Immagine dell'autore.

Carmine Infantino (1925–2013)

Autore di Star Wars Omnibus: A Long Time Ago..., Volume 1

50+ opere 814 membri 19 recensioni

Sull'Autore

Comprende il nome: Publisher Carmine Infantino

Fonte dell'immagine: Exhibition Hall, New York Comic Con 2008, photo by Lampbane

Serie

Opere di Carmine Infantino

Star Wars Omnibus: A Long Time Ago..., Volume 1 (1977) — Illustratore — 78 copie
Showcase Presents: The Flash Vol. 1 (2007) — Illustratore — 67 copie
Crisis on Multiple Earths: The Team-Ups, Volume One (2006) — Illustratore — 61 copie
The Flash Archives, Volume 1 (1996) — Illustratore — 53 copie
Showcase Presents: Adam Strange (2007) — Illustratore — 48 copie
Star Wars Omnibus: A Long Time Ago..., Volume 2 (1981) — Illustratore — 46 copie
The Flash Archives, Volume 2 (2000) — Illustratore — 40 copie
Essential Nova, Volume 1 (2006) — Illustratore — 36 copie
Star Wars 2 (1982) — Illustratore — 34 copie
Star Wars Omnibus: Wild Space, Volume 1 (2013) — Illustratore — 33 copie
DC Comics Classics Library: The Flash of Two Worlds (2009) — Illustratore — 26 copie
Deadman, Book One (2011) — Illustratore — 24 copie
The Adam Strange Archives, Volume 3 (2008) — Illustratore — 21 copie
Adam Strange: The Silver Age Omnibus (2017) — Illustratore — 20 copie
Spiderwoman (1979) — Illustratore — 15 copie
Daring New Adventures of Supergirl Vol. 2 (2017) — Illustratore — 12 copie
Star Wars, No. 13, July 1978: Day of the Dragon Lords! (1978) — Illustratore — 8 copie
Star Wars, No. 12, June 1978: Doomworld! (1978) — Illustratore — 5 copie
Detective Comics # 359 (1967) — Illustratore — 4 copie
Adventure Comics #479 (1981) — Illustratore — 4 copie
Spider-Woman [1978] #19 — Illustratore — 2 copie
Rouletten (1979) 1 copia
Frosne stjerner (1981) 1 copia
Spider-Woman [1978] #6 — Illustratore — 1 copia
Marvel Preview # 14 — Illustratore — 1 copia
DC Special [1968] #1 (1968) — Immagine di copertina — 1 copia
DC Super-Stars #8 — Illustratore — 1 copia

Opere correlate

The Greatest Joker Stories Ever Told (1988) — Illustratore — 256 copie
Essential Howard The Duck (2002) — Pencils (21) — 129 copie
Showcase Presents: House of Mystery, Vol. 1 (2006) — Illustratore — 120 copie
The Savage Sword of Conan, Volume 3 (2008) — Illustratore — 114 copie
The Black Canary Archives, Volume 1 (2001) — Illustratore — 56 copie
Essential Ms. Marvel, Volume 1 (2007) — Illustratore — 51 copie
The Greatest Golden Age Stories Ever Told (1990) — Collaboratore — 50 copie
Star Wars Omnibus: A Long Time Ago..., Volume 3 (1981) — Illustratore — 48 copie
52: The Companion (2007) — Illustratore — 43 copie
Secret Origins of the Super DC Heroes (1976) — Introduzione, alcune edizioni37 copie
Showcase Presents: The Witching Hour Vol 1 (2011) — Illustratore — 33 copie
Showcase Presents: House of Mystery, Vol. 3 (2009) — Illustratore — 31 copie
Wonder Woman: Featuring over Five Decades of Great Covers (1972) — Illustratore — 29 copie
Batgirl: The Greatest Stories Ever Told (2010) — Artist — 25 copie
Mysteries in Space: The Best of DC Science Fiction Comics (1980) — Collaboratore — 24 copie
Batman Vol. 1 #1 (1940) — Introduzione, alcune edizioni22 copie
Legion of Super-Heroes: Before the Darkness, Volume Two (2022) — Illustratore — 20 copie
Justice Society of America: A Celebration of 75 Years (2015) — Illustratore — 19 copie
The Green Lantern Chronicles, Vol. 2 (2009) — Penciller — 15 copie
Women of Marvel, Vol. 2 (2007) — Collaboratore — 13 copie
Werewolf by Night: The Complete Collection, Vol. 3 (2018) — Collaboratore — 8 copie
The Flash by Mark Waid Omnibus, Vol. 1 (2022) — Illustratore — 7 copie
New Crusaders: Legacy (2013) — Collaboratore — 6 copie
Merry Little Batman [2023 film] (2023) — Archive footage — 3 copie
DC Sampler (1983) #1 (1984) — Illustratore — 2 copie
The Transformers 118: Hunters (part two) (1987) — Illustratore — 1 copia
The Transformers 117: Hunters (part one) (1987) — Illustratore — 1 copia
The Flash [1959] #132 (1962) — Immagine di copertina — 1 copia
Strange Adventures [1950] #201 — Immagine di copertina — 1 copia
The Transformers 116: Burning Sky (part two) (1987) — Illustratore — 1 copia
The Transformers 115: Burning Sky! (part one) (1987) — Illustratore — 1 copia
The Flash [1959] #150 (1965) — Immagine di copertina — 1 copia
The Flash [1959] #144 (1964) — Immagine di copertina — 1 copia
The Flash [1959] #164 — Penciller; Immagine di copertina — 1 copia
The Flash [1959] #166 — Penciller; Immagine di copertina — 1 copia
Comics Revue #205 (2003) — Collaboratore — 1 copia
The Flash [1959] #147 (1964) — Immagine di copertina — 1 copia

Etichette

Informazioni generali

Utenti

Recensioni

I bought all of these comics when they came out originally. As a kid I lived for every new Star Wars story. Rereading them made me chuckle. Their was no canon at the time and the Marvel writers just went hog wild. If you have a problem with Jar Jar you are going to love Jax. This was the only way to get extra Star Wars while you waited for the movie. They sold incredibly well at the time.

Some of the stories are great but others don't hold up well. I would have given them a 5 as a kid now they are more like a 3.5. A great walk down memory lane.… (altro)
 
Segnalato
cdaley | Nov 2, 2023 |
Still wacky and all over the place. The adult me loves how different they are from what we now think of as the Star Wars Universe.
 
Segnalato
cdaley | Nov 2, 2023 |
Hahaha, que origem de personagem mais chatinha!
 
Segnalato
lulusantiago | Mar 11, 2023 |
In The Amazing World of Carmine Infantino: An Autobiography, Carmine Infantino and J. David Spurlock explore Infantino’s biography from youth, through his Golden Age comics work, the changes of the Silver Age and the 1960s, and his freelancing later on. Infantino, one of the giants of the field, worked for both Marvel and DC as well as smaller companies and animation, so his insights will both entertain and inform comic book aficionados. Further, this volume forefronts the art, both Infantino’s own work and work indicative of the periods he describes, using its unique size to better showcase artistic samples. Most interestingly for fans are some examples of never-before-published work and preliminary sketches.

Discussing the postwar state of the industry after the comic book moral panic, Infantino writes, “The business was wounded pretty badly by the Kefauver hearings and Wertham, really doing a number on us. DC called everyone in and told us we had to take a two- or three-dollar page rate reduction. We were naturally upset, but they said it was either that or no work” (pg. 38). He continues, “DC became a closed shop for years. New artists came by looking for work, including Neal Adams, but no new talent was hired for years. Those of use who were there were lucky to be getting work” (pg. 39).

Infantino writes of the Silver Age revival, “One day in 1956, I brought a job in – I think it was a romance – and, without fanfare, Julie said to me, ‘You’re going to draw a super-hero again.’ I was surprised because they hadn’t been selling. Of the hundreds of costumed characters created in the ’40s, only Superman, Batman, and Wonder Woman survived in their own titles. Julie [Julius Schwartz] said, ‘You’re going to be doing The Flash’” (pg. 50). He continues, “The Flash jump-started the whole super-hero business again and went a long way in saving the comic book business from extinction” (pg. 54). Not only did Infantino help revive superheroes, he played a key role in re-designing Batman for the 1960s with a look that influenced the ABC television series. Infantino writes, “Batman became the most popular comic book character in the world. We were getting an unheard of 95% sell-through with print-runs up to 900,000 copies per issue!” (pg. 67).

The book also features several testimonials from Infantino’s compatriots in the business. Arnold Drake discusses his difficulty creating Deadman for DC and the way Infantino helped him: “I told [DC editor Jack] Miller about my idea for a new character named Deadman and even produced a rough sketch of what he might look like. Well, Jack let me know in no uncertain terms that the Comics Code censors would never allow a character named ‘Dead-man.’ Fully rejected and with all the wind out of my sails, I prepared for my exit. At that point I noticed Carmine behind and out of Miller’s view. He was gesturing with his fist up in the air, that I should not give up but really give it to Miller… Following Carmine’s instigation, I proceeded to lay into Miller; that we couldn’t run around paralyzed in constant fear of what the Code might do. I told him the company had to proceed with every good idea and leave the Code’s business to the Code. Well, it worked” (pgs. 70-71).

Spurlock writes, “One of Carmine’s most notable mandates as Editorial Director was the infuse relevancy into the comics line. The most recognized series of its day was the lauded Green Lantern/Green Arrow” (pg. 99). Discussing the business side of things, Infantino writes, “With rare exceptions, like the super-hero boom of the early ’40s and the Batman boom of the mid-’60s, the comic book business tends to make more money on licensing of characters for film, TV, toys, etc., than it does in publishing” (pg. 125). Overall, the book will appeal to fans of Golden- and Silver-Age comic books, particularly with its emphasis on Infantino’s art. Some of the remembrances may be contradicted by other sources, but it’s still a lovely memoir intended more for the fans than cultural historians.
… (altro)
 
Segnalato
DarthDeverell | Oct 8, 2019 |

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Statistiche

Opere
50
Opere correlate
41
Utenti
814
Popolarità
#31,349
Voto
½ 3.7
Recensioni
19
ISBN
38
Lingue
4

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