|
Graphic
Novel Collection
Profiles
Marvel
Comics Books
Marvel
Entertainment

Websites
Graphic
Novel Collection Marvel
Entertainment



Profiles
Marvel
Entertainment Marvel
Slot Games Superhero
THE
HULK THE
HULK - HULK'S REVENGE
News
Marvel
Hero Jackpot Slots Available at PartyCasino.com
THE
HULK FANTASTIC
FOUR THE
AMAZING SPIDER-MAN THOR
PartyCasino.com
website PartyCasino.com
profile

FANTASTIC
FOUR Spider-Man
THE
HULK THE
HULK - HULK'S REVENGE

Wolverine


X-Men

IRON
MAN

THE
HULK

Marvel
Slot Games
The
Hulk The
Hulk II Spider-Man
Spider-Man
II IRON
MAN IRON
MAN II Blade
Fantastic
Four Wolverine
X-Men
Thor
Ghost
Rider DareDevil
Sub-Mariner
The
Punisher Elektra
Stan
Lee
InterCasino
Marvel
Entertainment Stan
Lee

MarvelSlotsOnline.com

Marvel
Entertainment
Feature
Marvel
Super Heroes Themed Slot Games
The
Hulk Spider-Man
Iron
Man Fantastic
Four Street
Fighter
PartyCasino
The
Hulk
 
The
Hulk
Spider-Man

Fantastic
Four

Iron
Man
PartyPartners.com
AffClub.com
Marvel
Super Heroes Marvel
Slot Games
Stan
Lee
Website
PartyCasino.com
Marvel
Super Heroes Marvel
Slot Games
News
Cryptologic
Aims High With Launch of Newest Casino Game - 6th
January 2009
Drawn
from unreal life - 22nd March 2008
CryptoLogic
makes casino games out of Marvel Comics! - 21st September
2007
Profile
Marvel
Comics is an American comic book company owned by
Marvel Publishing, Inc., a subsidiary of Marvel Entertainment,
Inc.
Marvel
counts among its characters such well-known properties
as Captain America, Spider-Man, the X-Men, the Fantastic
Four, the Hulk, Thor, Iron Man, Doctor Strange, the
Punisher, Daredevil, Ghost Rider and many others.
Most of Marvel's fictional characters are depicted
as inhabitants of a single shared reality; this continuity
is known as the Marvel Universe.
The
comic book arm of the company was founded in 1939
as Timely Publications and was generally known as
Atlas Comics in the 1950s. Marvel's modern incarnation
dates from the early 1960s, with the launching of
Fantastic Four and other superhero titles created
by Stan Lee, Jack Kirby, Steve Ditko, and others.
Marvel has since become one of the largest American
comics companies, along with DC Comics.
Timely
Marvel
Comics was founded as Timely Publications in 1939,
and is now the largest comic company in the world.
It was founded by Martin Goodman, a pulp-magazine
publisher whose first publication was a Western pulp
in 1933. Expanding into the emerging and by then already
highly popular new medium of comic books, Goodman
began his new line at his existing company at 330
West 42nd Street, New York City, New York. His official
titles were editor, managing editor, and business
manager, with Abraham Goodman officially listed as
publisher.
Timely's
first publication was Marvel Comics #1 (Oct. 1939),
containing the first appearance of Carl Burgos' android
superhero, the Human Torch, and the first generally
available appearance of Bill Everett's anti-hero Namor
the Sub-Mariner, among other features. The contents
of that sales blockbuster were supplied by an outside
packager, Funnies, Inc., but by the following year
Timely had a staff in place. With the second issue
the series title changed to Marvel Mystery Comics.
The
company's first true editor, writer-artist Joe Simon,
teamed with soon-to-be industry legend Jack Kirby
to create one of the first patriotically themed superheroes,
Captain America, in Captain America Comics #1 (March
1941). It, too, proved a major sales hit, with a circulation
of nearly one million.
While
no other Timely character would be as successful as
these "big three", some notable heroes —
many continuing to appear in modern-day retcon appearances
and flashbacks — include the Whizzer, Miss America,
the Destroyer, the original Vision, and Paul Gustavson's
Angel. Timely also published one of humor cartoonist
Basil Wolverton's best-known features, "Powerhouse
Pepper", as well as a children's funny animal
line whose most popular characters were Super Rabbit
and the duo Ziggy Pig and Silly Seal.
Goodman
hired a teenaged relative, Stanley Lieber, as a general
office assistant in 1939. When editor Simon left the
company in late 1941, Goodman made Lieber —
by then writing pseudonymously as "Stan Lee"
— interim editor of the comics line, a position
Lee kept for decades except for three years during
his World War II military service.
1960s
In
the wake of DC Comics' success reviving superheroes
in the late 1950s and early 1960s, particularly with
The Justice League of America, Marvel followed suit.
Editor/writer
Stan Lee and freelance artist Jack Kirby created the
Fantastic Four, reminiscent of the non-superpowered
adventuring quartet the Challengers of the Unknown
that Kirby had created for DC in 1957. Living in a
Cold War culture, the Marvel creators sought to deconstruct
the superhero conventions of previous eras to better
reflect the psychological spirit of their age. Eschewing
such comic-book tropes as secret identities and even
costumes at first, having a monster as one of the
heroes, and having its characters bicker and complain
in what was later called a "superheroes in the
real world" approach, the series represented
a change that proved to be a great success. Marvel
began publishing further superhero titles featuring
such heroes and antiheroes as the Hulk, Spider-Man,
Thor, Ant-Man, Iron Man, the X-Men and Daredevil,
and such memorable antagonists as Doctor Doom, Magneto,
Galactus, the Green Goblin, and Doctor Octopus. The
most successful new series was The Amazing Spider-Man,
by Lee and Ditko. Marvel even lampooned itself and
other comics companies in a parody comic, Not Brand
Echh (a play on Marvel's dubbing of other companies
as "Brand Echh", a la the then-common phrase
"Brand X").
Marvel's
comics were noted for focusing on characterization
to a greater extent than most superhero comics before
them. This was true of The Amazing Spider-Man, in
particular. Its young hero suffered from self-doubt
and mundane problems like any other teenager. Marvel
superheroes are often flawed, freaks, and misfits,
unlike the perfect, handsome, athletic heroes found
in previous traditional comic books. Some Marvel heroes
looked like villains and monsters. In time, this non-traditional
approach would revolutionize comic books.
Comics
historian Peter Sanderson wrote that in the 1960s,
“ DC was the equivalent of the big Hollywood
studios: After the brilliance of DC's reinvention
of the superhero ... in the late 1950s and early 1960s,
it had run into a creative drought by the decade's
end. There was a new audience for comics now, and
it wasn't just the little kids that traditionally
had read the books. The Marvel of the 1960s was in
its own way the counterpart of the French New Wave....
