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Mars Will Send No More

~ Comic books, art, poetry, and other obsessions

Mars Will Send No More

Tag Archives: Chris Claremont

sketchbook sunday: a trip to the amazing arizona comic-con

14 Sunday Feb 2016

Posted by Mars Will Send No More in art studio

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amazing arizona comic-con, Chris Claremont, George Perez, hero initiative, memoir, Rob Liefeld, sketchbook sundays, volunteer

Amazing Arizona Comic-Con was well underway by the time I showed up for my four-hour volunteer shift. Holly gave me a volunteer t-shirt and sent me off with Amy, who had an assignment for me. From the original description of the volunteer position, I expected to be moving fifty-pound boxes around all afternoon. But Amy explained to me that Mat Nastos was scheduled to moderate the Chris Claremont panel on the main stage, and I was going to watch his table for him!

I’ve never been to a comic-con in my life, so this was quite an unexpected way to spend my first hour. Mat told me to feel free to sketch, and pointed to his bag of pens and markers. It held several Sharpie markers and one of the same Pigma micron fine point pens I like to use. This launched a discussion of brush tip pens in which Mat showed me his refillable Pentel brush tip and told me about a refillable kuratake pen from Japan with a sable tip, not synthetic like the one I’ve been using this year.

As if having a chance to discuss tools of the trade with a professional wasn’t fun enough, I then spent an hour on the artist’s side of the table instead of the fan’s. Thanks to my bright white volunteer shirt, only two people mistook me for the real Mat. Everyone else I greeted with a smile, asked them how they were, and let them know Mat would be back at 4 p.m. Several of them stayed and chatted with me about Mat’s artwork and prints on the table, or indie comic books, or a new tattoo, or that it was their first comic-con, too.

But what most impressed me in that hour was the unfailing enthusiasm Rob Liefeld showed each and every fan in the massive line waiting to meet him. Rob’s table was the next one over from Mat’s, and I have never seen anyone so genuinely cheerful to be posed and photographed over and over and over. I was in awe of his ability to project a positive energy and make every fan feel like he cared.

From Mat’s table, I also had a view of the other biggest line that afternoon: the one to meet George Pérez. Once Mat got back, I got sent to “float” for a bit and check on other volunteers, see if they needed anything, and lend a presence to any lines that needed tending. After making a few loops around the hall and chatting with people, I relieved the volunteer who was watching over George and his fans.

George’s table had no merchandise or books on it. He only had his sharpie markers, pads of Bristol paper, a donation jar, and flyers for the charity he works with: The Hero Initiative. That’s it. It was explained to me that people had numbered tickets in this line, and we were accepting them in numerical order, and anyone without a ticket could get in line but there was no guarantee we would get to them.

Neither the ticketholders nor George were in any hurry. This line barely moved, because each and every fan got George’s full attention. And I realized that made their wait worthwhile. In the meantime, whoever was in the front of the line got to chat with me about things like Perez’s work on Crisis on Infinite Earths and Teen Titans. One fan told me he had been in line for six hours, and laughed when I suggested that instead of a sketch he request a full-body Sharpie tattoo.

George was gracious and cheerful, and even addressed one fan as “my son” when posing with the sketch he had drawn for the young man. Fans brought up entire stacks of comics for George to sign. One fan had a large Bristol paper full of empty panels, and George drew Batman in the center panel. He signed a two-meter-wide Marvel poster one fan had collected many signatures on. One fan had George sign a huge plastic infinity gauntlet. One had his comics bagged and boarded, but with areas of the bag sliced out and bordered with electrical tape so George would know just where he wanted a signature on the cover. And George delivered sketch after sketch after sketch after sketch. For hours.

I have never seen anything like it in all my life.

Before the night was over, everyone with a numbered ticket did make it through that line, and the donation jar was full. In honor of the tireless joy and attention George and the other creators at the convention showed their fans, consider donating to the organization George was promoting: The Hero Initiative. Funds for Hero Initiative are raised and disbursed by comic book artists and industry leaders to comic book artists in need, especially aging artists who need major medical treatments or surgeries. Please visit HeroInitiative.Org.

starlord special edition by claremont and byrne

29 Thursday Jan 2015

Posted by Mars Will Send No More in science fiction

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Chris Claremont, guardians of the galaxy, John Byrne, kraken, Star-lord, Starlord, starlord special edition, Terry Austin

starlord special edition (7)

We were late to the Guardians of the Galaxy party in 2014. Like, so late, everyone else went home and there’s no beer left. By now, you have surely combed the Star-lord Archives at Longbox Graveyard and discovered panels from a black-and-white version of Claremont & Byrne’s mini-masterpiece. Only a total n00b would fail to behold the glory that is the vintage Star-lord Archive at Diversions of the Groovy Kind.

starlord special edition (22)

But you know what? The Star-lord party may be over, but we’re just going to hang out on the front lawn and get cosmic anyway. Because this was a favorite tale of ours for many years, and it still provides a certain nostalgic bliss: the emotional drama of that double splash against a burning horizon, the swashbuckling space opera, and yes – the awesomeness of unleashing the kraken!

starlord special edition (26)

We scanned about 2/3 of this micro-epic before the neighbors complained about the Star-lord party and we had to get off your lawn. You will just have to go buy the original if you want to finish frolicking across the galaxy. Our scans include the great essay at the end of the book which talks all about the cultural significance of Star Wars and the madness of putting together a comic book. Enjoy!










My First Comic Book Subscription: Uncanny X-Men 193!

19 Tuesday Jun 2012

Posted by Mars Will Send No More in superhero

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Chris Claremont, John Romita jr, Storm, subscription, Uncanny X-Men, Uncanny X-Men 193, Wolverine, X-men

Normally I forego lengthy exposition here on Mars. But every so often, the madness of a memoir overtakes me. Today is one of those days. So, if you’d like to skip all this nonsense and simply bask in the radiant glory of Uncanny X-men #193, then just scroll your way down, down, down…

Still here? Okay, then. In 1985, I was 12 years old. Early in the year, perhaps with a cash gift for my birthday, I filled out my first subscription form. In 1985, this meant cutting out a square of paper from a Marvel comic — an act of pointless desecration that pains me to recall. Given a time machine, my first stop would be in 1985 to give a young Martian a ride to the copy shop, where for 5 measly cents he could spare the life of a Marvel comic.

Marvel was always running a deal: 16 issues for the price of 12, for example. Considering that 65 cents got you a complete comic in those bygone days of the Reagan era, you could get a lot of comics for not too much money. And so, a few months went by until I received the first issue of my first subscription in the mailbox.

At the time, Marvel placed its comics inside a brown wrapper which resembled a paper grocery bag, only less sturdy. It was a good way to make absolutely certain your coveted book would be torn, bent, exposed to the elements, and otherwise degraded well below a NM- to a VF or worse. These days, if my retailer doesn’t put that book in a silver age bag with a board and tape it shut before shipping it in a fairly indestructible cardboard box with plenty of cushioned packing material, someone will be getting an unhappy customer on the phone!

But at age 12, I simply ran from the mailbox to the house as fast as I could to kick off my shoes, jump onto the couch, and dive into the world of superheroes! It would take two more years before I discovered the joys of real Comic Shops as opposed to the news racks at Walgreens and Magic Mart; two more years before I discovered weekend employment as a golf caddy and the subsequent joy of squandering my entire paycheck on bagged and boarded back issues.

And so, I slid the comic book out of the gnarly brown wrapper. It was Uncanny X-Men #193, a double-length adventure marking the 100-issue anniversary of the “New” X-men: Storm, Colossus, Wolverine, Nightcrawler, and all the wonderful characters brought to us from the minds of Chris Claremont and Dave Cockrum. An occasion for rapturous thrills? A Mighty Marvel Milestone? A senses-shattering slab of superhero supremacy?


Actually, I hated it. Now, John Romita, Jr. has since earned my respect and affection as an artist, and many of his books hold places of honor in my collection. But, when I first saw his work, I felt dismay. I’d been brought up on the classic Marvel house style: Romita, Sr., John Buscema, Jack Kirby, Herb Trimpe, Steve Ditko, John Byrne — all tight, clean lines with boldness powerfully pounding the panels. The younger Romita’s light, sketchy style seemed to have little to do with all that — at least, to my 12-year-old eyes.

I finished the story and sincerely hoped that next month a different art team would be on the book. But the next month, it was the same artists! And the month after that — the same artists! This may sound stupid to you, this hope for another art team, but I had a lot to learn back then. I’d never had a subscription before. All the comics I read came from different time periods. I’d have a book I bought four months ago, and then a book I had at age six, plus a collected edition with 4 or 5 art teams, and then random books from 20 years out of Gramma’s garage. I’d never actually been with a book for any consistent length of time, but instead absorbed decades of comics’ history a la carte.

