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Evil Ernie, Hi-Res scan from Previews catalog (Feb 1998)
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Robert Crumb's Devil Girl Choco-Bar
Hi-Res scan from Previews Catalog, February 1998
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Ka-Zar corner box (1981)
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Detail from Atari Lynx ad. 1991
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Reference for Menace #1, by Jada Pinkett and Dan Fraga in Previews catalog. February 1998.
Early attempts of Rob Liefeld on atract celebrities to his publishing company, in order to facilitate the selling of his IPs to Hollywood
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Underwater #3 (1995)
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Underwater is one of the few unfinished Chester Brown's works, hence it has never been compiled in graphic novel format. The only phisical evidence for its existence is the original comic book series where it was periodically published by chapters.
Neither plot nor author's aims are easy to understand starting with chapter three. Underwater is deliberately surrealist, its dialogue is written in a bizarrely distorted version of English, and a single chapter is too few pages long to draw any kind of conclusion.
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In fact, the Underwarter episode is so short because it only fills half of the book. The second half belongs to another legendary unfinished work by Brown, nothing less than the Christian Gospels comic adaptation!. Particularly, these 13 pages adapt the "fedding the multitude" miracle according Gospel of Matthew.
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It's known that Brown's graphic translation of Jesus' life has a very special feature among others in any medium: The mood and look of Jesus changes depending on the particular gospel writer he is adapting. Clearly, the chosen depiction for Matthew's part is quite uncommon: semi-bald, older than usual, serious (almost angry) face... I am tremendously curious about the other alternative versions and the autor's reasons to choose those characterizations. I'll look for more chapters of Underwater and Yummy Fur on the Internet, hoping that Chester Brown take the decision to finish any of those works in order to see it reprinted .
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Purchased at Gosh! (Soho, London) for  £3.50
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Detail from !mpact Comics advertisement (1991)
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Detail from comic-book advertisement page. 1981
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Ka-Zar #5 (1981)
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Auto-conclusive flashback episode where Ka-Zar tells Shanna a sad story of his past, involving the native Savage Land settlement, his sabretooth "friend" Zabu and a rabies outbreak.
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Clearly because an editorial mistake, the artistic credits are missing in this issue. A quick search in Google solves the mistery: written by Bruce Jones and pencilled by Brent Anderson. In 1981, Jones already had a long experience on writting for Warren magazines, free of infamous Comics Code Authority restrictions, and it is noted in the inherent maturity of his script for this Ka-Zar episode. While Zabu remains missing, a crazed specimen of sabretooth is attacking people of the settlement, resulting in deaths from direct aggression as well as deadly infections from a mysterious contagious disease that Ka-Zar soon identifies as rabies. Ka-Zar fears the infected animal is Zabu, anyway he joins the expedition to hunt the beast. Conclusion: the raged tiger (who finished eaten by a t-rex) was not Zabu, but Tongah, the hunting partner of Ka-Zar gets infected and he has to accept his upcoming death.
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The story is narrated in a melancholic mood, where Brent Anderson's dramatic style of drawing bodies (with a touch of homoerotic sensuality) has an inportant role. A good handful of relevant subjects are touched in very few pages: the relationship hierarchy between a person, his beloved pet (kinda…) and other humans, the confrontation between beauty and cruelty present on virgin nature, the conveniences and inconveniences about renouncing to civilized world…
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This adult tone makes exteme contrast with tons of advertisment pages oriented to kids. The dissonance between the "supossed vs. actual" readers of comic-books was already strong in 1981. Specially funny and idiosyncratic the ad/mini-comic where Fantastic Four advertise candies.
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Purchased at Comic-Book Exchange (Notting Hill, London) for 50p
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Detail from Ms Mystic #2 By Neal Adams (A) and Cory Adams (C)
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Detail from Captain America #291 (1983). By Herb Trimpe (P), Jack Abel (I) and Andy Yanchus (C)
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Pokemon. Detail from printed comic-book ad (1999)
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Superboy #60 (1999)
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I have always been curious about Superboy's Hyper-Tension saga, but never had the chance of reading it. After The Kingdom event, this one is the first story that uses the controversial concept of Hypertime in a regular DC title. Since the beloved Crisis on Infinite Earths (1985) the DC Multiverse schema had been erradicated (sort of..), till Mark Waid and Grant Morrison set a new fictional environment where the multiple Earths became obsolete in front of an infinite fabric of alternate time lines where none of DC stories published to date were excluded from the canon.
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Really, Hipertyme is testimonial here. The story is similar to any other multi dimensional epic quest already seen in super-hero genre. The real interest on this pick is the Superboy series itself. Kesel and Grummett are not ashamed of creating classic super-hero stuff, and they put in the book all the fantasy that other authors try to negate in this post-Watchmen post-TDKR era. A lot of Kirby homage (really the title main scenario, the Cadmus Project, is a Kirby creation), all the explanatory flashbacks that a new reader needs to figure out the story so far, and a clear narrative-iconographic objective for the episode: Attach Superboy to the front of huge atomic missile and pull the trigger. Nothing more, nothing less.
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Regarding the advertisement section, we can highlight the double page ad for the brand new show Batman Beyond, as well as the in-house ads based on the slogan "The Original Unvierse".
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Also, to reflect the early 1999 comics scene context, we have two interesting pieces: The Wizard Magazine's Annual Fan Awards Ballot (you can see the trending titles and artists of that time) and the obituary for the recently deceased Bob Kane, written by the then DC's President Jenette Khan
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Purchased at London Comic Mart for 20p
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Detail from !mpact comics ad
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Marvel subscription add (1983). Illustration by John Byrne
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Detail from Ms Mystic #2. By Neal Adams
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Captain America #291 (1983)
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Another pick chosen because the cover, by John Byrne in this case. From the inside, we have a standard self-contained story by the versatile Marvel staffers Bill Mantlo and Herb Trimpe. Over time, Trimpe have gained the status of punching ball penciller, favorite objective of bad art jokes around the fandom. Totally unjustified, in my honest opinion. He is a good follower of the Kirby tradition, with subtle notes of Ditko. For this particular issue, it can be noted in the refined graphic synthesis of the front splash or in the hyperbolic perspectives used in the acrobatic scenes.
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Regarding Mantlo, he orchestrates a "silly but clever" story: The brother of deceased super-villain Tumbler puts on his bro's costume to take revenge against the corrupted insurance company that should cover his brother's death. After a negligent corporate behaviour, his mother was not able to collect the insurance policy money, preventing her from paying the medical treatment she needed to overcoming her illness. Captain America tries to stop this brand new Tumbler until he notices the background story, changes his perspective and joins his false foe to uncover and stop the evil insurancers. Caps supporting the People against the corrupted capitalists, one more time.
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The ads section of this issue deserves an special mention. First, because the obscure derivative products from Masters of the Universe franchise: Model kits and a videogame that nobody remembers...
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...and second, because the creepy(pasta) ads involving kids, dark places, blurry photos and forgotten toy manufacturers. Blumhouse should develop something with this material
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Purchased at London Comic Mart for 50p
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