The second cover is as it was originally drawn, the first is as it was published after being amended to give Namor's new costume greater visual impact |
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.)
Sunday, 11 September 2022
FANTASTIC FOUR COVER GALLERY INTRO... (UPDATED)
10 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.
Loved this time period for FF.Romita did not work for me(though apparently sales went up!)However Buscema was brilliant and111 and 112 were classics though 112 was scarce whereas 11q was everywhere.116 was a classic as was the follow up 117 and 118 with a great what if Thing story.126-128 had superb artwork and a grat story.Great to have you back Kid and hope you are well.best wishes FF follower or triple FF to you more to follow.
ReplyDeleteTriple F again mate.FF 133 came in the middle of a great run of issues 129 the Frightful 4 with Thundra,then the Inhumans,a brilliant Dragon Man /Gideon story followed by an amazing story(to a 10 year old Kid) of a 1950s love in by Roy Thomas and then Mr Miracle stars in a personal favourite.Loved it.Later I learnt that Big John only did layouts on those issues of FF in the 130's so Joe Sinnot was the main artist.Did not notice at the time but 30 years later it is a plausible scenario.
ReplyDelete#140 to 149 was my favourite era of the FF which is insane but let me explain.I loved the stories and art by Buckler including the Giant Size issues.That era had so many non distributed issues,the aforementioned G S issues and issues 144,145,146,147,148 that I found so hard to buy that I have built up a love of that era that it does not warrant.....and yet for me it does!Annihilus,Dr.Doom,Darkoth(brilliant)Submariner,The Inhumans and 2 fill in issues staring Thing and Medusa,bonkers but brilliant.An amazing time for me but others may wonder why I loved them but they were brilliant.
ReplyDeleteThanks for assembling your post Kid and opening the door to one of the happiest times of my life.Stay well my friend.Triple F.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the comments, Triple F, always welcome. Romita didn't quite work for me on FF either, though I loved his Sue Storm on the cover of 106. As you say, Buscema was brilliant on the foursome and was a hard act to follow. Having said that, Buckler and Wilson were also good, and looking at the covers Kirby did for FF once he returned to Marvel, it's probably best that he never drew the interiors as his talents had all but deserted him. His covers were too cartoony, the perspectives weren't quite right, his figures were even more distorted than usual and sales would probably have plummeted had he been drawing the stories.
ReplyDeleteI was lucky to catch some stories I'd missed in their US presentations when they were reprinted in The Complete Fantastic Four, but it's good to have the colour originals. I found myself surprised by how much I enjoyed reading the tales I never caught at the time (having bought them only recently), thinking they'd probably be second-rate to Byrne's later tenure on the title, but they were very entertaining.
Thanks for the good wishes - hope you're well and that everything's fine with you. Cheers.
I was deep into the Fab 4 during this period. Seeing these issues again in a recent Epic collection made wish that John Romita had done more issues.
ReplyDeleteAt the time, RJ, 106 was the only Romita issue I'd seen before Buscema took over and I thought JB was perfect for the job. Big John had the dynamism of Kirby, but with more realistic anatomy so I was well-pleased. Romita, of course, was a master visual storyteller and had I seen his other FF issues before Buscema took over, I think I'd have been more impressed and I'm sure he'd have made the strip his own given time. So, when I say Romita didn't quite work for me on the FF, I meant with that one issue and only in comparison to Big John Buscema, who wasn't only a hard act to follow, but also to precede in the FF's case after Kirby.
ReplyDeleteI didn't own any of these issues but they were all reprinted in The Titans, Captain Britain and The Complete Fantastic Four which is where I read them.
ReplyDeleteI had none of these at the time but picked up issues 111 and 116 about 15 years ago. I have issue 112_(Thing v Hulk) as a True Believers reprint. I m a Romita can and would also have liked to have seen him so more FF. It's strange although I liked the FF I didn't pick up many of their comics during this period maybe as I read so many in UK Marvel but great covers.
ReplyDeleteAs I've got complete sets of all those titles, CJ, I have the reprints as well.
ReplyDelete******
Romita has stated that he tried to emulate Kirby on the FF, McS, which was perhaps a mistake. Had he drawn the strip in the same way as he drew Spidey, it might have been better. Good as Romita usually is, I'd say that Buscema nailed it first time out, though I'll admit that Romita drew a beautiful Sue Storm (Richards).