
Keith Williams (2) (1957–)
Author of Emperor Doom
For other authors named Keith Williams, see the disambiguation page.
Works by Keith Williams
Associated Works
Superman in Action Comics #594 — Inker, some editions — 3 copies
Fantomet spesial - Fantomet-utgivelse nr. 1000 — Illustrator — 1 copy
Comics Revue #186 — Illustrator — 1 copy
Silver Surfer [1987] #43 — Illustrator — 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1957-09-16
- Gender
- male
- Nationality
- USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- USA
Members
Reviews
This graphic novel seems inspired by the old idiom about dogs who chase cars and what would they do once they caught them. In it, Doctor Doom uses the powers of an unwilling Purple Man to achieve his long-sought goal of conquering the world. Yet with the world literally bowing before him, Doom soon finds that conquering the world is a lot more stimulating than running it. And when a group of Avengers challenge his dominance, Doom finds himself facing a most unusual dilemma . . .
One of the show more limitations of most comic book plots is that the bad guy usually has to lose -- and the more audacious the goal, the more likely it is that the bad guy will fail. For this reason David Micheline's graphic novel stands out for its relatively novel exploration of what it would be like if a world-conquering super-villain actually conquered the world. Perhaps because of this it's a little more fun than might be expected, with a few "kid in the candy store" moments that no world conquest story should be without. I'm less a fan of Bob Hall's art, but it's a matter of taste; more disappointing is the absence, in person or even by way of explanation, of Reed Richards, which is disappointing but perhaps understandable given that it's ultimately an Avengers story and not a FF one. Still, it's an entertaining story, one that stands as one of the more interesting one-shots Marvel has done over the years. show less
One of the show more limitations of most comic book plots is that the bad guy usually has to lose -- and the more audacious the goal, the more likely it is that the bad guy will fail. For this reason David Micheline's graphic novel stands out for its relatively novel exploration of what it would be like if a world-conquering super-villain actually conquered the world. Perhaps because of this it's a little more fun than might be expected, with a few "kid in the candy store" moments that no world conquest story should be without. I'm less a fan of Bob Hall's art, but it's a matter of taste; more disappointing is the absence, in person or even by way of explanation, of Reed Richards, which is disappointing but perhaps understandable given that it's ultimately an Avengers story and not a FF one. Still, it's an entertaining story, one that stands as one of the more interesting one-shots Marvel has done over the years. show less
A very interesting story, one that not only focuses on some individual Avengers, but that gives us some great insight into Dr. Doom. I've always loved the ending of this one.
Brutal stuff, this. Fire and molten metal and melted bots and torture and things being torn apart bodily and zapped and woah!
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 7
- Also by
- 28
- Members
- 106
- Popularity
- #181,886
- Rating
- 3.7
- Reviews
- 3
- ISBNs
- 38