Now, with my first X-men subscription, I learned that creative teams stuck with books for a while! But my dismay grew worse. Before the subscription ended, my tender young brain received the horrifying classic Uncanny X-men #198. Although Romita Jr. gave my system a shock, he ill-prepared me for the work of Barry Windsor-Smith. Storm on the verge of death in Africa? A scene of live birth followed by the death of an old man? Realistic anatomy and humanized despair? I can appreciate this issue now, but it really was not “kid stuff.” Claremont and Windsor-Smith’s Life-Death was too intense — too adult — for a 12-year-old still accustomed to Herb Trimpe’s Hulk punching out a guy in brightly colored tights for 20 pages! It wasn’t exactly over my head so much as it was like switching from Kool-Aid to Jack Daniels without any notice.

storm x-men barry windsor smith060

Oh, but it got worse. Uncanny X-Men #205 showed up a few months later. What? This Windsor-Smith guy again? I don’t mind telling you that reading it gave me the most traumatic comic book experience of my entire life. It disturbed me. It unsettled me. It horrified me. Barry’s serpentine depictions of the terrifying bio-med transformation. The grotesque anatomy of Lady Deathstrike in her wires and fluids and weirdness. Do you know that feeling you get watching a really scary movie in the middle of the night with all the lights off during a storm? That’s nothing. I was ten times that troubled in the middle of a brightly-lit afternoon.

barry windsor smith wolverine049

It would be many years before I could read that book without a severe case of the willies. In fact, I read it now and find it absolutely stunning! Along with Windsor-Smith’s work on Wolverine’s adamantium procedure from Marvel Comics Presents, it sets a very high bar for incorporating horror, science fiction, and superheroes. It was just a little more than I could handle back then!

In some ways, it reminds me of beer. (Fitting, as Wolverine really likes beer.) My first taste of beer proceeded my teens by a few years. It was the grossest liquid I ever put in my mouths — except maybe Nyquil. These days, I like to order the highest alcohol content beer the bar will serve me! Things change as you age, and that includes your tastes, and also what you can appreciate.

astonishing x-men wolverine007

It also reminds me of calluses. When you first start playing the guitar, it hurts. Your fingers can’t take it for very long. But after time, you build up a protective layer of skin that keeps you from being so sensitive to pain. In time, it doesn’t bother you at all, and you can have loads of fun with it! Reading Uncanny X-men #205 at age 12 was like playing guitar with no calluses. I just had no protective barrier between my young mind and the pain Wolverine endured in that issue.

Shortly thereafter, my subscription to Uncanny X-men expired, and I did not renew it! But I learned a lot, and it shaped the future of my collecting. Understanding that creative teams stuck with books for a while made me much more attentive to who worked on a book, and when. I paid more attention to the artist and writer credits, and started to learn more about their work. I learned to identify what I liked, and find more of it. And while some people are loyal to characters or titles, I remain loyal to creative teams. Some readers may subscribe to X-men no matter who is producing the book, but I will always look for runs by creative teams who really “do it” for me. I also learned that just because I don’t “get” a book at first doesn’t mean it’s bad. Maybe I’m not just ready for it! The best stories age well with time, and the best of the best are almost timeless. So, don’t be too quick to dismiss something that doesn’t immediately grab you. You just might be overlooking a classic!

Now that you scrolled past all that reminiscing, enjoy the first comic book I ever got by subscription: Uncanny X-Men #193!















Your Biomed Transformation has been Completely Successful!

08 Thursday Sep 2011

Posted by Mars Will Send No More in superhero

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

adamantium skeleton, Barry Windsor Smith, Chris Claremont, Lady Deathstrike, Wolverine, Wounded Wolf, X-men

Welcome to today’s exhibit in our Wolverine Gallery! More Barry Windsor Smith art for you — this time from Uncanny X-Men #205. Here are some totally gruesome human science projects for you, and lots of Wolverine in berserker mode. The story is called “Wounded Wolf.” Smith also drew the first look we had at the full procedure for implanting Wolverine’s adamantium skeleton.

If you want to know who this Lady Deathstrike character is and why she wants to kill our favorite mutant, go check out Wolverine’s origin as revealed in the mid-80s in Alpha Flight #33-34. You’ll get the lowdown on psycho-lady and learn a few awesome things about Wolverine!

Collector’s Guide: From Uncanny X-Men #205.



He Wants to be Born!

