Unlikely as it seems a crime boss has come up with a new "little pill" that can make you 10 times better than you were at your greatest skill. So if you were fast, you're 10x faster, if you're strong, you're...you get the idea...
So naturally, a crime wave breaks out...
Fortunately, Max Mercury, The Laughing Robin Hood, is on the job!
And fortunately, Nick Cardy is there to draw and ink the battle. Allow me to present the full pages, so you can properly enjoy the fun of his layouts (click to embiggen the pages if necessary):
Don't mess with Max Mercury!! Or Nick Cardy!!
From National Comics #20 (1942)
Showing posts with label Nick Cardy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nick Cardy. Show all posts
Monday, December 8, 2014
Tuesday, July 23, 2013
The Best Covers You've Never Seen--Nick Cardy's Aquaman Covers
You know who doesn't get enough respect? Nick Cardy doesn't get enough respect.
Did you know, for example, that Cardy drew the covers for all 56 issues of Aquaman's first solo title (as well as the interiors for the first 39 issues)?
Now, initially the covers were nothing remarkable...they were pretty standard DC Silver Age covers, presenting the hero in the standard "WTF" dilemmas, like this...
...or this...
Still, there were traces of something more in some of his covers. Take, for example, Aquaman #21:
Or #30:
But in 1968, Cardy bloomed. Doubtless in part because Carmine Infantino began designing all of DC's covers--soon followed by a promotion to art director--Cardy began to let his freak flag fly, and began what I consider one of the greatest runs of covers ever, starting with Aquaman #37:
Even as Steve Skeates and Jim Aparo took over the interior of the book, Cardy continued to go nuts, experimenting with layouts, color, shading...producing covers like nothing ever seen in DC superhero books:
Tell me this isn't a great frakkin' cover:
Yes, sometimes the covers still bore the typical DC Silver Age stamp...
But even then they showed for more interesting perspective and style than what Cardy had ever done before.
Great googly moogly, just look at this:
And then Cardy went truly insane (in a good way):
Or this masterpiece:
And then it was done. Cancelled.
Hard to believe that a series with covers that freakin' good, with interiors by Skeates and Aparo, and Deadman back-ups by Neal Adams in some of them, couldn't sell enough to ever even get past bi-monthly status, let alone survive. Perhaps that's why people think Aquaman is lame...?
Nick Cardy did a lot more than this--his run on Teen Titans, while not quite as impressive in my eyes, is still pretty damn good, and follows essentially the same arc--and from 1972-1975, he was doing the majority of DC's covers every month.
Cardy is still with us--he's 92, for heaven's sake--so take some time today to appreciate his genius.
Did you know, for example, that Cardy drew the covers for all 56 issues of Aquaman's first solo title (as well as the interiors for the first 39 issues)?
Now, initially the covers were nothing remarkable...they were pretty standard DC Silver Age covers, presenting the hero in the standard "WTF" dilemmas, like this...
...or this...
Still, there were traces of something more in some of his covers. Take, for example, Aquaman #21:
Or #30:
But in 1968, Cardy bloomed. Doubtless in part because Carmine Infantino began designing all of DC's covers--soon followed by a promotion to art director--Cardy began to let his freak flag fly, and began what I consider one of the greatest runs of covers ever, starting with Aquaman #37:
Even as Steve Skeates and Jim Aparo took over the interior of the book, Cardy continued to go nuts, experimenting with layouts, color, shading...producing covers like nothing ever seen in DC superhero books:
Tell me this isn't a great frakkin' cover:
Yes, sometimes the covers still bore the typical DC Silver Age stamp...
But even then they showed for more interesting perspective and style than what Cardy had ever done before.
And then Cardy went truly insane (in a good way):
Or this masterpiece:
And then it was done. Cancelled.
Hard to believe that a series with covers that freakin' good, with interiors by Skeates and Aparo, and Deadman back-ups by Neal Adams in some of them, couldn't sell enough to ever even get past bi-monthly status, let alone survive. Perhaps that's why people think Aquaman is lame...?
Nick Cardy did a lot more than this--his run on Teen Titans, while not quite as impressive in my eyes, is still pretty damn good, and follows essentially the same arc--and from 1972-1975, he was doing the majority of DC's covers every month.
Cardy is still with us--he's 92, for heaven's sake--so take some time today to appreciate his genius.
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