词条 | Marvel Comics Super Special | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
释义 |
| title = Marvel Super Special | image = Marvel super special 01.jpg | caption = Cover of Marvel Comics Super Special #1 (September 1977). Art by Alan Weiss & Gray Morrow | schedule = Irregular | format = Standard | ongoing = y | publisher = Marvel Comics | date = September 1977 – November 1986 | issues = 40 (#1-6 and #8-41) | main_char_team = | writers = {{List collapsed|Cary Burkett, Tom DeFalco, J. M. DeMatteis, Sharman DiVono, Mark Evanier, Danny Fingeroth, Michael Fleisher, Steve Gerber, Archie Goodwin, Larry Hama, Sid Jacobson, Stan Kay, David Anthony Kraft, Ralph Macchio, Bill Mantlo, Rick Marschall, Roger McKenzie, David Michelinie, Doug Moench, Steve Moore, Dennis O'Neil, Louise Simonson, Walt Simonson, Roy Thomas, Marv Wolfman}} | artists = | pencillers = {{List collapsed|Brent Anderson, Kyle Baker, Bret Blevins, Joe Barney, Joe Brozowski, Rich Buckler, John Buscema, Sal Buscema, Howard Chaykin, Dave Cockrum, Gene Colan, Ernie Colón, Ron Frenz, Jackson Guice, Larry Hama, Jimmy Janes, Gray Morrow, Win Mortimer, Paul Neary, Michael Netzer, George Pérez, John Romita Jr., Marie Severin, Bill Sienkiewicz, Walt Simonson, Dan Spiegle, Frank Springer, Mark Texeira, Alan Weiss, Al Williamson, Mary Wilshire, Dean Yeagle}} | inkers = {{List collapsed|Ian Akin, Alfredo Alcala, Kyle Baker, Rick Bryant, John Buscema, Bob Camp, Vince Colletta, Ernie Colón, Tony DeZuniga, Brian Garvey, Carlos Garzon, Armando Gil, Dan Green, Richard Howell, Klaus Janson, Al Milgrom, Jim Mooney, Gray Morrow, Paul Neary, Rudy Nebres, Tom Palmer, Ralph Reese, Jacqueline Roettcher, Tony Salmons, Bill Sienkiewicz, Dan Spiegle, Frank Springer, Romeo Tanghal, John Tartaglione}} | colorists = | editors = | creative_team_month = | creative_team_year = | creators = | subcat = Marvel Comics | sort = Marvel Comics Super Special }} Marvel Comics Super Special was a 41-issue series of one-shot comic-magazines published by American company Marvel Comics from 1977 to 1986. They were cover-priced $1.50 to $2.50, while regular color comics were priced 30 cents to 60 cents, Beginning with issue #5, the series' title in its postal indicia was shortened to Marvel Super Special. Covers featured the title or a variation, including Marvel Super Special, Marvel Super Special Magazine, and Marvel Weirdworld Super Special in small type, accompanied by large logos of its respective features. These primarily included film and TV series adaptations, but also original and licensed Marvel characters, and music-related biographies and fictional adventures. Issue #7 was withdrawn after completion, and never published. Issue #8 was published in two editorially identical editions, one magazine-sized, one tabloid-sized. Publication historyThe premiere issue, dated simply 1977, featured the rock band Kiss in a 40-page fictional adventure written by Steve Gerber, penciled by John Romita Jr., Alan Weiss, John Buscema, Rich Buckler, and Sal Buscema, which saw the quartet battling Marvel supervillains Mephisto and Doctor Doom.[1] The members of the band had samples of their blood mixed into the ink used to print the first issue.[2][3] Kiss reappeared in an occult adventure in issue #5 (1978). With that issue, the series' title in its postal indicia was shortened to Marvel Super Special.[4] Marvel's licensed pulp fiction character, Robert E. Howard's Conan the Barbarian, which was concurrently appearing in a long-running color comic book, starred in issues #2 (1977) and #9 (1978), with adaptations of the Arnold Schwarzenegger movies Conan the Barbarian[5] and Conan the Destroyer published as issues #21 (1982) and #35 (Dec. 1984), respectively. An adaptation of the movie starring Marvel's original spin-off character, Red Sonja, appeared as issue #38 (1985).[6] The other Marvel properties to be featured were the character Star-Lord in #10 (Winter 1979), the feature Weirdworld in #11-13 (Spring - Fall 1979),[4] and Howard the Duck in #41 (Nov. 1986), the final issue.[7] Issue #3 featured an adaptation of Close Encounters of the Third Kind by writer Archie Goodwin and artists Walt Simonson and Klaus Janson.