The Irresistible Lois Lane!
Aug. 3rd, 2012 06:50 pm
Silver Age Superman books...the creme de la crack.
From LOIS LANE #29, 1961. 3 pages worth of panels from a 9-page story.
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My First Comic: JLA #7
Mar. 14th, 2012 03:17 pm
The earliest comic I can remember reading was Justice League of America #76, which contained reprints of two earlier issues, #7 and #12. I was only 4 or 5 years old at the time, so I couldn't really "read" it, but the strange imagery definitely left an impression. Rereading it as an adult is a slightly different experience -- Gardner Fox explains everything *to death* -- but no matter how you slice it, "The Cosmic Fun-House" is still an incredibly weird story.
(6 pages from a 25-page story)
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Weekends with Friends (fanart edition)
Feb. 11th, 2012 12:26 amHello scans_daily!
Another round of fanart pieces I wanted to share. Again, apologies if there are any repeats.
( My entirely arbitrary theme this time is images portraying groups... )
Another round of fanart pieces I wanted to share. Again, apologies if there are any repeats.
( My entirely arbitrary theme this time is images portraying groups... )
Aquaman #2 - 3 pages of AWESOME!
Oct. 28th, 2011 09:55 pmSeriously, is there anyone out there who thought "So, that 52 thing... I bet that Aquaman is going to be the best thing to come out of it"? I did not expect to care about it and yet, it is my favorite 52 title at the moment.
Here are a few pages from Aquaman 2 to show you why I love it so much:
( Aquaman 2 - 3 pages )
Here are a few pages from Aquaman 2 to show you why I love it so much:
( Aquaman 2 - 3 pages )
After properly reading the first issue of Mr. T, I gotta say if Eric Wallace is taking "Karen Starr" where I think he's taking her (as in away from her Earth-Two Kryptonian origin), I think I'll just wait for Grant Morrison's Multiversity series or Robinson's Earth-2 JSA book to make up for whatever new travesty is in store for this character. It's enough to say I'll even take Power Girl 2.0 to this newer version if she doesn't turn out to be the Peege I love and care about.
As it stands, she's been presented as the billionaire CEO of Starrware (that much is still intact) who makes "white girl" comments, and is apparently Mr. T's occasional fuckbuddy. So far I ain't diggin' it.
While, we're on the subject of rebooted origins, here's a look at 1990s Peege back when she thought she was Atlantean.

( Truthfully, I think she would have had a more successful career as step instructor for telly. )
As it stands, she's been presented as the billionaire CEO of Starrware (that much is still intact) who makes "white girl" comments, and is apparently Mr. T's occasional fuckbuddy. So far I ain't diggin' it.
While, we're on the subject of rebooted origins, here's a look at 1990s Peege back when she thought she was Atlantean.

( Truthfully, I think she would have had a more successful career as step instructor for telly. )
Fulfilling A Recent Request: JLA 1-4
Sep. 4th, 2011 03:42 amThis is a long one, folks!
Okay, so a couple days ago I made an uncharitable comparison between Geoff John's New 52 Justice League of America vs Grant Morrison's JLA, using a secret files story to illustrate my point.
Few people agreed with that point, but hey, Star Seed was still a cool story. During the discussion of Morrison's JLA, a certain scene from very early in his JLA run came up, and
drmcninja asked for scans.
No problem. I think it's been posted before, but I couldn't find it. Oh well. Here's the context.
( 29 pages out of 88 and 4 covers from 4 issues behind the cut. )
And so there you have it. Morrison's "widescreen" Justice League. The dream team. The big 7. The most powerful men and woman, and the most dangerous man. Hope you enjoy,
drmcninja!
Aaron "The Mad Whitaker" Bourque; this was a lot longer than I was expecting! . . . could someone give me a hand with the tags?
Okay, so a couple days ago I made an uncharitable comparison between Geoff John's New 52 Justice League of America vs Grant Morrison's JLA, using a secret files story to illustrate my point.
