Showing posts with label Colossus. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Colossus. Show all posts

Thursday, August 17, 2017

365 Days of Defiance, Day 229: Frank Castle, Vampire Hunter

So What If...? the Punisher armed with Doctor Strange's Cloak of Levitation was fighting evil vampire X-Men. What then, huh?


Panels from What If...? (1989 series) #24 (April 1991); script by Roy Thomas, Jean-Marc Lofficier, and Randy Lofficier; pencils and inks by Tom Morgan; colors by Tom Vincent; letters by Janice Chiang

The 1990s! There was no concept too high for that decade to embrace!

Seriously, do spray vampires with holy water.

Tuesday, January 24, 2017

365 Days of Defiance, Day 24: I hope the Russians love their spiders too

He may have the proportionate strength of a spider and the brilliant science mind of an elastic engineer, but I've always said that Spider-Man's most dangerous weapon is his sarcasm. (Also: dramatic irony, metaphor, bathos, puns, parody, litotes and satire.) Watch him defeat Colossus and Magik, both possessed by the Phoenix Force, armed only with a sonic screwdriver his wits!


(Click this picture to Bendis-crossover-event-size)


Panels from Avengers vs. X-Men #9 (October 2012); (deep inhale) plot by Brian Michael Bendis, Ed Brubaker, Jonathan Hickman, and Matt Fraction; script by Jason Aaron; pencils by Adam Kubert; inks by John Dell; colors by Laura Martin and Larry Molinar; letters by Chris Eliopoulos

Wednesday, January 04, 2017

If I Ran Timely Comics: Russia's greatest love machine

Hey, let's talk about Rasputin!


Splash page of The [Uncanny] X-Men #140 (December 1980), co-plot and script by Chris Claremont, co-plot and pencils by John Byrne, inks by Terry Austin, colors by Glynis Wein, letters by Tom Orzechowski

No, no, not that Rasputin. Grigori Yefimovich Rasputin, the infamous "Mad Monk" and trusted friend of the family of Nicholas II, last Czar of the Russian Empire! (At least until they reboot it in Russian Empire: Rebirth #1.) Rasputin was famously "unkillable," supposedly surviving several assassination attempts because of his adamantium bones and healing factor. That's why he's a perfect subject to star in his own Marvel/Timely-era comic book story! Remember how huge Rasputin got when they published this story? All the kids in the alleys and on the farms were running around yelling "I am Rasputin! You cannot kill me!" Ah, those were the days, the days of borscht and roses.


Splash panel of "The Mad Monk!" in Amazing Detective Cases #6 (Marvel/Timely, May 1951), script by Carl Wessler, pencils by Pierce Rice, inks by John Tartaglione

Of course this sets up the story for plenty of wholesome pre-code murder attempts! That darn Rasputin, he got away...again!


Naturally, it ends the way it always does: with Rasputin being shot, rolled up in a carpet, and dropped in the ice-freezing Volga River. Eh, that old cliché.


The world never saw the supposedly immortal Rasputin again.

Later in that same comic book, another story ends with death by drowning. Yes, thanks to Stan Lee's canny business sense, May 1951 was drowning month in all the Timely comic books! (See, for example, Patsy Walker #34, where Patsy attempts to get rid of an extra date, with hilarious and waterlogged consequences!)


Final panels of "Death on the River!" in Amazing Detective Cases #6 (Marvel/Timely, May 1951), pencils and inks by Jay Scott Pike

Hmmmmm, that story made me think. Hmmmmmm! Why, if I ran comics, that would give me an idea. An awesome idea. Bully got a wonderful, awesome idea!

So, cracking open the heavy plastic shell of my CGC 9.8 of Amazing Detective Cases #6 and going at the pages with scissors and glue, I've wound up with with this as the final panels of "The Mad Monk," and I think you'll all agree that it's an improvement and that I would be a natural working on the 14th floor of the Empire State Building, working alongside Stan Lee and suggesting maybe a superhero based on a spider might be a rather nifty thing to do.


Sunday, November 04, 2012

More Cow/Bull Month, Day 4: Cowlossus


Panel from Ultimate X-Men #94 (July 2008), script by Aron E. Coleite, pencils by Mark Brooks, inks by Jaime Mendoza and Troy Hubbs, colors by Edgar Delgado, letters by Albert Deschesne



Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Tuesday Nighty Tighty-Whities: In Soviet Union, jockey shorts wear you

Amy WInehouseIt's Tuesday night, and you know what that means...everyone in America is watching the new smash hit TV thriller, V, in which a British freedom fighter rallies against the tyrannical rule of British lizard people in the shape of Tony Blair and Gordon Brown. Tonight's special guest: Amy Winehouse! Is she human...or lizard...or both? [SPOILER ALERT: Lizard.] For the rest of you, however, there's Tuesday Nighty Tighty-Whities, the incisive and all-encompassing survey of superheroes in their underwear!

