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Post by impulse on Jan 10, 2020 10:46:05 GMT -5
Greg Land deserves every bit of criticism he gets for over-swiping and even stealing art from others. But when he tones it down, I have no complaint. This is from Iron Man #7, page 6, 2013 with inks by Jay Lestein. The thing that makes it hard to enjoy Land's work for me now is after learning where and what types of source images he swipes from, it's, err...a little hard not to see it in your head.
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Post by rberman on Jan 10, 2020 11:17:23 GMT -5
Greg Land deserves every bit of criticism he gets for over-swiping and even stealing art from others. But when he tones it down, I have no complaint. This is from Iron Man #7, page 6, 2013 with inks by Jay Lestein. The thing that makes it hard to enjoy Land's work for me now is after learning where and what types of source images he swipes from, it's, err...a little hard not to see it in your head. That's what made this particular Land page good. Just a guy talking to a robot, or something. No "Big O" faces. Mind you, Land is not unusual in using that sort of source material for referencing human figures without layers of thick clothing obscuring the form. He was just particularly bad at hiding what he was doing.
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Post by rberman on Jan 11, 2020 8:51:53 GMT -5
This Scarlet Witch pin-up that I got fell into the "Sure, why not?" department since it wasn't much. Like many pin-ups, the pose was probably referenced (or even lightboxed?) from a modeling photo. I don't know the artist. The signature sigil is enlarged below. Someone suggested to me that it may be an amateur rather than a professional, given that he chose a pose that obscured the hands and feet,which are notoriously difficult to draw. I'm in no position to say otherwise.
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Post by rberman on Jan 12, 2020 8:38:45 GMT -5
I got a 1995 page by Liam Sharpe and Robin Riggs from The Incredible Hulk #426: The finished product has some nice color effects in the top panel:
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Post by rberman on Jan 13, 2020 23:28:32 GMT -5
Next up, a pair of pages from 1999's Batman and Superman: World’s Finest with art by Dave Taylor and Robert Campanella. One page today: And the final version:
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Post by rberman on Jan 16, 2020 8:09:21 GMT -5
The other World's Finest page I got, also from Taylor and Campanella. Note that the background windows and thus the cityscape have been removed, so that the scene takes place in an interior room now.
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Post by rberman on Jan 17, 2020 7:44:45 GMT -5
Jessica Jones' eponymous "mature" noir series was followed by The Pulse, an all-ages book that integrated her more fully into the Marvel Universe through the eyes of a Daily Bugle tabloid insert. The series ran 14 issues plus a special and saw Jessica having a baby with Luke Cage. I got a page from #3 (2004). It's by Mark Bagley and Scott Hanna. And the finished version. Police Detective Gans is investigating a murder at the Daily Bugle and gets into an argument with Ben Urich. Jessica shows up at the end to interrupt:
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Confessor
CCF Mod Squad
Not Bucky O'Hare!
Posts: 10,202
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Post by Confessor on Jan 17, 2020 11:14:27 GMT -5
Jessica Jones' eponymous "mature" noir series... The first Jessica Jones series wasn't eponymous. It was called Alias. The eponymously titled series came after The Pulse. I loved Alias, and I think that The Pulse was damn good too.
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Post by impulse on Jan 17, 2020 12:19:47 GMT -5
Jessica Jones' eponymous "mature" noir series... The first Jessica Jones series wasn't eponymous. It was called Alias. The eponymously titled series came after The Pulse. I loved Alias, and I think that The Pulse was damn good too. I loved Alias, as well, but I was disappointed with The Pulse. It just felt to me like it lost too much being watered down to all-ages friendly.
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Post by rberman on Jan 17, 2020 12:22:52 GMT -5
Jessica Jones' eponymous "mature" noir series... The first Jessica Jones series wasn't eponymous. It was called Alias. The eponymously titled series came after The Pulse. I loved Alias, and I think that The Pulse was damn good too. Oh yeah, that was the TV show that was called Jessica Jones. Because there was already a female-fronted TV show called Alias once upon a time.
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Confessor
CCF Mod Squad
Not Bucky O'Hare!
Posts: 10,202
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Post by Confessor on Jan 17, 2020 14:21:18 GMT -5
The first Jessica Jones series wasn't eponymous. It was called Alias. The eponymously titled series came after The Pulse. I loved Alias, and I think that The Pulse was damn good too. I loved Alias, as well, but I was disappointed with The Pulse. It just felt to me like it lost too much being watered down to all-ages friendly. It was a whole different vibe to Alias, for sure, but I remember liking The Pulse a whole lot. Mind you, I don't think I've read it since it was coming out, so...what's that? 15 years ago? But I remember it being pretty good.
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Post by rberman on Jan 18, 2020 8:03:33 GMT -5
From 1996, I bought Dave Taylor and Stan Woch, Batman: Shadow of the Bat #53, Page 12. I would have liked to see a little more effort to make the plaid effect follow the lines of the clothing rather than look like MS Paint Autofill. That's probably why we don't see a lot of patterned clothing in comic books. Too much work!
