Lex Luthor Commits Series of Very Noisy Crimes, Carnival Cruises’ Rebranding Attempt Is Unsuccessful,
Batman Attends, Enjoys Local Production of Meet Me in St. Louis
Panel from the Sandman story "The Man Who Couldn't Sleep" in Adventure Comics #80 (November 1942), script and pencils by Jack Kirby, inks by Joe Simon (?), letters by Howard Ferguson
Panel from the Batman story "The Man Who Could See the Future" in Detective Comics #33 (March 1948), script by Edmond Hamilton, pencils by Bob Kane, inks by Charles Paris
Panel from "The Three Faces of Batman" in Batman #133 (June 1960), script by Bill Finger, pencils and inks by Sheldon Moldoff, letters by Stan Starkman
The Queen Helen is, of course, the ship that launched a thousand faces — but unfortunately they were all boiled down to the skull by radioactive smokestack exhaust.
Credits, from top to bottom:
ReplyDeletePanel from the Sandman story "The Man Who Couldn't Sleep" in Adventure Comics #80 (November 1942), script and pencils by Jack Kirby, inks by Joe Simon (?), letters by Howard Ferguson
Panel from the Batman story "The Man Who Could See the Future" in Detective Comics #33 (March 1948), script by Edmond Hamilton, pencils by Bob Kane, inks by Charles Paris
Panel from "The Three Faces of Batman" in Batman #133 (June 1960), script by Bill Finger, pencils and inks by Sheldon Moldoff, letters by Stan Starkman
Hey, Bully:
ReplyDeleteWhere do you rent a green tuxedo?
http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/nhl-puck-daddy/hartford-whalers-themed-wedding-beer-man-included-puts-144902410.html
Holy cow, Dave! Now I know what I want to wear when me and Keira Knightley get married!
ReplyDeleteThe Queen Helen is, of course, the ship that launched a thousand faces — but unfortunately they were all boiled down to the skull by radioactive smokestack exhaust.
ReplyDelete