TER General Board

Re:Favorite Comic Book?
razman13 17 Reviews 5884 reads
posted

BTW... Cherry Poptart ROCKS!!

mine was Richie Rich, cuz that Irona was hot in that French Maid outfit. lol

WhatTheHeck4144 reads

I was a ten-year old in 1961.  He was a test pilot - very cool, since John Glenn and the other Mercury astronauts were America's greatest heroes then.  They also had a thing going with Hal Jordan and his two brothers being very much like the three Kennedy brothers.

Thor, The Avengers, Hulk, Daredevil ,fantastic four and many others.

How about Jennifer Garner as Elektra in the Daredevil movie?  Yum!!!  She is so hot.  Something about red hair that drives me wild!

SexyCurvesDC3606 reads

That's my redheaded IDOL!

Gosh I love her... I'd almost forgotten, it's been so long since I've seen her!

*smooch*

Nicole

I think I missed the comic book phenomenon and was more into the graphic novels of the late 80's.  Frank Miller's Dark Knight Returns, Crying Freeman, Sin City, Lone Wolf and Cub, The Watchmen

IamSilky3394 reads

I always considered MAD Magazine a comic book...Never missed an issue from 10 years old to 16....Loved Alfed E. Newman.....

Man...I don't even remember the names but one of my favorites was 'Richie Rich' (is that right?), and then of course there was the kids - Jughead, Moose, and I forget the rest of them?? Betty?
Of course, Caspar, and Little Lulu..LOL

fortitude4313 reads

.......and his friend Jughead, Veronica and the rest of the gang.  I grew up on them, as well as Sgt. Rock when he was still fighting World War II.

And of course everybody loved Superman and Batman.

Ozymandias2831 reads

I never missed a copy of "Sergeant Rock".

Also I liked all the "Wierd" ones... "Wierd Tales", "Wierd War", etc.

Horror and War, basically. Never cared as much about "super heroes".

O.

fortitude5589 reads

I used to read "Sgt. Rock of Easy Company" when he was still fighting World War II.  I think that's the last comic book I read.

WhatTheHeck4111 reads

"The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay", by Michael Chabon, is one I would recomend highly to anyone who loves good writing - a very enjoyable read.

When I was a blond, blue-eye kid growing up in California in the early 1960s, I was a big fan of superhero comics.  I was not Jewish, and didn't have a single Jewish friend.  Slowly I became aware that all the comics were published in New York, and that the writers and artists were mostly Jewish.  A lot of then had changed their names, like Stanley Lieber, who became Stan Lee, or my favorite character Green Lantern's artist Eli Katz, who had emigrated from Lithuania and become Gil Kane.  I realized vaguely that there nmight be some meaning to this, and perhaps a dramatic story behind it.

During the "Golden Age" of 1940s comics, there were a number of superheros, most notably Captain America, who specialized in fighting Nazis.  The young Jews who were creating these comics knew through rumors that something like the Holocaust might be coming, but the American public at large was still ambivalent in pre-Pearl Harbor 1938-1940 about the need to stop Hitler.  Creating the stories of Captain America and the others was an attempt by these young Jews to try in their small (or perhaps not so small) way to wake up America to what was going on in Europe, and how monstrous the Nazi ideology really was.  

This novel is about this story, and focuses on a very talented young Jewish man who comes to America and joins his younger American cousin in working in the comic book industry.  I can't really do it justice in a short post, but I can tell you that it absolutely deserved the Pulitzer.  The book actually is much lighter and funny than my description makes it sound. Chabon is an incredible worddmith.  I recommend it highly.

Has to be anything with Spiderman....reading how he thinks and see things...he could be any one of us.

As for my favs, Spiderman and Venom, all the Image titles (esp Gen 13!!).  Graphic novels, mine was Druna (from Heavy Metal).  Cant wait to see how they did Dare Devil (Ben Afflec??)  i dunno about that....

BTW... Cherry Poptart ROCKS!!

The idea of a walking talking Aardvark with a bad temper and a short sword fascinates me:)

Now that you mention it, I recall that Sgt. Fury stories often dealt with topics such as segregation, anti-semitism, and other real-world issues.  Very much a comic for its time (the 60's).

DannyBustyLvr4906 reads

Those animals crack me up (Ralph alswys inventing rocket belts...) - and poor Frank, he is like me..
because he lusts for beautiful busty brunette Brandy !!!

SweetJaclyn4559 reads

Although I don't read comic books much anymore, I still fondly remember Green Lantern, Superman, and Hulk.  Even though, in my opinion, the TV show sucks, I am obligated to like Buffy, The Vampire Slayer comic books as a friend of mine helps write them.

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