31 Wednesday Aug 2011

Posted by Mars Will Send No More in jungle, superhero

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Africa, Barry Windsor Smith, birth, birth scene, Chris Claremont, Storm, Uncanny X-Men 198, X-men

You know, we haven’t had a good childbirth here since we dug that issue of MiracleMan. Lots of carnage involving dinosaurs and mutants, but not many childbirths. Here’s one from artist Barry Windsor Smith and Chris Claremont. Remember when Storm lost her powers? She went on a trip to Africa to find herself. She used to be revered as a goddess in Africa when Professor X first found her. This time around she nearly dies — and helps bring new life into the world.

Collector’s Guide: from Uncanny X-Men # 198.

You can see Barry Windsor Smith’s cover art before coloring and lettering at Marvel 1980s.



Their Rage is Matched by a Terrible Transcendent Joy!

27 Monday Jun 2011

Posted by Mars Will Send No More in superhero

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Alan Davis, Chris Claremont, Sabretooth, Wolverine, X-men, X-men covers

Welcome to the Wolverine Gallery! It’s an ongoing project, so just click Wolverine Gallery to see everything in this virtual exhibition!

Today’s Wolverine images come from the mighty pen of Alan Davis. Uncanny X-Men #213 marks the historic meeting of Wolverine and his now arch-nemesis Sabretooth. The very first time they ever meet on the page is right here! Just imagine: Once upon a time, we read Wolverine stories in which this idiot furball with the fuzzy collar wasn’t showing up every three days!

Collector’s Guide: From Uncanny X-Men #213.


The Universe — Mine — To Do with as I Wish!

24 Friday Jun 2011

Posted by Mars Will Send No More in superhero

≈ 1 Comment

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Alan Davis, Chris Claremont, Horde, Wolverine, X-men, X-men covers

Welcome to the Wolverine Gallery! It’s an ongoing project, so just click Wolverine Gallery. Not only did Alan Davis draw the very first fight between Sabretooth and Wolverine, he also drew the night Wolverine became God! In the climax of Uncanny X-Men Annual #11, Wolverine gains the power to re-shape the universe in any way he wants. Then, he decides ‘to hell with it’ — he’ll settle it with his claws! SNIKT!

Collector’s Guide: From Uncanny X-Men Annual #11.




Merciful Mother, That Hurts!

20 Friday May 2011

Posted by Mars Will Send No More in jungle, superhero

≈ 1 Comment

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Chris Claremont, Classic X-men, John Bolton, jungle, Savage Land, Storm, X-men

Storm has a scantily-clad adventure fighting a giant alligator underwater in the prehistoric jungle of the Savage Land. You either think that sounds like an awesome plot or you’re at the wrong web site!

Collector’s Guide: From Classic X-Men #22

This Time, The Final Victory Will Belong To —

08 Sunday May 2011

Posted by Mars Will Send No More in superhero

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Chris Claremont, John Byrne, Magneto, X-men

Magneto, the Master of Magnetism! John Byrne & Terry Austin’s original black and white X-Men artwork shines in Essential X-Men TPB Vol. 1.

Fresh Kill for Dinner!

05 Thursday May 2011

Posted by Mars Will Send No More in dinosaur, jungle, superhero

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Alan Davis, Chris Claremont, dinosaur, dinosaur comics, Savage Land, Wolverine, X-men, X-men covers

Wolverine in the Savage Land clawing the bejeezus out of dinosaurs — one of our favorite themes here on Mars! Feast your eyes on Alan Davis art of our favorite reptile-slashing mutant from Canada! Alan Davis also drew Sabretooth’s first appearance and the night Wolverine became god, among other fine stories.

Alan Davis and Chris Claremont produced about twenty issues of Uncanny X-men, between the Chuck Austen run and Ed Brubaker’s run. Long-time fans recall it was not their first run on Uncanny X-Men.

Collector’s Guide: From Uncanny X-Men #456.



I Ain’t No Dino Dinner!

22 Friday Apr 2011

Posted by Mars Will Send No More in jungle, superhero

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Chris Claremont, dinosaur, Jim Lee, Ka-zar, Savage Land, X-men, X-men covers, Zabu

uncanny x-men 275 jim lee 122

Uncanny X-Men #275 featured an awesome three-page fold-out wrap-around cover. Today’s post features that cover — and let me tell you, it wasn’t easy, what with my scanner only being big enough for one page at a time. So take advantage of my hard work, click on the image, blow it up to relish the detail, and set it as your desktop background.