Few people agreed with that point, but hey, Star Seed was still a cool story. During the discussion of Morrison's JLA, a certain scene from very early in his JLA run came up, and
No problem. I think it's been posted before, but I couldn't find it. Oh well. Here's the context.
( 29 pages out of 88 and 4 covers from 4 issues behind the cut. )
And so there you have it. Morrison's "widescreen" Justice League. The dream team. The big 7. The most powerful men and woman, and the most dangerous man. Hope you enjoy,
Aaron "The Mad Whitaker" Bourque; this was a lot longer than I was expecting! . . . could someone give me a hand with the tags?
How To Put The Whole Team In The Book
Sep. 2nd, 2011 12:49 amNote to self, Batman, Geoff Johns and Jim Lee's new Justice League of America #1 was just . . . not very good.
Here's a good intro to the JLA: from JLA Secret Files & Origins #1, Star Seed!
( 7 pages out of a 21 page story )
This wasn't actually the first appearance of this iteration of the Justice League, it had shown up first a year before in Justice League: A Midsummer's Nightmare as well as the JLA monthly title by Morrison and Porter. But this was an excellent jumping on point for readers. It introduces the whole league, pits them against a world- and even universe-spanning threat, dire straits, epic stakes, break-neck pace . . . everyone (except Aquaman, sorry) has at least something to do, even if it's only contributing an idea (yeah, okay, Batman steals the show, but hey, it's Batman! I'm totally fine with that.) And all in 21 pages! No decompression! The whole league pretty much working together, plus special guest star the Spectre!
Note to self, Geoff Johns, that's how you do a good team book introduction.
Aaron "The Mad Whitaker" Bourque; no, I'm not gonna let that little grammar slip-up go, not without a fight.
Here's a good intro to the JLA: from JLA Secret Files & Origins #1, Star Seed!
( 7 pages out of a 21 page story )
This wasn't actually the first appearance of this iteration of the Justice League, it had shown up first a year before in Justice League: A Midsummer's Nightmare as well as the JLA monthly title by Morrison and Porter. But this was an excellent jumping on point for readers. It introduces the whole league, pits them against a world- and even universe-spanning threat, dire straits, epic stakes, break-neck pace . . . everyone (except Aquaman, sorry) has at least something to do, even if it's only contributing an idea (yeah, okay, Batman steals the show, but hey, it's Batman! I'm totally fine with that.) And all in 21 pages! No decompression! The whole league pretty much working together, plus special guest star the Spectre!
Note to self, Geoff Johns, that's how you do a good team book introduction.
Aaron "The Mad Whitaker" Bourque; no, I'm not gonna let that little grammar slip-up go, not without a fight.
Check another off the list..
Aug. 15th, 2011 11:13 am..of people I was looking for after the reboot.
( Read more... )
Oh and just saw this, thought you guys would like:
http://www.comicbookresources.com/n ews/preview2.php?image=solicits/dccomics/2 01111/dckids/ABMBAB_Cv13.jpg
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Oh and just saw this, thought you guys would like:
http://www.comicbookresources.com/n
The 12 Labors of Wonder Woman - Part 4
Jun. 24th, 2011 10:33 pmPart 1
Part 2
Part 3
TL;DR version: Amnesia and bad continuity have left Wonder Woman unsure of her abilities, so she asks the JLA to monitor her next 12 missions to make sure she's still fit for duty.
This issue, it's Aquaman's turn to stalk, er, "monitor" Wonder Woman. Warning to Aquaman fans: This is not his finest hour.
(select panels from a 20-page story)
( Read more... )
Part 2
Part 3
TL;DR version: Amnesia and bad continuity have left Wonder Woman unsure of her abilities, so she asks the JLA to monitor her next 12 missions to make sure she's still fit for duty.
This issue, it's Aquaman's turn to stalk, er, "monitor" Wonder Woman. Warning to Aquaman fans: This is not his finest hour.
(select panels from a 20-page story)
( Read more... )

