Showing posts with label Stan Lee. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stan Lee. Show all posts

Saturday, October 17, 2015

COUNTDOWN TO HALLOWEEN (Day 17): Wanda the Good Witch

I grew up on comic books, Marvel Comics co-created by Stan Lee, Jack Kirby and Steve Ditko for the most part. And if I had to pick a few series that I’d point to as the most influential, The Avengers would be one of those two.

A team of multiple heroes gathered to face down a threat to the world so great that not one of them could handle it alone—that is the definition of The Avengers.  But what made them stand out, in my mind, was the fact that they had relationships outside of their “jobs” as super-people.



I loved the fact that they lived together, most of the core of the team, in a big house (Avengers Mansion).  They ate together, drank together, argued with each other and even occasionally dated one another.  Hell, there were even a few couples who married!



One of those couples were founding members of the team Hank Pym and Janet Van Dyne (Ant-Man and The Wasp), which wasn’t really a surprise to long-time readers because they’d been a couple for years of ups and downs.  The other couple, however, was a result of I don’t know what to call it but a sign of the times--times that were changing.



The Vision was a synthezoid (that’s right, that word is making my autocorrect shit bricks), an artificial humanoid created by an enemy of The Avengers to destroy them.  Wanda Maximoff was an “evil” mutant who was making an attempt, with her twin brother, to reform after years of servitude to the leader of the brotherhood, Magneto.





Wanda was called The Scarlet Witch.  She was not a witch, but she was given that name because her mutant ability was to alter probabilities in order to make the impossible probable or actual.  If an enemy were standing over a gas line that was freshly built, it would suddenly explode as if it were fifty years old.  So weird shit would happen around her and most of the time it would be to her or her teammate’s advantage.  That freaked them out enough that she was called a witch.



Eventually, she began to study and became adept at witchcraft when she lost her mutant powers for a while.  Although, what she was actually doing was simply using her probability altering powers to tap into the magical energies out there.  So the name “Witch” became more apt, more witchy and more scary to her enemies.  Now around this time, she and her brother discovered that their former leader in the Brotherhood of Mutants, Magneto, was their true father.  Add to that possession by a demonic entity known as Chthon and the the witch part of her name started to hold a lot more weight.



Meanwhile, she’d married her synthezoid (there goes that word again) boyfriend/teammate.  And while life wasn’t perfect, he and she knew happiness together.  Now I could get into the vast amount of history that came later, how they’d had impossible kids, she’d gone crazy and wiped out a race and destroyed The Avengers—killing her husband in the process—but I won’t.  That could take hours.  And, frankly, it doesn’t matter.



The point is she went from a frail young lady to a woman of power, a woman of so much power that it became scary to all those around her.  And while her teammates cared for her, they certainly feared her abilities enough to take measures to protect themselves and their world.  The point being, even a good witch, a good woman of power, should be treated with respect... and a good amount of caution!




And now, right here on our stage, it's ZZ TOP frontman Billy Gibbons in his psychedelic blues band that he fronted before he became a sharp dressed man...
it's MOVING SIDEWALKS with
"CRIMSON WITCH"...


Thursday, October 8, 2015

COUNTDOWN TO HALLOWEEN (Day 8): A Hag Named Harkness


When you are looking for a nanny to take care of your special little one and your special little one happens to be the child of two of the greatest adventurers on the planet, you tend to want a person with experience, who is adept, who can handle any problem that might spring up.

Everyday problems are obvious for regular people, but what if you, your wife and your child have abilities far beyond those of normal people and regularly save the world.  And what if your child's undeveloped abilities could one day destroy the world?  You would at least hope the one caring for your baby would be able to deal with all of that in an emergency--at least until you could get home and handle it.

Or, say, if your former roommate who is obsessed with beating you--a guy who happens to be an iron-fisted dictator who wears a suit of highly-advanced armor and speaks of himself in the third person all the time--were to show up with bad intentions?  You would need that person to know how to handle that situation--or, at the very least, not panic.

Well, when Reed and Sue wanted someone to watch over little Franklin, they chose well...