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Post by rberman on Jan 19, 2020 8:20:54 GMT -5
I bought Page 15 from Cloak and Dagger #7 (1990) by Mike Vosburg and Barb Rausch. Terry Austin was writing at this point. It bears perhaps a little explaining if you want to know what's going on here. As a result of the X-Men event Inferno, Tyrone (Cloak) was swallowed by his own cloak while fighting demons. The cloak then entered the possession of the villainess Ecstasy, who had previously rivalled Cloak for control of the Dark Dimension. For some reason, when Esctasy wears the Cloak, it barely cloaks her privates, and little else. But Ecstasy has her own troubles; she's a rival drug dealer (dealing Ecstasy, a euphoric amphetamine derivative) to Kingpin. So Kingpin has sent an assassin with the improbable name of "The Disciplinarian" to assassinate her. He has time-stop abilities and can be seen in the last panel here, approaching Ecstasy's hotel penthouse suite as he throws off his overcoat. This issue has two other parallel plot lines. In one, Dagger, still blind from the events of Inferno, and her priest uncle/guardian are caught in a bank heist/hostage situation by some toughs led by a Scarlet Pimpernel clone, the Crimson Daffodil, who looks like Clark Gable in a Dread Pirate Roberts mask and has hypnosis powers. Dagger is also periodically ill from not having Tyrone around to safely discharge her excess light power into periodically, reminiscent of what happened to Dazzler in Ann Nocenti's Beauty and the Beast mini-series a few years previous. Finally, quite a bit of this issue shows Tyrone living an idyllic fantasy life of being a family man with a wife and kids in the suburbs. He sees an attractive woman at the grocery store and later realizes that she is Vanna White from the TV show "Wheel of Fortune." This is his first clue that he is not experiencing reality. Sounds a lot like "For the Man Who Has Everything." The following issue is a battle royale at the bank in which Tyrone escapes from the cloak to challenge Esctasy for control of it while Crimson Daffodil, Dagger, and The Disciplinarian duke it out. Someone called Mayhem shows up too. After that's all satisfactorily resolved, the good guys return to Father Bowen's church and get accosted by a motley crew of villains including Hulk, Fenris, Hydro-Man, Jester, and Rock, as part of the Acts of Vengeance event.
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Post by Farrar on Jan 19, 2020 12:26:54 GMT -5
... I guess that's the World Trade Center in the background? Don't think so, as the cover was created in early 1966 (for a comic on sale in May 1966), and the WTC and its Twin Towers, wasn't completed and an iconic part of the NYC skyline until 1972-73. Plus there's no antenna spire.
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Post by impulse on Jan 19, 2020 14:17:01 GMT -5
I bought Page 15 from Cloak and Dagger #7 (1990) by Mike Vosburg and Barb Rausch. Terry Austin was writing at this point. It bears perhaps a little explaining if you want to know what's going on here. As a result of the X-Men event Inferno, Tyrone (Cloak) was swallowed by his own cloak while fighting demons. The cloak then entered the possession of the villainess Ecstasy, who had previously rivalled Cloak for control of the Dark Dimension. For some reason, when Esctasy wears the Cloak, it barely cloaks her privates, and little else. But Ecstasy has her own troubles; she's a rival drug dealer (dealing Ecstasy, a euphoric amphetamine derivative) to Kingpin. So Kingpin has sent an assassin with the improbable name of "The Disciplinarian" to assassinate her. He has time-stop abilities and can be seen in the last panel here, approaching Ecstasy's hotel penthouse suite as he throws off his overcoat. This issue has two other parallel plot lines. In one, Dagger, still blind from the events of Inferno, and her priest uncle/guardian are caught in a bank heist/hostage situation by some toughs led by a Scarlet Pimpernel clone, the Crimson Daffodil, who looks like Clark Gable in a Dread Pirate Roberts mask and has hypnosis powers. Dagger is also periodically ill from not having Tyrone around to safely discharge her excess light power into periodically, reminiscent of what happened to Dazzler in Ann Nocenti's Beauty and the Beast mini-series a few years previous. Finally, quite a bit of this issue shows Tyrone living an idyllic fantasy life of being a family man with a wife and kids in the suburbs. He sees an attractive woman at the grocery store and later realizes that she is Vanna White from the TV show "Wheel of Fortune." This is his first clue that he is not experiencing reality. Sounds a lot like "For the Man Who Has Everything." The following issue is a battle royale at the bank in which Tyrone escapes from the cloak to challenge Esctasy for control of it while Crimson Daffodil, Dagger, and The Disciplinarian duke it out. Someone called Mayhem shows up too. After that's all satisfactorily resolved, the good guys return to Father Bowen's church and get accosted by a motley crew of villains including Hulk, Fenris, Hydro-Man, Jester, and Rock, as part of the Acts of Vengeance event. Wow, that looks very similar in style to John Romita Jr.
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