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The Pendulum series was the direct antecedent to Marvel Classics Comics — in fact, the Marvel series' first 12 issues were colorized reprints of selected Pendulum comics, with new covers. These issues featured writers like Otto Binder , Kin Platt , and Irwin Shapiro doing the adaptations; with art by Filipino artists Alex Niño , Rudy Nebres ...
This category collects cover images that are scans, in whole or in part, as published by Marvel Comics. This includes material either owned at the time by Marvel or licensed from other companies. This does not include cover art presented without titles, logos, trade dress, or copy.
Marvel Premiere Classic was a series of hardcover comic book collected editions, that reproduced Marvel Comics storylines. [ 1 ] Marvel's Associate Editor of Special Projects Mark Beazley, promised: "definitive collection(s) of the stories along with as much behind the scenes extras as we can possibly dig up". [ 2 ]
This category collects cover images that are scans, in whole or in part, from titles related to the Avengers "family" of comic books as published by Marvel Comics. This includes titles such as, but not limited to: The Avengers (multiple volumes) West Coast Avengers; New Avengers; Young Avengers
View the 14 images of this gallery on the original article. Check out the gallery to witness some of the oddest things in Marvel’s universe; postcards from uncharted lands, early 1990’s album ...
Classic X-Men, originally titled X-Men Classics and later retitled X-Men Classic, is a reprint comic book series published by Marvel Comics.The first volume was a limited series which collected stories from the Thomas/Adams/Palmer run on X-Men (originally published in 1969).
The Avengers are a team of superheroes appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics, created by writer-editor Stan Lee and artist/co-plotter Jack Kirby.The team made its debut in The Avengers #1 (cover-dated September 1963).
In 1960, DC Comics launched a comic book series featuring a team of superheroes called the Justice League. Impressed by that book's strong sales, Martin Goodman, the owner of Marvel Comics predecessor Timely Comics, asked Stan Lee to create a title featuring a similar team of superheroes for Marvel. [1] Lee recounts in Origins of Marvel Comics: