Covers from Fantastic Four v.3 #51-54 (March-June 2002), art by Mike Wieringo, colors by Liquid! Graphics
This is one of my favorite interconnected images, not simply because it's got Jolly Orange Ben Grimm anchoring the bottom (altho' that don't hurt!) I really like the way there's a hint of the other's presence or powers on their teammates' spotlighted covers: Johnny's flame rises the entire length of the mural, Reed stretches up the bottom three, and the debris thrown up by Ben's clobberin' flies as high as Reed. Sue's "invisible" force field is anchored behind Ben, right next to her husband's lower, um, half. It's not merely a lovely image, it's a wonderful metaphor for the FF as a family. Remember that Claremont and Byrne X-Men where Phoenix saves the universe by knitting the fabric of time, space, and Professor X's wooly jumper back together while inside the M'Kraan Crystal?
Panel from [Uncanny] X-Men #108 (December 1977), script by Chris Claremont, pencils by John Byrne, inks by Terry Austin, colors by Andy Yanchus, letters by Denise Wohl
Whoa, that's a lot of info crammed into that panel that's kinda tiny on my ever-lovin' blue-eyed blog. Let's magnify the important bit here...Claremont's ever-so-poetic captions, lettered by Denise Wohl:
ADDITION on 12/2/09: Sharp-eyed commenter H.P.L. noted that the panel I'm thinking of was actually from Classic X-Men #15, a reprint of X-Men #108 with newly-inserted panels by Chuck Patton. Thanks, H.P.L.! Please help yourself to a Bull-Prize (and if you're really H.P.L., please don't fill my nights with a nameless, un-ending ennui and dread, 'kay?' Kay!)
Panel from Classic X-Men #15 (November 1987), script by Chris Claremont, pencils by Chuck Patton, inks by Terry Austin, colors by Glynis Oliver, letters by Tom Orzechowski
Anyway, tree, schmee. The X-Men can have their ol' tree if they want:
The FF don't need no steenkin' tree: they are forming a tower or power as strong and as solid as a city skyscraper. Why, in fact, there it is right behind their portraits: The Baxter Building. Which in and of itself ain't, when you consider it, that bad a metaphor for the Fantastic Four themselves. Just like the FF themselves, the BB is strong, it's advanced, it's full of wonder, it has a gift shop in the lobby, Willie Lumpkin delivers mail to it, Doctor Doom shot it twice into space...wait a minute, where was I? Ah, yes. The FF: not merely solid as a rock, but mighty and awe-inspiring as a skyscraper.
Also, occasionally Reed blows up the top part.
4 comments:
Possible image of the X-men forming the tree would be in X-men: The End. The climax of the series involves a bunch of them uniting, and as I recall the Tree shape, as well as some Shi'ar iconography is featured.
And having read these captions now, that particular image makes a lot more sense.
Hi there. The image of the X-Men forming the tree is in the Classic X-Men reprint of this very same issue, which had some added/changed pages pencilled by Kieron Dweyer, I think. Not to be confused with the bonus stories by John Bolton at the end.
Pretty sure the 90's X-Men cartoon used the tree imagery too. Maybe. Actually, I'm still mad Nightcrawler got shafted out of that show, and Gambit got to go on that one. (I think Nightcrawler is on the current DVD packaging for it, so he may have got him back for it.)
If you enjoy Claremont's X-Men, you may enjoy this issue by issue review of his entire 17 year run:
http://geoffklock.blogspot.com/search/label/Claremont
Here is this issue in particular:
http://geoffklock.blogspot.com/2008/02/jason-powell-on-classic-x-men-15-part.html
I can only imagine, since Bully can type out every creator on X-Men #137 from memory, that he has some interest in Mr. Claremont's work.
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