High on a hilltop in a secluded little town in upstate New York called Whisper Hill sits a large old home of an ancient retired governess.  She's tall and skinny, and at first glance appears frail as a crisp leaf, and yet there's a steeliness in her eye, a confidence of wisdom and power.  It's actually frightening to look at her directly in the eye for long.





Agatha Harkness is her name and she has been on this Earth longer than Atlantis has sat on the ocean floor.  She is a witch and she is to be feared and respected.  She survived the Salem witch trials and went on to live a successful and long life as a governess.  Probably several lives...




Created by Jack Kirby and Stan Lee for FANTASTIC FOUR #94, she is probably one of the last creations that the two worked on together.  Kirby only drew her in this issue, but what a debut it is... she not only frightens the fight out of the FRIGHTFUL FOUR, she literally makes Ben Grimm quit quipping and run away from her with one look.  Now that takes some real magic!



Saturday, July 26, 2014

Where the Time Goes...

The time goes down a manhole and into the swamp.
It collects into the form of a thing that used to be a man.
It is now just a Man-Thing full of empty thoughts and merely hints of memories.
This Man-Thing wanders the Earth without direction or purpose, alone.
(Silly isn't it?)



Tuesday, December 25, 2012

SONS OF SATAN, THE ALL-FATHER and RICK GRIMES

The three sons featured today are all children of men who have made powerful names for themselves in their own ways...

You can enlarge any of these images for further review--it's fun even!

(Carl Grimes, son of Rick, a survivalist family during a zombie plague)

(Hellboy and Thor measuring each other up--it's a hero thing.)

(Thor looking as pissed as usual.)

(Hellboy's hunting down some kind of nasty sumbitch)

Tuesday, November 27, 2012

TRYPTOPHAN HULK-OUT

The Hulk having THANKSGIVING DINNER...

(HULK ALWAYS GET DRUMSTICK AND 'TATER SALAD ON THANKSGIVING!)

Monday, October 15, 2012

MONSTER-MONTH: COUNTDOWN TO HALLOWEEN (Day 15)

(Click to Frankensize)
“I am HIM… not born of man and woman!  I was created to be invincible!
And those who made me… made me well!”
--Adam Strange/HIM  from THOR #166

(Click to Frankensize)
Tonight we look to the wonderful world of funnybooks for a peek at a different kind of Frankenstein Monster.  This one created by evil scientists for an evil purpose.  This one who destroys his creators and seeks a companion because he is alone in the universe.

I’m speaking of HIM, a creation of Jack Kirby and Stan Lee, a character for whom it feels a larger purpose was intended.  After all, it is rare that a character appears in one massive story arc in the world’s greatest comic magazine and soon is the feature of the mighty THOR shortly thereafter.  Who knows what larger story might have unfolded at the hands of his creators...

(Click to Frankensize)
The being who later became known as Adam Warlock was the creation of four geneticists who called themselves the Enclave.  “HIM” as Adam Warlock was known then, was the prototype for a perfect human life form grown from artificial genetic material, which the Enclave intended to mass produce to form an invincible army to conquer the world.

(Click to Frankensize)
These scientists miscalculated the strength of HIM, and after leaving his womblike cocoon, their prototype destroyed the Enclave and their island base which was known as the Beehive.  He then harnessed his cosmic power and left earth to find his own destiny in space.

(Click to Frankensize)
There you have it, a FRANKENSTEIN tale told in just a few issues of the FANTASTIC FOUR #66 and 67.  Overreaching scientists have their own creation turn against them, thus the morality play is played.  But waitaminute, where’s the part where this creation seeks out a mate to fulfill his life?  Ah, that’s where Stan and Jack bring back HIM again, this time in the pages of THOR #165-166!



A Watcher, having accidentally caused HIM to spin another protective cocoon, decides to return him to his point of origin so as to have interfered with his life as much as leaving him floating out in space would.  The cocoon eventually opened as Thor, Sif and Balder were investingating the disturbing power being unleashed.

