Don McGregor
Auteur de Black Panther (Penguin Classics Marvel Collection)
A propos de l'auteur
Crédit image: Don McGregor. Photographed July 1974, Commodore Hotel, New York Comic Art Convention. By Tenebrae at English Wikipedia, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=18840374
Séries
Œuvres de Don McGregor
Tales from the Crypt #1: Ghouls Gone Wild (Tales from the Crypt Graphic Novels) (2007) 39 exemplaires
Marvel Masterworks, Volume 265: Killraven Volume 1 [Amazing Adventures #18-39 + Marvel Graphic Novel #7] (2018) 19 exemplaires
Marvel Masterworks, Volume 271: Luke Cage, Power Man Volume 3 [#32-47 & Annual #1] (2019) 11 exemplaires
Black Panther: Panther's Quest (Marvel Comics Presents (1988-1995)) (2017) — Auteur — 10 exemplaires
Marvel Masterworks, Volume 303: Black Panther Volume 3 [#1-4 + parts of Marvel Comics Presents #13-37] (2021) 8 exemplaires
Murder By Crowquill 4 exemplaires
Amazing Adventures, Vol. 2 # 32 4 exemplaires
Amazing Adventures, Vol. 2 # 31 3 exemplaires
Amazing Adventures, Vol. 2 # 39 3 exemplaires
Amazing Adventures, Vol. 2 # 37 3 exemplaires
Amazing Adventures, Vol. 2 # 36 3 exemplaires
Amazing Adventures, Vol. 2 # 34 3 exemplaires
Morbius The Living Vampire: Lighthouse Of The Possessed 2 exemplaires
The Thought occurred to me: A book about Owen Cooper 2 exemplaires
Amazing Adventures, Vol. 2 # 30 2 exemplaires
Amazing Adventures, Vol. 2 # 28 2 exemplaires
Morbius The Living Vampire: Blood Tide! 2 exemplaires
Amazing Adventures, Vol. 2 # 35 2 exemplaires
Fantasy Illustrated #1 — Auteur — 2 exemplaires
Amazing Adventures, Vol. 2 # 21 2 exemplaires
Amazing Adventures, Vol. 2 # 23 2 exemplaires
Amazing Adventures, Vol. 2 # 25 2 exemplaires
Amazing Adventures, Vol. 2 # 27 2 exemplaires
Amazing Adventures, Vol. 2 # 26 2 exemplaires
Monsters Unleashed! — Directeur de publication — 2 exemplaires
Nathaniel Dusk #3 1 exemplaire
Jungle Action (1972-1976) #11 1 exemplaire
Zorro No. 8 1 exemplaire
Jungle Action (1973-1976) #7 1 exemplaire
Zorro No. 9 1 exemplaire
Vampire Tales (1973-1975) #5 1 exemplaire
Dracula versus Zorro #1 1 exemplaire
Zorro (1993 series) No 11 1 exemplaire
Zorro No. 10 1 exemplaire
Zorro No. 7 1 exemplaire
Jungle Action (1973-1976) #6 1 exemplaire
Zorro No. 6 1 exemplaire
Zorro No. 5 1 exemplaire
Zorro No. 4 1 exemplaire
Zorro No. 3 1 exemplaire
Zorro No. 2 1 exemplaire
Zorro No. 1 1 exemplaire
Zorro No. 0 1 exemplaire
Nathaniel Dusk #1 1 exemplaire
Play Press presenta n. 13: La maschera di Zorro 1 exemplaire
Morbius: Demon Fire! 1 exemplaire
Morbius: The Blood Sacrifice Of Amanda Saint! 1 exemplaire
Movie Review: Night Of The Living Dead 1 exemplaire
An Editorial Felled 1 exemplaire
Spider-Man (Vol. 1) #28 1 exemplaire
Morbius The Living Vampire: High Midnight 1 exemplaire
Spider-Man (Vol. 1) #27 1 exemplaire
Amazing Adventures, #21-30 1 exemplaire
We can see the Trade Center from Marine Park... 1 exemplaire
Blade (1998) #3 1 exemplaire
Blade (1998) #2 1 exemplaire
Blade (1998) #1 1 exemplaire
Movie Review: Hell House Is Dying 1 exemplaire
The Reality Manipulators 1 exemplaire
Worlds Of Zorro #1: FCBD 2021 Edition 1 exemplaire
Deadly Hands of Kung Fu Vol. 1 #7 1 exemplaire
Doctor Strange (1974-1987) #31 — Auteur — 1 exemplaire
Clásicos Marvel blanco y negro - Killraven 1 exemplaire
Nathaniel Dusk II 1 exemplaire
Zorro Matanzas #1 1 exemplaire
Dracula versus Zorro 1 exemplaire
Zorro Matanzas #4 1 exemplaire
Zorro Matanzas #3 1 exemplaire
Morbius The Living Vampire: Where Is Gallows Bend And What The Hell Am I Doing Thereunknown 1 exemplaire
Jungle Action Featuring The Black Panther 1 exemplaire
Marvel Premiere #43 (Paladin) 1 exemplaire
Oeuvres associées
9-11: The World's Finest Comic Book Writers & Artists Tell Stories to Remember (2002) — Auteur — 250 exemplaires
Étiqueté
Partage des connaissances
