In blackagar 's collection
Captain Marvel by Don Heck, Vince Colletta, Arnold Drake - Comic Strip
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Captain Marvel

Comic Strip
1969
Ink
26 x 39 cm (10.24 x 15.35 in.)
Small size
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Captain marvel 9 cover

Description

"between Hammer and Anvil!" captain Marvel n°9 page 15

Comment

Captain Marvel, guerrier extraterrestre de race Kree infiltre la base spatiale humaine pour vérifier les progrès fait dans la conquête de l'Espace. En concurrence sentimentale avec son supérieur hiérarchique le Colonel Yon-Rogg pour le cœur de la seule femme de l’équipage du vaisseau, le Docteur Una, il rencontre et craque pour la belle blonde terrienne Carole DANVERS, chef du projet spatial, tout en combattant les Aakon, autres E.T et le Cyberex, énorme robot chargé de démasquer le Dr LAWSON, son identité secrète...

Bon! le scenar est un peu compliqué mais Don HECK nous donne des pages pleines de combats et de jolies filles... Que demander d'autre? et finalement DON HECK est un bon dessinateur

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About Don Heck

Don Heck's professional career began in 1949 when he got a job in the production department of Harvey Comics. Heck did his first comic book illustration through Quality and Hillman however. he eventually worked for Comic Media for two years, working on their line of horror and war titles. In 1954, Heck joined Charlton Comics, where he did 'Captain Gallant of the Foreign Legion'. He eventually became a mainstay at Altas/Marvel, where he started out illustrating 'Torpedo Taylor' in Navy Combat and 'Cliff Mason' in Jungle Tales and Jann of the Jungle. After a brief interlude drawing airplane models, Heck returned to work on the comic books Journey in Mystery and Tales of Suspense. Heck's first super-hero assignment was on the first 'Iron Man' story, which appeared in Tales of Suspense in 1963. Heck also did work on early stories of 'Thor' and 'Giant Man'. But he is probably best remembered for his long, first run on 'The Avengers', that started in 1964. During his time at Marvel, he also contributed to the art on 'Spider-Man', 'X-Men' and many more. In the mid-1960s, Heck additionally worked for Western Publishing on the 'Man from U.N.C.L.E.' comic book and assisted Sy Barry and Joe Giella on the 'The Phantom' newspaper strip. In 1971, Don Heck was considered the best renderer of attractive women in comics by Jack Kirby, who suggested him to DC as an artist for 'Batgirl'.