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Re: Comic Book Cover Of The Day
Originally Posted by Spiderbite
(Post 14483230)
They spent a lot of time working on the title for this comic.
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Re: Comic Book Cover Of The Day
Another great cover by Nick Cardy. Clever and creative - and just some great artwork!
https://i.ibb.co/Xj2s8Yw/Teen-Titans...edited-720.jpg |
Re: Comic Book Cover Of The Day
Beautiful cover artwork here: Bet the inside art sucks. :lol:
https://d1466nnw0ex81e.cloudfront.ne...600/699261.jpg |
Re: Comic Book Cover Of The Day
Originally Posted by Spiderbite
(Post 14483799)
Beautiful cover artwork here: Bet the inside art sucks. :lol:
Spoiler:
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Re: Comic Book Cover Of The Day
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Re: Comic Book Cover Of The Day
Originally Posted by B5Erik
(Post 14483769)
Another great cover by Nick Cardy. Clever and creative - and just some great artwork!
https://i.ibb.co/Xj2s8Yw/Teen-Titans...edited-720.jpg |
Re: Comic Book Cover Of The Day
Silver Age and Bronze Age Teen Titans pre-Wolfman don't seem to have many fans. Even with characters like Dick and Wally around, those issues don't draw nearly the same attention as other DC books of the time.
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Re: Comic Book Cover Of The Day
Originally Posted by Spiderbite
(Post 14484564)
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Re: Comic Book Cover Of The Day
What did you get for them? I just looked it up and it said value was around the $150 range.
So, anyone here buy in to Crystar at all? I had a couple of the action figures because they looked kind of cool, but I was too balls deep into Star Wars at the tie to care about much else in the toy arena. At the time it seemed they really tried to push this character, but it went nowhere. https://th.bing.com/th/id/OIP.v_CVu7...pid=ImgDetMain |
Re: Comic Book Cover Of The Day
Originally Posted by Bronkster
(Post 14484907)
When this came out in 1973, my adolescent little mind figured that this would be worth BIG BUCKS in the future. So I bought ten copies (quite the investment for kid at that time!). I sold the last one a few years ago. I'm not as rich as I had expected back in '73, but I made a decent profit on them. :lol:
Originally Posted by Spiderbite
(Post 14485088)
So, anyone here buy in to Crystar at all? I had a couple of the action figures because they looked kind of cool, but I was too balls deep into Star Wars at the tie to care about much else in the toy arena. At the time it seemed they really tried to push this character, but it went nowhere.
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Re: Comic Book Cover Of The Day
Of all things, I loved Crystar because his toy had the novelty of being crystal-like and having a removable helmet. I was easy to please as a kid, give me a helmet or weapons storage and I was in. I also liked sword and sorcery type books that went off the beaten (superhero) path like Warlord and Amethyst. As a side note they just released a Marvel Legends toy of Crystar (and soon will have one of Rom).
As for the pre Wolfman/Perez Teen Titans, I dunno I thought the original team of sidekicks was a bit boring so I welcomed the variety that Starfire, Cyborg, Changeling, Raven etc. brought (the Perez art helped a lot). I think it's similar for X-men where the original five were fine but expanding that roster and getting Cockrum, then Byrne on board really garnered my interest in X-men. |
Re: Comic Book Cover Of The Day
Funny you mentioned ROM today. I noticed one of the comics I had of it when I was a kid when I was looking for a cover to post today.
I didn't have much ROM stuff but I always thought this cover kicked ass...and was one of the few I had. https://i.pinimg.com/originals/c6/fb...41546e5f18.jpg |
Re: Comic Book Cover Of The Day
I never had the action figure (sometimes I consider picking up a vintage boxed one) but I was a regular reader of the ROM comic when I was a kid, I really liked it.
Originally Posted by fujishig
(Post 14485153)
Of all things, I loved Crystar because his toy had the novelty of being crystal-like and having a removable helmet. I was easy to please as a kid, give me a helmet or weapons storage and I was in. .
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Re: Comic Book Cover Of The Day
Originally Posted by Spiderbite
(Post 14485088)
So, anyone here buy in to Crystar at all? I had a couple of the action figures because they looked kind of cool, but I was too balls deep into Star Wars at the tie to care about much else in the toy arena. At the time it seemed they really tried to push this character, but it went nowhere.
Crystar must have been remembered though, as I saw an action figure of him at a Toys R Us up here (‘memba those? :lol: ) earlier this year, in a line of boxed Marvel toys. Another obscure, short-lived series that this brought to mind was U.S. 1, which was based on an electric slot car racing set (!). As the son of a truck driver who passed down a lifetime love of and tolerance for long-distance driving, I naturally picked up a few issues of that. Again, I didn’t finish it as the writing and art inside were pretty average and by artists whose styles I wasn’t fond of (Herb Trimpe, Frank Springer, even late-period Ditko on the final issue, which sent the character into outer space), but the series from #2 onward was blessed with some spectacular covers by Bill Sienkewicz (#2) and Michael Golden (the rest), many of them beautifully painted. https://cimg2.ibsrv.net/gimg/dvdtalk...2ef1a34ee.jpeg https://cimg3.ibsrv.net/gimg/dvdtalk...e45c8affa.jpeg https://cimg4.ibsrv.net/gimg/dvdtalk...eadf9cc2e.jpeg https://cimg5.ibsrv.net/gimg/dvdtalk...ca37ced26.jpeg https://cimg6.ibsrv.net/gimg/dvdtalk...eca4d1a42.jpeg While I recall the original being somewhat tongue-in-cheek about its silly premise, I though it was truly clever when John Byrne (a personal favorite) revived the character – in outer space, where the original series left him – in a couple of issues of his Sensational She-Hulk revival. I’ve read that U.S. 1 made subsequent appearances in various Marvel comics throughout the ensuing decades, including in a Deadpool comic, but those were beyond my time in the hobby. https://cimg2.ibsrv.net/gimg/dvdtalk...cdb47454e.jpeg https://cimg5.ibsrv.net/gimg/dvdtalk...5eb98c359.jpeg Whenever I remember this comic, I’m also reminded of another, similarly short lived toy-based tie-in comic from Marvel during the same era as U.S. 1, Team America, which I believe was based on a line of motorcycle toys with those friction ‘motors’ you started by pulling a plastic zip line through a slot, or maybe launched them from a base of some kind that revved them up? Not sure if these characters ever went beyond the original comic. https://cimg4.ibsrv.net/gimg/dvdtalk...d9412f36b.jpeg |
Re: Comic Book Cover Of The Day
Holy shit. I 100% forgot about and now totally remember US 1 and Team America. Fuck yeah!
