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Eduardo Barreto (1954–2011)

Author of Superman: Speeding Bullets

17+ Works 552 Members 14 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Includes the name: Ed Barreto

Works by Eduardo Barreto

Superman: Speeding Bullets (1993) — Illustrator — 99 copies
Batman: Master of the Future (1991) — Illustrator — 89 copies
Noir: A Collection of Crime Comics [2009] (2009) — Illustrator — 82 copies
Irredeemable Vol. 8 (2012) — Illustrator — 70 copies
A New Hope: Special Edition [graphic novel] (1992) — Illustrator — 55 copies
Batman: Scar of the Bat (1996) — Illustrator — 39 copies
Batman/Daredevil: King of New York (2000) — Artist — 27 copies
The Long Haul (2005) — Illustrator — 24 copies
Lex Luthor: The Unauthorized Biography (1989) — Illustrator — 23 copies
Swamp Thing Annual #4 (1988) — Illustrator — 8 copies
Martian Manhunter American Secrets, #1 (1992) — Illustrator — 4 copies
Marvel Westerns: The Two-Gun Kid #1 - Tooth & Claw (2006) — Illustrator — 3 copies
Atari Force (1984) #13 (1985) — Illustrator — 2 copies

Associated Works

Birds of Prey: Between Dark & Dawn (2006) — Illustrator — 149 copies
Chase (2011) — Illustrator — 63 copies
The Justice Society Returns! (2003) — Illustrator — 60 copies
Batman Versus Bane (2008) — Inker — 56 copies
Star Wars Omnibus: The Complete Saga: Episodes I through VI (2011) — Pencils / Inks — 38 copies
Wonder Woman: Featuring over Five Decades of Great Covers (1972) — Illustrator — 29 copies
Marvel Westerns (Marvel Comics) (2006) — some editions — 25 copies
Batman Sonderband 3: Bane I (2002) — Inker — 4 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Barreto, Eduardo
Legal name
Barreto Ferreyra, Luis Eduardo
Other names
Kopy, S. Gneis
Barreto, Ed
Birthdate
1954-01
Date of death
2011-12-15
Gender
male
Nationality
Uruguay
Birthplace
Montevideo, Uruguay

Members

Reviews

 
Flagged
freixas | 2 other reviews | Mar 31, 2023 |
Lex Luthor: The Unauthorized Biography features writing from James D. Hudnall, art by Eduardo Barreto, color from Adam Kubert, and letters by Bill Oakley. As a graphic novel, the book could go beyond the weakened limits of the Comic Code in 1989, focusing on Peter Sands, a washed-up drunk of a reporter who sets out to write a sleazy biography of Luthor in order to raise some funds. Hudnall tells the story in flashback, with Clark Kent relaying what he knows of these events to police since he stands accused of Sands’s murder. As the story unwinds, Hudnall portrays a Luthor who tormented those around him from a young age, figuring out how to wield power over others and scheming to control them. Hudnall portrays Luthor having his parents killed for insurance money and then parleying that windfall into a front company that enabled him to develop and distribute designer drugs, filling the gap left when the CIA’s Air America program ended. Barreto’s portrayal of Metropolis’ slums differs from the usual clean, well-lit city of Superman, recalling instead David Mazzucchelli’s portrayal of Gotham in Batman: Year One with its grime and vice. Kubert’s colors add to this effect, with more muted colors and washes bringing out the grittiness of Barreto’s linework.

When Sands pitches the book to Ellen Fisher at Tinsel Town Press, she responds, “That sounds great! Could do better than Trump’s book.” The reference to Trump: The Art of the Deal doesn’t end there as Eric Peterson’s cover illustration directly references the cover to Tony Schwartz and Trump’s book, especially in the font choice and layout. This works particularly well, coming as it does three years after Marv Wolfman and John Byrne’s post-Crisis revamping of Lex Luthor as a wealthy businessman in 1986. While the story takes place in Superman’s world, the Man of Steel only makes a brief blur of an appearance. Most of the story is grounded, taking place in the human world even as Luthor’s power and influence begin to border on classic supervillainy. Hudnall builds on Luthor’s identity as a businessman when he depicts Sands getting the opportunity to ask Lex why he did what he did. Luthor responds, “Life is short. I could have become like my parents, had I chose to wallow in cheap emotion and self loathing, as did they. Instead I chose to become a god. I control human lives, instead of being controlled. I can destroy someone with a phone call. Which is why I cannot abide Superman! There is only room for one god on this planet!” Though no longer canon, Lex Luthor: The Unauthorized Biography offers an interesting take on Superman nemesis that feels all-too-relevant today.
… (more)
½
 
Flagged
DarthDeverell | 1 other review | Sep 17, 2019 |
In Batman: Master of the Future, Brian Augustyn and Eduardo Barreto continue the story begun in Gotham by Gaslight in which the Victorian-era Bat-Man continues the fight for justice. Having beaten Jack the Ripper, Bat-Man must again don the cape and cowl to defend Gotham's World's Fair at the turn of the century from Alexandre LeRoi, the Man of Tomorrow, who feels the increasing pace of modernization will destroy society. This story has even more steampunk elements than Augustyn's first Elseworlds tale, with LeRoi using an airship as his base of attack. Fans of the first will likely enjoy this, although Eduardo Barreto's art is markedly different from that of Mike Mignola in the original volume.… (more)
½
 
Flagged
DarthDeverell | 1 other review | Dec 6, 2017 |
Interesting end to this series. Loved the nod to two iconic comic writers in the final pages.
 
Flagged
TysonAdams | 2 other reviews | Jun 20, 2017 |

Awards

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Associated Authors

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Gabriel Ba Illustrator
Hugo Petrus Illustrator
Stefano Gaudiano Illustrator
Fábio Moon Illustrator
Kano Illustrator
KEN LIZZI Author
Paul Grist Author
Sean Phillips Illustrator
Rick Geary Author
Diego Barreto Illustrator
Damian Couceiro Illustrator
Peter Krause Illustrator
Pat Broderick Illustrator
Ron Randall Illustrator
Mike Hoffman Illustrator
Dennis O'Neil Editor, Group Editor
Steve Oliff Colorist
Kelley Puckett Assistant Editor
Ed Dukeshire Letterer
Zac Atkinson Colorist
Carlos Garzon Illustrator
Al Williamson Illustrator
Jordan B. Gorfinkel Associate Editor
Todd Klein Letterer
Sherilyn Van Valkenburgh Colour Separations
Matt Hicks Assistant Editor
Ken Bruzenak Letterer
Joe Illidge Associate Editor
Adam Kubert Color Artist
Bob Pinaha Letterer
Tatjana Wood Colorist
Eric Powell Cover artist
Trevor Hairsine Cover artist

Statistics

Works
17
Also by
8
Members
552
Popularity
#45,212
Rating
½ 3.4
Reviews
14
ISBNs
23
Languages
1
Favorited
1

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