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#denny O'Neil
fantastic-nonsense · 7 months
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"Kate Kane's costume exists because Paul Dini wanted to dunk Barbara Gordon in a Lazarus Pit in the 90s but shelved it because Denny O'Neil told him to knock it off and leave her alone" is the kind of story you hear three shots in and think is a joke, but no. it actually happened
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cantsayidont · 8 months
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April–May 1980. Batman loses his cool a bit in a scene from DETECTIVE COMICS #490, but who could blame him?
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madcapberry · 7 months
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One sec I need to talk about Shiva.
Lady Shiva was introduced in Richard Dragon: Kung Fu Fighter in the 70s. She was a traveling martial artist hellbent on getting revenge for her sister, who she believed had been killed by Richard Dragon. She lured Dragon into a trap, revealed herself as Carolyn's sister, and tried to fight him to the death. Once she realized that Dragon had nothing to do with it, that Cravat and The Swiss (unimportant villain characters, they killed Carolyn) had been the ones to kill her sister, she helped Dragon defeat the villain (by giving him her shiny belt so he could redirect the beam of a deadly laser that was being pointed at them while they were fighting, don’t even ask) and Richard Dragon and Lady Shiva became allies, friends even. Dragon convinced her it would be a waste to kill Cravat and told her that he had killed the Swiss himself. She accepted this. They shook hands. This all took place over the course of one issue of Richard Dragon: Kung Fu Fighter. It took ONE issue for Shiva to go from antagonist to ally. She then tagged along with Richard because she liked the adventures he got up to, the danger, the challenge, and the thrill of it. Richard even called her later on when he needed help on a different adventure. What I’m saying is she didn’t start out as evil.
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Okay, so what do we know about Shiva so far? She’s a thrill-seeking peripatetic martial artist of great capacity and skill. She cared about her sister. She’s willing to kill. She’s an adventurer and a valuable ally. Great. Moving on.
The Question 1987 features THE Lady Shiva. A character capable of both ruthlessness and mercy, cruelty and tenderness. A curious, thrill-seeking, teasing character. She was vicious and nonpartisan and she was working as a mercenary for hire. But she was an ally, even when she was beating the shit out of Vic. She loved the O Sensei. You can tell she even cared about Vic in her way. I’m not saying she had a heart of gold, or that there weren’t tropes she fell into. She wasn’t and there were. But she was a fairly well-rounded, morally gray character that played a key role wherever she showed up. She was closer to a non-traditional anti-hero than anything else. Idfk, just go read The Question.
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I read a tvtropes article describing Lady Shiva as “an archetypical Dragon Lady, complete with sinister motivations and exotic sex appeal,” which… she isn’t. She subverted this trope in several ways actually. She never had “sinister motivations” until Chuck Dixon got his grubby little hands on her. Her motivations were pretty neutral. She had her own set of principles, she was very morally gray. She wanted to travel and fight worthy opponents on her adventures for the thrill of it. She seemed to operate mostly on personal whims, and on the basis of building worthy rivals, out of love for the art of combat. And she didn’t use her sex appeal for shit (until the Richard Dragon reboot comic kms), she didn’t tolerate sexual advances or objectification. She just WAS NOT a conniving temptress, I don't understand where this misperception came from (but I do blame Dixon, I’ll get to that in a sec).
This same article states that she began as the arch-nemesis of Richard Dragon? Unless you’re accepting the version of the two of them from the very short lived Richard Dragon 2004 series as their canonical relationship then NO she didn’t. But I digress.
There was a marked change in the way Lady Shiva was written by the time Robin (1991) came out, this is where her character starts to lean towards the Dragon Lady trope imo. She also weirdly, and maybe arguably, leans more into traditional femininity while at the same time being written as more wild and uncontrollable. Chuck Dixon seemed to fundamentally misunderstand Lady Shiva as a character. He turned her (sometimes ironic) disdain for brutes who wouldn’t last a second in a fight with her into stereotypical womanly haughtiness. He turned her capacity for ruthlessness into bloodlust. And he made her into a conniving, somewhat deranged, villainous woman, tempting our young hero towards evil (oh my!). Again, I’m not saying she ever had a heart of gold, but Dixon changed core character traits (namely her respect for other people's personal code) to turn her into a villain.
“Kill him, little bird. Kill him and become a predator…Aren’t you my weapon? My instrument of death? Say you are mine.” Like?? She would not fucking say that, respectfully.