Marvel was pioneering new methods of comics storytelling
and characterization, addressing more serious themes,
and in the process keeping and attracting readers
in their teens and beyond. Moreover, among this new
generation of readers were people who wanted to write
or draw comics themselves, within the new style that
Marvel had pioneered, and push the creative envelope
still further.”
Lee
became one of the best-known names in comics, with
his charming personality and relentless salesmanship
of the company. His sense of humor and generally lighthearted
manner became the "voice" that permeated
the stories, the letters and news pages, and the hyperbolic
house ads of that era's Marvel Comics, and fostered
a clubby fan-following with Lee's exaggerated depiction
of the Bullpen (Lee's name for the staff) as one big,
happy family. This included printed kudos to the artists,
who eventually co-plotted the stories based on the
busy Lee's rough synopses or even simple spoken concepts,
in what became known as the Marvel Method, and contributed
greatly to Marvel's product and success. Kirby in
particular is generally credited for many of the cosmic
ideas and characters of Fantastic Four and The Mighty
Thor, such as the Watcher, the Silver Surfer and Ego
the Living Planet, while Steve Ditko is recognized
as the driving artistic force behind the moody atmosphere
and street-level naturalism of Spider-Man and the
surreal atmosphere of Dr. Strange. Lee, however, continues
to receive credit for his well-honed skills at dialogue
and story sense, for his keen hand at choosing and
motivating artists and assembling creative teams,
and for his uncanny ability to connect with the readers
— not least through the nickname endearments
he bestowed in the credits and the monthly "Bullpen
Bulletins" and letters pages, giving readers
humanizing hype about the likes of "Jolly Jack
Kirby", "Rascally Roy Thomas", "Jazzy
Johnny Romita" and others, right down to letterers
"Swingin' Sammy Rosen" and "Adorable
Artie Simek".
Lesser-known
staffers during the company's industry-changing growth
in the 1960s (some of whom worked primarily for Marvel
publisher Martin Goodman's umbrella magazine corporation)
included circulation manager Johnny Hayes, subscriptions
person Nancy Murphy, bookkeeper Doris Siegler, merchandising
person Chip Goodman (son of publisher Martin) and
Arthur Jeffrey, described in the December 1966 "Bullpen
Bulletin" as "keeper of our MMMS [Merry
Marvel Marching Society] files, guardian of our club
coupons and defender of the faith".
In
the fall of 1968, company founder Goodman sold Marvel
Comics and his other publishing businesses to the
Perfect Film and Chemical Corporation. It grouped
these businesses in a subsidiary called Magazine Management
Co. Goodman remained as publisher.
1970s
In
1971, Marvel Comics editor-in-chief Stan Lee was approached
by the United States Department of Health, Education,
and Welfare to do a comic book story about drug abuse.
Lee agreed and wrote a three-part Spider-Man story
portraying drug use as dangerous and unglamorous.
However, the industry's self-censorship board, the
Comics Code Authority, refused to approve the story
because of the presence of narcotics, deeming the
context of the story irrelevant. Lee, with Goodman's
approval, published the story regardless in The Amazing
Spider-Man #96-98 (May-July 1971), without the Comics
Code seal. The storyline was well-received and the
Code was subsequently revised the same year.
Goodman
retired as publisher in 1972 and was succeeded by
Lee, who stepped aside from running day-to-day operations
at Marvel. A series of new editors-in-chief oversaw
the company during another slow time for the industry.
Once again, Marvel attempted to diversify, and with
the updating of the Comics Code achieved moderate
success with titles themed to horror (Tomb of Dracula),
martial arts, (Shang-Chi: Master of Kung Fu), sword-and-sorcery
(Conan the Barbarian, Red Sonja), satire (Howard the
Duck) and science fiction ("Killraven" in
Amazing Adventures). Some of these were published
in larger-sized black-and-white magazines, targeted
for mature readers, under its Curtis Magazines imprint.
Marvel was able to capitalize on its successful superhero
comics of the previous decade by acquiring a new newsstand
distributor and greatly expanding its comics line.
Marvel pulled ahead of rival DC Comics in 1972, during
a time when the price and format of the standard newsstand
comic were in flux. Goodman increase the price and
size of Marvel's November 1971 cover-dated comics
from 15 cents for 36 pages total to 25 cents for 52
pages. DC followed suit, but Marvel the following
month dropped its comics to 20 cents for 36 pages,
offering a lower-priced product with a higher distributor
discount.
In
1973, Perfect Film and Chemical Corporation changed
its name to Cadence Industries, which in turn renamed
Magazine Management Co. as Marvel Comics Group. Goodman,
now completely disconnected from Marvel, created a
new company called Atlas/Seaboard Comics in 1974,
reviving Marvel's old Atlas name, but this project
lasted only a year-and-a-half.
In
the mid-1970s, Marvel was affected by a decline of
the newsstand distribution network. Cult hits such
as Howard the Duck were the victims of the distribution
problems, with some titles reporting low sales when
in fact they were being resold at a later date in
the first specialty comic-book stores.[citation needed]
But by the end of the decade, Marvel's fortunes were
reviving, thanks to the rise of direct market distribution
— selling through those same comics-specialty
stores instead of newsstands.
In
October 1976, Marvel, which already licensed reprints
in different countries, including the UK, created
a superhero specifically for the British market. Captain
Britain debuted exclusively in the UK, and later appeared
