#Archie Goodwin Story
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keycomicbooks · 3 months ago
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Classic Star Wars #3 (1992) Al Williamson Cover & Pencils, Archie Goodwin Story, Classic Darth Vader Cover
#ClassicStarWars #3 (1992) #AlWilliamson Art, #ArchieGoodwin Story, Classic #DarthVader Cover In this issue, Luke volunteers for an espionage mission aboard Darth Vader's new battleship – but can he trust the Imperial Admiral he meets there, who claims to be helping the Rebels?! https://www.rarecomicbooks.fashionablewebs.com/Classic%20Star%20Wars.html#3 @rarecomicbooks Website Link In Bio Page If Applicable. SAVE ON SHIPPING COST - NOW AVAILABLE FOR LOCAL PICK UP IN DELTONA, FLORIDA #RareComicBooks #KeyComicBooks #DarkHorse #DarkHorseComics #ComicBooks
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atomic-chronoscaph · 26 days ago
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Alien: The Illustrated Story - art by Walter Simonson (1979)
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weirdlookindog · 6 months ago
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Image in Wax!
by Tom Sutton (art) / Archie Goodwin (story) / Ben Oda (letterer)
from Creepy #17, October 1964. (source)
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the-gershomite · 1 month ago
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Heavy Metal presents Alien the Illustrated Story -1979-
by Archie Goodwin and Walter Simonson
based on the twentieth century-fox's science fiction hit, Alien
screenplay by Dan O'Bannon
story by Dan O'Bannon and Ronald Shusett
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cantsayidont · 6 months ago
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Summer 1996. Speaking of getting real: Barbara Gordon confronts Batman about the events of THE KILLING JOKE, in which she was paralyzed by the Joker. This is part of John Ostrander's other major contribution to DC lore; in SUICIDE SQUAD, he and Kim Yale had revived Babs, who had been summarily discarded by Bat-books editor Denny O'Neil as surplus to requirements and also a girl, and reinvented her as Oracle. This scene is from the first story in THE BATMAN CHRONICLES #5, which is not her first appearance as Oracle, but rather an "Oracle: Year One" story chronicling the circumstances of how she created that role. It's infuriating to me that DC has since discarded this version of Barbara Gordon in order to reduce her to Dick Grayson's girlfriend, while also trying to make her younger and younger.
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ufonaut · 8 months ago
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I've planned for everything -- the house will be... ah... total... fulfill every need!
Eerie (1966) #3
(Archie Goodwin, Alex Toth)
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transistoradio · 2 years ago
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“Alien: The Illustrated Story” (1979) by Archie Goodwin and Walt Simonson.
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fictionz · 1 year ago
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New Horror 2023 - Day 26
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"My own belief is that she died simply of the terror of life."
"The Shadowy Third" by Ellen Glasgow (1923)
While there's a twist you see coming a mile away, the finale is still a nice bit of surprise comeuppance.
💀💀💀
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"Wine outweighs fear!"
"The Duel of the Monsters" by Archie Goodwin & Angelo Torres (1966)
Hey that's a cool twist as well! Not a big shock, just a good twist of the knife when it seems like it'll be a straightforward slice.
💀💀💀
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"Literally pick up his best friend and use his ass as a battering ram."
Kuso dir. Steve (2017)
I don't know what it says about me when the gross and bizarre stuff in this movie doesn't really phase me. I saw many reviews where people were really sickened by some of the scenes, which sure I get it, but it's so surreal and cartoony that it didn't hit the same as movies that approach the nastiness more seriously. Glad I watched it!
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dirtyriver · 2 months ago
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Vampirella started as a horror host, like Uncle Creepy and Cousin Eerie, before being promoted to active protagonist starting with this story.
"Who Serves the Cause of Chaos?", Vampirella #8, November 1970, written by Archie Goodwin, art by Tom Sutton
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retroscifiart · 1 year ago
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Alien: The Illustrated Story by Archie Goodwin & Walter Simonson (Heavy Metal, 1979)
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kekwcomics · 6 months ago
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DOSSIER NEGRO (Ediciones Zinco, 1971?)
Spanish reprint of various Warren Creepy strips and other stuff. Stories by Archie Goodwin, Bill Everett, Tom Sutton and others....
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swamp-adder · 3 months ago
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Me reading my first Nero Wolfe book (The Silent Speaker): Well Rex Stout was the guy who said Watson must be a woman because two men would never act that way toward each other, so presumably this series will be less shippy than the Holmes stories -- 
Archie Goodwin: Frankly, I wish I could make my heart quit doing an extra thump when Wolfe says satisfactory, Archie. It’s childish.
Me: Um. OK.
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atomic-chronoscaph · 9 months ago
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Alien: The Illustrated Story - art by Walter Simonson (1979)
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vintage1981 · 1 year ago
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Vampirella Vibes | Cosplay Corner
Elizabeth Rage as Vampirella.
Vampirella is a fictional vampire superheroine created by Forrest J. Ackerman and comic book artist Trina Robbins in Warren Publishing's black-and-white horror comics magazine Vampirella #1 (Sept. 1969), a sister publication of Creepy and Eerie.
Writer-editor Archie Goodwin later developed the character from horror-story hostesses, in which capacity she remained through issue #8 (Nov. 1970), to a horror-drama leading character. The magazine was published continuously until 1983, when Warren Publishing ceased operations and its assets were bought by Harris Publications. Vampirella comics, both new and reprints, have continued through various publishers into the 21st century including current owner Dynamite Entertainment.
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the-gershomite · 1 month ago
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Heavy Metal presents Alien the Illustrated Story -1979-
(1-30 of 60)
by Archie Goodwin and Walter Simonson
based on the twentieth century-fox's science fiction hit, Alien
screenplay by Dan O'Bannon
story by Dan O'Bannon and Ronald Shusett
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cantsayidont · 1 year ago
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October 1978. The first appearance of the bounty hunter Valance, who has recently made a comeback in the modern STAR WARS comics. Created by Archie Goodwin and Walt Simonson, Valance is a cyborg, a former Stormtrooper officer who had been grievously wounded by a Rebel air raid and who now expresses his self-loathing through a pathological hatred of Droids and automata. (His secretiveness seems merited in these stories, which indicate that cyborgs experience a high level of mistrust and social stigma. I assume this is something Goodwin extrapolated from the "We don't serve their kind" stuff in the first movie, although the degree of prejudice and outright loathing Valance faces when people know he's a cyborg isn't really borne out by later SW media.)
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The next issue box is a bit misleading; THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK wasn't released until a year or so after this issue appeared. Also, the story to which the box refers (which is indeed called "The Empire Strikes!") didn't actually appear until issue #18. The issue following this one ended up being a fill-in story about Luke and Biggs prior to the events of the first movie, with art by Herb Trimpe and Al Milgrom rather than regular penciller Carmine Infantino. The delay probably had something to do with the juggling act required to produce the U.S. and UK versions of the comic — the stories that ran in the U.S. monthly color series were published more or less contemporaneously in eight-page B&W installments in the British STAR WARS WEEKLY, a logistical nightmare that necessitated the use of two distinctly different inkers and a number of fill-ins to make the math work.
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