#ew Ross
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
itsnotmourn · 7 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
how time flies by
677 notes · View notes
nickfuryagentofsword · 8 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
Immortal Thor 10 (2023) by Al Ewing & & Martin Coccolo
Cover: Alex Ross
92 notes · View notes
gallonsoblood · 1 year ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Some red army uniform designs i made mainly for hc stuff
163 notes · View notes
vertigoartgore · 7 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Alex Ross's 2018-2021 cover run on the Immortal Hulk series (2/2).
61 notes · View notes
superheroes-or-whatever · 7 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Defenders (2021) #1-5 art by Javider Rodrigeuz
56 notes · View notes
ultrameganicolaokay · 10 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Immortal Thor #9 by Al Ewing and Ibraim Roberson. Cover by Alex Ross. Variant cover by Karen S. Darboe. Out in April.
"THE ENCHANTRESS OF WORLDS!
The Son of Odin came to the citadel of Roxxon – to make war for the sake of the Earth herself.
But his enemies were waiting to steal from him the one thing that was Thor's alone… and they had crafted the foulest of weapons to do it.
This is the story of THE IMMORTAL THOR… and of the trap he could not escape."
64 notes · View notes
farsight-the-char · 7 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
IMMORTAL THOR #13
AL EWING (W) • JAN BAZALDUA (A) • Cover by ALEX ROSS
ENTER: HERCULES!
• The son of Zeus sought Thor out – for Toranos’ wheel had turned for the Olympians too, and two Gods together might solve such a mystery.
• The trail took them to a wasteland of snow and ice…to terror and treachery…and to an old foe of Hercules, at the height of her dread power.
• New series artist JAN BAZALDUA draws the story of the IMMORTAL THOR…and the Night Mother’s vengeance.
32 PGS./Rated T+ …$4.99
...
Guys Being Dudes.
49 notes · View notes
wwprice1 · 1 year ago
Text
Tumblr media
Incredible upcoming Immortal Thor cover by Alex Ross!
80 notes · View notes
zndr315-blog · 10 days ago
Text
Tumblr media
The Immortal Thor #18
8 notes · View notes
dirtyriver · 14 days ago
Text
Tumblr media
Sneak peek at Immortal Thor #19, written by Al Ewing, cover by Alex Ross, interior art by... 19 artists?!
Yup, totally looks like the kind of stuff Al Ewing would do:
"While Thor is away gathering resources to deal with the looming threat of Utgard, IMMORTAL THOR #19 spotlights different characters from Thor's legendary mythos in single-page stories, each drawn by a different artist. The stories will be connected by the mysterious viewpoint of a significant hero from Thor's past who's set to return in next week's IMMORTAL THOR #17."
"This is not the story of the Immortal Thor! The All-Father had a journey to make to a far star – and so, for a time, the Golden Realm was left to rule itself. Yet even in the absence of the King, the story continued – and each Asgardian had their own drama to play out. These are the TALES OF ASGARD… "
Tumblr media
Steve Skroce
Tumblr media
Jan Bazaldua
Tumblr media
Juan Ferreyra
Tumblr media
Lee Garbett
Tumblr media
Ivan Reis
Tumblr media
Humberto Ramos
Tumblr media
Luciano Vecchio
7 notes · View notes
jayonaka · 4 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
This Immortal Hulk page of Joe Fixit and Harpy reminds me of the uncensored album cover of My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy
7 notes · View notes
bread-squid-uwu · 4 months ago
Note
What's the crafting dead?
A really REALLY old minecraft roleplay series created by sgcbarbierian, a bunch of other mc youtubers were in it as well, like aphmau, redvacktor, yourpalross, etcetera.
It's exactly what it sounds like, youtubers roleplaying an apocalypse in minecraft, but it's not technically a typical zombie apocalypse because the zombies were created through human experiments done by..... some scientist villain
also there's a cannibal guy
It's absolutely nothing like mys/mcd, everyone in it plays just themselves as a character, like Red the cannibal cult leader, or like Mithzan Max that one weird guy who's immune to the zombies and just wants to play uno with someone, Jess even plays as JESS and not some version of Aphmau.
Uhh more rambling in the tags idk
10 notes · View notes
nickfuryagentofsword · 8 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
Immortal Thor 3 (2023) by Al Ewing & Martin Coccolo
Cover: Alex Ross
125 notes · View notes
salad-006 · 2 years ago
Text
Another repost BUT people always seem to really like this one so I'll post it here for the tumblers to enjoy
Tumblr media
Being that im a fan of two separate groups of bizzare color coded men, it just seems fitting to combine the two
I've planned on making more edds hall drawings in the year since i drew this i just always forget and never have time
Additionally, around the same time i made the reverse .tallyworld
Art is kinda sloppy plus the image quality is bad but its the only copy i have at the moment so it'll have to work
Tumblr media
91 notes · View notes
vertigoartgore · 5 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
2023's Immortal Thor Vol.1 #3 (LGY : #764) cover by artist Alex Ross.
