Sleepwalker #3 by Bret Blevins
102 notes
·
View notes
Superman Adventures # 5
by Scott McCloud, Bret Blevins, Terry Austin, Marie Severin and Lois Buhalis
DC
81 notes
·
View notes
One of the most shocking moments in X-Men history!
58 notes
·
View notes
Mohawk Storm (the best era of Chris Claremont's version of Ororo Munroe/Storm) by Bret Blevins. From 1988's Marvel Fanfare #37.
42 notes
·
View notes
Fantasic Four vs Namor by Bret Blevins
From Marvel Action Hour #2
29 notes
·
View notes
Storm (and Warlock) pin up by Bret Blevins
After similar jokey convention sketch book piece of his
155 notes
·
View notes
Marvel Comics Presents #63 cover by Bret Blevins
44 notes
·
View notes
Magik #4 (March 1984) cover by Bret Blevins and Tom Palmer.
64 notes
·
View notes
Shanna by Bret Blevins in Marvel Fanfare #58
64 notes
·
View notes
Bret Blevins: The Rocketeer and Betty
253 notes
·
View notes
What is your favorite Magik cover?
X-Men: Magik: Storm & Illyana #4 (1983) MARVEL
Artists: Bret Blevins and Tom Palmer
50 notes
·
View notes
Oh wow! I just finished 4-issue The Shade miniseries from 1997 which is collected in the Starman by James Robinson Compemdium One and holy crap was this limited series overall FREAKING phenomenal!
Narrated through the Shade’s personal journals, this miniseries covers an ongoing feud between the enigmatic and immortal Shade and a vengeful family of corrupt aristocrats known as the Ludlows which spans from 1838 when the family first found an amnesiac Shade after he first gained his powers, all the way up to the present-day in-universe (which was 1998 at the time…). What I love is how this series heavily fleshes out the Shade’s struggles with coming to terms with his immortality and gradual acceptance of his role as a villain due to the dark deeds he’s been forced to commit in order to survive ever since his first fateful encounter with the Ludlows, as well as a unique exploration about the legacy of generational trauma and inherited values with how this family actively indoctrinated each of its successors to hate the Shade due to a conflict dating back 150-years ago. Plus, seeing the Shade’s exploits across various historical time periods and regions, as well as his Golden Age rivalry with the Jay Garrick Flash (reinterpreting Shade’s generic supervillain exploits of robbing banks as actually being a deliberate game by the Shade designed to provide him a sense of purpose to his immortal and up-until-then meaningless existence by pitting himself others with powers who weren’t cursed to play the role of the villain like he has been).
Overall, The Shade was a brilliantly written miniseries which helps further cement the titular Richard Swift as one of my new favorite supervillains/anti-heroes in comics! I’ve been thoroughly enjoying James Robinson’s classic run on Starman so far this year, and the Shade’s character has been a major contributor to said-investment due to how multifaceted and enigmatic he is as both an overarching antagonist and secondary-protagonist to the series’ lead Jack Knight, aka the titular Starman!
39 notes
·
View notes