Tonight: he's seven-foot-five, five hundred pounds of solid Soviet stainless steel...the Moscovite mutant we all call...um...(glancing at my copy of The Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe Deluxe Edition #3)...Colossus! And as you can see here, the Communist Crusher couldn't get enough days off from Professor Xavier's Academy for the Genetically Overactive to stand in line at GUM to buy pajamas, so he sleeps in...you guessed it...his Fruit of the Looms!

UXM #137
Panels from [Uncanny] X-Men #137 (September 1980), co-plot and script by Chris Claremont, co-plot and pencils by John Byrne, inks by Terry Austin, colors by Glynis Wein, letters by Tom Orzechowski. Hey, how much of a fanbull does it make me that I knew by heart and I didn't have to look up the creator credits on this ish?


Ta-da! Changing into a strongman giant made of organic steel certainly beats my morning routine, which consists of two and a half sit-ups and then a chocolate Pop-Tart for breakfast. But hey, how does Peter Rasputin keep his underwear from ripping to shreds when he changes from teenager to titanium? Well, two answers to that pressing question, actually...

Answer #1:

FF v3 #63
Panel from Fantastic Four v.3 #63 (January 2003), script by Mark Waid, pencils by Mike Wieringo, inks by Karl Kesel, colors by Paul Mounts, letters by Richard Starkings and Albert Deschesne


Ask any fanboy who invented unstable molecules, the miracle fabric that stretches, resists burning, turns invisible and splashes back grape juice spills, and you'll hear the dead-certain answer "Reed Richards!" Which only goes to show you, you're dead wrong. (If you were a contestant on QI, you'd be Alan Davies and that big board on the back would be flashing your wrong answer while the buzzer blares away.) Mr. Fantastic didn't invent unstable molecules, he discovered them—passage through the cosmic rays on that fateful journey back in 1961 about ten years or so ago turns the FF's crew jumpsuits into that hyperactive fabric with the give and pull that allows Ben Grimm to go out in public without showing everyone his rock collection. So I betcha Colossus has undies made out of unstable molecules. We already know that lots of superheroes get their unstable costumes from Reed, but technically, they "lease" them from Fantastic Four, Inc...the technology is still too expensive, even for Reed, to mass-produce unstable swimsuits, no matter how many times Namor asks him. We do know that the X-Men Mk. II's uniforms are made of unstable molecules...remember, for example, how Storm used to transform her street clothes into her fighting costume by sending an electrical spark through it? And how Cyclops's yellow booties would turn into pirate galoshes every time that Dave Cockrum came back near the strip? It's all unstable molecules...my friend...and yours!

But that's only one answer to the sartorial conundrum of why Peter Rasputin ain't bustin' out all over when he changes into Colossus in his y-fronts. For the No-Prize, here's

Answer #2


CCA
The Comics Code Authority: protecting you from Peter Rasputin's area since 1954.

Hey, a letter just landed with a "you've got mail" in the Comics Oughta Be Fun! emailbox, so let's take a look. Hmmm, it's from a Miss "K. Pryde" of "Deerfield Illinois" and she asks, "can we look again at Colossus in his underwear? You know, just one last peek?"

I'll do you better than that, Ms. P, here's an all-new, all-different, all-uncannily peek at the Colossus from Earth-9112, a world where everyone looks pretty much the same but they're more Flexographically-colored...from the original version of X-Men #137 before Jim Shooter twiddled his fingers into it (and, let's face it, made it a better story):

Phoenix: The Untold Saga
Panels from Phoenix: The Untold Story one-shot (April 1984), words and pictures and yadda yadda yadda by the same guys I listed from memory above, okay?


Phoenix: The Untold Story was a special comic that reprinted Claremont and Byrne's original story, ending with the Jean Grey living. The art is the same as X-Men #137 until the last handful of pages, but the dialogue's substantially different throughout, as you can see here. It's an interesting alternative story, but again, I still prefer the original, even with more Claremont verbiage per square inch than the special.

So, there you have it...superheroes in their underwear, digressions into the worlds of Amy Winehouse, the Fantastic Four, and the scary, scary place that is the creative mind of Chris Claremont. Who says this isn't the Mighty Bully Age of extra content in a blog post?

Eh, never mind. I know the only real reason you stopped by here tonight: Colossus in his underwear...

UXM #131
Partial panel from [Uncanny] X-Men #131 (March 1980), by you know the drill by now.


...with bonus extremely-hairy Wolverine! Sweet dreams now, kids!