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That isn’t even to mention Richard Dragon (2004) where Dixon turned Shiva’s relationship with Dragon into a resentful, sexually charged dick-measuring contest.
Even so, I don’t entirely hate Shiva as a villain, especially in Batgirl (2000). Pucketts Shiva is a bit less egregious imo. So she’s a passively suicidal evil mentor-figure who wants Cass to be a killer like her. Whatever, I can get on board with that I guess. I can enjoy it because I love Cass and this is a great comic run. But the retcon that–Listen, THE RETCON THAT IS SHIVA’S SISTER BEING KILLED BY DAVID CAIN, SHIVA DESCRIBING THIS AS FREEING, SAYING SHE’S GRATEFUL, THEN AGREEING TO GET PREGNANT WITH HIS CHILD IN RETURN?? This boils my blood. Shiva, who was introduced as somebody who cared about getting revenge for her dead sister. Shiva, for whom freedom and autonomy were core character traits. That Shiva?? That Shiva is relieved her sister is dead and is willing to carry her sister's killer's child to term?? What the fuck?
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I hate it. I don’t understand it. Why would you take a complex character who makes it difficult to tell who she really cares about, and flatten them into somebody incapable of love?
Okay I’m done, this is getting too long and I don’t even want to get started on New 52 era Shiva. I don’t have a conclusion, I’m just annoyed. Thanks for reading. The Question (1987) is NOT a perfect comic but if you’re interested in Shiva please please please check it out, it’s very moody and philosophical, noir-esque. Also Chuck Dixon suck my dick.
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inhousearchive · 7 months
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A house-ad for The Shadow (1973) ongoing series running throughout DC Comics titles released in June 1973. The series would debut in November of the same year featuring the creative team of Denny O'Neil and Mike Kaluta. "The Shadow knows!" references the series' tagline of "Who knows what evil lurks in the hearts of men?"
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tuxedosaurus · 2 years
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I like Alex Ross art as much as the next guy, but this idea for Barbara Gordon is one of the dumbest things I’ve ever seen.
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Thank god for Greg Rucka & J.H. Williams turning an ableist nostalgia play into such a good new character, and thank god for Dennis O’Neil keeping Barbara as Oracle & fighting for Cass Cain to be a non-white Batgirl.
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vertigoartgore · 3 months
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Strange N°184 cover by french cover artist Jean Frisano (1985).
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ultrameganicolaokay · 30 days
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DC Comics Presents #19 ‘Who Haunts This House?’ (1979) by Dennis O'Neil, Joe Staton, Frank Chiaramonte and Jerry Serpe. Edited by Julius Schwartz. Cover by Ross Andru, Dick Giordano and Tatjana Wood.
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browsethestacks · 7 months
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Haunt Of Horror (Digest)
House Ads + Covers
Art by Grey Morrow / Arthur Byron
Curtis Magazines / Marvel Magazine Group (1973)
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batmanonthecover · 3 months
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Justice League of America #70 - March 1969 (DC Comics - USA)
Cover Art: Neal Adams
VERSUS THE CREEPER
Script: Denny O'Neil
Art: Dick Dillin  (Pencils), Sid Greene (Inks)
Characters: Justice League of America [JLA; Atom [Ray Palmer]; Flash [Barry Allen]; Batman [Bruce Wayne]; Green Lantern [Hal Jordan]; Superman [Clark Kent; Kal-El]]; Mind-Grabber Kid [Lucian Crawley]; Mr. Crawley; Mrs. Crawley; The Creeper [Jack Ryder]; aliens (villains); Nails Naylor (villain)
Synopsis: The League votes to investigate the Creeper to determine which side he is on. Meanwhile, teen hero Mind-Grabber Kid, who is jealous of the acclaim that the Justice League receives, tells an army of invading aliens that the League is acting as super-powered dictators who must be overthrown.
Batman story #1,268
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saint-of-ossaville · 7 months
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“Some [vengeance], surely, but it has to be more about justice and compassion. If it’s not, we’re as corrupt as our enemies. You had a choice and you chose well, you chose compassion. I said you’d do fine, and you did.”
— Batman (Bruce Wayne) comforts Jean-Paul Valley (Azrael) by combatting his perception of failure in the Joker escaping, with the thought of success in saving the captured child through his own compassion, in Azrael: Agent of the Bat Vol 1 #53 (Jun 1999; 1998, DC Comics) by Dennis “Denny” O’Neil (W), Roger Robinson (P), James Pascoe (I), Rob Ro and Alex Bleyaert (C), and Ken Bruzenak (L).