- Nom légal
- McGregor, Donald Francis
- Date de naissance
- 1945-06-15
- Sexe
- male
- Nationalité
- USA
- Lieu de naissance
- Providence, Rhode Island, USA
- Professions
- comic book writer
- Organisations
- Marvel Comics
Membres
Critiques
Listes
Prix et récompenses
Vous aimerez peut-être aussi
Auteurs associés
Statistiques
- Œuvres
- 123
- Aussi par
- 6
- Membres
- 772
- Popularité
- #32,960
- Évaluation
- 3.6
- Critiques
- 16
- ISBN
- 66
- Langues
- 2
After Don McGregor's Black Panther run from Jungle Action was cancelled back in 1976, he actually got invited back two more times: he did a story called Panther's Quest published in Marvel Comics Presents in 1989 and a four-issue prestige miniseries called Panther's Prey in 1991. This "Epic Collection" collects both of them, along with five short Black Panther tales by other creators from the same era.
Panther's Quest sends the Black Panther into South Africa in order to find his mother, missing since childhood. Sure, we did apartheid in a thinly fictionalized version of South Africa in the immediate previous Black Panther storyline, but why not do it again in the real place? This story ran twenty-five biweekly installments of (usually) eight pages... and it is interminable. Like, eight pages will go by and all that's happened is Black Panther has punched a guy. One thing I liked about McGregor's Panther's Rage was how it really made you feel the difficulty of what the Black Panther did, but this goes too far with it, because everything is immensely difficult, everything is enormously slowed down, it never feels like we're getting anywhere, being crushed under the weight of McGregor's enormously wordy style. Being set in South Africa means we again lose the worldbuilding that made Panther's Rage so interesting, too. It has it moments, including some nice side characters in South Africa, but ultimately, a tedious slog with little to say.
Panther's Prey almost has the opposite problem: this is made up of four forty-page installments and is all over the place. Wakanda is modernizing, connecting with the outside world more—this is nicely demonstrated by the appearance of a food court selling pizza. But with the benefits of connecting to the outside world also come the downsides, and someone is smuggling crack into Wakanda and vibranium out... using an army of cyborg pterodactyls, of course! The story follows this main storyline, but also T'Challa's mother acclimating to life in Wakanda, what Monica Lynne's been up to in the U.S. since we last saw her in Jungle Action (McGregor ignores her later appearances), the guy organizing the drug smuggling operation, and updates to various members of Black Panther's Wakandan supporting cast. There's a lot of nice moments here but overall not much actually seems to happen despite the fact the story runs over one hundred and fifty pages. Black Panther doesn't even meet the villain until about ten pages from the end, and beats him by luck in about six seconds. And in the end, crack is still a problem in Wakanda! Way to cheer me up, McGregor.
The other stories here are nice to have for completism's sake, but not very memorable.
What's interesting to me reading Black Panther in terms of publication chronology is to see the development of the character I know from the movies. His mother, Raimonda, debuted in this volume, but she's not the imperious ruler of screen, but a South African woman romanced by T'Challa's father who returned to her homeland after her husband died. Many elements of the mythos have yet to appear at all. There's also still no sense of cohesion: McGregor doesn't really acknowledge that anyone used the character other than him since 1976. (Can't imagine why the "Black Musketeers" don't come up in discussions of T'Challa's family!)… (plus d'informations)