Marvel Comics 1980s
2008 August 26

You can buy reprints of Transformers comics in 1980?
These days you can buy reprints of many of the older DC Comics Marvel / The "complete collections and so on, where they put a dozen volumes of issues of a comic into a book and sell them. Will they ever do this with the 1980 issues of Transformers? I am particularly interested in anything that covers 17 U.S. edition (UK issue 66), the casting pool.
http://www.tfarchive.com/comics/titan/reprints/review.php?tpb=cybertronredux There you its called Cybertron Redux
CGR Comic Book Review – AIR RAIDERS #2 1980′s Toys
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Howard the Duck $3.45 If you concentrate on the fact that Howard the Duck was a notorious box office dud (still brought up today) and considered one of the worst films of the ’80s, it’s entirely possible to enjoy this special effects piffle. Howard, played by a special effect puppet, lives on a planet where ducks evolved instead of apes, but one day he’s sucked into a vortex and deposited on Earth. There he befriends B… |
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Transformers: The Complete First Season (25th Anniversary Edition) $19.44 Where it all began! This 25th anniversary DVD set includes the complete first season from the Generation One animated series. Packed with Generation One extras including a new look at the Transformers, rare PSAs, original toy commercials, and more.Product Measures: 0.5 x 5.5 x 7.5… |
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Dungeons & Dragons – The Complete Animated Series $54.98 Dungeons & Dragons was one of CBS’ most popular animated series airing from 1983 – 1986 and later on FoxKids. Created by legendary Marvel Productions the series was base on the popular TSR role-playing game created in 1974 – which spawned an entire industry! Now in a set bursting with magical Special Features fans can roll the dice to see the entire Dungeons & Dragons series in a beautiful five-di… |
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Retro-Action DC Super Heroes Shazam Collector Figure – Series 4 $9.79 Travel back in time with the Retro-Action DC Super Heroes Figure collection DC Comics most legendary heroes and villains Features 8″ nostalgic action figure in authentic cloth retro-styling Captures the look and feel of the soft-body figures from the 1980s A must have limited edition collector figure Retro-Action DC Super Heroes Collector Figure Assortment: Celebrate t… |
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1982 Comic Debuts $19.99 Purchase includes free access to book updates online and a free trial membership in the publisher’s book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Chapters: Supergirl, Swamp Thing, V for Vendetta, Marvelman, Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe, List of Swamp Thing Comics, Grendel, Groo the Wanderer, Captain Carrot and His Amazing Zoo Crew!, Firestorm, Camelot 3000, Masters of the Universe, Warrior, Twisted Tales, Firestorm, Arion, Alien Worlds, Marvel Graphic Novel, the Uncanny X-Men and the New Teen Titans, Starstruck, Martin Mystère, Wolverine, Starslayer, Ms. Mystic, Atari Force, X-Men: God Loves, Man Kills, Destroyer Duck, Marvel Fanfare, Dreadstar, Creepshow, Domino Chance. Excerpt: Alien Worlds Alien Worlds was a science fiction anthology comic book published by Pacific Comics and, later, Eclipse Comics , in the early 1980s. The title was edited by Bruce Jones and April Campbell. Publication history Alien Worlds was published on a bi-monthly schedule by Pacific Comics from December 1982 to April 1984 (eight issues, including an offshoot Three Dimensional Alien Worlds published in July 1984). After Pacific went bankrupt, two final issues were published by Eclipse Comics in November 1984 and January 1985. In 1986, Blackthorne Publishing published their own one-shot Alien Worlds title. In May 1988, Eclipse issued a standalone, unnumbered edition of the title as part of its Graphic Album Series, featuring all new stories and art. Nearly all of the stories in Alien Worlds were written by Jones, with only a few exceptions (notably Jan Strnad’s “Stoney End” in Issue # 8 and Frank Brunner ‘s “The Reading!” in Issue # 9). Jones had developed a skill for the short genre tale, often with a twist ending , during his years with Warren Publishing while writing for their Creepy and Eerie titles. He was heavily influenced by the horror and science fiction movies of the 1950s, adding graphic violence and sexuality to the |
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Alien Legion Omnibus, Volume 2 $24.99 The Alien Legion is the most feared fighting force in the Galarchy – and Nomad Squad is the best, and the worst, of the lot. Comprised of the outcasts, dregs, and idealists from three galaxies, the expendable grunts of Nomad jump into a series of intense missions prompted by everything from attacks by biomechanical religious zealots, orders to eliminate a traitorous legion hero, and the personal whims of a Galarchy bureaucrat. The squad is devastated when three veteran legionnaires die – and another faces an even worse fate in a legion “Mindrobber” machine. Nomad’s chemistry is further altered with the addition of Tamara, a cosmic valkyrie who catches Lt. Montroc’s attention. Long live the Legion! The longest-running creator-owned series in Marvel Comics’ 1980s Epic Comics line, Alien Legion set the bar for military science-fiction in comics. Featuring work by Alan Zelenetz, Larry Stroman, Frank Cirocco, Randy Emberlin, and Terry Austin, Alien Legion Omnibus Volume 2 features over three hundred story pages and rounds out the first Alien Legion series, including the long-out-of-print A Grey Day to Die graphic novel. |
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All-Star Companion Volume 4 $51.95 Used – The epic series of All-Star Companions goes out with a bang, featuring: Colossal coverage of the Golden Age All-Star Comics! Sensational secrets of the Junior Justice Society! An index of the complete solo adventures of all 18 original JSAers in their own features, from 1940 to 1951! The JSA’s earliest imitators (Seven Soldiers of Victory, All Winners Squad, Marvel Family, and International Crime Patrol)! Infinity, Inc. on Earth-Two and after! And the 1980s Secret Origins series! Edited b |
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All-Star Companion Volume 4 $51.95 New – The epic series of All-Star Companions goes out with a bang, featuring: Colossal coverage of the Golden Age All-Star Comics! Sensational secrets of the Junior Justice Society! An index of the complete solo adventures of all 18 original JSAers in their own features, from 1940 to 1951! The JSA’s earliest imitators (Seven Soldiers of Victory, All Winners Squad, Marvel Family, and International Crime Patrol)! Infinity, Inc. on Earth-Two and after! And the 1980s Secret Origins series! Edited by |
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