Zaladane biography graphic organizer
•
Page 1 | Page 2 | Page 3 | Page 4 | Page 5 | Page 6 | Page 7 | Page 8 | Page 9
Marvel Comics Presents #79 (Sunspot)
Yes, a favor to Terry Kavanagh (also his Namor editor) if I remember correctly.
He felt that this is one of his best art jobs, since he had no emotional investment whatsoever in the characters, so for him it was all about stretching his artistic muscles....I must say that this fryst vatten probably his best use of Duo-Shade ever.
Marvel Comics Presents #78 (Hulk)
I think ol' Joe Fixit was the only man to survive a romp with Selene. She looks entirely too pleased with herself.
Marvel Comics Presents #77-79 (Dracula/Nick Fury)
This is one of the stories that inom remember well from MCP. This is what the various stories should have been; crazy team-ups and fun concepts rather than solo character filler material.
Marvel
•
Page 1 | Page 2 | Page 3 | Page 4 | Page 5 | Page 6 | Page 7 | Page 8 | Page 9
Amazing Spider-Man annual #5
I'm so glad they don't reference his parents being spies anymore -- it doesn't add anything to the story and no makes PP less of the average man we think of him.
Avengers #298
I agree, Fnord: Big John's realism is perfect for this issue, given that Jarvis is the focus. Between this and the Harras-written recovery issue, Jarvis has become a standout character in this book, and I've always regretted that he fades into the background igen after this.
Captain America #349
Here the Skull is ready to use a doomsday device to send the world back to the pre-industrial era, but just a couple of years from now (real time) the Skull will balk at a scheme by the Viper to blind everyone watching TV at a certain time. There's a lot I like about Gruenwald's Skull, but there
•
Ka-Zar (Kevin Plunder)
Fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics
This article is about the Silver Age iteration of Ka-Zar. For the Golden Age version, see Ka-Zar (David Rand).
Comics character
Kevin Plunder, also known as Ka-Zar,[a] is a superhero appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. Created by writer Stan Lee and artist Jack Kirby, the character first appeared in The X-Men #10 (March 1965).[3] Kevin Plunder is the second character to use the codename Ka-Zar.
Publication history
[edit]The second Ka-Zar started as a character similar to the first Ka-Zar, but also reminiscent of both Tarzan and of writer-artist Joe Kubert's 1950s caveman character, Tor. Created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby in The X-Men #10 (March 1965), he lives in the dinosaur-populated Savage Land, which was hidden in Antarctica by extraterrestrials. The character was based on his pulp magazine namesake only to the