The Fantastic Four (Picture 3) cartoon images gallery | CARTOON VAGANZA

The Fantastic Four (Picture 3) Free Online Cartoon Images Gallery. The Fantastic Four (Picture 3) cartoon character and history. The Fantastic Four (Picture 3) animated movie and comic. CARTOON VAGANZA


The Fantastic Four (Picture 3)

Monday, February 21, 2011

The Fantastic Four (Cartoon Picture 3)
The Fantastic Four (Cartoon Picture 3)
size image : 859 x 611
The Fantastic Four (picture 3). The Fantastic Four cartoon picture collection. The Fantastic Four cartoon images gallery. Kirby recalled events somewhat differently. Challenged with Lee's version of events in a 1990 interview, Kirby responded: "I would say that's an outright lie", although the interviewer, Gary Groth notes that this statement needs to be viewed with caution. Kirby claims he came up with the idea for the Fantastic Four in Marvel's offices, and that Lee had merely added the dialogue after the story had been pencilled. Kirby has also sought to establish, more credibly and on numerous occasions, that the visual elements of the strip were his conceptions. He regularly pointed to a team he had created for rival publisher DC Comics in the 1950s, Challengers of the Unknown. "[I]f you notice the uniforms, they're the same ... I always give them a skintight uniform with a belt ... the Challengers and the FF have a minimum of decoration. And of course, the Thing's skin is a kind of decoration, breaking up the monotony of the blue uniform". The characters wear no uniforms in the first two issues. The Fantastic Four (picture 3). The Fantastic Four cartoon picture collection. The Fantastic Four cartoon images gallery. Given the conflicting statements, outside commentators have found it hard to identify with precise detail who created the Fantastic Four. Although Stan Lee's typed synopsis for the Fantastic Four exists, Earl Wells, writing in The Comics Journal, points out that its existence doesn't assert its place in the creation; "[W]e have no way of knowing of whether Lee wrote the synopsis after a discussion with Kirby in which Kirby supplied most of the ideas". Comics historian R.C. Harvey believes that the Fantastic Four was a furtherance of the work Kirby had been doing previously, and so "more likely Kirby's creations than Lee's". But Harvey notes that the Marvel Method of collaboration allowed each man to claim credit, and that Lee's dialogue added to the direction the team took. Wells argues that it was Lee's contributions which set the framework within which Kirby worked, and this made Lee "more responsible". Comics historian Mark Evanier, a studio assistant to Jack Kirby in the 1970s, says that the considered opinion of Lee and Kirby's contemporaries was "that Fantastic Four was created by Stan and Jack. No further division of credit seemed appropriate" The release of The Fantastic Four #1 (Nov. 1961) was an unexpected success. Lee had felt ready to leave the comics field at the time, but the positive response to Fantastic Four persuaded him to stay on. The title began to receive fan mail, and Lee started printing the letters in a letter column with Issue #3. Also with the third issue, the Fantastic Four starting wearing costumes at a letter writer's suggestion, and Lee created the hyperbolic slogan "The Greatest Comic Magazine in the World!!" With the following issue, the slogan was changed to "The World's Greatest Comic Magazine!", and became a fixture on the issue covers into the 1990s, and on numerous covers in the 2000s. The Fantastic Four (picture 3). The Fantastic Four cartoon picture collection. The Fantastic Four cartoon images gallery.

Labels:

Share ARCHIVES

<< Home