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Marvel Comics Vision

2009 March 6



marvel comics vision
Superman is a superhero as borin has divine powers, but the weakness is kryptonite and magic that can win it. "

Ya can use the characters comics and animation is not photorealistic battles with ya captain planets or lame characters. DC, Marvel, Top Cow, Image, all divine beings cosmic. Without bias allowed the use ya resources and power Superman has to remember the yellow sunwhich gives you super strength, speed, agility, heat vision, breathing frost. Use ya choose wisely let's start

Vartox a Tynolan, the planet Tynola powers and abilities attributed to the original Vartox:. Vartox is possessed of Hyper-Power it is manifested in a variety of ways to combat crime. These variations include powers such as Hyper-vision (and other Hyper-directions), Hyper-teleportation, Hyper-remote-control-hits (a form of telekinesis), telekinesis, and Hyper-loads (spherial globes of energy) – including the powerful Hyper-obliteration of charge .. Its Hyper-Powers can also be used temporarily to dematerialize solid matter, allowing it to pass unharmed through the barriers. As well, has a body that Hyper-Vartox He described as a "Hyper-etheric body that dwells within my physical essence. At the time this 'ghost' I was shipped in action .. He also can become a being of pure energy, hyper, able to defy gravity and the laws of physics. He can also fire blasts of heat and cold that a person can burn or freeze them in place. His hyper-energy can be shaped to make objects such as bubbles and force networks. How are your psychic powers, he is also telepathic, allowing you to fire screws mind, communicate mentally, read minds, and cast illusions .. Vartox is also super-strong, invulnerable and able to fly (a power that can be enhanced by devices connected to their boots). He is able to temporarily transfer those powers to others. As well, he can communicate using radio waves, ultra-lengths, while in space .. Vartox is also an accomplished inventor and scientific genius.

Vision Tribute


Kotobukiya Marvel Comics: Scarlet Witch Bishoujo Statue


Kotobukiya Marvel Comics: Scarlet Witch Bishoujo Statue


$47.99


A KOTOBUKIYA Japanese import!

Third in the line of Marvel Comics Bishoujo Statues (after Rogue and Black Widow) is the magical and mysterious SCARLET WITCH. The beautiful mutant sorceress, and daughter of the incomparable Magneto, Wanda Maximoff exemplifies the Japanese Bishoujo (pretty girl) style, and was designed by the incomparable illustrator Shunya Yamashita! Fans should be familiar with Ya…


MARVEL LEGENDS  VISION  MIB FAMOUS COVERS


MARVEL LEGENDS VISION MIB FAMOUS COVERS


$13.79


Vision is an on-and-off member of the Marvel Comics super-team, the Avengers. Along with his sister, the Scarlet Witch, Vision went in search of his true parents to discover that he is the son of none other than Magneto! Vision comes complete with outfit and removable cape. The Famous Covers series consists of 8 inch ultra-posable and articulated action figures with authentic fabric costumes and f…

MARVEL LEGENDS PHASING VISION SERIES VII


MARVEL LEGENDS PHASING VISION SERIES VII


$17.94



Star Wars Art: Comics


Star Wars Art: Comics


$16.47


Star Wars and sequential art share a long history: Star Wars debuted on the comic-book page in 1977, when Marvel Comics began publishing a six-part adaptation of the first film, which morphed into a monthly comic book. Now, more than three decades later, new series by Dark Horse Comics continue to expand the Star Wars galaxy.  The second book in the Star Wars Art series, Star Wars Art: Comic…


 1939 Comics Characters Debuts: Batman, Namor, James Gordon, Blue Beetle, Ma and Pa Kent, Thomas Wayne, Sandman, Ka-Zar, Ultra-Humanite


1939 Comics Characters Debuts: Batman, Namor, James Gordon, Blue Beetle, Ma and Pa Kent, Thomas Wayne, Sandman, Ka-Zar, Ultra-Humanite


