Författarbild

Mark Beazley

Författare till Stoker's Dracula (Marvel Illustrated)

15+ verk 456 medlemmar 6 recensioner

Om författaren

Inkluderar namnet: Mark D. Beazley

Serier

Verk av Mark Beazley

Stoker's Dracula (Marvel Illustrated) (2005) — Redaktör — 98 exemplar
Essential Werewolf By Night, Volume 1 (2005) — Redaktör — 51 exemplar
Essential Fantastic Four, Volume 6 (2007) — Redaktör — 42 exemplar
Young Marvel: Little X-Men, Little Avengers, Big Trouble (2013) — Redaktör — 39 exemplar
Star Wars: The Original Marvel Years Omnibus Volume 2 (2015) — Redaktör — 38 exemplar
Marvel Romance (2006) — Redaktör — 27 exemplar
Women of Marvel: Celebrating Seven Decades [Omnibus] (2011) — Redaktör — 12 exemplar
Lockjaw: Dog Days #1 (2017) — Redaktör — 5 exemplar
Encyclopédie Marvel (2004) 2 exemplar

Associerade verk

Marvel Encyclopedia, Vol. 2: X-Men (2003) — Redaktör — 77 exemplar
Devil Dinosaur (2014) — Collection Editor — 71 exemplar
Marvel Monsters HC (2006) — Associate Editor (Files), vissa utgåvor28 exemplar

Taggad

Allmänna fakta

Födelsedag
1977-09-03
Kön
male
Nationalitet
USA

Medlemmar

Recensioner

Skimmed it mostly. Too cartoonish. Not my cup of tea.
 
Flaggad
Brian-B | 1 annan recension | Nov 30, 2022 |
From beyond the stars shall come the Overmind and he shall crush the universe.’ So goes an ancient prophecy steeped in Stan Lee hyperbole. Super-heroes used to save America, then the world and later the galaxy from some terrible menace. Now it’s the universe. This shows that Stan didn’t know how big the universe is. A large chap with a strong brain isn’t going to conquer all of it. He wouldn’t have time.

Never mind. The overlong ‘Overmind Saga’ is preceded by a couple of issues in which the Thing goes amok and then fights the Hulk, who is always amok anyway. No sooner is Ben Grimm returned to normal than the Watcher arrives to warn our heroes about the Overmind. He takes up four issues of their time, some of it scripted nicely by Archie Goodwin. Then Roy Thomas delivers an interesting tale in which the Thing and the Human Torch go to an African country which practices apartheid to rescue the Black Leopard, formerly the Black Panther. He changed his name (briefly) to avoid association with certain other people. The story makes its point without preaching.

Stan Lee returns to drag out another Galactus story for four issues, bits of which were perhaps used in the film ‘Rise Of The Silver Surfer‘. It was okay really but the sense of old yarns being rehashed is hard to dispel. The creature from the black lagoon – no, the monster from the lost lagoon, sorry – returns for another go and then Stan hands the scripting chores over to ‘Rascally’ Roy Thomas. The writing phase of Mister Lee’s fantastic, industry-changing career was coming to an end as he moved on to the promotions and marketing department. He didn’t end with a whimper by any means but a fresh viewpoint was welcome.

Roy Thomas did a sort of re-launch by retelling the origin of the Fantastic Four, using the slightly contrived method of having the Thing reminiscing while wearing Reed’s new thought projector helmet so there are visuals to go with his words. Remembering the team’s first villain, Mole Man, sets Ben Grimm to thinking. His girlfriend Alicia is blind. Moles are blind. Perhaps Mole Man has a cure for Alicia! I’m being facetious. The rationale is better than that and leads into a great underground adventure which revives a couple of long-forgotten subterranean villains. As a fan of early Marvel, before he joined the team, Roy Thomas had an almost encyclopaedic knowledge of the old stuff which he often put to good use.

He’s also a liberal. Having raised the race issue, he now dallies with feminism by having Sue argue with Reed about her role and introducing a domineering lady super-villain called Thundra. From parts unknown, she has come to Earth to fight the world’s strongest man, which she believes to be the Thing. To accomplish this, she joins the Frightful Four, a team of bad guys with a name that reeks of Noel Coward to English ears. (‘Simply frightful, darling!’) or perhaps of older works by Agatha Christie. The Fantastics survive the Frightfuls and after a dalliance with the Inhumans, written by Gerry Conway, go on to face a rich man who has it in for them again. This is followed by a great two-parter in which the whole of the USA becomes a distorted vision of the fifties with Marlon Brando bikers against crew-cut jingoistic patriots. ‘Rascally’ Roy was firing on all cylinders back then, though Gerry Conway scripted the second half, to give credit where it’s due.

Apart from a couple of issues by Ross Andru and one by Ramona Fradon the art is all by John Buscema and Joe Sinnott and is therefore beautiful. Not startling, not genre changing, not especially clever, stylish, daring or anything like that; just simple, competent and lovely. This kind of illustration is too often undervalued, methinks.

