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Mars Will Send No More

~ Comic books, art, poetry, and other obsessions

Mars Will Send No More

Tag Archives: George Perez

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.

Titans Together: 24 George Perez Splash Pages

25 Friday Jul 2014

Posted by Mars Will Send No More in superhero

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Curt Swan, DC Archive Edition New Teen Titans, DC Comics, George Perez, Marv Wolfman, New Teen Titans, New Teen Titans Omnibus, Romeo Tanghal, Teen Titans, Teen Titans reprints

New Teen Titans 13-01

Though thirty-four years have passed since Marv Wolfman and George Perez began their run on the Teen Titans for DC Comics, time has done nothing to diminish our affection for their work. Our gallery below presents a collection of splash pages and two-page spreads from the first twenty issues of The New Teen Titans, showcasing Perez’s knack for detail, action, and creative layouts. Romeo Tanghal’s ink work made him an integral part of the team. Nothing displays this better than the two pages (included in our gallery) penciled by legendary Superman artist Curt Swan in issue #5. Under Tanghal’s pen they seamlessly maintain the look and feel Perez established for the title.

New Teen Titans 08-01

The New Teen Titans embraced the absurdities of superhero comics while taking them to a higher level with rich characterizations and finely-crafted emotional lives for its adolescent stars. It managed to be a grown-up book without being an “adult” title, and it handled many serious stories without veering off into the “grim and gritty” deconstructionism of more famous works from the 1980s. The New Teen Titans deserved better than the cheap paper and printing processes of the average comic book of its time. It thus became one of the first mainstream superhero books to change to a higher-quality printing process, though unfortunately this came near the end of Perez’s stint on the title.

New Teen Titans 10-2324

Readers would have to wait many years to see Perez’s outstanding art printed in a high-quality format it deserved. This began with The New Teen Titans DC Archive Edition in 1999, a four-volume hardcover reprinting #1-27, the first Annual, the first appearance in DC Comics Presents #26, and the Tales of the New Teen Titans limited series. Sadly, that printing only covered less than half of the incredible Wolfman/Perez run. Readers would have to wait even longer for a complete reprint of the masterpiece.

New Teen Titans 06-01

More recently, from 2011 to 2013, DC Comics unleashed The New Teen Titans Omnibus. This three-volume hardcover series spans 1,720 pages, at last giving this outstanding series the treatment it deserved.

As a result, the demand for original printings of all but the earliest issues has significantly declined. So, if you enjoy collecting classics on a budget, you will find the original issues of New Teen Titans incredibly affordable. The upside of having the original issues is that you can truly enjoy the two-page spreads in a format where they open up completely and don’t lose any artwork in the “gutter” between pages. We love omnibus formats, but sometimes a floppy old comic book that opens flat allows you to really take in the artwork as originally intended. The choice is yours!










An Inhuman Retrospective

24 Monday Mar 2014

Posted by Mars Will Send No More in superhero

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

Amazing Adventures, collection, Doug Moench, first issue, George Perez, Gil Kane, Inhumans, Jack Kirby, Jae Lee, Marvel Comics, Paul Jenkins

inhumans collection (1b)

We’ve always had a fondness for the Inhumans as characters and concepts despite the lackluster treatment they often receive in print. The Inhumans first appeared as supporting characters in the Fantastic Four when creators Stan Lee and Jack Kirby still masterminded that title together. In 1970, Kirby launched Inhumans on their own adventures in Marvel’s second attempt at an Amazing Adventures title.

inhumans collection (1a)

Marvel ran the 1961 Amazing Adventures for just half a year, its first six issues collecting some entertainingly vintage stories by Kirby and Steve Ditko, Dick Ayres, Paul Reinman, Don Heck, and Larry Leiber. You can preview many of these golden-age sci-fi and monster stories in our archives.

Beginning with a new #1 issue — something that seems a monthly event at Marvel these days — the 1970 Amazing Adventures put both the Inhumans and the Black Widow on the cover. The Black Widow stories have some wonderful John Buscema and Gene Colan artwork you can preview at Diversions of the Groovy Kind.

