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Avengers 104 Page 2 by Rich Buckler, Joe Sinnott - Comic Strip
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Avengers 104 Page 2

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Une superbe page de tension où Rich Buckler propulse l'action au rythme effréné d'un Quicksilver qui résume la situation pour ceux qui prennent l'histoire en route... Une petite trilogie un peu passée inaperçue dans l'ombre de la guerre Kree-Skrull, cette première confrontation entre les Sentinels et les Avengers tient toutes ses promesses. Du côté du dessin, Rich Buckler nous concocte un mélange John Buscema/Neal Adams très efficace, bien secondé par l'encrage ultra-léché de Joe Sinnott !

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About Rich Buckler

Rich Buckler (February 6, 1949 – May 19, 2017) was an American comic book artist and penciller, best known for his work on Marvel Comics' Fantastic Four in the mid-1970s and for creating the character Deathlok in Astonishing Tales #25. Buckler drew virtually every major character at Marvel and DC, often as a cover artist. As a teenager in Detroit, Buckler attended the initial iterations of the Detroit Triple Fan Fair, eventually running the convention along with originator Robert Brosch in 1969–1970. Buckler's first comics work was as a teenager with the four-page historical story "Freedom Fighters: Washington Attacks Trenton" in the King Features comic book Flash Gordon #10 (cover-dated Nov. 1967). At DC Comics, he drew the "Rose and the Thorn" backup stories in Superman's Girl Friend, Lois Lane #117-121 (Dec. 1971 - April 1972). Buckler drew the first three issues of writer Don McGregor's Black Panther series in Jungle Action vol. 2, #6-8 (Sept. 1973 - Jan. 1974), a run that Comics Bulletin in 2010 ranked third on its list of the "Top 10 1970s Marvels". He fulfilled a decade-long dream in 1974 when assigned to draw Marvel's flagship series, Fantastic Four, on which he stayed for two years. During this period, Buckler created the cyborg antihero Deathlok, who starred in an ongoing feature debuting in Astonishing Tales #25 (Aug. 1974).