$28.66


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: Batman, Namor, James Gordon, Blue Beetle, Ma and Pa Kent, Thomas Wayne, Sandman, Ka-Zar, Ultra-Humanite, Joe Chill, Doll Man, Batman, Lara Lor-Van, Angel, Doll Girl, Red Tornado, Julie Madison, Doctor Death, Monk, Wonder Man, Invisible Hood, Batman, Eye. Excerpt: The Angel The Angel ( Thomas Halloway ) is a fictional character , superhero in comic books published by Marvel Comics . Created by writer-artist Paul Gustavson during the period comics fans and historians call the Golden Age of comic books , the Angel first appeared in Marvel Comics #1 (Oct. 1939), the first publication of Marvel predecessor Timely Comics . The Angel, like Batman , is a non-superpowered detective who nonetheless wore a superhero costume. Gustavson cited Leslie Charteris ‘ pulp-novel detective, Simon Templar , the “Saint,” as a model for the Angel. Publication history The Angel was the next-most-popular Timely character after the “big three” of the Human Torch , the Sub-Mariner and Captain America , with more than 100 Golden Age appearances starting in that initial Marvel title (which changed its name to Marvel Mystery Comics with issue #2), up through #79 (Dec. 1946); as the sole backup feature in Sub-Mariner Comics #1-21 (Spring 1941 – Fall 1946); and in occasional appearances in Mystic Comics and Daring Comics . A simulacrum of the Angel was temporarily created from the mind of Rick Jones , along with those of the Blazing Skull , the Fin , the Patriot , and the Golden Age Vision , to aid the superhero team the Avengers during the Kree-Skrull War , in The Avengers #97 (March 1972). The Angel is one of the central characters of the 2009 comic-book series The Marvels Project , by writer Ed Brubaker and penciler Steve Epting . Fictional character biography A costumed detective with no

 1968 Comics Characters Debuts: Green Lantern, Guy Gardner, Franklin Richards, Red Tornado, Annihilus, Ms. Marvel, Vision, Cain and Abel


1968 Comics Characters Debuts: Green Lantern, Guy Gardner, Franklin Richards, Red Tornado, Annihilus, Ms. Marvel, Vision, Cain and Abel


$45.98


New – 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: Green Lantern, Guy Gardner, Franklin Richards, Red Tornado, Annihilus, Ms. Marvel, Vision, Cain and Abel, the Creeper, League of Assassins, Mordru, Ultron, Madame Masque, Tiger Shark, Mesmero, Wrecker, Legion of Super-Villains, George Stacy, Blacklash, Brother Power the Geek, Copperhead, Xemnu, Marcie, Me

 A Tribute to Michael Turner


A Tribute to Michael Turner


$15.99


Join Aspen Comics and a host of the industry”s finest comic book writers, artists, and creators as they pay special tribute to acclaimed artist, creator, colleague, friend, and Aspen Comics President and founder, Michael Turner. The creative force behind such best-selling titles as Fathom, Soulfire, and Witchblade, and the cover artist to numerous mainstream comic events such as Marvel”s Civil War and DC Comics” Identity Crisis and Justice League of America, Michael Turner”s artistic vision was unlimited. In honor of Turner”s tremendous spirit and body of work, as well as his countless contributions to the comic book industry, Aspen Comics and the entire comic book community will return the favor by remembering Michael”s amazing life both in and outside of comics.

 Al Williamson's Flash Gordon: A Lifelong Vision of the Heroic


Al Williamson’s Flash Gordon: A Lifelong Vision of the Heroic


$17.87


Flash Gordon, introduced as a Sunday newspaper comic strip by King Features Syndicate in 1934, remains after more than 70 years, one of the best-known and most beloved epics of heroic fantasy produced in America. Initially envisioned and drawn by the brilliant Alex Raymond, the strip’s melange of alien wonders, beautiful damsels, interplanetary evil and peerless derring-do remains potent today, as witness its many adaptations in print, motion pictures and television. It has been cited by no less a popular fantasist than George Lucas as a primary influence on his Star Wars series.Beyond the lasting impact of the strip’s heroic themes, the drawing skills of Raymond inspired a small army of succeeding cartoonists to take up his illustration-based stylistic mantle. Al Williamson is arguably the foremost of these acolytes, widely acclaimed as the artist who best exemplifies the original spirit of Raymond’s creation, as well as being the most distinctive and lyric. His vision of the character, formed in childhood and deeply personal, captured the hearts of Flash Gordon readers like no other.Al Williamson’s Flash Gordon: A Lifelong Vision of the Heroic, collects all the major works of the artist featuring the character. At 256 pages, it encompasses Williamson’s three stints of depicting Flash in comic book format: the legendary King Comics stories from the 1960s, the 1980 adaptation of the Universal Flash Gordon motion picture, and the Marvel Comics miniseries of 1994.In addition to these classics of sequential storytelling, Al Williamson’s Flash Gordon features Williamson’s Flash drawings done for commercial illustration and prints, his assists on the Flash Gordon comic strip, a variety of Flash images contributed to amateur publications, and a selection of largely unpublished images spanning his interest in the character from childhood to the conclusion of his career.With an introduction by Sergio Aragones, text by Mark Schultz, and images

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