(Click to Frankensize)
Seeing Sif and feeling a deep well of loneliness, HIM seized her as his mate and quickly whipped up a portal to another world.  Now this caused Thor to completely lose his mind and be overtaken by “The Warrior Madness”.  The god rages for five pages straight before deciding to simply follow them by creating his own portal with Mjolnir.

(Click to Frankensize)
Once they reach HIM and Sif, she tries to comfort Thor by explaining that he has no sense of things, that he is naive.  Thor will have none of it and prepares to throw down on the cosmic creation like a mad god will tend to do when his woman has been taken (Liam Neeson ain’t alone in metting out that kind of pain.).

(Click to Frankensize)

The fickle finger of fate, or, more precisely, Haag interferes by literally reaching through a portal to try and kidnap Balder as a favor for her queen, Karnilla.  Thor, as enraged as possible; because what the heck is it, grab a god week in the Marvel Universe, fights off Haag’s attack and saves Balder.  Then does he turn back to HIM and Sif only to find empty space as the golden godling has fled again, with his girlfriend.






(Click to REVENGE!)
So, Thor, in full immortal meltdown, teleports again to where they have travelled.   And thus the beatdown begins.  He rages and rages and hammers HIM so much that he eventually spins another cocoon and flees into the vastness of space.  Thor, now at the end of his berzerker rage calms down enough to relax.




(Click to Frankensize)
So, this is really where the story of Kirby and Lee’s HIM ends as it is much later before his story is picked up again and it is under the direction of another writer, another editor, another artist and the character, by this point has taken on another name:
Adam Warlock.  



And Roy Thomas and Gil Kane eventually ran with the story of Christ as a super hero… a different kind of story than the one as it began here.  Though, who knows--it seems as though Kirby imbued HIM with many of the qualities he put into the Silver Surfer.  The Surfer being a character Kirby had wanted to continue to develop, but couldn’t.  So, mayhap, he created HIM for this very purpose.

It was shortly after this that Kirby quit with the major character creations for Marvel--the Doctor Frankenstein who had served the House of Ideas so well for so long was off to work his strange magics and sciences creating life for a different company.
And other, new gods and monsters were born there.


Vas?

Friday, July 13, 2012

BUILDING UP FROM SCRATCH

When considering the possibilities of how to portray a battle between two characters in a single image or scene, I like to consider the finale of such a battle.  It is, after all, the result of said
battle and is one of the most important parts.

When thinking on an obvious lopsided battle, the finale becomes the more important because of the "how".  Surely we all know this was the inevitable outcome, but here is exactly how
it actually went down...etc.



So when it came down to Darkseid and Carnage in a Character Battle Royale that I was a 
participant in, it was too easy to imagine the many possibilities of the Lord of Apocalypse
destroying the tiresome Spider-Man villain and Venom also-ran.

>>>>Click on any of the images here for that bigger flavor we all crave!<<<<

I can always go "Omega Beams!" with Darkseid, but for a character such as this, I think that a
simple physical act should do the trick and what better way than removing the guy's head from
his shoulders.  Simple and to the point.


(I love how Carnage's hand comes up yearning to free himself even when his head's gone!)

But then I got to thinking about how a touch of comedy can lighten the dark mood of a 
piece of art featuring a beheading.  And so I came up with this...


(That's supposed to be Spidey being held up by Darkseid, looking down on the corpse of Carnage.)



(Found my angle with the above sketch,
Darkseid holding up Carnage's face to Spidey while asking the question:
"Why is it that your enemies keep attacking me, Spider?")


(Expanded it on the computer to show Spidey reacting to Darkseid's question with:
"That's what I ask myself every day!")


I ended up not going with the above as it was a little too unfocused on Carnage, so
I decided on the direct approach again.  Though this time in the middle of the act itself!


(Drew the above on packing cardboard from work with a ballpoint.)



(Cleaned up a bit in photoshop and tilted (always the fun part))



(Cleaned up more and Carnage's arm has been repositioned into more a defensive pose.)



(And the digital inking begins.)



(Digital inking for the figures nearly done.)



(Here we join the coloring process nearly completed.)




(And now we have the finished product!)

And, just so you know, the battle continues over at...