcit parodied the popular western newspaper strip Red Ryder Super Mouse (the Mouse of Stainless Steel) and Mighty Mouse did the same for Superman. In Hoppy the Marvel Bunny, Fawcett artists created an animal parody of Captain Marvel, who, like his hero, had only to say "Shazam" to assume super-animal powers. ... [Pg.63]

The atomic spy theme proved so pervasive, however, that several rival companies drew on it to capture public interest. American Comics Group s Spy and Counterspy appeared in August/September 1949, while Marvel s Spy Cases (September 1950) and Spy Fighters (March 1952),... [Pg.78]

Whiz Comics 82 (February 1947) (Fawcett). Captain Marvel Adventures 107 (April 1950) (Fawcett). Captain Marvel Adventures 78 (November 1947) (Fawcett). Bradford W. Wright, Comic Book Nation The Transformation of Youth Culture in America (Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press, 2001), 69-71. Captain Marvel Adventures 76 (September 1947) (Fawcett), 46-47. [Pg.144]

They have been collected as Godzilla King of the Monsters (New York Marvel, 2006), by Doug Moench, Herb Trimpe, Jim Mooney, Tom Sutton, et al. Comic book giveaway, Godzilla vs. Megaton (1976), Cinema Shares. [Pg.150]

Les Daniels, Comix A History of Comic Books in America (New York Bonanza Books, 1975), 139. See also Les Daniels, Marvel Five Fabulous Decades of the World s Greatest Comics (New York Harry N. Abrams, 1991) and Richard Reynolds, Superheroes A Modern Mythology (Jackson University Press of Mississippi, 1992). [Pg.152]

Scott Brick, "The Many Faces of Spider Man," Comics Buyer s Guide, January 2, 1988, 30-34 Stan Lee, introduction to The Uncanny X-Men Masterworks (New York Marvel, 1993), n.p. Stan Lee, The Incredible Hulk (New York Simon and Schuster, 1978) Mike Benton, Superhero Comics of the Silver Age (Dallas Taylor, 1992), 20-22 Stan Lee, The Best ofSpiderman (New York Ballentine Books, 1986), 49. [Pg.152]

Superman 308 (Fehmary 1977) (DC Comics) All Star Squadron (December 1982) (DC Comics). Outsiders (November 1985), All Star Squadron (December 1982) (DC Comics). Black Goliath vl 2 (April 1976) (Marvel). [Pg.152]

Marvel Five Decades of the World s Greatest Comics. New York Harry A. Abrams,... [Pg.157]


See other pages where Marvel Comics is mentioned: [Pg.349]    [Pg.356]    [Pg.357]    [Pg.155]    [Pg.10]    [Pg.85]    [Pg.94]    [Pg.109]    [Pg.119]    [Pg.137]    [Pg.192]    [Pg.349]    [Pg.356]    [Pg.357]    [Pg.155]    [Pg.10]    [Pg.85]    [Pg.94]    [Pg.109]    [Pg.119]    [Pg.137]    [Pg.192]    [Pg.10]    [Pg.4]    [Pg.5]    [Pg.19]    [Pg.25]    [Pg.26]    [Pg.51]    [Pg.61]    [Pg.62]    [Pg.117]    [Pg.120]    [Pg.121]    [Pg.123]    [Pg.124]    [Pg.126]    [Pg.136]    [Pg.141]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.349 , Pg.350 , Pg.356 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.78 , Pg.85 , Pg.94 , Pg.109 , Pg.117 , Pg.121 ]




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