Mike Zeck
Author of Marvel Super Heroes Secret Wars
About the Author
Works by Mike Zeck
Marvel Super Heroes Secret Wars #3: Tempest Without, Crisis Within! (1984) — Illustrator — 11 copies, 1 review
Badger #33 — Illustrator — 2 copies
Badger #34 — Illustrator — 2 copies
Master of Kung Fu (1974 series) #100 — Illustrator — 2 copies
Captain America [1968] #279 — Illustrator — 1 copy
Batman Portfolio 1 copy
Associated Works
The Big Book of Little Criminals: 63 True Tales of the World's Most Incompetent Jailbirds! (1996) — Illustrator — 102 copies
Marvel Masterworks, Volume 127: Deathlok Volume 1 [Astonishing Tales #25-28 + #30-36 + Marvel Spotlight #33 + Marvel Team-Up #46 + Marvel Two-In-One #27 + #54 + Marvel Fanfare #4… (2008) — Illustrator — 28 copies
Guerras Secretas 2 – A Batalha Final (Heróis Marvel #13) (2012) — Illustrator, some editions — 2 copies
Monster Hunters #7, Sep. 1976 — Illustrator — 1 copy
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Reviews
Boy, was this a slog. I could appreciate the kitsch for only so long. I was reminded of the quote from John Waters: "Good bad taste is celebrating something without thinking you're better than it... Bad bad taste is condescending, making fun of others." Unfortunately, Jim Shooter's reckless, overwritten mess of a script inspires the latter.
I could see recommending Secret Wars for its historical value, and for the fact that Dr. Doom has got to be one of the ripest villains for popular show more revision. He is far and away the most interesting character in this (and other) stories. The camp can be rich, as in this morsel - the Wasp in book 6:
"Oh, no! I broke a nail! I don't even have an emery board and I'm thirty-seven trillion miles from my manicurist and it's her day off anyway!"
Moments like these are just too rare to make the book entertaining. No, mostly it's just boring, which is the worst thing a comic can be. show less
I could see recommending Secret Wars for its historical value, and for the fact that Dr. Doom has got to be one of the ripest villains for popular show more revision. He is far and away the most interesting character in this (and other) stories. The camp can be rich, as in this morsel - the Wasp in book 6:
"Oh, no! I broke a nail! I don't even have an emery board and I'm thirty-seven trillion miles from my manicurist and it's her day off anyway!"
Moments like these are just too rare to make the book entertaining. No, mostly it's just boring, which is the worst thing a comic can be. show less
Solidly written and drawn comics, but they're a little out of Captain America's typical milieu and they seem like Deathlok's comic, with Captain America guest starring.
Boy, was this a slog. I could appreciate the kitsch for only so long. I was reminded of the quote from John Waters: "Good bad taste is celebrating something without thinking you're better than it... Bad bad taste is condescending, making fun of others." Unfortunately, Jim Shooter's reckless, overwritten mess of a script inspires the latter.
I could see recommending Secret Wars for its historical value, and for the fact that Dr. Doom has got to be one of the ripest villains for popular show more revision. He is far and away the most interesting character in this (and other) stories. The camp can be rich, as in this morsel - the Wasp in book 6:
"Oh, no! I broke a nail! I don't even have an emery board and I'm thirty-seven trillion miles from my manicurist and it's her day off anyway!"
Moments like these are just too rare to make the book entertaining. No, mostly it's just boring, which is the worst thing a comic can be. show less
I could see recommending Secret Wars for its historical value, and for the fact that Dr. Doom has got to be one of the ripest villains for popular show more revision. He is far and away the most interesting character in this (and other) stories. The camp can be rich, as in this morsel - the Wasp in book 6:
"Oh, no! I broke a nail! I don't even have an emery board and I'm thirty-seven trillion miles from my manicurist and it's her day off anyway!"
Moments like these are just too rare to make the book entertaining. No, mostly it's just boring, which is the worst thing a comic can be. show less
This is one of the best Spider-Man stories ever written. It takes place very much in the head of its four main characters and it really delves into who they are as people. Some might say that it betrays past characterizations of Kraven the Hunter, but honestly, he had very little characterization before these stories. The beautiful artwork by Mike Zeck is just the icing on the cake.
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Statistics
- Works
- 34
- Also by
- 25
- Members
- 1,140
- Popularity
- #22,523
- Rating
- 3.6
- Reviews
- 32
- ISBNs
- 63
- Languages
- 11
- Favorited
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