Joe Quesada
Autor von Batman: Sword of Azrael
Über den Autor
Bildnachweis: Photo by Wikipedia User Nightscream
Werke von Joe Quesada
All-New Miracleman Annual #1 (2014) — Illustrator; Umschlagillustration, einige Ausgaben — 5 Exemplare
The Mighty Avengers-Most Wanted Files 4 Exemplare
Secrets of the House of M #1 — Illustrator — 3 Exemplare
Gus Beezer With Spider-man 3 Exemplare
New Avengers: Most Wanted Files — Herausgeber — 2 Exemplare
Iron Man (1998) #27 2 Exemplare
Iron Man (1998) #26 2 Exemplare
Iron Man, Activity Book(includes over 50 stickers, 1 pull-out poster and 1 growth chart) (2008) 2 Exemplare
Iron Man (1998) #28 2 Exemplare
Ash, Vol. 1 1 Exemplar
Iron Man (1998) #34 1 Exemplar
Ash Volume One 1 Exemplar
Iron Man (1998) #33 1 Exemplar
Supereroi - Le grandi saghe vol. 35 1 Exemplar
Iron Man (1998) Annual 2000 1 Exemplar
Iron Man (1998) #32 1 Exemplar
Iron Man (1998) #31 1 Exemplar
Daredevil (1998) #12 1 Exemplar
Marvel Knights Sketchbook 1 Exemplar
NYX #2 1 Exemplar
NYX #4 1 Exemplar
NYX #7 1 Exemplar
NYX #3 1 Exemplar
NYX #5 1 Exemplar
NYX #6 1 Exemplar
Iron Man (1998) #35 1 Exemplar
Iron Man (1998) #29 1 Exemplar
Iron Man (1998) #30 1 Exemplar
Ash 1 Exemplar
Zugehörige Werke
Black Panther by Christopher Priest: The Complete Collection Volume 1 (2015) — Illustrator — 134 Exemplare
The Amazing Spider-Man (Vol. 1) #573: New Ways to Die, Part 6 (2008) — Umschlagillustration, einige Ausgaben — 2 Exemplare
Wolverine (2003) #33 - Chasing Ghosts, Part 1 — Umschlagillustration — 1 Exemplar
Getagged
Wissenswertes
- Geburtstag
- 1962-01-12
- Geschlecht
- male
- Nationalität
- USA
- Berufe
- Co-Publisher, Marvel Comics
Mitglieder
Rezensionen
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Statistikseite
- Werke
- 71
- Auch von
- 24
- Mitglieder
- 729
- Beliebtheit
- #34,830
- Bewertung
- 3.8
- Rezensionen
- 18
- ISBNs
- 51
- Sprachen
- 7
First, the art. Joe Quesada can be a wonderful artist...I mean, just look at that cover. But he's also wildly inconsistent with characters' faces, often too cartoonish, while imbuing the rest of the page with gritty realism. There's times when it feels like he's learned to do faces from Berni Wrightson, only not as well, or as consistent. The problem is, I don't know if it's the issue with Quesada, or his inker, Jimmy Palmiotti. Regardless, when they're good, they're phenomenal. But when they're off, they're really bad.
Then there's the two story arcs presented here. The first is by filmmaker Kevin Smith and, while it starts out quite strong, in fairly quickly devolves into silliness, and the villain's multi-page monologue explanation of what happened behind the scenes and why he did what he did? Cringe-worthy. Just...terrible.
And yet, Smith also get some stuff in there...sub-plots and observations about life and law and being a red-suited superhero...that are just gorgeous to read. Overall, I've heard other complain about the wordiness. That doesn't concern me...this is a book...it's meant to be read, as well as to see all the pretty pictures. Just, make those words count. That's all I ask.
The second, shorter arc gives us a different writer, David Mack (who's art I adore, and really wished he'd drawn the thing too) presenting us with the first appearance of Echo, who is an extremely interesting and multi-layered character. And Mack utterly sells the blossoming relationship between her and Matt Murdock. However, the difference between Mack and Smith's writing is jarring in their differences. On the plus side, Quesada even rises to the challenge here and gives us some very Mack-like pages of art that were really strong.
Have to admit, I also enjoyed all the Jay and Silent Bob references that Mack and Quesada dropped into the narrative. This arc, just because of a stronger plot and art, and likely because it was shorter, is far better.
Overall, there's a lot of life-changing events mashed into these pages, and both stories are worth the read.… (mehr)