Random thoughts on zeitgeist:
Iron Man, created in March of 1963. After a piece of shrapnel lodged near his heart, millionaire industrialist Tony Stark created a superpowered suit of armor to keep his heart beating. Stark went on to adventure as The Invincible Iron Man and co-founded The Avengers.
Iron Man, created in March of 1963. After a piece of shrapnel lodged near his heart, millionaire industrialist Tony Stark created a superpowered suit of armor to keep his heart beating. Stark went on to adventure as The Invincible Iron Man and co-founded The Avengers.If he were created for DC, in a different place & time:
Ted (Wildcat) Grant, created in 1942, was inspired to become a superhero by following the exploits of Alan Scott, The original Green Lantern. Ted Grant went on to become a founding member of the pre-eminent super-team, The Justice Society of America. Wildcat has since gone on to train some of The DCU's greatest fighters (Batman, Black Canary, Catwoman & most of The JSA) in the art of hand-to-hand combat.If he were created for Marvel, in a different place & time:
Ted (Wildcat) Grant created in 1969, was inspired to become a superhero by following the exploits of Thomas Halloway, The original Angel. Ted Grant only had the one adventure and hasn't been seen since.
Oh, great, so now people are giving me theoretical reasons to dislike Bendis's work...
ReplyDeleteIn all fairness, it was Mark Millar who wrote the shocking death of Impulse (Bart Allen) and the much of the rest of Young Justice in Civil War #1. I don't know if I accept the rational that they were "over their heads" in taking on Chemo directly...
ReplyDelete1st Issue Spectacular #14 was May '76, not March. The March issue was #12, featuring the all-new, all-different, all-doomed-to-never-reappear Starman.
ReplyDeleteI'm calling shenanigans on the second part of your post, because Roy Thomas woulda have brought back Wildcat in the pages of The Invaders.
ReplyDeleteI think Wildcat would have popped up in an issue of Steve Gerber's Avengers.
ReplyDeleteTony Stark? He would have disappeared for about 30 years until he re-emerged as the head of Checkmate and shot Blue Beetle in the head!
Over at DC, Bronze Age JLA-member and amiable street-level crime fighter Spider-Man is brought to the brink of madness and suicide when his pregnant wife Mary Jane is incinerated by a newly-deranged Wasp in an attempt to get Hank Pym to love her again.
ReplyDeleteJMS can retcon all the unsavory implications he wants, but he can't dim the memory of those spectacular Golden Age Captain America / Boy Commandos team-ups.
ReplyDeleteI just can't believe you found another neglected Golden-Age character named Tom Halloway.
ReplyDeleteAnd that I followed too links to find that out.
And that I spelled "Two" wrong.
ReplyDeleteOf course, the corollary is that there's a universe where Code Name: Assassin had three ongoing series during the '90s (along with the short-lived Wolverine/Assassin: Full Adamantium Jacket).
ReplyDelete...speaking of which, "Its" (when it is a possessive pronoun) has no apostrophe.
ReplyDeleteWhen "it's" is a contraction of "it is," it has an apostrophe between the T and the S.
There is never a reason to follow "its" with an apostrophe.
I think you've created a new feature for your blog, DVS...
ReplyDeleteUnless you're talking about something that belongs to Steve Its, penciler on the short-lived "Astonishing Adventures Starring the Atom".
ReplyDeleteThat would actually be more properly rendered as Its's. Oft-neglected but technically true!
ReplyDeleteCurse you, Phantom Punctuator!
ReplyDelete"There is never a reason to follow 'its' with an apostrophe."
ReplyDeleteOh no?
Am I missing something? There wasn't a 1st Issue Spectacular 14 was there? Or was it part of the Canceled Comic Cavalcade?
ReplyDelete