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Edward Aycock
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Joined: 13 July 2024
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Posted: 03 April 2025 at 11:36am | IP Logged | 1 post reply

CRISIS ON INFINITE EARTHS. (I know, I know). 

Worlds lived, worlds died, the DC Universe was never the same.  

Now obviously, what came after was a lot of good and a whole lot of not so good but the maxi series itself?  George Perez's covers alone (I especially loved issue 9 with the villain war) were phenomenal. And Marv Wolfman's writing was perfect.  The story was indeed big and monumental.  I couldn't wait to get the latest issue.  

I also liked that it wasn't just twelve issues of trying to stop the anti-matter cloud.  The story kept moving.  

Apparently, they destroyed the Marvel Universe in one panel- does anybody know any more or what panel that would have been? 


Edited by Edward Aycock on 03 April 2025 at 11:53am
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Brian Miller
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Joined: 28 July 2004
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Posted: 03 April 2025 at 11:53am | IP Logged | 2 post reply

George Byrne? 😁
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Brian Rhodes
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Joined: 19 April 2004
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Posted: 03 April 2025 at 3:56pm | IP Logged | 3 post reply


Although I agree in principle, I can’t say that I agree in the specific.  I was old enough to watch 2001 in the 70s but too young to have watched it when it first hit theatres.  Although I’ve always appreciated its achievement, I find it just as dull and bland a movie now as I did as a kid.  In other words, I think people can and often do appreciate the groundbreaking nature of a thing without actually liking the thing that broke the ground. 

Similar here. I tried watching it in the 80s...and 90s... and couldn't get past the first 20 minutes. So I gave up for a long while. Finally made myself watch it in its entirety last year. Am I glad I saw it? I guess. Are the effects groundbreaking and do they (for the most part) hold up today? Sure. Did I actually enjoy the movie itself or ever want to see it again? No. I can't say it wasn't good...just not good for me. 
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Peter Martin
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Joined: 17 March 2008
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Posted: 03 April 2025 at 11:44pm | IP Logged | 4 post reply

The original Miller DD run is a good call. I encountered Born Again fresh off the stands, but the original run I did not encounter properly until  I got a (thick) reprint in the early 90s of the Elektra stories.

I had a back issue of #167, which was right before Miller got the writing gig, and a truly battered second-hand copy of #188 (which was when Miller had moved to providing the loosest of layouts for Janson to pencil and finish).

The reprint was sooo compulsively readable. I think I burnt through half of it in one sitting and probably polished the rest off later in the day. Just amazing storytelling; Miller when on form was (is!) a remarkable talent.


Edited by Peter Martin on 03 April 2025 at 11:44pm
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Brett C. Flechaus
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Posted: 04 April 2025 at 9:06pm | IP Logged | 5 post reply

Six series that I only discovered about 1-2 years after they started, due to hearing a lot of positive word of mouth or hype were Walking Dead, 100 Bullets, Authority, Fables, Invincible & Planetary.  In all six cases, I thought they were outstanding.  I'll have to give the reverse (books that didn't match the hype), some thought?    Maybe the Goodwin Simonson Manhunter & the Kirby 4th World stuff?  Neither really landed with me.


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Jim Lynch
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Posted: 04 April 2025 at 10:29pm | IP Logged | 6 post reply

Echoing Glen, I read the Dark Phoenix saga a couple of years after the fact. I paid the ungodly sum of $2 each for issues 135 and 136, and 5 motherscratching dollars for 137 ( I also paid $2 each for issues 139 through 142). 
JB’s art was incomparable in those issues; at the time I was first learning to draw or pretending to, and I read #137 to pieces trying to draw the structures in the Blue Area of the moon. 


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