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Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 84

AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #43 * CGC 4.0 * Real-Time Rhino * Which Peter: Parker or Pan?

Schätzpreis
100 $ - 150 $
Zuschlagspreis:
237 $
Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 84

AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #43 * CGC 4.0 * Real-Time Rhino * Which Peter: Parker or Pan?

Schätzpreis
100 $ - 150 $
Zuschlagspreis:
237 $
Beschreibung:

CGC certified: VG (4.0). Off-white to white pages. Not cleaned and pressed. Cover: John Romita pencils and inks, Stan Goldberg colors. Story: Stan Lee and John Romita. Art: John Romita. Lettering: Artie Simek. GPAnalysis: A 4.0 sold for $185 in 5/22. Spidey fights the Rhino; Pete and MJ make the scene on Pete's new motorcycle. Romita, tasked with drawing like Ditko, has instead "made a more or less decent stab at drawing Spider-Man as Kirby might have drawn him." — Rilstone . All the fascinating psychosexual baggage that gave weight to Ditko's renderings has vanished, though. It's only been five issues since Ditko's departure, but in some ways it feels like a million years. The letter column is full of praise for Romita, with nary a sigh for the loss of Ditko, no pleas for his return. Romita's slick, glammed-up style made Spidey far more accessible to "the pantin' public," as Stan Lee called Marvel's rabid readership, and ASM soon eclipsed Fantastic Four as Marvel's top-selling mag. One letter writer, rattled by Pete's recent high school graduation, pleads with Stan to make Peter Parker a Peter Pan: "Spider-Man must never grow up! ...Spider-Man is a symbol of teenage youth—our energy, our arrogance, our idealism, our confusion... He is the one super-hero we can really identify with. Apart from that he's nothing special." Stan offers a No-prize to any reader who can solve the crisis: "If Spidey does stop aging, won't we then have to do the same with all of our other characters... and where will it all end?" Marvel postponed the problem, but it would eventually have to be reckoned with. The eventual solution was "Marvel Time," a sliding timeline designed to keep the heroes young. As Tom Breevort wrote in a 2013 blog post: "[In the 1980s] the 'seven year rule' was first devised, which postulated that it had been perhaps seven years since FANTASTIC FOUR #1 in story time, regardless of how many real-world years had passed." Enjoying the Spidey Sale? Order a fully-illustrated softcover catalogue for 30 bucks. Only about 100 copies were printed and they're going fast. To reserve a copy, contact PBA's Director of Comics: [email protected] Consign to PBA Galleries. Our comic sales average a 98% sell-through rate, our prices realized are top-of-the-market, and our research-intensive catalogues are the best in the business. Seeking Silver Age Marvel, Golden Age superheroes, and pre-Code horror. Contact [email protected]

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 84
Auktion:
Datum:
08.12.2022
Auktionshaus:
PBA Galleries
1233 Sutter Street
San Francisco, CA 94109
Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika
pba@pbagalleries.com
+1 (0)415 9892665
+1 (0)415 9891664
Beschreibung:

CGC certified: VG (4.0). Off-white to white pages. Not cleaned and pressed. Cover: John Romita pencils and inks, Stan Goldberg colors. Story: Stan Lee and John Romita. Art: John Romita. Lettering: Artie Simek. GPAnalysis: A 4.0 sold for $185 in 5/22. Spidey fights the Rhino; Pete and MJ make the scene on Pete's new motorcycle. Romita, tasked with drawing like Ditko, has instead "made a more or less decent stab at drawing Spider-Man as Kirby might have drawn him." — Rilstone . All the fascinating psychosexual baggage that gave weight to Ditko's renderings has vanished, though. It's only been five issues since Ditko's departure, but in some ways it feels like a million years. The letter column is full of praise for Romita, with nary a sigh for the loss of Ditko, no pleas for his return. Romita's slick, glammed-up style made Spidey far more accessible to "the pantin' public," as Stan Lee called Marvel's rabid readership, and ASM soon eclipsed Fantastic Four as Marvel's top-selling mag. One letter writer, rattled by Pete's recent high school graduation, pleads with Stan to make Peter Parker a Peter Pan: "Spider-Man must never grow up! ...Spider-Man is a symbol of teenage youth—our energy, our arrogance, our idealism, our confusion... He is the one super-hero we can really identify with. Apart from that he's nothing special." Stan offers a No-prize to any reader who can solve the crisis: "If Spidey does stop aging, won't we then have to do the same with all of our other characters... and where will it all end?" Marvel postponed the problem, but it would eventually have to be reckoned with. The eventual solution was "Marvel Time," a sliding timeline designed to keep the heroes young. As Tom Breevort wrote in a 2013 blog post: "[In the 1980s] the 'seven year rule' was first devised, which postulated that it had been perhaps seven years since FANTASTIC FOUR #1 in story time, regardless of how many real-world years had passed." Enjoying the Spidey Sale? Order a fully-illustrated softcover catalogue for 30 bucks. Only about 100 copies were printed and they're going fast. To reserve a copy, contact PBA's Director of Comics: [email protected] Consign to PBA Galleries. Our comic sales average a 98% sell-through rate, our prices realized are top-of-the-market, and our research-intensive catalogues are the best in the business. Seeking Silver Age Marvel, Golden Age superheroes, and pre-Code horror. Contact [email protected]

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 84
Auktion:
Datum:
08.12.2022
Auktionshaus:
PBA Galleries
1233 Sutter Street
San Francisco, CA 94109
Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika
pba@pbagalleries.com
+1 (0)415 9892665
+1 (0)415 9891664
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