

Some issues, he'd just appear, lecture the central character then vanish again. Sean, The Phantom Stranger was the least-defined comic I ever read. I feel he'd got the hang of drawing the strip by then. In fairness to John Romita, his final issue was excellent. I think I will try and score a used copy somewhere, when it becomes cheap.įFf, yes, I loved it when John Buscema took over the Fantastic Four. It has unsettled my already unquiet brain. This piqued my curiosity to the nth level and I googled it and checked out some of the pages. He's been working on and off on it for like, thirty years. It certainly adds some variety!īarry Smith's Conan is up there, and it was this very day I was reading the NPR website and there was an interview with him.Īpparently, he has completed and published his magnum opus, a massive graphic novel entitled Monsters. I agree whole-heartedly with Charlie that's it's great to see old D.C. How could a kid resist a showdown between Spider-Man and Cap and the Falcon? Was this their first encounter? But I've forgotten what happens in that one. Sal Buscema, I think, but I dunno who the inker is. "The brute that shouted love at the heart of the atom!"Ī strong crop of comics today, Steve. Ps The Romita issues sold better than the final year of Kirby. Great Post about my favourite comic title! Keep up the good work my friend. They are a quantum leap in quality from the previous John Romita issues(#103-106)which were flat and must have frightened the wits out of Stan Lee as they looked poor! Buscema restored FF to previous glories especially the Hulk crossover. As you can guess I loved those comics and there seemed to be extra time and care taken with them. The colouring in those issues especially #107-116 also seemed super sharp and noticeably richer. At the time I did not notice any difference but the artwork is highly detailed in this issue you have reviewed#110 and continued at a very high level until the late #120"s. His artwork was sensational over those original 3 years he was on the title.I read, would you believe, in the FF's letter column that for his last year or so(#130-142)that he only did breakdowns.Joe Sinnot completed the finished art. You may delete this file once you've updated to version 5 and things are running smoothly.Loved Fantastic Four with John Buscema, superb artwork which looked like Big John was enjoying taking over Marvels flagship title.
Dvdpedia iafd update#
A Database.pediadata file which was created as backup during the update from version 4 to version 5.This folder never gets overwritten by the program unlike the Plug-ins folder inside the application which gets overwritten with each update. A Plug-ins folder which holds any plug-ins you downloaded from our Extras page or written yourself.This folder never gets overwritten by the program unlike the InfoTemplates folder inside the application which gets overwritten with each update. An InfoTemplates folder which holds any details view templates you customized or wrote yourself.This folder never gets overwritten by the program unlike the Templates folder inside the application which gets overwritten with each update. A Templates folder which holds any export or print templates you customized or wrote yourself.


Up to three backup.dvdpd files which are backup files of the original Database.dvdpd file.A Database.dvdpd file which holds all the data for your DVDpedia database in SQL format.It contains the following files and folders: Your DVDpedia database information is kept in a folder called "DVDpedia" apart from the actual application so if you should delete DVDpedia.app from your computer by mistake, your data will be safe.īy default, the DVDpedia data folder is located in your Home folder under ~/Library/Application Support/DVDpedia.
