Photo de l'auteur

Marshall Rogers (1950–2007)

Auteur de Batman: Strange Apparitions

42+ oeuvres 346 utilisateurs 10 critiques 2 Favoris

Séries

Œuvres de Marshall Rogers

Batman: Strange Apparitions (1999) — Illustrateur — 127 exemplaires
Batman: Dark Detective (2005) — Illustrateur — 57 exemplaires
Demon with a glass hand (1986) 42 exemplaires
Legends of the Dark Knight - Marshall Rogers (2011) — Illustrateur — 29 exemplaires
Detectives Inc.: A Remembrance of Threatening Green (1980) — Illustrateur — 16 exemplaires
The Best of Marvel Comics, Volume 1 (1987) — Illustrateur — 12 exemplaires
Madame Xanadu, Vol. 1 #1 (1981) — Illustrateur — 5 exemplaires
Excalibur #11 - The Price (1989) — Illustrateur — 5 exemplaires
Excalibur #10 - Widget (1989) — Illustrateur — 4 exemplaires
Batman: Saarto (2008) — Illustrateur — 3 exemplaires
Doctor Strange (1974-1987) #53 (1982) — Illustrateur — 3 exemplaires
Silver Surfer [1987] #21 (1987) 3 exemplaires
Doctor Strange (1974-1987) #50 — Illustrateur — 2 exemplaires
Cap'n Quick & a Foozle #1 (1984) — Auteur — 2 exemplaires
Unwilling Rape 2 exemplaires
Strange Portfolio (1979) 2 exemplaires
Superman Family [1974] #182 (1976) — Illustrateur — 2 exemplaires
DC Special Series #15 (Batman Spectacular) (1978) — Artiste de la couverture — 2 exemplaires
Detective Comics # 481 (1978) — Illustrateur — 2 exemplaires
Detective Comics # 475 (1978) — Illustrateur — 2 exemplaires
Doctor Strange (1974-1987) #52 — Illustrateur — 2 exemplaires
Doctor Strange (1974-1987) #51 — Illustrateur — 2 exemplaires
Detective Comics # 476 (1978) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
Detective Comics # 474 (1977) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
Detective Comics # 478 (1978) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
Detective Comics # 473 (1977) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
Detective Comics # 472 (1977) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
Detective Comics # 471 (1977) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
Detective Comics # 477 (1978) — Artiste de la couverture — 1 exemplaire
Doctor Strange (1974-1987) #49 — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
Detective Comics # 479 (1978) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
Mister Miracle (1971-1978) #19 (1977) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
Mister Miracle (1971-1978) #20 (1977) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
Mister Miracle (1971-1978) #21 (1977) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
Doctor Strange (1974-1987) #48 — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
Eclipse #3 1 exemplaire
The Shadow #7 (1988) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
Secret Origins (1986-1990) #06 (1986) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
Eclipse #4 1 exemplaire
Mister Miracle (1971-1978) #22 (1978) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire

Oeuvres associées

The Incredible Hulk: Planet Hulk (2007) — Illustrateur — 481 exemplaires
The Greatest Joker Stories Ever Told (1988) — Illustrateur — 256 exemplaires
Batman in the Seventies (1999) — Illustrateur — 51 exemplaires
Spirit Jam (1998) — Contributeur — 51 exemplaires
Excalibur Classic, Vol. 2: Two-Edged Sword (2006) — Illustrateur — 46 exemplaires
Batman: The Greatest Stories Ever Told, Vol. 2 (2007) — Contributeur — 32 exemplaires
Marvel Westerns (Marvel Comics) (2006)quelques éditions25 exemplaires
Detectives Inc.: A Terror of Dying Dreams (1999) — Illustrateur — 16 exemplaires
World's Finest Comics [1941] #259 (1979) — Illustrateur — 2 exemplaires
Green Lantern [1960] #187 (1985) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Nom canonique
Rogers, Marshall
Date de naissance
1950-01-22
Date de décès
2007-03-24
Sexe
male
Nationalité
USA
Lieu de naissance
Flushing, New York, USA
Lieu du décès
Fremont, California, USA
Professions
Artist

Membres

Critiques

Another one I got from the local public library.

See my short note on it:

[http://gypsylibrarian.blogspot.com/2006/12/short-notes-on-graphic-novels-8.html]
 
Signalé
bloodravenlib | 3 autres critiques | Aug 17, 2020 |
There are a few story lines going on in this TPB. The Joker wants to run for governor. His slogan is vote for him or he'll kill you.

The Scarecrow is also running around planting fear capsules willy nilly and trying to scare Batman to death or something. Two-Face is also in this TPB, he has a clone made of himself and they have a little bit of a story with Batman.

