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Chargement... Marvel Masterworks, Volume 047: Golden Age Sub-Mariner Volume 1 [#1-4]par Bill Everett
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Guided by the hand of one of the Golden Age's greatest talents, Bill Everett, in 1941 the Sub-Mariner leapt from the pages of Marvel Comics into his very own series-and you can read it all here in the Marvel Masterworks! Comics' first anti-hero, the tempestuous half-Atlantean/half-human Prince Namor strode from panel to panel with an unbridled energy that made his series unlike any other. He'd just as readily wrestle with U-Boats and great whites as the heroic Human Torch and the NYPD. Collecting: Sub-Mariner Comics 1-4 Aucune description trouvée dans une bibliothèque |
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Google Books — Chargement... GenresClassification décimale de Melvil (CDD)741.5973The arts Graphic arts and decorative arts Drawing & drawings Cartoons, Caricatures, Comics Collections North American United States (General)ÉvaluationMoyenne:
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Namor starts his own title off right by ripping apart a shark with his bare hands, saving his people from destruction, and, of course, taking out a bunch of Nazis. He does that last part quite frequently in this volume. Modern Namor may be an isolationist who doesn't bother much with the surface world's problems, but this Namor is staunchly anti-Nazi, and he spends a lot of his time fighting them. He also seems to talk with a Brooklyn accent, which is rather amusing.
The co-feature starring Angel (no, not Warren Worthington III, but Thomas Halloway) dabbles in the horror genre. Angel's costume might be ugly, but he is pretty awesome. He has no superpowers of his own; he just goes against whatever evils cross his path armed with his wits.
This volume also includes original ads that ran with the comics (mostly featuring Captain America and his battle against spies - which you too can join, for only ten cents!) and prose stories - including one by the legendary Stan Lee, who was just starting out his comic book career!
This collection, in my opinion, is worth every penny. Not only are the stories fun, but it's great to look into the history of the era, too. ( )