Uncanny X-Men #275 sets the artistic high water mark for the team of Chris Claremont and Jim Lee. Very soon, their take on Marvel’s mutants would earn X-Men #1 the record of highest sales for any one comic book, ever. The records still stands.

Collector’s Guide: From Uncanny X-Men #275. Reprinted in X-Men Omnibus Chirs Claremont/Jim Lee/Marc Silvestri #2.

You might also enjoy flipping through the Wolverine Gallery.



With that Proud Cry, the Battle is Joined!

21 Thursday Apr 2011

Posted by Mars Will Send No More in science fiction, superhero

≈ Leave a comment

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Chris Claremont, Jim Lee, Wolverine, X-men, X-men covers

Uncanny X-Men #275 featured an awesome three-page fold-out wrap-around cover. Today’s post features that cover — and let me tell you, it wasn’t easy, what with my scanner only being big enough for one page at a time. So take advantage of my hard work, click on the image, blow it up to relish the detail, and set it as your desktop background.

Uncanny X-Men #275 marks the artistic high water mark for the team of Chris Claremont and Jim Lee. Very soon, their take on Marvel’s mutants would earn X-Men #1 the record of highest sales for any one comic book, ever. The records still stands.

Collector’s Guide: From Uncanny X-Men #275. Reprinted in X-Men Omnibus Chirs Claremont/Jim Lee/Marc Silvestri #2.

You might also enjoy flipping through the Wolverine Gallery.



You’re as Inconspicuous as a Mack Truck!

04 Monday Apr 2011

Posted by Mars Will Send No More in dinosaur, jungle, superhero

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Chris Claremont, dinosaur, John Byrne, Savage Land, Smilodon, Wolverine, X-men, Zabu

Rock the black & white artwork by John Byrne and Terry Austin in one of our favorite comic book scenes of all time: Wolverine having a chat with Zabu the sabretooth tiger, a constant companion of Ka-Zar.
Dig the full–color version with bonus material!

Collector’s Guide: From Essential X-Men TPB Vol. 1. Originally printed in Uncanny X-Men 116.



When He Strikes, There Is No Mercy in Him!

04 Monday Apr 2011

Posted by Mars Will Send No More in dinosaur, jungle, superhero

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Chris Claremont, dinosaur, John Byrne, Savage Land, Wolverine, X-men, Zabu

Wolverine having a chat with Zabu the sabretooth tiger, a constant companion of Ka-Zar. Art by John Byrne and Terry Austin. Note the “additional footage” inserted into John Byrne original artwork here. You can compare it to the unedited black and white version of the original story.

Collector’s Guide: From Classic X-Men 22. Originally printed in Uncanny X-Men 116.



RRAWRR!

04 Monday Apr 2011

Posted by Mars Will Send No More in jungle, superhero

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Chris Claremont, John Byrne, Ka-zar, Savage Land, Smilodon, Wolverine, X-men, Zabu

More black and white artwork from Essential X-Men. Witness John Byrne and Terry Austin’s original artwork from the first time Wolverine meets Ka-Zar, Lord of the Savage Land – and his awesome sabretooth tiger, Zabu!

Collector’s Guide: From Essential X-Men TPB Vol. 1. Originally printed in Uncanny X-Men #115; 1978, Marvel.

The Only Place You’re Gonna Rule… Is in Hades!

04 Friday Mar 2011

Posted by Mars Will Send No More in dinosaur, jungle, superhero

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Chris Claremont, dinosaur, dinosaur comics, Ka-zar, pterosaur, Sauron, Savage Land, tyrannosaurus rex, Wolverine, X-men, X-men covers

Wolverine and Sauron. One nasty mammal and one hideously evil reptile. Something tells us they are never going to get along! Here’s a touching scene from their first meeting in Uncanny X-Men #115.

Collector’s Guide: From Classic X-Men 21. This reprint added gnarly dinosaur art to the interior and back covers, with a fun back up story: Colossus versus a Tyrannosaur!



Dear Lord Preserve Me, I’m Changing!

22 Tuesday Feb 2011

Posted by Mars Will Send No More in dinosaur, jungle, superhero

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Chris Claremont, Classic X-men, dinosaur, John Byrne, jungle, Sauron, Savage Land, Wolverine

Here are two sequences from Uncanny X-Men #114 (reprinted in Classic X-Men #20). You gotta love how John Byrne draws Wolverine taking out a giant flying dinosaur! That’s good comics! Storm plays a classic role as a bathing beauty menaced by a horrible evil.




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