Then there's Silver St. Cloud. She's back as the fiancee of the other man rnning for Governor, Evan. But, she knows Bruce Wayne's secret and so she and Bruce re-enter each others orbit and things get complicated.

With every TPB that I read with with Silver St. Cloud in it I get to like her more and more. (Although no one will ever be as right for Bruce/Batman as Catwoman/Selina is in my mind.)
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
DanieXJ | 3 autres critiques | May 21, 2018 |
Access a version of the below that includes illustrations on my blog.

I'm reading this because it's a sequel to Strange Apparitions, reuniting the all-star team of Steve Englehart, Marshall Rogers, and Terry Austin, and bringing back Silver St. Cloud, one of the great loves of Batman's life, now engaged to Senator Evan Gregory, now running for governor. Strange Apparitions wove a thread about Boss Thorne through its various issues; Dark Detective weaves in Gregory's bid for office, especially the Joker's declaration that he'll also be running. Meanwhile, Bruce's meeting with Silver rekindles old feelings, and Two-Face and the Scarecrow both put in appearances.

Sometime when you get the band back together, they don't play as well: Dark Detective is not quite as grabbing as Strange Apparitions, but it's still very good. Rogers and Austin are still an unbeatable Batman art team, capturing the twisted gloom of Gotham in all its splendor. They're slightly let down by Chris Chuckry on colors, who makes Silver St. Cloud's hair white instead of, well, silver, which I found very distracting.

What really makes Englehart a great Batman writer is his grasp on the villains: his Joker is not the motiveless terrorist of A Death in the Family, but rather follows a twisted logic all his own. In a weird way, he really does want to be governor, and he follows the logic through to its conclusion, including his magnificent slogan "VOTE FOR ME OR I'LL KILL YOU." At first he won't kill Gregory because he wants to win "fairly" (as he defines it). But soon he gets bored and decides to kill Gregory anyway; something about the whole process makes a weird sort of sense, which makes it perfect for the Joker.

The story also captures Two-Face very well. I really dislike it when writers depict him as a generic criminal, given his motives were much more complex than that. Here, Two-Face is a tragic figure, torn between his original belief in justice and law, and his new belief in random fate as the ultimate arbiter. As a result, he has a nice little side role, telling the Joker he can't subvert the democratic process, and later commissioning a supervillain named Doctor Double X to create an unscarred duplicate of himself. Watching Two-Face watch this normal Harvey makes you sad for what could have been. (And the cloner, Doctor Double X, is a pretty fun character on his own.)

The beats of the main plot are a bit generic: Bruce and Silver fall back in love, Bruce is terrorized by some memories of his past, Silver is captured by the Joker. This is all very well executed, but you've seen a lot of it before. Alas, the ending seems to set you up for a third story that could have built on this generic foundation in new ways, and indeed one was planned but never published. Given that Rogers is dead now, one supposes it never will happen, even though Englehart scripted the whole thing. Which is a shame, as Englehart/Rogers/Austin remains one of the best Batman teams despite only doing twelve issues together across thirty years!

Batman "Year One" Stories: « Previous in sequence | Next in sequence »
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Stevil2001 | 3 autres critiques | Aug 19, 2016 |
Access a version of the below that includes illustrations on my blog.

All of the Batman stories I've read so far (in this project) have been "flashback" tales: they haven't been set in what was the current continuity at their time of publication, but rather have been set in some earlier period. Strange Apparitions marks a first for me, then, in that this is the first Batman story I've read that took place in the "present" when it was published. This is no flashback to the early days of Batman, but simply the next adventure of Batman.

Much has changed of late. The Caped Crusader is fundamentally solo again, as Dick Grayson is off attending Hudson University. He's grown up so fast! In addition, Bruce Wayne has moved from Stately Wayne Manor to the actual city of Gotham; he now resides in a penthouse on the top floor of the new Wayne Foundation tower, beneath which there is, of course, a cave, where he's relocated all his stuff. An secret elevator directly connects his penthouse to the cave. I like this change: if you imagine Gotham as a New York, it strains credulity to anyone who's ever driven anywhere near New York that Batman could effectively police the city from the location where his manor ought to be. I was surprised, though, to learn that the Wayne Foundation was not in the heart of the city, but rather past "the impressive rows of ancient brownstones" in "Gotham's humbler districts, where the Wayne Foundation towers above the lower, leaner skyline."

