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#All Star Comics
lunar-sams · 3 months
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this was funnier in my head
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dcbinges · 4 months
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All-Star Comics #4 (1941) by Everett Hibbard & Martin Nodell
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vndertheredhood · 6 months
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I've seen a lot of people complaining about the new Justice Society of America series and how the lead of it's first arc was Huntress, Batman's daughter.
It's fine to not like the character, but people's reasoning is beyond uninformed. They say they don't want a Batfam character in their JSA book, or that they don't want a Batfam character from the future as the main character.
Well I'm here to reinform you all that Helena Wayne is not a new character, and has always been a JSA member ever since her creation pre-crisis. She is also not much of a Batfam character either. Much like her partner, Power Girl, she is mostly assigned to her role on the JSA and has little interaction with her other family members outside of Dick Grayson.
She originated in December of 1977, and debuted in All-Star Comics #69 shortly after the revival of the JSA. She was a hit character with solo backups in Wonder Woman (!) and was even a co-founder of the original Infinity Inc. team.
I'm sure someone more informed than I could make a better post on this topic, but I hope this helps :)
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cantsayidont · 8 months
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September/October 1976. The 1970s revival of ALL-STAR COMICS briefly saw Keith Giffen in august company: providing breakdowns to be finished by the legendary Wally Wood. Here, they provide a stirring reintroduction for the Golden Age Clark Kent, now the middle-aged editor of the Metropolis Daily Star, but not yet too old to declare:
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cgbcomics · 9 months
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inhousearchive · 1 year
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An April 1941 house-ad for All-Star Comics (1940) #4, also announcing the debut of All-Flash Quarterly (1941) as a result of fans’ votes.
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browsethestacks · 10 months
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5 Random Comics
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ufonaut · 1 year
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Each of the JSAers is a tremendously complex creature, you see. Their individual series were among the best of the forties, and the total number of tales they’ve appeared is almost beyond reckoning... and certainly beyond reading. At least in the limited time I had available. So I had to capsulize each one’s background. When that was done, I discovered a common denominator -- each of their character bits was related to what the passing years had done to them.
Paul Levitz’s ‘Aging the All-Stars’ from Amazing World of DC Comics (1974) #16 with art by Joe Staton, regarding the 1976 revival of All-Star Comics.
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Art Edit Credit to Roberto Coltro
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thebristolboard · 1 year
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Original and final cover art by Wally Wood from All Star Comics #65, published by DC Comics, March 1977. Even when he was phoning it in he was still one of the best!
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comicarthistory · 1 year
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Page from All Star Squadron #30. 1983. Art by Richard Howell and Mike Machlan.
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comfortfoodcontent · 2 years
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All Star Comics #38
Writers Robert Kanigher Pencilers Alex Toth, Carmine Infantino, Bob Oksner Inkers Alex Toth, Frank Giacoia, Bob Oksner
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dcbinges · 4 months
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All-Star Comics #4 (1941) by Gardner Fox & Chad Grothkopf
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cantsayidont · 9 days
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Winter 1940. Dr. Fate doesn't mess around with evil wizards, in this panel from ALL-STAR COMICS #3. The late Jim Harmon, recounting this story in a nostalgic essay ("A Swell Bunch of Guys") in the 1970 book ALL IN COLOR FOR A DIME, remarked, "I have always suspected that one tap from the Spectre’s green-gloved hand could have jammed Dr. Fate’s golden helmet down so far over his ears, he could never get it off if he worked ad infinitum."
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cgbcomics · 10 months
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inhousearchive · 1 year
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House-ad for All-Star Comics (1940) #5 from June 1941.
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