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James Warren (born James Warren Taubman; [1] July 29, 1930) [2] is a magazine publisher and founder of Warren Publishing.Magazines published by Warren include Famous Monsters of Filmland, the horror-comics magazines Creepy, Eerie, and Vampirella, the war anthology Blazing Combat, and the science-fiction anthology 1984 (later renamed 1994), among others.
Illustrator and editor Russ Jones, the founding editor of Creepy in 1964, said he approached Famous Monsters of Filmland magazine publisher Jim Warren with the idea of horror comics similar to the 1950s' EC Comics comic books. Warren also choose not to use the comics industry's voluntary self-censorship Comics Code Authority for his black and ...
After 17 issues of Creepy and 11 of Eerie, Goodwin resigned as editor in 1967.The movement of Warren's operations from Philadelphia to New York City, combined with a change in distributors and a downturn in the market imposed a cash flow problem on Warren, and Goodwin along with all of the artists except for Tom Sutton and Rocke Mastroserio (who soon died) departed the company.
Jim Warren (born November 24, 1949, in Long Beach, California) is an American artist best known for book cover illustrations and surrealistic fantasy art. [1] [self-published source] He has worked in surrealistic fantasy since about 1969. He has collaborated on paintings with marine life artist Wyland, [2] and artist Michael Godard. Warren ...
The feature appeared in Eerie #82-85, #87-96, #98-105, 132, #134 and #136, Vampirella #70, and Warren Comics Presents #2, as well as in the 14-issue series The Rook. “Darklon the Mystic” - Story and art by Jim Starlin. Not to be confused with the Jim Starlin character Zyzygy Darklock. The first story about each character had the same title ...
Famous Monsters of Filmland is an American genre-specific film magazine, started in 1958 by publisher James Warren and editor Forrest J Ackerman.. Famous Monsters of Filmland directly inspired the creation of many other similar publications, including Castle of Frankenstein, Cinefantastique, Fangoria, The Monster Times, and Video Watchdog.
By late 1974, Magazine Management was flooding the black-and-white comics magazine market with 11 ongoing titles. Al Hewetson, editor of rival comics-magazine publisher Skywald Publications, which went defunct in 1975, blamed his company's demise on ...Marvel's distributor. Our issues were selling well, and some sold out.
The Rook is a fictional, time-traveling comic book adventure hero. He first appeared in March 1977 in American company Warren Publishing's Eerie, Vampirella & Warren Presents magazines. In the 1980s, the Rook gained his own comic magazine title of the same name, The Rook Magazine.