Strange Apparitions collects the full run of the creative team of Steve Englehart, Marshall Rogers, and Terry Austin on Detective Comics, which despite its significance, was a mere six issues long. It also collects, however, two issues Steve Englehart wrote but someone else drew, and two issues that Marshall Rogers drew, but someone else wrote. I was surprised to read in Englehart's introduction to the collection that while he and Walt Simonson worked from the "Marvel style" (the writer plots, then the artists draw, then the writer does dialogue) and he and Marshall Rogers worked "DC style" (the writer does a full script, the artists draw), and that Englehart actually wrote all six issues without even knowing who would draw them, because Steve Englehart and Marshall Rogers mesh perfectly. Englehart's writing and Rogers's illustrations support each other perfectly to create a moody, atmospheric, but ultimately fun story, whereas the first two issues drawn by the great Walt Simonson are just kinda there (though necessary for Englehart's eight-issue plot).

Strange Apparitions begins with a so-so story about a new Batman villain, one Doctor Phosphorous, a medical doctor who invests his money in a nuclear plant where disaster strikes: "Five million slivers of red-hot sand were driven through my body! But not--hee hee-- ordinary sand! No! Radioactive sand--blasted upward one level on the chemical scale!" I'm sure this is all very scientific. Doctor Phosphorous doesn't appear again, but the two issues do introduce a couple of important characters: Rupert Thorne, chairman of the City Council, and Silver St. Cloud, a socialite with whom Bruce Wayne quickly becomes sexually involved.

Englehart's story is a tour through a sequence of Batman rogues in a way that I really enjoyed, bringing in one for an issue or two at a time, and then moving on to another one, without feeling contrived or pandering. With the wounds he sustained at the hand of Phosphorous not healing, Bruce Wayne checks himself into a clinic for Gotham elites renowned for its discretion-- only to discover that the clinic manager is actually Hugo Strange in disguise: Batman's very first supervillain opponent, from Batman and the Monster Men. Batman shouts, "Professor Hugo Strange! I thought you were dead!" and indeed, when we last saw Strange in Batman: Prey, he was quite clearly dead, his body having been impaled on a metal pole for several days before it was found. But Strange apparently wasn't really dead, just in Europe. Even though The Monster Men and Prey were written much later, these stories are all of a piece, Strange's obsession with Batman here leading him to actually take over Bruce Wayne's life. (Amazingly, at one point he wears a Batman mask over a Bruce Wayne mask.) The work of Englehart and Rogers is perfectly simpatico here: it's a moody, splashy, nightmarish tale with some great twists and turns. Dick Grayson guest stars to help Bruce reclaim his life, but then leaves for an issue of Teen Titans when Wonder Girl calls.

Everything continues from there. Having deduced Batman's identity, Strange wants to sell it to the highest bidder, but he decides Boss Thorne isn't worthy of it, prompting Thorne to have him killed. (No doubt he'll get better again.) While Strange's ghost heckles Thorne, the Penguin (having lost his bid) decides to carry out a scheme anyway. Batman puts him in jail, where his escape gadget is stolen by Deadshot, who escapes himself to get revenge on Batman for putting him away. Meanwhile, Bruce's romance with Silver has been turning into one of real emotion, and Silver works out that Bruce is Batman-- and when his fight with Deadshot ends up in her place of work (Silver runs a convention center), Batman realizes she knows! Then the Joker turns up with a wacky but deadly plan, and so on. Meanwhile meanwhile, Boss Thorne is trying to eliminate the Batman while being haunted.

Englehart and Rogers have a handle on each and every one of these villains, not to mention Batman himself, who is clearly a man as much as he is an unstoppable force of the night. The story is moody without being grim in a way that hits the exact tone I want out of a Batman tale: darkly fun.

The book wraps up with a two-issue Clayface story written by Len Wein (in a surprising display of fan pedantry, it is actually titled "The Coming of... Clayface III!", making a fan's numerical bookkeeping part of the actual narrative), that follows on from the events of Englehart's run. I've read and liked other stuff by Wein, but it pales in comparisons to Englehart's work; suddenly Batman is melodramatically shouting his feelings at everyone: "Blast it--it's all going sour!! [...] Alfred, things couldn't be more wrong! I let two punks I tangled with tonight get to me--and that's a luxury I cannot afford!" Still, it comes to a suitably tragic conclusion, and I also noted that the trick Prey pulled with Strange's manikin lover was actually first used here with Clayface III.

On the whole, this is one of the best stories I've read so far on this project, and probably one of the best Batman books I've read full stop. Englehart and Rogers perfectly balance ongoing plots with standalone stories, and character insight with fun adventures in darkness.

Batman "Year One" Stories: « Previous in sequence | Next in sequence »
… (plus d'informations)
1 voter
Signalé
Stevil2001 | 3 autres critiques | Jun 12, 2016 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
42
Aussi par
16
Membres
346
Popularité
#69,043
Évaluation
3.9
Critiques
10
ISBN
16
Langues
2
Favoris
2

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