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I've never been a Star Trek fan (of any iteration) and I've read that the Marvel published ST comics were some of the poorest.
And yet these two damn covers have got my attention. Haha. Spock the Barbarian and space gnomes?
Just like I thought Dale Keown was a bigger, louder John Byrne -- 80s Ernie Colon looked like a bigger, louder H. G. Peter.
Everything was "extreme" this and "extreme" that in the 90s.
In the post-millennium everything is an academy.
It should be criminal to not recognize Marshall Rogers as a giant in Batman artists. His design work is so sexy, and Silver St. Cloud too.
Strange coincidence that the reporter who interviews Lois in Alan Moore's "Whatever Happened to the Man of Tomorrow" story is named Tim Crane and Supreme is Ethan Crane. I thought it was a Moore addition but apparently Keith Giffen gave Supreme that name a year beforehand.
I liked the brief gimmick The Vulture had in the 90s Spider-Man cartoon and the comic series where he rejuvenated his body by sucking out the life force of young men.
He was like Madonna with wings.
Miss Fury, the first female action hero created by a female creator in June Tarpe Mills.
I wonder how much 80s Catwoman owes Miss Fury in royalty checks for stealing her borrowing her outfit.
Even though it's popularly accepted that the main Watchmen characters were re-skinned Charlton characters -- Dr. Manhattan looks like he owes more to Dr. Solar than Captain Atom.
For the last decade it seems like Marvel books restart at #1 anytime the day ends in "Y".
Here's some big moments when the title could've restarted right afterwards and I would've been like "Yeah, that makes sense."
This is a pretty ridiculous comics review site in the first place for having qualitative indices, but Uncle Scrooge isn't a positive minority portrayal?
How many times a day do you encounter a talking duck or beagle? Uncle Scrooge is nothing but minorities.