A cascading cornucopia of cool comics, crazy cartoons, & classic collectables - plus other completely captivating & occasionally controversial contents. With nostalgic notions, sentimental sighings, wistful wonderings, remorseful ruminations, melancholy musings, rueful reflections, poignant ponderings, & yearnings for yesteryear. (And a few profound perplexities, puzzling paradoxes, & a bevy of big, beautiful, bedazzling, buxom Babes to round it all off.)
Monday, 10 April 2017
SPOT THE DIFFERENCE: THE AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #11...
8 comments:
ALL ANONYMOUS COMMENTS WILL BE DELETED UNREAD unless accompanied by a regularly-used and recognized
name. For those without a Google account, use the 'Name/URL' option. All comments are subject to moderation and will
appear only if approved. Remember - no guts, no glory.
I reserve the right to edit comments to remove swearing or blasphemy, and in instances where I consider certain words or
phraseology may cause offence or upset to other commenters.
Kid,
ReplyDeleteI can see that Lee probably felt the way Spidey's legs were posed looked a little awkward but Kirby's fix STILL makes them awkward,and the webbing on the boots are all wrong! If Ditko didn't have time to make the correction I would have left it as is. Having said that i also understand that it's easy to be judgmental decades later; in reality Lee had lots of comic books to get on the stands every month and didn't have time to analyze every point.
Very true, Nick, 'though I suspect Stan would've noticed that Jack's 'fix' wasn't really an improvement, but by that time it was probably too late to get it redone again. Jack's version of the left leg is okay-ish, but the right one is too short. If Jack had left that one alone and matched the left boot's webbing to the right, then I think it would've worked. Thanks for dropping by, always a pleasure.
ReplyDeleteI read somewhere (Alter Ego probably) that Stan did not like to see the soles of feet, somehow thought that took away from the heroic stance. So that might be why he requested the change. It's weird.
ReplyDeleteRip Off
Perhaps, but I would've thought it'd depend on the character's position, RJ. When he's just been knocked on his @rse on the floor, it's likely that the soles of his feet are going to be visible, depending on the reader's pov. If true, Stan had his work cut out for him with Ditko as he was always drawing Spidey's soles jumping out of the panels towards the reader. I think the way Steve drew him on this cover made Spidey look as if he was shrinking away from Doc Ock (and the foot does look a bit odd as well), which is why Stan probably had it redrawn.
ReplyDeleteI never heard that about not showing the soles of the hero's feet before. Weird.
ReplyDeletePresumably, the 1982 reprint had to flip the cover image to allow for the UPC bar code. Direct sales editions (that were sold only in the comic book specialty shops) did not have the bar code, so the box would instead have a logo, a Spider-Man face, or whatever.
That would explain flipping the cover, TC, but not ruining Doc Ock's face. What were they thinking?
ReplyDeleteI think Stan got it right, the new leg and Doc's face were better.
ReplyDeleteBut the Marvel Tales cover, Doc was far too thin.
Well, Spidey's got two new legs, JP, but I don't think the right one is an improvement (too small, it looks stunted). The left one's a bit better, but it's a shame Jack didn't match the webbing to the way that Steve drew it.
ReplyDelete