I really hope to see Madisynn in every Marvel cameo now with her just getting into theses weird situations.
Her just calling Wong and saying “Wongers! Come get me! I’m fighting with this angry talking duck!”
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Hey Kids Comics
Comics At The Flea Market (c.1977)
Waiting patiently at the Greyhound Bus Terminal, 1947.
Ann Arbor News, August 26, 1985
The Eye of Agamotto has a regional reputation for its wide selection of comic books. Above, Josh Darsky (left) and Brett Grossman of the Detroit suburb of Huntington Woods browse through the titles during a recent visit to the store
Photography by Larry E. Wright
Jack Riddle reading a Marvel comic book at his home at 509 Hovland Street in Warren, Arizona. Riddle injured his eye in a rubber gun fight he had with his good friend Harold Wilson.
“All Eyes As They Look Over A Comic Book Are George Scarmoutzos And Lee Marble 9 Both Of Lynnfield. They Were At The Recent New England Comic Convention At The Sheridan Boston.”
Boston MA (1978)
Comic Book Readers, NYC (1947)
Photography by Ruth Orkin
12-year-old Freddie Lewis, left, and Marshall Beck, both of San Diego's Normal Heights neighborhood, set aside superhero comics to check out a copy of "Howard the Duck" (Dennis Huls / San Diego Historical Society)
Two Girls Reading Captain America (1982)
A Shopper Browses Comic Books At The Eye Of Agamotto (July1985)
Photography by Larry E. Wright
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my turn with the trend!! my turn !!!
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Howard the Duck #1 - "Into (Looking at) The Multiverse" (2023)
written by Chip Zdarsky
art by Joe Quinones, Jordan Gibson, & Stacey Lee
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The lesser reason that Howard the Duck (1986) fails as an adaptation of its comic book source material is that Howard the Duck comics were vanishing up their own metatextual ass decades before it was cool, and any adaptation that fails to acknowledge this lacks the courage of its convictions.
The greater reason that Howard the Duck (1986) fails as an adaptation of its comic book source material is that in the comics, Howard’s principal adversary is a hulking, bell-headed man named Doctor Bong, and if a Howard the Duck adaptation understands nothing else, it must understand that its core target audience is people who smirk at the name “Doctor Bong”.
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Howard the Duck: Star Waaugh! - art by Gene Colan and Alan Weiss (1978)
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