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Re: Comic Book Cover Of The Day
Those comics are a blast from the past! I too was surprised to learn that Crystar was a Marvel created comic character first, then a toy line. I had no idea that U.S. 1 was a part of the MU and appeared in other comics, cool. And for Team America, they were indeed friction engine motorcycles, created by Ideal, who made the original similar Evel Knievel toys, and the toy line even included Cap himself. More here from Plaid Stallions, a website run by a very good friend of mine and is awesome, check it out for all kinds of 70s and 80s greatness.
https://plaidstallions.com/reboot/19...promo-catalog/ https://cimg6.ibsrv.net/gimg/dvdtalk...6f3fcbe3df.jpg |
Re: Comic Book Cover Of The Day
Originally Posted by Spiderbite
(Post 14485088)
What did you get for them? I just looked it up and it said value was around the $150 range.
https://cimg1.ibsrv.net/gimg/dvdtalk...a343b4be12.jpg |
Re: Comic Book Cover Of The Day
The only issue of Crystar I have is the one that has the first appearance of Danzig!
https://cimg1.ibsrv.net/gimg/dvdtalk...3bc0288db9.jpg |
Re: Comic Book Cover Of The Day
That's a lotta ass on the cover for a kid's comic :lol:
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Re: Comic Book Cover Of The Day
That's fantasy for you (thanks Frazetta!)
I loved US 1 and Team America (mostly for the matching but slightly different uniforms). Team America did show up again but had to be renamed the Thunderiders (same with Rom where all the Spaceknights came back but Rom and whatever else belonged to the license). It's kind of amazing to me how integrated Marvel made the licensed characters in with their universe (which caused some licensing problems later: Rom, Micronauts, Shogun Warriors, Godzilla, even the first Transformers miniseries. At least we're finally getting omniboo of most of them. DC did it too, with stuff like He-man crossing over with Superman, but not to that extent I think. Though there is Atari Force... |
Re: Comic Book Cover Of The Day
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Re: Comic Book Cover Of The Day
Something for the furries, although it's no Omaha the Cat Dancer. ;)
Originally Posted by Spiderbite
(Post 14485425)
That's a lotta ass on the cover for a kid's comic :lol:
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Re: Comic Book Cover Of The Day
Originally Posted by cultshock
(Post 14485296)
Those comics are a blast from the past! . . . More here from Plaid Stallions, a website run by a very good friend of mine and is awesome, check it out for all kinds of 70s and 80s greatness.
https://plaidstallions.com/reboot/19...promo-catalog/ Also, glad to see U.S. 1 and Team America struck a chord with some folks! :thumbsup: I still find it interesting that among all of the toy tie-ins of that era, U.S. 1 was (possibly) the only one not based on some kind of character or action figure IP, but instead a slot car set. Those were pretty common back then, but generally lacked characters per se. I’m curious what it was beyond the logo that made Marvel see it as viable. Perhaps it was creating their own characters to populate it which they could then presumably keep the rights to? Back then I figured there was probably one or two U.S. 1 sets, but apparently there were many, which probably appealed to Marvel in the sense that they could match ‘personalities’ to all sorts of vehicles, not unlike Transformers or Mask or G.I. Joe. The latter even got its own U.S. 1 set, so I’m surprised they didn’t cross over in the comics. https://cimg1.ibsrv.net/gimg/dvdtalk...0d2c455d0.jpeg https://cimg6.ibsrv.net/gimg/dvdtalk...4d4b6ffb8.jpeg https://cimg7.ibsrv.net/gimg/dvdtalk...4b2a8a79a.jpeg https://cimg8.ibsrv.net/gimg/dvdtalk...fe9f7d55d.jpeg https://cimg9.ibsrv.net/gimg/dvdtalk...b342854ad.jpeg https://cimg0.ibsrv.net/gimg/dvdtalk...31a9ee226.jpeg https://cimg1.ibsrv.net/gimg/dvdtalk...08aa3b7da.jpeg |
Re: Comic Book Cover Of The Day
Originally Posted by Brian T
(Post 14485669)
I’ve checked this site out many times over the years – quick references always turn into deep dives – and I even picked up one of his books a few years back called Knock Offs about dodgy off-brand action figures. I’d imagine his house must be packed to the rafters with pop culture ephemera. :)
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Re: Comic Book Cover Of The Day
I've been watching Lost in Space reruns on MeTV and decided to look up some of the Innovation comics that Bill Mumy wrote that continued the series...
https://cimg3.ibsrv.net/gimg/dvdtalk...e81f842cd1.jpg :eek: |
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