29 notes · View notes
wonder-worker · 8 months ago
Text
"The feast of the Nativity of Saint John the Baptist being appointed as the day upon which the coronation of the king [Edward V] would take place without fail, all both hoped for and expected a season of prosperity for the kingdom."
-Excerpt from the Croyland Continuator / David Horspool, Richard III: A Ruler and Reputation
Even though Edward IV’s death was unexpected, after twelve years of peace there need not have been too much of a sense of foreboding about the succession. The great dynastic wound from which the Wars of the Roses had grown had not so much been healed as cauterized by the extinction of the House of Lancaster. There was no rush for London, as had happened in earlier, disputed successions. The royal party didn’t set out from Ludlow for ten days after hearing the news of Edward IV’s death, while Richard took his time, too. And the new king had [his mother the dowager queen and] two uncles to support him: his mother’s brother, the sophisticated, cultured, highly experienced Earl Rivers; and his father’s, the loyal and reliable Duke of Gloucester, to whom Edward IV had entrusted unprecedented power and vital military command.
... [Richard of Gloucester] had achieved his goal by a mixture of luck and ruthlessness, and if he made it appear, or even believed himself, that destiny played a part, this only made him a man in step with his times. Modern historians have no time for destiny, but sometimes the more ‘structuralist’ interpretations of the events surrounding the usurpation can come close to it. When we read that ‘the chances of preserving an unchallenged succession were . . . weakened by the estrangement of many of the rank-and-file nobility from . . . high politics, which was partly a consequence of the Wars of the Roses and partly of Edward IV’s own policies’, it is hard not to conclude that an unforeseeable turn of events is being recast as a predictable one. But without one overriding factor – the actions of Richard, Duke of Gloucester after he took the decision to make himself King Richard III – none of this could have happened. That is, when the same author concedes ‘Nor can we discount Richard’s own forceful character’, he is pitching it rather low*.
Edward IV had not left behind a factional fault line waiting to be shaken apart. Richard of Gloucester’s decision to usurp was a political earthquake that could not have been forecast on 9 April, when Edward died. After all, Simon Stallworth did not even anticipate it on 21 June, the day before Richard went public. We should be wary of allowing hindsight to give us more clairvoyance than the well-informed contemporary who had no idea ‘what schall happyne’. This is not to argue that Richard’s will alone allowed him to take the Crown. Clearly, the circumstances of a minority, the existence of powerful magnates with access to private forces, and the reasonably recent examples of resorts to violence and deposition of kings, made Richard’s path a more conceivable one. But Richard’s own tactics, his arrest of Rivers, Vaughan and Grey, the rounding up of Hastings and the bishops, relied on surprise. If men as close as these to the workings of high politics at a delicate juncture had no inkling of what might happen, the least historians can do is to reflect that uncertainty [...].
(*The author who Horspool is referencing and disagreeing with is Charles Ross)
#wars of the roses#edward v#richard iii#edward iv#my post#I'm writing a post on this topic but I have no idea when I'll finish it so I figured I should post Horspool's epic analysis#or should I say epic takedown? <3#friendly reminder that Richard's usurpation happened primarily and decidedly because of Richard's own decisions and actions#we need to stop downplaying his singular agency and accountability by casting the blame on others#most of all Elizabeth Woodville and her family but also the bizarre interpretation of historians like Ross and Pollard (et al)#who somehow hold Edward more responsible (through a 'structuralist' view as Horspool says) even though that literally makes no sense#also friendly reminder that actual contemporaries did not view Edward V's minority as a sign of worry and potential discontent#quite the opposite - they expected him to have a prosperous reign. which made sense since Edward IV left his son a far more stable#country than any former minor king (and most other adult kings tbh). The irony is that it was his son's usurper who benefitted from it.#also I added Elizabeth Woodville to the list because Edward V himself specifically said that he trusted the governance of the country#'to the peers of the realm and the queen' as quoted by Mancini (likely relayed to him by John Argentine)#and this is supported by evidence. After Edward's death the Croyland Continuator substitutes Elizabeth's role in the council#for that of the King: 'the counsellors of the king now deceased were present with the queen'#we know Elizabeth presided over all the council's decisions and initiated proposals (the size of her son's military escort) on her own#She was clearly the one with the most authority in the council (who were described as being present with *her* not anyone else)#Hastings made demands but he couldn't enforce them at all (and was in fact worried). It was clearly Elizabeth who had that power.#She was likely going to play a very prominent role during her son's minority and imo it's problematic to assume otherwise#(Lynda Pidgeon assumes otherwise but she's based her assumption on objectively false information so I don't think we should take her#seriously)(see: she claims that EW lacked influence compared to her male relatives in royal councils when EW HERSELF WAS IN ROYAL COUNCILS)#That's not to go too far the other direction and claim EW tried to dominate and tactlessly exclude others - we know she didn't#The impression we get by this first council and by Richard's own actions indicates that she Richard and Anthony would likely#work *together* when it came to governing the realm#I do find it frustrating when people disregard the fact that based on the impression we have she would've had a very visible#and powerful role
11 notes · View notes