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#Dave Hunt
ultrameganicolaokay · 1 month
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The Defenders #6 ‘The Dreams of Death!’ (1973) by Steve Englehart, Sal Buscema, Frank McLaughlin and Dave Hunt. Edited by Roy Thomas. Cover by Buscema.
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splooosh · 2 months
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Dr. Fate
Keith Giffen - Dave Hunt
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cantsayidont · 4 months
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September 1980. Yet another change in direction for the Bronze Age Wonder Woman, and the addition of a new eight-page backup strip starring the Huntress, daughter of Earth-2's late Batman and Catwoman. The "new twist" for Wonder Woman was the second return of Steve Trevor. Steve had been killed off back in 1968 (in WONDER WOMAN #180); he returned briefly in 1974 as a "mentally-induced" illusion and was resurrected for real two years later (in WONDER WOMAN #223). He died again in WONDER WOMAN #248, leaving Diana bereft. In the issue before this one, Hippolyta prays for Aphrodite to cut Diana some slack, which the goddess does by using the Mists of Nepenthe to erase Diana's memories of Steve. Almost immediately after that, the Steve Trevor of a parallel Earth crash-lands near Paradise Island and is rescued by Diana as she did in her first meeting with the Earth-1 Steve. In this issue, Aphrodite says she can't send this Steve home, "for even I do not know from which of an infinity of worlds he came," so Hippolyta sends Diana to take him back to Man's World and resume her role as Wonder Woman, while Aphrodite uses the Mists of Nepenthe to "cause every man, woman, and child on Earth to forget that Steve Trevor ever died." The only one on Earth who remembers the truth is Hippolyta. (This blew up later: Diana eventually discovered that her memories had been altered and was not happy about it, although she and this Steve got married during the Crisis.) All very messy.
The new Huntress backup strip picked up from Helena Wayne's short-lived feature in THE BATMAN FAMILY, which had ended temporarily when that book was folded into DETECTIVE COMICS. Initially written by Paul Levitz and drawn by Joe Staton (inked in this first three-part story by Steve Mitchell), the eight-page strip quickly overshadowed the main feature in quality and coherency, and the conventional wisdom was that between 1980 and 1984, many readers were buying this book for Helena rather than Wonder Woman. The strip lost some steam in 1982 with the departure of Levitz, succeeded by Joey Cavalieri, and then Staton, leading to more than a year and a half of artistic musical chairs. The backup was finally dropped from WONDER WOMAN in 1984, but the final installment in issue #321 proclaimed, "Word has it that people want a full-length Huntress comic every month…so we're working on it--no fooling! Keep your eyes open for a mini-series, coming soon to a comic rack near you!" In the letters page, editor Alan Gold said there would soon be a four-issue miniseries by Cavalieri and Eduardo Barreto, but it never materialized, and the Huntress met a much crueler fate in CRISIS ON INFINITE EARTHS.
Without her, WONDER WOMAN was soon demoted from monthly to bimonthly status, managing only eight more issues before it was canceled in early 1986 in anticipation of its post-Crisis relaunch.
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beyondthespheres · 4 months
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Stephen DeStefano & Dave Hunt for Video Jack #6, by Cary Bates & Keith Giffen, 1988
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acmeoop · 9 months
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As Warner Bros Is My Witness “Tomorrow Is Another Date” (1994)
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theblackestofsuns · 8 months
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"Back To Detroit"
The Amazing Spider-Man #147 (August 1975)
Gerry Conway, Ross Andru, Mike Esposito, Dave Hunt and Stan Goldberg
Marvel Comics
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petitefleuriste · 1 year
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onlylonelylatino · 14 days
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The Champions break up by Sal Buscema and Dave Hunt
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tomoleary · 2 months
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Dave Hunt and Frank Giacoia - Super Spider-Man #165 (1975) Cover Original Art.
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Spider-Man by Ross Andru, Frank Giacoia and Dave Hunt
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wonderwomanart · 8 months
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Wonder Woman by Dave Hunt
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intrapanelreturns · 1 year
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MARVEL TEAM-UP #59 1977, Marvel Comics Chris Claremont writer, John Byrne pencils, Dave Hunt inks and colors, Gaspar Saladino and Bruce Patterson letters
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nofatclips · 2 years
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Cracker Island by Gorillaz featuring Thundercat - Directors: Jamie Hewlett & Fx Goby
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cantsayidont · 5 months
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May 1979. Okay, one time Brainiac 5 had a terrible psychological breakdown during which he killed Ultra Boy's ex-girlfriend An Ryd (so, not the universe's biggest loss, perhaps), framed him for the murder, and then used the Miracle Machine to create a universe-destroying monster called Omega.
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This story, which ran in SUPERBOY AND THE LEGION OF SUPER-HEROES, had a somewhat torturous gestation. It was plotted and laid out by Jim Starlin as a continuation of his story in SUPERBOY AND THE LEGION OF SUPER-HEROES #239, and was intended for publication in a single oversize issue as the LEGION OF SUPER-HEROES SPECTACULAR. However, before it could be published, DC lost confidence in the format, and inker Josef Rubinstein, who'd done finishes for Starlin's earlier story and was supposed to finish this one, was no longer available. So, Paul Levitz was asked to edit Starlin's breakdowns and cut the story down so it could run as two issues of the regular Legion series, which involved discarding more than 20 pages and rearranging some of what was left; the art was then finished by Dave Hunt rather than Rubinstein. Starlin was not wild about the results, so he asked that his name be removed, substituting the pseudonym "Steve Apollo."
The story seemed set to turn Brainiac 5 into a particularly awful villain, but he was rehabilitated by writer Gerry Conway a few issues later and nothing more was said about Ultra Boy's murdered ex-girlfriend.
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agentxthirteen · 1 year
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Sharon-A-Day, Day 360 (12/27/22)
Captain America 186. On sale 3/11/75. "Mind Cage"
Writer: Steve Englehart
Penciller: Frank Robbins
Inker: Michael Esposito
Letterer: Dave Hunt
Colorist: Michele Wolfman
Editor: Len Wein
Sharon and Dave Cox part ways.
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acmeoop · 2 years
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Little Green Men “"Flying Saucers Over Toontown!" (1991)
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