in American comics.
1980s
By
the 1980s, Jim Shooter was Marvel's editor-in-chief.
Although a controversial personality, Shooter cured
many of the procedural ills at Marvel (including repeatedly
missed deadlines) and oversaw a creative renaissance
at the company. This renaissance included institutionalizing
creator royalties, starting the Epic imprint for creator-owned
material in 1982, and launching a brand-new (albeit
ultimately unsuccessful) line named New Universe,
to commemorate Marvel's 25th anniversary, in 1986.
However, Shooter was responsible for the introduction
of the company-wide crossover (Contest of Champions,
Secret Wars).
In
1981 Marvel purchased the DePatie-Freleng Enterprises
animation studio from famed Looney Tunes director
Friz Freleng and his business partner David H. DePatie.
The company was renamed Marvel Productions and it
produced well-known animated TV series and movies
featuring such characters as G.I. Joe, The Transformers,
Jim Henson's Muppet Babies, and such TV series as
Dungeons & Dragons, as well as cartoons based
on Marvel characters, including Spider-Man and His
Amazing Friends.
In
1986, Marvel was sold to New World Entertainment,
which within three years sold it to MacAndrews and
Forbes, owned by Revlon executive Ronald Perelman.
Perelman took the company public on the New York Stock
Exchange and oversaw a great increase in the number
of titles Marvel published. As part of the process,
Marvel Productions sold its back catalog to Saban
Entertainment (acquired in 2001 by Disney).
1990s
Marvel
earned a great deal of money and recognition during
the early decade's comic-book boom, launching the
highly successful 2099 line of comics set in the future
(Spider-Man 2099, etc.) and the creatively daring
though commercially unsuccessful Razorline imprint
of superhero comics created by novelist and filmmaker
Clive Barker. Yet by the middle of the decade, the
industry had slumped and Marvel filed for bankruptcy
amidst investigations of Perelman's financial activities
regarding the company.
In
1990, Marvel began selling Marvel Universe Cards with
trading card maker Impel. These were collectible trading
cards that featured the characters and events of the
Marvel Universe.
Marvel
in 1992 acquired Fleer Corporation, known primarily
for its trading cards, and shortly thereafter created
Marvel Studios, devoted to film and TV projects. Avi
Arad became director of that division in 1993, with
production accelerating in 1998 following the success
of the film Blade.
In
1994, Marvel acquired the comic book distributor Heroes
World to use as its own exclusive distributor. As
the industry's other major publishers made exclusive
distribution deals with other companies, the ripple
effect resulted in the survival of only one other
major distributor in North America, Diamond Comic
Distributors Inc. Creatively and commercially, the
'90s were dominated by the use of gimmickry to boost
sales, such as variant covers, cover enhancements,
regular company-wide crossovers that threw the universe's
continuity into disarray, and even special swimsuit
issues. In 1996, Marvel had almost all its titles
participate in the Onslaught Saga, a crossover that
allowed Marvel to relaunch some of its flagship characters,
such as the Avengers and the Fantastic Four, in the
Heroes Reborn universe, in which Marvel defectors
Jim Lee and Rob Liefeld were given permission to revamp
the properties from scratch. After an initial sales
bump, sales quickly declined below expected levels,
and Marvel discontinued the experiment after a one-year
run; the characters returned to the Marvel Universe
proper. In 1998, the company launched the imprint
Marvel Knights, taking place within Marvel continuity;
helmed by soon-to-become editor-in-chief Joe Quesada,
and featuring tough, gritty stories showcasing such
characters as the Inhumans, Black Panther and Daredevil,
it achieved substantial success.
Marvel goes public
In
1991, Pereleman took Marvel public in a stock offering
underwritten by Merrill Lynch and First Boston Corporation.
Following the rapid rise of this immediately popular
stock, Perleman issued a series of junk bonds that
he used to acquire other children's entertainment
companies. Many of these bond offerings were purchased
by Carl Icahn Partners, which later wielded much control
during Marvel's court-ordered reorganization after
Marvel went bankrupt in 1996. In 1997, after protracted
legal battles, control landed in the hands of Isaac
Perlmutter, owner of the Marvel subsidiary Toy Biz.
With his business partner Avi Arad, publisher Bill
Jemas, and editor-in-chief Bob Harras, Perlmutter
helped revitalize the comics line.
2000s
With
the new millennium, Marvel Comics escaped from bankruptcy
and again began diversifying its offerings. In 2001,
Marvel withdrew from the Comics Code Authority and
established its own Marvel Rating System for comics.
The first title from the era to not have the code
was X-Force #119 (Oct. 2001). It also created new
imprints, such as MAX, a line intended for mature
readers, and Marvel Age, developed for younger audiences.
In addition to this is the highly successful Ultimate
Marvel imprint, which allowed Marvel to reboot their
major titles by deconstructing and updating its major
superhero and villain characters to introduce to a
new generation. This imprint exists in a universe
parallel to mainstream Marvel continuity, allowing
writers and artists freedom from the characters' convoluted
history and the ability to redesign them, and to maintain
their other ongoing series without replacing the established
continuity. This also allowed Marvel to capitalize
on an influx of new readers unfamiliar with comics
but familiar with the characters through the film
and TV franchises. The company has also revamped its
graphic novel division, establishing a bigger presence
