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Showing posts with label Barry Kitson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Barry Kitson. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 09, 2016

America turns the clock back

While the world reels from the news of a bigoted, homophobic, narcissistic, thin-skinned man-child being voted as president of the United States, perhaps some comfort is that we can enjoy our escapism while it lasts. Today, Marvel Comics in the USA launch Avengers 1.1 by Mark Waid and British artist Barry Kitson. The story is set in the early days of The Avengers, when they had their first change in the line-up. Iron Man, Thor, Giant-Man and the Wasp have quit, leaving Captain America with ex-villains Hawkeye, Quicksilver and The Scarlet Witch to train as the new Avengers.

The five-issue miniseries fits into the continuity after Avengers No.16, which was published in 1965, but I doubt we'll see any sixties references due to the elasticated "Marvel time" that tends to update flashbacks to contemporary times.

Here are a few preview pages with great art by Barry Kitson. 




There are also variant covers, including this stunner by Alan Davis…


Avengers 1.1, on sale in comic shops in the USA and UK from today. 

Wednesday, October 21, 2015

25 Mega Years

For some reason known best to them, British publishers seem to have a predilection for celebrating the anniversaries of their comic based on cover date, rather than date of publication. The first issue of Judge Dredd the Megazine was published in September 1990 but it's celebrating this week instead. (Issue 2 was published on October 20th 1990.)

Anyway, I'm tired of pointing things like that out. Publishers will carry on doing it long after I'm gone so let's roll with it...

The main thing is that a British comic is celebrating 25 years of continuous publication. That's not something that happens often these days. There have been hundreds, maybe thousands, of comic titles published in the UK over the last 130 years or so but very few make it this far. Judge Dredd the Megazine No.1 was cover dated October 1990, was priced £1.50, and had 52 pages in full colour, with cover art by Glenn Fabry. 

Judge Dredd had been a popular character in 2000AD since his first story in issue 2 in 1977. He was awarded his own annual in 1980 but I remember some editors at IPC / Fleetway were apprehensive about putting him in his own comic. Anyway, they finally did it in 1990 and it's still around today, albeit with a slight name change to Judge Dredd Megazine. He also still appears every week in 2000AD of course, and it'd be unthinkable for him not to. 

Let's take a quick look at the contents of that first issue from 25 years ago...

The lead strip was naturally a Judge Dredd thriller. Midnite's Children was written by Alan Grant and illustrated by Jim Baikie (9 pages)...
Chopper had proved to be a reader's favourite when he appeared in a Dredd serial in 2000AD so here he was awarded his own series. Story by Garth Ennis, art by John McCrea (10 pages)...
Next up was a four page newspaper spoof, Mega City News. Ah the early days of computer design...
The third strip in issue 1 was Young Death; the boyhood of Judge Death! Script by Brian Skuter, art by Peter Doherty (6 pages)...
Next, another Dredd story (well, it's his comic). A saga destined to become a popular classic: America, by John Wagner and Colin MacNeill (10 pages)...
Finally, another Dredd supporting character with his own series. Kenny Who? in Beyond Our Kenny, by John Wagner and Cam Kennedy (9 pages)...
All in all, a strong line up of talent and a good first issue. Marred only slightly by the matt paper stock used then which reproduced some pages too darkly. (I've tried to adjust it a bit in these scans.) 

Twenty five years later, here's the cover to today's issue of Judge Dredd Megazine (No.365) by Barry Kitson. Apart from a mention of the anniversary on the cover, and in the editorial, the celebrations are low key. 
These days the comic has 64 pages, is printed on better paper, plus it's bagged with a 64 page reprint collection, all for £5.80. The main comic features four strips including the start of a new 10 page Judge Dredd serial, Terror Rising, by John Wagner and Colin MacNeill. (Both still doing great work after all these years.)

The other strips are: 
Demon Nic by Paul Grist (15 pages)
Storm Warning by Leah Moore, John Reppion, and Tom Foster (9 pages)
Lawless by Dan Abnett and Phil Winslade (9 pages)

There's also a three page text story, Hunting With Missiles, by Karl Stock, plus features on comics. The bonus comic is a reprint of Faces by Mindy Newell and John Higgins.

The Judge Dredd Megazine has had various format changes and ups and downs over the years but personally I think it's as strong at the moment as it's ever been. I like the mixture of all new strips and comics features, and the bagged reprint comic often has some forgotten treasures. Congratulations to all concerned for 25 years of Mega magnificence. May there be many more to come!
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