I love this picture so much, so I had to cut it out especially... for me and for all who are in love with this awesome couple!
This is a snippet from my other post with the complete story of how Kristoff, Sven and Olaf got their fancy outfits.
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Donald Duck Halloween Story Fanart!!
This year, the Halloween story in the Donald Duck & co comic magazine was made by Jaakko Seppälä (script) and Rodriques (art). Magazine: week 43 - 2022 -75th year (2245)
Isn't this monster just amazing?
Click image for better quality
Original art/reference photos below
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Nikola Navojev
Zigomar is a comic strip character created in Yugoslavia by artist Nikola Navojev and writer Branko Vidić.
has been called one of the most notable titles of the "Golden Age of Serbian comics"
It’s believed that the name ‘Zigomar’ came from the more famous French character of the same name, a hero of pulp fiction novels and films.
Zigomar first appeared in Mikijevo Carstvo (which translates to ‘Mickey’s Empire’), number 28, in Yugoslavia, published on the 28th of May, 1939.
Zigomar is a young man coming from a wealthy American family, who decided to leave the rich life and dedicate himself to fighting crime.
Zigomar wears a mask and a tight costume (including a cape) with a “Z” sign on his belt and a ring with a “Z” sign on it. Zigomar has no superpowers and is followed on his adventures by his loyal sidekick, Chinese boy Chi Yang.
In one of his adventures, in the Himalayas, Zigomar meets the Phantom. The two get into a fight (leaving the other with their ring mark on their face), but soon after they show respect for each other and become friends.
However, at one point, an evil fakir hypnotizes them and turns them against each other. The story continues with new clashes between the two heroes, until Zigomar sets the captured Phantom free.
The Phantom Connection
Cover of the "Zigomar protiv Fantoma" episode
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A paper I wrote in college, in 2015, about the magazine, Puck.
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The Australian Women's Weekly, April 13, 1940
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Spy vs. Spy is a political cartoon, but it’s not a Political Cartoon. The strip stakes its claim immediately via a single thematic masterstroke—overlaying the blind jingoism and deranged paranoia of Cold War politics onto the endlessly resilient slapstick framework of classic cartoons—and then spends the rest of its existence exploring every facet of that premise by remixing the established formula.
In our latest original feature, Gyasi Hall dives deep into Spy vs. Spy, Antonio Prohías’ iconic MAD Magazine comic strip. Its premise may seem simple, but its revolutionary sensibility has proven impossible to replicate. Click the image (or here) to read the piece.
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Comic - Mad Magazine 2024 FCBD Special Edition (2024)
Art by Kerry Callen
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1998 Yoshi's Story for Nintendo 64 Comic Ad
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