All in all, this is another fine collection of stories to add to your collection of collections. Together with the first five volumes, this makes thirteen years of yarns from ‘The world’s greatest comic magazine’ and although they take up a lot of space on the bookshelf they really are frightfully good; almost, dare I say it, essential.

Eamonn Murphy
This review first appeared at https://www.sfcrowsnest.info/
… (mer)
 
Flaggad
bigfootmurf | 1 annan recension | Aug 11, 2019 |
Excellent adaptation of the story. Loved the illustrations!

 
Flaggad
asthepageturns | Jun 13, 2019 |
The first story in this book was fantastic, wonderful, amazing. In short, I loved it. Cyclops has stolen Cap’s Bucky Bear and he assembles the Avengers to rescue him. This story was such a delight with all the characters as baby versions of the regular ones. Though obviously toned down from the real AVX crossover, there is still a lot of sly adult humor that made me laugh aloud. Unfortunately, everything after that went downhill fast.

The rest of the stories involve kid versions (though not the babies from the first story) of the heroes being manipulated by some villain called Mojo; and it was a piping hot mess. The panels are unbelievably crowded, both visually and with lots and lots of text boxes, most of which are not dialog. It’s actually a chore trying to read what is happening. As another reviewer pointed out, there’s a lot of mumbo jumbo about ratings and tv that just kinda blended together. The best thing about the book is the names for the X-Babies (Wolvie, Shower, Sugah, Cyke, etc). But that is literally the only redeeming thing. The “plots” were unclear, babbling nonsense. I ended up skimming most of the material.

The books ends on a high note with an entire gallery of Skottie Young’s beautiful hero baby cover art. Overall, other than the gallery, this book was a total waste for me since I got the first story in the AVX hardcover collection anyway. Though, I will say, the amount of material is well worth the price. Too bad the same can’t be said of the quality. Sadly, not recommended. Pick up the one-shot of the first story and skip this.
… (mer)
 
Flaggad
jshillingford | 1 annan recension | Jul 3, 2014 |

Listor

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Associerade författare

Dick Giordano Illustrator, Cover artist
Jack Kirby Illustrator
Ross Andru Illustrator
Gerry Conway Contributor
Archie Goodwin Contributor
Gene Colan Illustrator
John Buscema Illustrator
Werner Roth Illustrator
Don Perlin Illustrator
Tony Isabella Contributor
Mike Friedrich Contributor
Stan Lee Contributor
Roy Thomas Contributor
David Michelinie Contributor
Joe Rosen Letterer
Rus Wooton Letterer
Petit Cory Letterer
Bram Stoker Original Story
Dan Slott Contributor
Sol Brodsky Illustrator
Jean Thomas Contributor
Jim Mooney Illustrator
Don Heck Illustrator
Jim Starlin Illustrator
Gil Kane Illustrator
Tom Sutton Illustrator
Doug Moench Contributor
Mike Ploog Illustrator
Marv Wolfman Contributor
Len Wein Contributor
David Palumbo Cover artist
Ramona Fradon Illustrator
Andres Guinaldo Illustrator
Mary "Jo" Duffy Contributor
Gurihiru Illustrator
Mike Wieringo Illustrator
Chris Claremont Contributor
Tom Raney Illustrator
Ruben Diaz Contributor
Mark Buckingham Illustrator
Juvuan J. Kirby Contributor
Jack Abel Illustrator
Bill Everett Illustrator
John Romita Illustrator
Frank Giacoia Illustrator
Vinnie Colletta Illustrator
Al Hartley Illustrator
Jim Steranko Illustrator
Gary Friedrich Illustrator
Dwight D. Coye Contributor
J. M. DeMatteis Contributor
Carole Seuling Contributor
George Tuska Illustrator
John Byrne Contributor
Mary Wilshire Illustrator
George Kapitan Contributor
Mark Bright Illustrator
Robin D. Chaplik Contributor
Harry Sahle Illustrator
Alan Lee Weiss Illustrator
Greg Larocque Illustrator
Linda Fite Contributor
Gene Colon Illustrator
Larry Leiber Contributor
Patty Greer Illustrator
Tom DeFalco Contributor
Richard Howell Contributor
Jack C. Harris Contributor
Bob Brown Illustrator
John Warner Contributor
Jim Shooter Contributor
Sal Buscema Illustrator
Ed Hannigan Contributor
Mike Vosburg Illustrator
Robert Greenberger Contributor
Steve Gerber Contributor
Winslow Mortimer Illustrator
Stan Goldberg Illustrator
June Brigman Illustrator
Frank Springer Illustrator
Dwayne McDuffie Contributor
Marie Severin Illustrator
Andrea Divito Illustrator
José Delbo Illustrator
Geof Darrow Illustrator
Stuart Moore Contributor
Jill Thompson Contributor
Scott Lobdell Contributor
Bill Mantlo Contributor
Rick Geary Illustrator
Butch Guice Illustrator
Paul Jenkins Contributor
Jae Lee Illustrator
Olivier Coipel Cover artist

Statistik

Verk
15
Även av
6
Medlemmar
456
Popularitet
#53,831
Betyg
½ 3.6
Recensioner
6
ISBN
21
Språk
2

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