The Inhumans get the full Jack Kirby treatment for three issues. He writes and draws them in pretty straight-forward superhero adventures. We have the first story in our archives. Like Kirby’s Black Panther, they lack  depth but make fast-paced action stories for young readers. 1970 also gave Inhumans fans another Jack Kirby treatment of his genetically-modified heroes: the final issue of the first Silver Surfer series.

inhumans collection (1c)

Even the Mandarin appears in these Amazing Adventures, in his utterly ridiculous “Asian Villain” outfit! The Inhumans made it about sixteen issues in this format, with Roy Thomas and Neal Adams stepping up to create new stories after Kirby left. But like Thomas & Adams’ X-men, the Inhumans were doomed as a publication.

inhumans collection (1d)

Okay. Not exactly doomed. They got their own title after that! Leaving behind the anthology comic format, the Inhumans had earned their own shot as title characters. Doug Moench and George Perez launched them with Inhumans #1 in 1975. We have that first issue in our archives, too: Spawn of Alien Heat!

inhumans collection (1e)

That series showed a lot of potential, but its struggle to find its feet is almost palpable. You can find it reprinted in a hardcover format as Marvel Masterworks: Inhumans #2 from 2010, the first volume of which covers all those Amazing Adventures stories plus their origin story from Thor.

inhumans collection (1f)
inhumans collection (1g)

Marvel billed the Inhumans as “uncanny” in this series, a word they would later apply to the X-men. The “Uncanny X-men” stuck, and few readers of bronze-age Marvel recall anyone but the X-men ever being uncanny! Gil Kane moved from cover art to interior art in this series. Although his style seems rough after Perez’s smooth work, Kane delivers some truly classic 70s work in stories like “A Trip to the Doom” in issue #7.

inhumans collection (1h)
inhumans collection (1i)

In what now feels like a desperate ploy to boost sales, the Inhumans fight Hulk in their final issue. The same thing happened to Kirby’s Eternals in the mid-70s. Bad sales figures? Hulk Smash! “Let Fall the Final Fury” turns out to be the last appearance of the Inhumans in their own title for about 25 years.

inhumans collection (1j)

Despite some great guest appearances in John Byrne’s Fantastic Four in the 1980s, the Inhumans never really got a stellar treatment until Paul Jenkins and Jae Lee crafted a twelve-issue limited series for them in the 21st century. We have some of that artwork in our archives. The Inhumans live up to their potential in this compelling story, despite its reliance on the same old struggle with Maximus the Mad.

The four-issue Inhumans series by Carlos Pacheco earlier that summer had some stunning art by Ladronn. It attempted to free the Inhumans from the only two stories they ever seemed to get: the fight with Black Bolt’s mad brother, and their thing about needing to live on the moon. Pacheco stepped in and said, “Let’s shake this up a bit,” taking their conceptual struggles in the next logical plot direction.

inhumans collection (1k)

But, in the wake of the Jenkins/Lee story, Marvel decided on a “next generation” approach to the Inhumans. The book became more teen-friendly and introduced a new, younger set of Inhumans characters, some of whom we met in Jenkin’s story. This 2003 Inhumans series ran for twelve issues. It has its merits and perhaps competed at the time with Marvel’s Runaways and Exiles for a teen audience wanting teen characters. Of those three, only Runaways kept our attention, proving to be a book about teens that older audiences could appreciate, too.

inhumans collection (2)

And that, dear Martians, is why some lucky buyer overseas ended up with a stack of Inhumans comics from us! We collected those first Kirby issues, the run of their 1970s title, and the Jenkins/Lee paperback, along with some other minor Inhumans goodies from over the years. It was fun to have them all close at hand for a few years, and we did hold on to our single-issue copies of the Jenkins stories.

inhumans collection (3)

Creatures on the Loose 36: Man-wolf!

29 Sunday Dec 2013

Posted by Mars Will Send No More in occult

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Creatures on the Loose, George Perez, man-wolf, Marvel Comics

creatures on the loose 36 -005
On a trip to the top secret fifty cent rack here on Mars, we discovered the UK price variant for Creatures on the Loose #36 featuring Man-wolf. The cover claims not 25 cents but 9 pence for a price! Plus, the person at the bookstore used marker to deface the cover and sell it at 6 pence instead. Some collectors focus on these UK price variants, but our beat up copy will probably never be worth more than a couple bucks.

Still, we enjoy this early example of George Perez artwork. We dig his rendering of the unlikely astronaut/werewolf so much that we did a pastel study of a Perez panel from this issue.

This story reads a bit like a television script from the mid-70s, but it offers plenty of chances for gnarly werewolf drama, insane splash panels, and hypnotic light effects. Enjoy this legendary lycanthropic liturgy from the boisterous bronze age!

Collector’s Guide:
– from Creatures on the Loose #36; Marvel, 1975.

 







The Secret Origin of Titans Tower!