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cantsayidont · 8 months
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For a long time, the main impetus for DC reprinting any of its voluminous back catalog was some promotional or licensing tie-in: a movie, a TV show, some merchandise they were trying to push, or just a popular ongoing book. Given how prominently Dr. Fate was featured in the recent BLACK ADAM movie, therefore, it's surprising and somewhat disheartening that DC didn't take the opportunity to do some kind of greatest hits compilation for the character, who was certainly the best thing about that mostly terrible film.
This is especially unfortunate because you could fit quite a bit of Dr. Fate's Silver Age and Bronze Age non-JSA appearances in a single volume, starting with the two 1965 SHOWCASE team-ups with Hourman shown above, by Gardner Fox and Murphy Anderson. There are also a number of later team-ups with Superman and Batman:
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Fate then got a couple of solo features in the '70s:
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Kubert cover notwithstanding, the 1ST ISSUE SPECIAL story, which is written by Marty Pasko, has some really outstanding early Walt Simonson art, while the SECRET ORIGINS OF SUPER-HEROES story has an eight-page retelling of Fate's origin, narrated by Kent Nelson's wife Inza, by the ALL-STAR COMICS team of Paul Levitz and Joe Staton.
In 1982, Doctor Fate got his own eight-page backup feature in, weirdly enough, THE FLASH #306–313. Despite what a couple of the covers imply, there wasn't a team-up between the Flash and Fate (who in those days still existed on separate parallel Earths); the Fate strip was just an unrelated second feature.
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This strip, written by Marty Pasko and Steve Gerber with spectacular art by Keith Giffen and Larry Mahlstedt, presents an array of interesting ideas (some of which obviously paved the way for Giffen's 1987 revamp). Pasko had already established (in the 1975 1ST ISSUE SPECIAL story) that Doctor Fate wasn't exactly Kent Nelson: He was really the ancient Lord of Order Nabu, the entity who trained Nelson in the magical arts, who possessed Nelson's body whenever he put on the Helm of Fate. In other words, the Dr. Fate of these stories isn't so much a man wearing a magical helmet as a magical helmet wearing a man. Nabu has made both Kent and Inza ageless — they both appear about 25, but by this time, they're really in their 60s — but allows them little real control of their lives. Kent has more or less resigned himself to it, but Inza is feeling the strain of being trapped in a magical menage à trois with her husband and an inhuman entity that has little regard for Kent's welfare and even less for hers. Nabu, for his part, seems to exist in a state of constant mystical urgency in which human frailties are an unaffordable distraction.
This could have been really compelling, and it's both graphically interesting and quite strange, but all that is a lot to squeeze into eight-page installments, and having them crammed in the back of one of DC's most conventional superhero books was obviously not optimal. It was also having to compete for Giffen and Mahlstedt's attention with LEGION OF SUPER-HEROES, which I assume was why the Fate strip was dropped after only eight installments.
To everyone's surprise, there was even a Doctor Fate action figure in 1984 as part of the Kenner Super Powers line. This came with a little minicomic, which to my knowledge has never been reprinted:
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All of this stuff would add up to something in the realm of 230 pages, which would easily fit into a single trade paperback collection with a digestible price point. Maddeningly, DC has already done the color remastering for roughly three-fifths of this material, so even that probably wouldn't be a huge chore (although the Giffen/Mahlstedt stuff, which has a lot of color holds and graphic effects, really calls for more care in remastering than DC has tended to give its older material of late.)
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smashpages · 8 months
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Out this week: The Question Omnibus (DC, $125): 
This giant collection of stories featuring the Question includes not only the landmark series by Dennis O’Neil and Denys Cowan, but also the character’s appearances in places like The Brave and the Bold and Green Arrow, by creators like Kelley Puckett, Mike Grell, Mike Baron, Joe Quesada, Shea Anton Pensa and more.
See what else is arriving in comic shops this week!
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cardboard-writer · 4 months
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Black Canary and Superman from Justice League of America Vol 1 #75 by writer Denny O'Neil and artist Dick Dillin:
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616mattfoggymoments · 9 months
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Daredevil (1964) #18 | Stan Lee & Denny O'Neil & John Romita, Sr.
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