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#paul reinman
ufonaut · 4 months
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Merry Christmas!
(Green Lantern 1940 #18, art by Paul Reinman)
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comic-covers · 11 months
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(1963)
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theblackestofsuns · 2 months
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"The Hunt Begins!"
Fantastic Four #90 (September 1969)
Stan Lee, Jack Kirby, Joe Sinnott and Paul Reinman
Marvel Comics
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dirtyriver · 7 months
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Archie first appeared in Pep Comics #22, December 1941. Although he was a quick success, Pep kept on featuring some gory imagery for a while. The feature published right after the Archie short story, Bentley of Scotland Yard, often displayed some gruesome murders on its splash page.
Bentley of Scotland Yard in "The Church-Steeple Murders", Pep Comics #31, September 1942, written by Joe Blair (pencils), art by Paul Reinman
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cantsayidont · 7 months
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October 1944. Born on Monday: The debut of one of the most fearsome of DC's Golden Age villains, the monstrous Solomon Grundy, in a story written by noted science fiction author Alfred Bester. Although he looked like Universal's Frankenstein Monster (then appearing with Dracula and the Wolf Man in a popular series of monster movies), Grundy was actually a kind of swamp monster, built around the skeleton of murdered miser Cyrus Gold. As Green Lantern explains:
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Grundy's origin is very similar to that of the Hillman Comics muck-monster The Heap, who had first appeared in the Sky Wolf story in AIR FIGHTERS COMICS #3 (December 1942), although the Heap had originally been a WW1 German flying ace, Baron Emmelmann. (The Heap later inspired Swamp Thing and Man-Thing.) However, all of these characters ultimately had their roots in a Theodore Sturgeon short story called "It," first published in the pulp magazine UNKNOWN in 1940.
Because Solomon Grundy is immune to Alan's power ring (which didn't work on wood), Alan eventually deals with him by shoving the monster in front of an oncoming freight train. However, as any horror movie fan could tell you, it's not so easy to kill something that's dead to begin with. Grundy would return three more times in the Golden Age, next appearing in the Green Lantern story in COMIC CAVALCADE #13 (Winter 1945).
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nevenkebla · 4 months
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Portada de Fantastic Four (Vol. 1) #18 por Jack Kirby, Paul Reinman, Stan Goldberg y Art Simek.
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smashedpages · 10 months
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To me, my X-Men!
Today in 1963, the strangest teens of all made their debut in X-Men #1 by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby! Alongside Professor X and his students Cyclops, Marvel Girl, Beast, Iceman and Angel, the world also met the evil mutant Magneto!
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smbhax · 2 months
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From "The Brotherhood of Evil Mutants!" in The X-Men #4, March 1964. Stan Lee script, Jack Kirby pencils, Paul Reinman inks, Artie Simek letters. Original colorist unknown. Photoshop color reduction.
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the-spinner-rack · 1 year
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Pretty Tough For A Little Guy (by Jack Kirby & Paul Reinman from Avengers #3, 1964)
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tomoleary · 3 months
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Paul Reinman - The Shadow #1 Cover Original Art (Archie, 1964)
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chernobog13 · 2 years
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There was that time back in the day when the Hulk only had three toes.
What I really love about this shot, though, is that no one but Jack Kirby would dare to draw Ol’ Jade Jaws posed with his hands behind his back.  He looks more like Perry Mason in a Speedo than a menacing man-monster.
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ufonaut · 6 months
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Alan Scott: The Green Lantern (2023) #1 visually referencing All-American Comics (1939) #40, #69, and #92. Art by Cian Tormey, Irwin Hasen, Paul Reinman, and Alex Toth respectively.
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comic-covers · 2 years
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(1966)
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theblackestofsuns · 2 months
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"The Wrong Racket!"
Fantastic Four #90 (September 1969)
Stan Lee, Jack Kirby, Joe Sinnott and Paul Reinman
Marvel Comics
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dirtyriver · 7 months
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This time the feature published right after the Archie short story, Bentley of Scotland Yard, opened with a beheaded woman. Good clean fun.
Bentley of Scotland Yard in "The Head on Traitor's Gate", Pep Comics #32, October 1942, written by Joe Blair, art by Paul Reinman
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browsethestacks · 2 years
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Original Art - Marvel Super-Heroes #013 Pg 12 (1967) by Gene Colan And Paul Reinman
First Comic Appearance Of Carol Danvers
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