30 Saturday Nov 2013

Posted by Mars Will Send No More in superhero

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blueprints, Cyborg, Cyborg's Dad, DC Comics, first appearance, George Perez, Marv Wolfman, New Teen Titans, origin, Teen Titans, Teen Titans Tower, Titans Tower

New Teen Titans #7 gave us the origin of Titans Tower: the T-shaped building serving as their headquarters, home away from home, and high-tech clubhouse. We see that Cyborg’s father built the Tower, a fact hidden from the reader for the first six issues.

Cyborg blames his father for the research accident at S.T.A.R. Labs that killed his mother and disfigured Cyborg. This issue gives us more insight into those events, and takes an unexpected turn for Victor and his father.

Keep in mind that in New Teen Titans #6, the Teen Titans just got done preventing satan from taking over the universe — satan being Trigon, Raven’s demonic dad from an alien hell. They arrive home at Titans Tower to find something amiss. If only they could find what every superhero lair requires: a cool schematic!

New Teen Titans 007-08
New Teen Titans 007-09
New Teen Titans 007-10
New Teen Titans 007-16
New Teen Titans 007-20
New Teen Titans 007-21
New Teen Titans 007-22
New Teen Titans 007-23
New Teen Titans 007-24
New Teen Titans 007-25

About half of this issue concerns the battle with the team of supervillains that infiltrated Titans Tower. Although beautifully drawn by George Perez, it has little to do with our focus here: Titans Tower. Soon the bad guys get the upper hand and produce Cyborg’s dad. His unexpected appearance carries a big reveal: He built the Tower! Insert more epic super battles here.

After the Titans defeat the enemy team, Cyborg’s dad needs to get something off his chest. Victor reluctantly listens, but soon his resentment gives way to compassion. Although he blames his father for both his own fate and his mother’s, Victor learns the same mishap began slowly killing his dad, too.

The final two pages of this story could not be farther in tone from the somewhat typical good guy/bad guy showdown that led up to them. Wolfman and Perez condense the final days of a father and son into a montage, a cinematic effect enhanced by Wolfman’s narrative “voice over” in the captions.

The closing scene begins a new era of peace for Cyborg. Changed forever by making peace with his father, he becomes less prone to lash out angrily at an unjust world. Soon, he will begin working with children who also have prosthetic limbs, playing baseball with them, and inspiring them to be strong. He will even learn to love again.

Collector’s Guide:
– From New Teen Titans #7; DC, 1981
– Reprinted in New Teen Titans Omnibus #1, hardcover; DC, 2011.
– Reprinted in DC Archive Edition New Teen Titans, hardcover; DC, 1999

The Gargoyle’s Touch Turned My Armor to Stone!

30 Monday Sep 2013

Posted by Mars Will Send No More in superhero

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Avengers, Avengers 191, David Michelinie, George Perez, Grey Gargoyle, John Byrne, Roger Stern

Avengers 191-01

John Byrne pencils one of our favorite Grey Gargoyle appearances in Avengers #191, with the plot/script team of Roger Stern and David Michelinie. Great things were simmering in the pot here: Stern and Byrne would craft a short but memorable run on Captain America, David Michelinie was just a few years from making Spider-man a super-hot franchise with Todd McFarlane, and cover artist George Perez would soon be teaming up with Marv Wolfman to create the wildly successful relaunch of Teen Titans.
Here, however, they prove that most superhero problems can be solved with lots of punching, kicking, beating, hitting, smashing… and a magic ray.

Collector’s Guide:
– from Avengers #191; Marvel, 1980.
– Reprinted in the paperback collection Avengers Visionaries: George Perez. Dont ask us why, since Perez did the cover, not the interior art!







The Logic of a Lunatic’s Nightmare!

28 Saturday Sep 2013

Posted by Mars Will Send No More in superhero

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Avengers, Avengers 200, David Michelinie, dinosaur, George Perez, Ms Marvel

Avengers200-17

Avengers #200 is one of those sprawling epics of an ‘anniversary’ issue that makes just about zero effing sense. It has a lot of action, and a lot of wondering what the heck is going on — true hallmarks of monumental superhero milestones. By the time you hit the big flashback that reveals how Carol “Ms. Marvel” Danvers got pregnant for only three days, your suspension of disbelief may have taken too many hits to recover.

But, it has George Perez on pencils, and a huge dinosaur bashing around New York City. That’s enough for a bicentennial! Roll ’em!

Collector’s Guide: from Avengers #200; Marvel, 1980.

This issue is NOT included in the paperback collection Avengers Visionaries: George Perez.













pastel werewolf

03 Tuesday Sep 2013

Posted by Mars Will Send No More in art studio

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

art, drawing, George Perez, man-wolf, pastel, Werewolf

pastel werewolf - copy

Pastel Werewolf. Pastel and ink on toned tan paper.

