In BillBaroud  's collection
George Perez, Joe Rubinstein, Tom Christopher, Jim Starlin, Infinity Gauntlet - Issue 1 - Page 28 - Comic Strip
1721 

Infinity Gauntlet - Issue 1 - Page 28

Comic Strip
1991
Ink
Added on 11/28/18
Share

Description

N'essayer pas de faire pareil à la maison, les enfants! (En particulier si votre papa est un dieu, un demi-dieu, un maître de l'univers ou apparenté...)

Comment

"De grands pouvoirs impliquent de grandes responsabilités!" écrivait Stan Lee, à propos de Spider-man.
Mais ici, on pousse le curseur une chouquette plus loin.
Je ne m'étendrai pas plus avant, mais ceux qui ont lu la BD ou, nettement plus nombreux, ont vu au cinéma le dernier Avengers: "Infinity War" savent de quoi je parle...
Pour les autres, c'est une petite planche mineure sans la moindre importance.

8 comments
CosmicArtFan Aug 18, 2019, 1:52 AM
Holy crap!!!! The snap! What a piece of comics & movie history!
michael07 Nov 28, 2018, 7:37 PM
De grands doigts impliquent de grands claquements de doigts...copyright Michael07
DoctorFeelgood Nov 28, 2018, 7:33 PM
Race of Master ...
salvignol Nov 28, 2018, 7:11 PM
superbe ! un mythe !quelle sont les dimensions svp ?
MM60 Nov 28, 2018, 2:36 PM
Une belle quête que cette planche historique et devenue culte! Il y a Thanos et sa quête des Pierre d'Infinité et BillBaroud et sa quête de planches de rêve... top!
To leave a comment on that piece, please log in

About George Perez

George Pérez (born June 9, 1954) is an American writer and illustrator of comic books, whose titles include The Avengers, Teen Titans, and Wonder Woman. Writer Peter David has named Pérez his favorite artistic collaborator. Pérez's first involvement with the professional comics industry was as artist Rich Buckler's assistant in 1973, and made his professional debut in Marvel Comics' Astonishing Tales #25 (Aug. 1974) as penciler of an untitled two-page satire of Buckler's character Deathlok, star of that comic's main feature. Soon Pérez became a Marvel regular, penciling a run of "Sons of the Tiger", a serialized action-adventure strip published in Marvel's long-running Deadly Hands of Kung Fu magazine and authored by Bill Mantlo. He and Mantlo co-created the White Tiger (comics' first Puerto Rican superhero) a character that soon appeared in Marvel's color comics, most notably the Spider-Man titles.