[6] Simonson described working on the adaptation as "the worst experience of my comics career" due to the lack of visual reference and the inability of Marvel to obtain the likeness rights to the lead actors in the film.[8] Except for a biography of The Beatles in issue #4 (1978), the remainder adapted fantasy, science fiction, and adventure films of the day, including Blade Runner, Dragonslayer, The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai, and two Star Wars,[9][10] two Indiana Jones, and two James Bond movies, and such other films as Jaws 2 and the children's musical comedy The Muppets Take Manhattan.[6] The sole TV series adaptation was of Battlestar Galactica in issue #8 (1978), which was published in two editorially identical editions, one magazine-sized, one tabloid-sized.[4] This special was partially redrawn and expanded into three issues when Battlestar Galactica became a monthly comic book series. The adaptations of The Motion Picture (issue #15) and Blade Runner (issue #22) were also reprinted in standard comic book format.[11][12] Each issue included text features and other additional material. Missing issueMarvel Super Special #7, an adaptation of the film Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, by writer David Anthony Kraft and artists George Pérez and Jim Mooney was promoted on the "Bullpen Bulletins" page in Marvel Comics cover-dated January 1979. It was never published in the U.S. "because the book was late and the movie proved to be a commercial failure," according to a contemporaneous news account, which added, without substantiation, that, "Reportedly, Marvel's adaptation was published in Japan".[13] A French translation was published by Arédit-Artima under two covers, one for the French market and one for the French-speaking Canadian market.[14][15] A Dutch version with yet another different cover was published. Penciler George Pérez, recalled that Marvel had {{blockquote|...nearly zero cooperation from the Robert Stigwood company [which produced the film] and we didn't realize that the [movie] script was still in so much flux that things we were putting in the comic were not going to appear in the movie and things we didn't know about were going to be added to the movie. The plot was so convoluted and cheesy — even on the printed page — and after a while we realized it was not really going anywhere. They said they were going to have all these superstars appear at the end of the film and, of course, in the end they couldn't get them — not that we could have used them anyway, because we didn't have the licenses to use their likenesses. Also, I was paired with a very incompatible inker because the book was running so late. I was doing a terrible job on it, Jim Mooney was a terrible fit for me — though he did the best he could — [and] it was just one disaster after another. It was one of the nadirs of my career. I was so grateful that the book never got an American release. I've yet to see a copy of Sgt. Pepper.[16]}} Pérez said Bob Larkin had done the cover art[17] but the actual artist was Tom Palmer.[6]The issues
Collected editions
References1. ^{{cite book|last = Sanderson|first = Peter|authorlink = Peter Sanderson|last2= Gilbert|first2= Laura, ed.|chapter= 1970s|title = Marvel Chronicle A Year by Year History|publisher = Dorling Kindersley|year = 2008|location= London, United Kingdom|page = 180|isbn =978-0756641238|quote= "Marvel Super Special #1 featured the rock band Kiss as super heroes battling Mephisto and Doctor Doom, aided by the Avengers, the Defenders, Spider-Man, and the Fantastic Four."}} 2. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.snopes.com/music/artists/kissblood.asp |title=Blood Money |first1=Barbara |last1=Mikkelson |first2=David |last2=Mikkelson |date=June 16, 2011 |publisher=Snopes.com |archiveurl=https://www.webcitation.org/6GHNHbKuf?url=http://www.snopes.com/music/artists/kissblood.asp |archivedate=May 1, 2013 |deadurl=no |accessdate=April 30, 2013 |df= }} 3. ^{{cite web|url=http://io9.com/5711513/kiss-vs-doctor-doom-is-the-best-andor-worst-comic-youll-read-today |title=KISS vs. Doctor Doom is the best and/or worst comic you'll read today |first=Cyriaque |last=Lamar |date=December 11, 2010 |publisher=io9 |archiveurl=https://www.webcitation.org/6GHN7Ir9Y?url=http://io9.com/5711513/kiss-vs-doctor-doom-is-the-best-andor-worst-comic-youll-read-today |archivedate=May 1, 2013 |deadurl=no |accessdate=April 30, 2013 |quote=The band poured vials of their own blood into the comic's red ink. |df= }} 4. ^1 2 {{gcdb series|id= 2401|title= Marvel Comics Super Special}} 5. ^1 2 {{cite journal|last = Catron|first = Michael|authorlink = Michael Catron|title = Marvel to Adapt Four More Films|journal = Amazing Heroes|issue = 2|pages = 20–21|publisher = Fantagraphics Books|date = July 1981|location= Stamford, Connecticut }} 6. ^1 2 3 {{cite journal|last= Friedt|first= Stephan|title= Marvel at the Movies: The House of Ideas' Hollywood Adaptations of the 1970s and 1980s|journal= Back Issue!|issue= 89|pages= 59–73|publisher= TwoMorrows Publishing|date= July 2016|location= Raleigh, North Carolina}} 7. ^DeFalco, Tom "1980s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 228: "This issue adapted the story line of Howard the Duck, the first major motion picture based on a Marvel character." 8. ^{{cite book|last1 = Nolen-Weathington|first1 = Eric|last2 = Ash|first2 = Roger|title = Modern Masters, Volume 8: Walter Simonson|publisher= TwoMorrows Publishing|year= 2006|location= Raleigh, North Carolina|page= 32|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=ILopomw3UpMC&pg=PA32&dq=Walter+Simonson+the+worst+experience+of+my+comics+career&hl=en&sa=X&ei=LHuAUcnnCajBywHjtICoBw&ved=0CDQQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=Walter%20Simonson%20the%20worst%20experience%20of%20my%20comics%20career&f=false|isbn = 978-1893905641}} 9. ^{{cite book|last = Edwards|first = Ted|title = The Unauthorized Star Wars Compendium|chapter= Adventures in the Comics|publisher = Little, Brown and Company|year = 1999|location= New York, New York|page = 82|isbn = 9780316329293|quote= In 1980 The Empire Strikes Back hit theaters and Marvel published their adaptation of the movie in a few different formats. The earliest version appeared in a paperback-size book followed by the magazine-size Marvel Super Special #16, and then in regular comic book form in six parts.}} 10. ^Edwards, p. 87: "The adaptation of Return of the Jedi was published in Marvel Super Special #27 and in a separate miniseries, once again penciled by Al Williamson and inked by Carlos Garzon." 11. ^{{gcdb series|id= 2564|title= Star Trek}} 12. ^{{gcdb series|id= 2647|title= Blade Runner}} 13. ^{{cite journal|title= The Sgt. Pepper Snafu|journal= The Comics Journal|issue= 44|page= 12|publisher= Fantagraphics Books|date= January 1979|location= Stamford, Connecticut}} 14. ^{{cite web |url= http://www.comicsvf.com/fs/8663.php#1283|title= Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band|date= n.d.|publisher= Comicsvf.com|language=fr}} 15. ^{{gcdb series|id= 42203|title= Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band}} 16. ^{{cite book|last = Nolen-Weathington|first = Eric|title = Modern Masters Volume 2: George Pérez|publisher = TwoMorrows Publishing|year = 2003|location= Raleigh, North Carolina|pages= 29–30|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=bhOPZ2u7C_YC&pg=PA29&dq=George+Perez+nearly+zero+cooperation+from+the+Robert+Stigwood+company&hl=en&sa=X&ei=lWyAUfKQIImuyQGImICABw&ved=0CDgQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=George%20Perez%20nearly%20zero%20cooperation%20from%20the%20Robert%20Stigwood%20company&f=false|isbn = 978-1893905252}} 17. ^Pérez in Nolen-Weathington, p. 30 18. ^"Kiss Scores, Beatles Bomb," The Comics Journal #45 (March 1979), p. 15. 19. ^{{cite journal|last= Friedt|first= Stephan|title= Santa Claus: The Movie|journal= Back Issue!|issue= 85|pages= 62–64|publisher= TwoMorrows Publishing|date= December 2015|location= Raleigh, North Carolina}} External links
11 : 1977 comics debuts|1986 comics endings|Comics anthologies|Comics based on films|Comics by Doug Moench|Comics by Howard Chaykin|Comics by Louise Simonson|Comics by Marv Wolfman|Comics by Steve Gerber|Marvel Comics titles|Series of one-shot comics |
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