in the bookstore market. As of 2007, Marvel remains
a key comics publisher, even as the industry has dwindled
to a fraction of its peak size decades earlier.
Stan
Lee, no longer officially connected to the company
save for the title of "Chairman Emeritus",
remains a visible face in the industry. In 2002, he
sued successfully for a share of income related to
movies and merchandising of Marvel characters, based
on a contract between Lee and Marvel from the late
1990s; according to court documents, Marvel had used
"Hollywood accounting" to claim that those
projects' "earnings" were not profits. Marvel
Comics' parent company Marvel Entertainment continues
to be traded on the New York Stock Exchange as MVL.
Some of its characters have been turned into successful
film franchises, the highest-grossing being the X-Men
film series, starting in 2000, and the Spider-Man
series, beginning in 2002
In
2006, Marvel's fictional crossover event "Civil
War" established federal superhero registration
in the Marvel universe, creating a political and ethical
schism throughout it. Also that year, Marvel created
its own wiki.
The
company launched a major online initiative late in
2007, announcing Marvel Digital Comics Unlimited,
a digital archive of 2,500 back issues available for
viewing, for a monthly or annual subscription fee.
This subscription fee was also Available on www.topcomicbooks.com.
In
November 2007, Marvel contacted the popular comic
book bittorrent site, Z-Cult FM, and gave it three
days to remove illegal scans of Marvel comic books
before Marvel pressed charges. Z-Cult contacted Marvel
and negotiated that it would remove all Marvel comics
from its site within seven days.
Editors-in-chief
The
Marvel editor-in-chief oversees the largest-scale
creative decisions taken within the company. While
the fabled Stan Lee held great authority during the
decades when publisher Martin Goodman privately held
his company, of which the comics division was a relatively
small part, his successors have been to greater and
lesser extents subject to corporate management.
The
position evolved sporadically. In the earliest years,
the company had a single editor overseeing the entire
line. As the company grew, it became increasingly
common for individual titles to be overseen separately.
The concept of the "writer-editor" evolved,
stemming from when Lee wrote and managed most of the
line's output. Overseeing the line in the 1970s was
a series of chief editors, though the titles were
used intermittently. Confusing matters further, some
appear to have been appointed merely by extending
their existing editorial duties. By the time Jim Shooter
took the post in 1978, the position of editor-in-chief
was clearly defined.
In
1994, Marvel briefly abolished the position, replacing
Tom DeFalco with five "group editors", though
each held the title "editor-in-chief" and
had some editors underneath them. It reinstated the
overall editor-in-chief position in 1995, installing
Bob Harras. Joe Quesada became editor-in-chief in
2000.
* Joe Simon (1940-1941)
* Stan Lee (1941-1942)
* Vincent Fago (acting editor during Lee's military
service) (1942-1945)
* Stan Lee (1945-1972)
* Roy Thomas (1972-1974)
* Len Wein (1974-1975)
* Marv Wolfman (black-and-white magazines 1974-1975,
entire line 1975-1976)
* Gerry Conway (1976)
* Archie Goodwin (1976-1978)
* Jim Shooter (1978-1987)
* Tom DeFalco (1987-1994)
* No overall editor-in-chief (1994-1995)
* Bob Harras (1995-2000)
* Joe Quesada (2000-present)
Offices
Located
in New York City, Marvel has been successively headquartered
in the McGraw-Hill Building (where it originated as
Timely Comics in 1939); in suite 1401 of the Empire
State Building; at 635 Madison Avenue (the actual
location, though the comic books' indicia listed the
parent publishing-company's address of 625 Madison
Ave.); 575 Madison Avenue; 387 Park Avenue South;
10 East 40th Street; and 417 Fifth Avenue.
Marvel characters in other media
Marvel
characters and stories have been adapted to many other
media. Some of these adaptations were produced by
Marvel, while others were produced by companies licensing
Marvel material.
Television programs
List of television series based on Marvel Comics
Many
television series, both live action and animated,
have been based on Marvel Comics characters. These
include multiple series for popular characters such
as Spider-Man and the Fantastic Four. Of particular
note were the animated series from the mid to late
90's, which were all part of the same Marvel animated
universe.
Additionally,
a handful of television movies based on Marvel Comics
characters have been made.
Films
Marvel
characters have been adapted into films including
the Spider-Man, Blade and X-Men trilogies; the Fantastic
Four, duology; Daredevil, Elektra, Ghost Rider, Iron
Man, The Incredible Hulk, and The Punisher: War Zone.
Additionally,
a series of direct-to-DVD animated films began in
2006 with Ultimate Avengers.
Theme
Parks
Marvel
has licensed its characters for theme parks and attractions,
including at the Universal Orlando Resort's Islands
of Adventure, in Orlando, Florida, which includes
rides based on the Hulk, Spider-man, and Doctor Doom,
and performers costumed as Captain America, the X-Men,
and Spider-Man. There are Marvel rides as well as
Universal theme parks in California and Japan. In
early 2007 Marvel and developer the Al Ahli Group
announced plans to build Marvel's first full theme
park, in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, by 2011.
Video games
List of video games based on Marvel comics (Credit:
Wikipedia)
Profiles
The
Hulk
Animation
Cartoons
Art
and The Creatives
Marvel
Comics video games
The
Hulk Spider-Man
Fantastic
Four
PartyPartners.com
AffClub.com
InterCasino.com
MarvelSlotsOnline.com
Marvel
Slots Online
Media
Man does not represent Marvel Comics
|