Not just any werewolf: Man-Wolf! We modeled our werewolf after a panel by George Perez in Creatures on the Loose #36 featuring Man-Wolf. Drawn in 1975, it represents some of Perez’s first published work at Marvel. About this time he was working on Avengers, outgrowing his role as an artist’s assistant to become a regularly published artist.

creatures on the loose 36 - small copy

Inhumans – First Issue from 1975!

20 Sunday Jan 2013

Posted by Mars Will Send No More in first issue, superhero

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

Doug Moench, first issue, George Perez, Inhumans

Marvel gave the Inhumans their own series more than once over the years. The Inhumans first had their own series in 1975 with author Doug Moench leading the charge. Moench used several devices which have formed the core of many Inhumans stories to come later: the destruction of their home Attilan, being at odds with the rest of Marvel’s characters, and Jack Kirby’s device of Maximus the Mad throwing a monkey wrench into every situation.

Gil Kane crafted the covers and provided some of the interior art. But the art of George Perez got this series off the ground. Here, Perez develops what would soon become the distinctive style of his Teen Titans at DC Comics.

The pages of many of these early Inhumans stories seem cramped. Perhaps Moench’s scripts were so jam-packed with information that Kane and Perez had trouble finding room on the pages to tell the whole story. Perez would later find a way to put just as much detail on the page without seeming pressed for breathing room.

The Inhumans shine in science-fiction tales like issues #7-8, where they get involved in a inter-species battle on another planet. The insect-shaped ship where people have lived for centuries shows Moench’s sci-fi genius at work. Too often, the Inhumans succumb to well-worn superhero tropes such as fighting costumed bad guys who refer to themselves in the third person. At those times, they’re just another ho-hum Bronze Age bore. Based on some of the daring plot moves he makes, we suspect Moench wanted to really re-invigorate and re-imagine the Inhumans but got stuck in the rut of trying to sell a superhero book.

That’s less than our typically enthusiastic exuberance, so let’s just say that half of this series rocks and half of it doesn’t. If Moench and Perez had just spent a litle more time inhaling the Terrigen Mists, we might have had a sci-fi masterwork on our hands!

Collector’s Guide: From Inhumans #1; Marvel, 1975. Reprinted in Marvel Masterworks Inhumans #2, hard cover; Marvel, 2010.








The Death of Barry Allen: Crisis on Infinite Earths 8

19 Thursday Jul 2012

Posted by Mars Will Send No More in superhero

≈ 7 Comments

Tags

Barry Allen, Crisis on Infinite Earths, Death of Flash, Flash, George Perez, Marv Wolfman

The death of Barry Allen, The Flash, in Crisis #8 marks the last time a mainstream superhero death meant anything – to us at least, and maybe you feel the same. Maybe you’re sick of everyone from Superman to Colossus coming back to life over and over again. (F@$& you, Jean Grey!!!) But here, in the ten-page scene we share with you today, Marv Wolfman and George Perez kill off the Flash like they mean it. For good. (Or at least for 23 years until the next Crisis thingie brought him back in 2008. Sigh.) And, they do it in a way that makes his death matter.

To say this scene affected us in 1985 would be putting it mildly. It burned an intense trajectory across our 12-year old brain. In fact, we used it to get into Drama Club in 7th grade. For the try-outs, we converted the scene into a monologue for Flash, giving it a ‘dramatic reading.’ We may not have been a great actor, but we could memorize lines like nobody’s business – and had no fear of the stage.

So, yeah, we got the lead in the first school play of 7th grade: a singing role as Rumplestiltskin. Not only did Barry Allen save the universe, he got us a part as a mad dwarf. This cemented our involvement in drama club throughout junior high. Thank you, Flash. Without your noble sacrifice, we would have never played Rumplestiltskin, Gandalf, a crazed serial killer, and a kid who dressed up as a maid to get the girl.

Come to think of it, Flash – if you could use your time powers and erase that last one for us, that’d be swell.

Collector’s Guide:
– From Crisis on Infinite Earths #8; DC Comics, 1985.
– Reprinted in Crisis on Infinite Earths Absolute Edition, 2005.
– Reprinted in Crisis on Infinite Earths Hardcover, 1998. Limited Edition, includes Poster and Slipcase.
– Reprinted in Crisis on Infinite Earths TPB, 2000.





Origin of Starfire!

13 Sunday May 2012

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

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

first issue, George Perez, Koriand'r, Marv Wolfman, New Teen Titans, origin, Starfire, Starfire tortured, Tales of the New Teen Titans, Teen Titans

Marv Wolfman and George Perez took a lackluster DC property called Teen Titans and gave it a shot in the arm back in 1980. The Titans have done well since then, although never attaining the cult status of their contemporaries, the X-Men.

