Tumgik
#Paul Gulacy
spaceshiprocket · 10 days
Text
Tumblr media
Spider-Man vs Morbius by Paul Gulacy
223 notes · View notes
omercifulheaves · 11 months
Photo
Tumblr media
Art by Paul Gulacy
452 notes · View notes
tomoleary · 28 days
Text
Tumblr media
Paul Gulacy and Pablo Marcos - Master of Kung-Fu #46 title splash page (1976) Source
The comic today
Tumblr media
84 notes · View notes
Text
Tumblr media
Shanna by Paul Gulacy in Marvel Commics presents #75
116 notes · View notes
balu8 · 2 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Batman: Legends of the Dark Knight #15
by Doug Moench; Paul Gulacy; Terry Austian; Steve Oliff and John Costanza
DC
48 notes · View notes
sandmandaddy69 · 3 months
Text
Tumblr media
Paul Gulacy
39 notes · View notes
xmencovered · 10 months
Text
Tumblr media
Bizarre Adventures Vol 1 27 / Published: June 16, 1981 / Artist: Paul Gulacy
70 notes · View notes
cantsayidont · 4 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
July 1983 to October 1986. In 1983, DC lured Doug Moench away from Marvel and books like MASTER OF KUNG FU and MOON KNIGHT to take over BATMAN and DETECTIVE COMICS under the editorship of Len Wein. Their run, which lasted 40 months, was the final phase of the Bronze Age Batman continuity; although it continued for some months after the end of CRISIS ON INFINITE EARTHS, everything up to DETECTIVE COMICS #566 and BATMAN #400 is functionally part of pre-Crisis continuity, in particular most anything to do with Jason Todd becoming the second Robin. (Jason debuted during the end of Gerry Conway's run in early 1983, but it was Moench and Wein who oversaw Jason's actually becoming Robin.)
From 1981 to 1986, there was a tight continuity between BATMAN and DETECTIVE COMICS: a story begun in one book would continue in the other two weeks later. This was something new for Batman; there had been occasional multi-issue storylines for years, and Steve Englehart and Len Wein had introduced a certain amount of Marvel-style continuity in the late '70s, but having around 40 story pages per month allowed more room for character-focused stories, supporting characters, and subplots. When Doug Moench arrived, a central focus was on leading up to Jason Todd becoming Robin, but there were also numerous other major and minor subplots, from Alfred's attempts to connect with his adult daughter, Julia Remarque (introduced by Conway in 1981), to Gotham's messy city politics and power struggles in the underworld.
In MASTER OF KUNG FU, Moench's signature storytelling preoccupation had been "kinky weirdos hurting each other's feelings," and his initial run on the Bat-books also featured a series of messy, sometimes bloody romantic triangles, the most important of which involved Batman; the now-reformed Catwoman; Nocturna (Natalia Knight), a pretentious Goth burglar who attempted to adopt Jason Todd; and Nocturna's adoptive brother Anton, who became a cat burglar out of deranged obsession with Natalia and later tried to kill her so no one else could have her. It was all very grandiose and inevitably somewhat florid, but then expecting gritty, understated realism from a comic book about a man who fights crime dressed as a bat is itself pretty silly.
The strongest story in this run actually has little to do with that soap opera: "What Price the Prize?" in BATMAN #372, is an intelligent, grounded drama about an up-and-coming young Irish boxer maneuvering for a bout with a Black champion obviously inspired by Muhammad Ali, featuring some of Don Newton's finest Batman art; the conclusion in DETECTIVE #539 isn't quite as sharp, but is still one of Moench's best. Other highlights include a clash with Catman (BATMAN #371/DETECTIVE #538) in which Thomas Blake's determined belief in the magical power of his costume nearly gets both him and Batman killed over and over; a wistful story about the private life and hidden depths of boorish Harvey Bullock (DETECTIVE #549); a delightful one-shot (BATMAN #383) in which Batman repeatedly tries and fails to get some sleep; the debut of Black Mask (BATMAN #385–386 and DETECTIVE #553); a comedic tale of Batman and Catwoman on an actual date, in costume (BATMAN #392); and a distinctly '80s-Bondian espionage adventure reuniting Moench and artist Paul Gulacy (BATMAN #393–394).
Artistically, the run got off to a good start with Don Newton on BATMAN (inked by Alfredo Alcala) and Gene Colan on DETECTIVE (generally inked by Bob Smith). Newton's departure in 1984 hurt, leading to a period of artistic musical chairs and some really bad early Pat Broderick art, followed by Tom Mandrake taking over BATMAN. Mandrake gets a bad rap in some quarters, mostly because his style is looser (and about two steps further in the direction of Gene Colan) than many comics fans care to tolerate, but his work here is mostly fine, and certainly an improvement over Broderick's. The Annual has some very nice early Denys Cowan pencils, inked by Alcala, and BATMAN #400 is an all-star extravaganza art-wise.
Maddeningly, DC has never properly reprinted a lot of this material, which I think is badly overdue. If it's not as epochal as some more familiar periods both before and after, the median level of quality is pretty decent (and certainly no worse than the 1987–1991 period, which has now been reprinted in its entirety); its emphasis on characterization wouldn't be matched again in the Batman titles for many years. Denny O'Neil supposedly hated much of what Moench had done (Moench has said O'Neil especially loathed Nocturna, whom he flatly refused to revive in any form), but Denny is dead now, and in any case, his Batman stories include their share of stinkers as well as gems. I don't know that DC has any kind of real reprint strategy anymore, but I hope they won't wait until Doug Moench is dead to properly remaster and collect these issues. Doing them all (BATMAN #360–400 and Annual #10, DETECTIVE #527–567) in something akin to Marvel's Epic Collection format would probably take four volumes — there's around 1,800 pages of material, more if you include Moench's Superman/Batman stories from WORLD'S FINEST — but why not?
27 notes · View notes
Photo
Tumblr media
Karate Kid vs Shang-Chi by Paul Gulacy 
Color: Simon Gough
98 notes · View notes
comicarthistory · 6 months
Text
Tumblr media
Eclipse Comics house ad for Sabre #7. 1983. Art by Kent Williams.
47 notes · View notes
comfortfoodcontent · 4 months
Text
Tumblr media
1993 Dark Horse Comics House Ad
MAN LOOK AT THAT PRE RELEASE GODZILLA VS BARKLEY ROUGH COVER!!
21 notes · View notes
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Christmas at Elvira’s House of Mystery" from Elvira’s House of Mystery Special #1 (DC, 1987)
223 notes · View notes
cccovers · 29 days
Text
Tumblr media
Bizarre Adventures #25 (March 1981) cover by Paul Gulacy.
12 notes · View notes
tomoleary · 10 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Paul Gulacy, Black Widow Portfolio (SQ Productions, 1982)
351 notes · View notes
Text
Tumblr media
Black Diamond by Paul Gulacy
58 notes · View notes
balu8 · 2 months
Text
Tumblr media
Master of Kung Fu #64
Cover by Paul Gulacy
Marvel
29 notes · View notes