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#Marvel Two In One
fruitreka · 6 months
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tonights yaoi from the sad galactus homewreck timeline
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TIGRA guest stars in Marvel Two-in-One #19
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splooosh · 4 months
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“a Gathering”
George Perez - Joe Sinnott
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marvelousmrm · 3 months
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Marvel Two-in-One #60 (Gruenwald & Macchio/Perez, Feb 1980). The Impossible Man invites himself to Alicia’s showcase and learns the true meaning of love.
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cantsayidont · 6 months
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December 1977. Given how much Marvel has since pushed Adam Warlock, Thanos, and the Infinity Gems, it's somewhat ironic that Jim Starlin's original Warlock series was rather ignominiously canceled before the story was complete, leaving the conclusion to play out in THE AVENGERS Annual #7 and MARVEL TWO-IN-ONE Annual #2 in the fall of 1977, both magnificently illustrated by Starlin and Joe Rubinstein. Continuing the story into the latter Annual required Starlin to frame his finale as, improbably, a Thing/Spider-Man team-up, but it's Mar-Vell (whose series Starlin had also written and drawn for a while) who delivers the full-page eulogy for Adam Warlock, a minor Kirby character whom Roy Thomas and Starlin had transformed into a tortured cosmic figure, driven by truly existential angst.
Given that Thanos' plot in this story had involved using the combined power of the six Infinity Gems (here still called "Soul Gems") to blow "every star out of the heavens," leaving Adam's vampiric Soul Gem just lying on his grave seems a trifle irresponsible, but at this juncture, Warlock is dead, Thanos has been reduced to a literal monument to his own folly, and none of the survivors understands the full power of the gems. Also, they don't know that the souls of Adam Warlock, Gamora, and Pip the Troll, taken by the Gem before their deaths, now reside in the idyllic landscape of Soul World.
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Starlin would subsequently write the end of Mar-Vell in the memorable THE DEATH OF CAPTAIN MARVEL graphic novel in 1982, which returned Thanos as a kind of psychopomp. Alas, Thanos subsequently became too commercially important a villain (in the comics and later in the dreary live-action movies) to ever stay dead or truly learn from his mistakes.
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tomoleary · 3 months
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Jack Kirby and Joe Sinnott - Marvel Two-In-One #27 Cover Fantastic Four and Deathlok Original Art (Marvel, 1977) Source
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wanderingmind867 · 1 month
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Marvel and DC both had two team up books in the 70s: DC had the Brave and the Bold with Batman and DC Comics Presents with Superman, whole Marvel had Marvel Team-Up with Spiderman (most of the time) and Marvel Two-In-One with The Thing. I can tell you two of these books sound better than the others.
Yeah, I'd probably prefer Marvel Two-In-One and DC Comics Presents. Because Batman and Spiderman are not my favorite characters, but I do really like Superman and The Thing. Who doesn't like Superman and The Thing? Those two could have had their own crossover team up and I'd have read it. Those two are fun. Besides, Batman is usually too dark (unless it's the silver age era Batman) and Spiderman has problems like the deaths of George and Gwen Stacy. By comparison, The Thing and Superman are great, great characters.
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ungoliantschilde · 2 months
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Marvel Two-in-One, Vol. 1 # 42 by George Perez, with Inks by Terry Austin.
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agentxthirteen · 5 months
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Sharon-A-Day, Day 691 (11/22/23)
Marvel Two-In-One 4. On sale 4/16/74. "Doomsday 3014"
Writer: Steve Gerber
Penciller: Sal Buscema
Inker: Frank Giacoia
Letterer: Charlotte Jetter
Colorist: Petra Scotese (Goldberg)
Editor: Roy Thomas
Steve and Sharon visit the Fantastic Four.
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vincentvega0721 · 3 months
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Clobberin’ Time #1 by Steve Skroce. Variant covers by Greg Smallwood and Dan Jurgens. Out in March 2023.
“It's the most clobber-filled title in the Marvel line, brought to you by the talented Steve Skroce, as Ben Grimm teams up with heroes from across the Marvel Universe! It's the Thing's greatest adventure yet, with or without the Fantastic Four. In this issue, the Hulk and Ben are stranded on a distant, ancient, alien world, where the duo must protect an ancient people against legions of Deviant hordes and ultimately face the wrath of a Celestial.”
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Art Edit Credit to Roberto Coltro
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Marvel Two-in-One #68 by Ron Wilson
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splooosh · 2 months
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“Thus”
George Perez - Gene Day
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marvelousmrm · 4 months
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Marvel Two-in-One #50 (Byrne, Apr 1979). Ben goes back in time to cure his past self! He only manages to create an alternate timeline…
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prettywitchiusaka · 29 days
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Speaking of the good doctor, some comic goodies I picked up this week from a friend of mine, mostly DS since he knows my tastes.
It pays to have friends who sell comics on weekends!
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