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Bane Dorrance.
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October 18, 2010 at 2:00 am #96256
ze fly
ParticipantThe thread is about Bombshell , and Jessica Wingfoot, respectively daughters of Hercules and She-Hulk in an alternate universe future, featured in the 2-parts book The Last Avengers Story. Jessie is really impressive in the books. Alas the story doesn’t end well for both our heroines… 🙁
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Source: Marvel Comics, Last Avengers vol.1, No.1, November 1995.
Story by Peter David, art by Ariel Olivetti.[/URL]
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Source: Marvel Comics, Last Avengers vol.1, No.2, December 1995.
Story by Peter David, art by Ariel Olivetti.October 18, 2010 at 3:44 am #96257BlackKusanagi
ParticipantI was looking for these things in general… Nice!
Sad what happens to BS and Jess though.
October 18, 2010 at 4:19 am #96258Robert McNay
ParticipantThe artist does a nicely muscular SH, but he sucks otherwise. He’s one these artist that can draw mouths only closed or wide open. It makes everyone look like they are either ventriloquists or screaming their lines.
Obviously a student of the Jack Kirby school of comic drawing. The only thing he’s missing is the square finger tips.
October 22, 2010 at 8:49 am #96354David
ParticipantBeing Jessica Wingfoot would make her the daughter of Jennifer and Wyatt Wingfoot. He was Jennifer’s love for years but he suddenly vanished when She-Hulk was marginalized and turned into a bed hopper.
October 22, 2010 at 1:14 pm #96364AlexG
KeymasterMasschine wrote:
. . . He (Wyatt Wingfoot) was Jennifer’s love for years but he suddenly vanished when She-Hulk was marginalized and turned into a bed hopper.
He was a supporting character in the Fantastic Four title for many yrs before Jen/SH even existed as a part of Marvel stable. She met him when John Byrne used her as a replacement for The Thing when the character left the title in the mid-80s. There was some talk that Byrne wanted to make the cast change permanent (of course, how long is forever in a comic title?), but she was sent packing when the The Thing was restored to the book after 3 or so yrs.
His last major appearance (so far as I know) was in the two-part graphic novels She-Hulk: Ceremony (1989) which involved his return to his Indian tribe.
“I like a good story well told. That is the reason I am sometimes forced to tell them myself.”
~ Mark Twain / Samuel Clemens (1907)October 22, 2010 at 2:58 pm #96365Reason
ParticipantWow, that’s some beautiful comic art! Thanks for posting!
October 22, 2010 at 9:05 pm #96371Zespara Alathar
ParticipantAlexG wrote:
Masschine wrote:
. . . He (Wyatt Wingfoot) was Jennifer’s love for years but he suddenly vanished when She-Hulk was marginalized and turned into a bed hopper.
He was a supporting character in the Fantastic Four title for many yrs before Jen/SH even existed as a part of Marvel stable. She met him when John Byrne used her as a replacement for The Thing when the character left the title in the mid-80s. There was some talk that Byrne wanted to make the cast change permanent (of course, how long is forever in a comic title?), but she was sent packing when the The Thing was restored to the book after 3 or so yrs.
His last major appearance (so far as I know) was in the two-part graphic novels She-Hulk: Ceremony (1989) which involved his return to his Indian tribe.
Byrne did indeed want to make Shulkie a permanent cast member of the FF either as a replacement for Ben Grimm or changing the name to the Fantastic Five.
However, because Marvel changed one of his panels he did of Jean Grey’s face in FF #286 (the X-Factor crossover with the resurrection of her), he left the title because they did the change without his permission. I personally didn’t notice that much of a difference and why it would make that big a deal anyway but that’s just me.
He left with a couple of plotlines left hanging and others tried to finish the storylines but it didn’t feel the same after he left the title. He never did finish the Last Galactus Story when they cancelled Epic Illustrated magazine either.
Z
October 25, 2010 at 4:35 am #96421ze fly
ParticipantReason wrote:
Wow, that’s some beautiful comic art! Thanks for posting!
Glad you liked it. 😉
AlexG wrote:
His last major appearance (so far as I know) was in the two-part graphic novels She-Hulk: Ceremony (1989) which involved his return to his Indian tribe.
His last one I’m aware of is in the issue of the F4, when he took in the disfigured She-Thing.
January 20, 2019 at 4:13 am #142697 -
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