Showing newest posts with label bill sienkiewicz. Show older posts
Showing newest posts with label bill sienkiewicz. Show older posts

Saturday, June 12, 2010

Far-Out Threads, Man: Moon Knight


What it is, Groove-ophiles! Today, Ol' Groove's layin' a whole new semi-series on ya, "Far Out Threads, Man!" In the FOTM posts, we'll be looking at some of the best costumes created during the Groovy Age--when heroes were heroes and looked the part, baby! Back then, our heroes weren't ashamed to let their underwear hang out, put their initials on their chests, or let their capes flap in the breeze. Superheroes were super, man! Glorious, colorful, and rarely realistic. And that, Groove-ophiles, is why yourz trooly luvs 'em!

Just for fun, let's start with the mysterious Moon Knight. I've already laid the behind-the-scenes creation of Moonie on ya here, so let's just dig on the sheer badness of our multi-identitied crime-buster's threads. Like f'rinstince penciler/co-creator Don Perlin's spruced-up design that appeared in Marvel Spotlight #'s 28-29 (March-May, 1976). When I saw that Klaus Janson-inked cover sitting in the old spinner rack, there was no way that quarter was staying in my pocket!

The black and white motif, the hood, and that funky glider-cape blew Young Groove's mind. It was kinda weird, yeah, but the originality and functionality of the whole thing made it so doggone cool! Just check out how well Keith Giffen and Mike Royer put it to use...
For some reason, in Moonie's back-up feature in The Hulk! #12 (cover dated December 1978), Marvel decided to have artist Keith Pollard dump MK's glider cape and replace it with a long, flowing cape a la The Batman (adding fuel to the "Moonie's Marvel's Batman" controversy). The bottom of the cape was supposed to be shaped like a crescent moon. T'was a cool idea, but sometimes artists remembered it, but sometimes they forgot.

Teen Groove never dreamed Moonie could look any cooler, then some new dude named Bill Sienkiewicz took over the strip with The Hulk! #13 (cover-date February 1979). In Bill's hands, MK blew the top offa the cool-o-meter!

Of course, over the intervening decades, Moonie's costume has been tweaked and accessorized there and back again, and still one question remains: if MK's costume is "jet and silver", as author/co-creator Moench has stated in many a tale, what keeps happening to the "jet" part?

Sunday, January 3, 2010

Making A Splash: Bill Sienkiewicz's Early Moon Knight

When Teen Groove flipped through the pages of The Hulk! magazine #13 (December 1978), I have to admit I went a little ga-ga when I got to the Moon Knight feature. Had Neal Adams taken over the penciling chores of this bodacious back-up feature? Nope, t'was some new fella who's name Bill-something-that-was-awfully-hard-to-spell--but the awesomeness of his art made it worth the effort to learn the correct spelling of Sienkiewicz. As you can see from the following splash pages, Sienkiewicz hit the ground running as a far-better-than-average Neal Adams imitator. You can also see his art changing in each splash page (from The Hulk! issues 13-15, 17-18), his own unique style finding itself bit by bit. By the early 80s, Sienkiewicz had become a sensation, his innovative style blazing the trail for the next "new wave" of comicbook art.

LinkWithin

Blog Widget by LinkWithin
Comic Blog Elite
Diversions of the Groovy Kind at Blogged Diversions of the Groovy Kind - Blogged
My BlogCatalog BlogRank
Note to "The Man": All images are presumed copyright by the respective copyright holders and are presented here as fair use under applicable laws, man! If you hold the copyright to a work I've posted and would like me to remove it, just drop me an e-mail and it's gone, baby, gone.

All other commentary and insanity copyright GroovyAge, Ltd.

As for the rest of ya, the purpose of this blog is to (re)introduce you to the great comics of the 1970s. If you like what you see, do what I do--go to a comics shop, bookstore, e-Bay or whatever and BUY YOUR OWN!