Wolfman and Perez created some new characters to spice up the dull routine Titans had become: Raven, Cyborg, and Starfire. The series kicked into high gear from the first panel, never slowing down for the usual hum-drum origin stories. Fans waited two whole years before Wolfman and Perez fully revealed the pasts of their new creations — and it was worth the wait!

Here is the complete origin of Koriand’r for you, the star-powered alien Princess who was sold into slavery, tortured, and ultimately empowered. It has been one of our favorite single issues ever since we first read it. If you like, check out our scans from New Teen Titans #1 later. The Titans’ first adventure centered around rescuing Koriand’r during her escape from the evil Gordanian Slavers. It’s a lot of fun!

Collector’s Guide:
– From Tales of the New Teen Titans (1982 Mini-Series) #1.
– Reprinted in DC Archive Edition New Teen Titans hardcover #3; 2006.
– Reprinted in the New Teen Titans Omnibus Vol. 1, 2011.

Avengers 162: Bride of Ultron!

11 Friday May 2012

Posted by Mars Will Send No More in superhero

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Avengers, Bride of Ultron, George Perez, Jim Shooter, Jocasta, Ultron

George Perez and author Jim Shooter wrap up the “Bride of Ultron” two-part Avengers story in style. You’ll witness the first appearance of Jocasta here. Jocasta played a role as a minor supporting character for a time, without being inducted into the Avengers. She starred more recently in The Initiative and Mighty Avengers, and the Heroic Age.

Collector’s Guide: From Avengers #162. Story begins in Avengers #161. Reprinted in Avengers Visionaries: George Perez







Avengers 161: Beware the Ant Man!

10 Thursday May 2012

Posted by Mars Will Send No More in superhero

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Ant Man, Avengers, Bride of Ultron, George Perez, Jim Shooter, Ultron

Jim Shooter’s writing and the art of George Perez brought us one of the coolest Avengers stories of the 1970s: the two-part “Bride of Ultron” that begins here in Avengers #161. A lot of butt gets kicked in this dynamic tale. Ant Man hands out a beatdown to the whole team. The Scarlet Witch shows us why we should be very, very afraid of her. And, the Wasp puts on what may be her sexiest outfit of all time.

Collector’s Guide: From Avengers #161. Concluded in Avengers #162. Reprinted in Avengers Visionaries: George Perez







Alive and Ready to KILL!

07 Monday Nov 2011

Posted by Mars Will Send No More in dinosaur, superhero

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Tags

brachiosaurus, Changeling, dinosaur, George Perez, Marv Wolfman, New Teen Titans, Teen Titans

Sometimes you just have to transform into a massive dinosaur and tangle with Amazon babes! Changeling shows us how it’s done in this wild dino scene! Brachiosaurus drawn by George Perez, script by Marv Wolfman.

Collector’s Guide: From The New Teen Titans. DC Comics. Reprinted in the DC Archive Edition New Teen Titans hardcover, 1999.



New Teen Titans Far-Out First Issue!

23 Friday Sep 2011

Posted by Mars Will Send No More in first issue, superhero

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

DC Comics Presents, George Perez, Marv Wolfman, New Teen Titans, Teen Titans

We present to you the first adventure of the 1980s revamp of the silver age team, Teen Titans. Okay — technically, it’s their second adventure. Their very first appearance was DC Comics Presents #26. That book might put a little ding in your wallet, but you can easily pick up the reprint in Tales of the New Teen Titans #59 for $1.

Collector’s Guide: From New Teen Titans #1; DC Comics. Reprinted in DC’s New Teen Titans Archive Edition #. By Marv Wolfman & George Perez.

We also have a Teen Titans paperback book by Tor Press that reprints the first few issues in black and white. It’s how we discovered the Titans way back in 1982 or so. But enough nostalgia! Let’s rock the totally hot alien warrior princess escaping from her slave masters!









Time You Tasted The Serpent’s Kiss!

14 Monday Feb 2011

Posted by Mars Will Send No More in superhero

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

DC Comics, George Perez, occult, Wonder Woman

Wonder Woman and her supporting cast journey to a hellish underworld to confront the god of fear. Inimitably rendered by George Perez, Wonder Woman kicks some demon butt! George Perez’s 1987-1989 run on Wonder Woman remains a favorite visual interpretation of our favorite Amazon princess.

Collector’s Guide: from Wonder Woman #5, DC Comics, 1987.

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