Read v for vendetta online free6/29/2023 ![]() Three years later, V for Vendetta would find a new home, and a wider audience, with DC Comics. It was one of the comic’s most popular strips, but Warrior was cancelled after only 26 issues due to low sales. To step back for a moment, and to help anyone playing catch-up here, V for Vendetta first ran as a black-and-white strip between 19, in Warrior, a British anthology comic published by Quality Communications. London’s Cartoon Museum’s exhibition, V for Vendetta: Behind the Mask, opening tomorrow, Tuesday 18th May 2021, caters for both entry points, containing as it does both original black and white artwork, and the coloured acetates that David Lloyd, working with colourists the work of Steve Whitaker and Siobhan Dodds, subsequently produced for US publisher DC Comics, famously the publishers of Batman and Superman titles, who persuaded Alan Moore and Lloyd to let them give V for Vendetta a new home, initially as a ten-issue maxi series in 1988. If you’ve only ever read the collected edition, with its iconic mask cover, a symbol since adopted by many of protest, including campaigners Anonymous, then you’ll only be familiar with the colour version of the art. If you read the episodes of V for Vendetta published in, say, Warrior, then you will have seen David Lloyd’s black and white artwork before. I may only have read the story once, but I was blown away by it at the time, and would recommend it to anyone out there who hasn’t read it at all – even if they’re not a regular comics fan or reader. ![]() However, when I do finally get the time, it will be V for Vendetta that’s at the top of my re-reading pile – a long way ahead of Watchmen, I must add. In fact, the reason for only having read them once, so far, is that there are always so many other comics to read… I just never seem to have the time to start re-reading stuff, too! ![]() I’ve only read Alan Moore and David Lloyd’s V for Vendetta once, just as I’ve only read Watchmen, by Alan and Dave Gibbons, once – which some might consider a pretty poor batting average for a comics fan like me. Comic Projects: The Really Heavy GreatcoatĬonfession time.Comics Projects: Return to Planet Earth.Starblazer Checklist: Starblazer Abroad.Starblazer Recalled: Forgotten Fantasy Fiction – With Pictures.British Comic Reference | British Comic Characters Profiled | Garth.Marvel UK | “Genesis ’92”: Looking Back and What Might Have Been.Marvel UK in Print: Captain Britain, Death’s Head, Doctor Who and more – A Quick Guide.Action – The Sevenpenny Nightmare – Micro Site.British and Irish Creators and Publishers on Twitter.British Classic Comics and Creators on Facebook.British Comics Sales Figures: The Good Old Days.British News Stand Comics and Magazines for Teens, Pre-Teens and Children.Why Your Favourite British Comic Strip of 1974 Hasn’t Been Reprinted – Yet!. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |