» » Daredevil: Gang War

Download Daredevil: Gang War fb2

by Klaus Janson,Frank Miller

  • ISBN: 0871358808
  • Category: Comics & Graphic
  • Author: Klaus Janson,Frank Miller
  • Subcategory: Publishers
  • Other formats: mobi docx doc mbr
  • Language: English
  • Publisher: Marvel Enterprises; First Edition edition (July 1, 1992)
  • Pages: 114 pages
  • FB2 size: 1948 kb
  • EPUB size: 1802 kb
  • Rating: 4.2
  • Votes: 447
Download Daredevil: Gang War fb2

Art by Frank Miller and Klaus Janson. Published in 1999, Softcover, 116 pages, full color. Gang War" collects some of Miller's early work on this title, which features Daredevil's first conflict with the man who would become his most implacable foe, Wilson Fisk, the Kingpin of Crime.

Art by Frank Miller and Klaus Janson. Miller's writing and art, while already in the upper echelons of the genre, fall utterly within standard comic book conventions. This is clearly a look at Miller during his formative years, as he learned the ropes in the medium he would later revolutionize. Great stuff if you're interested in the evolution of the artist.

Daredevil By Frank Miller Box Set. Klaus Janson. Marvel in particular has characters that reach as far back in history as World War II, with Captain America fighting side-by-side with the Greatest Generation to combat Nazi tyranny and oppression. With the dawn of the 1960's, Marvel issued in its most well known and beloved characters, including Spider-Man, The Mighty Thor, The Incredible Hulk, The Fantastic Four, and a slew of other timeless characters.

Frank Miller and Klaus Janson's groundbreaking run on Daredevil concludes in this volume. The three stories that close the book, written after Miller's initial run, all very in quality with Love and War being pretty great (if a little overwrought), The What If. Daredevil tangles with the Hand, a new Stiltman, and the Kingpin. His relationship with Heather ends and Elektra is resurrected by The Hand. As with the last volume, these are more character driven stories, exploring the inner workings of Matt Murdock. The three stories that close the book, written after Miller's initial run, all very in quality with Love and War being pretty great (if a little overwrought), The What I. .story being fun but forgettable and the later issue of the main series penciled by John Buscema being pretty decent if you forget it's a Daredevil story.

Daredevil Frank Miller and Klaus Johnson Omnibus!!! Seems like I’ve been following Frank Miller’s major works through . Frank Miller is a genius to put it blumtly, i was worried when going into this book that it would be a typical 70's comic with single issue plots and not much there

Daredevil Frank Miller and Klaus Johnson Omnibus!!! Seems like I’ve been following Frank Miller’s major works through different publishers for quite some time now. From Sin City in Dark Horse, then Dark Knight in DC, and finally, we reached the shores of Marvel with Daredevil. This particular run was from 1979 to 1983 (Old school baby! Before I was even born!). Frank Miller is a genius to put it blumtly, i was worried when going into this book that it would be a typical 70's comic with single issue plots and not much there. I was so wrong, its hard to describe what exactly makes the writing great but WOW Having enjoyed the tv show, i've been wanting to get into the daredevil comics.

DAREDEVIL: Gang War. Hello Patrons! Darecember rolls on with the 3rd video and this time, I look at 3 specific issues in Frank Miller and Klaus Janson's iconic run on Daredevil. This is a much more art and writing focused video and I really enjoyed putting this together. Hope you do, too. comic books

These three trades collect Frank Miller and Klaus Janson's work on Daredevil from the late 1970s into the late 1980s.

These three trades collect Frank Miller and Klaus Janson's work on Daredevil from the late 1970s into the late 1980s. Academic Action Adaptation Adult Adventure All Ages Alternate History Alternative Animated Anthology Anthropomorphic Biographical Bronze Age (1970 - 1985) Cancelled Collection Complete Crime Digital Only Drama Educational Event Fantasy Fiction Fighting Foreign Franchise Game Related Golden Age (1938 – 1956) Historical Horror Humor LGBTQ Live Action Magazine Magic Manga Mature Maxi-Series Mini-Series Missing Issues Modern Age (1985+) Mystery Non-Fiction One Shot Ongoing.

Frank Miller (born January 27, 1957) is an American comic book writer, penciller and inker, novelist, screenwriter, film director, and producer best known for his comic book stories and graphic novels such as Ronin, Daredevil: Born Again, The Dark K.

DAREDEVIL GANGWAR reprints Frank Miller and Klaus Janson’s Daredevil issues and 180, featuring the return of the popular villain, Bullseye, and the first confrontation between the sightless swashbuckler and his arch nemesis-the Kingpin! 1st Printing.

SC, TPB, NM/M, New, in cello, Written by Frank Miller. Art by Frank Miller and Klaus Janson. Published in 1999, Softcover, 116 pages, full color. Cover price $15.95. If you want additional books, I ship as many books as you want for a low flat fee.
Reviews about Daredevil: Gang War (7):
breakingthesystem
Frank Miller's seminal work on the Daredevil series in the late '70s and early '80s constitutes one of the greatest writer / artist runs in comic book history. The stories stand up today as the perfect marriage of concept, story, and art--Miller really knows when to be fantastic and when to ground the book in gritty reality. This volume comprises a five issue arc (issues 169 - 172 and 180 in the original Daredevil series) that pits DD against the Kingpin and arch-nemesis Bullseye, setting up events and characters that would echo through the title for years. The only drawback to this edition is the hideous cover art; it deserves a more lavish presentation, and I think they're getting around to it with the "Visonaries" series.
Dangerous
Before "The Dark Knight Returns", before "Sin City," Frank Miller cut his teeth on old Marvel standby Daredevil.
"Gang War" collects some of Miller's early work on this title, which features Daredevil's first conflict with the man who would become his most implacable foe, Wilson Fisk, the Kingpin of Crime.
Miller's writing and art, while already in the upper echelons of the genre, fall utterly within standard comic book conventions. This is clearly a look at Miller during his formative years, as he learned the ropes in the medium he would later revolutionize.
Great stuff if you're interested in the evolution of the artist.
Mr.jeka
There has been quite a hype about the seminal work of Frank Miller on DD. His stories here are quite good but the artwork is perfunctory at best. Tiny figures drawn at the same scale, tiny panels, poor layouts, no sense of true perspective, awkward anatomy, repetitive poses, lack of facial expressions etc. The list goes on. The drawing style shows DD in various action poses, many of which makes him look slightly effeminate.

Let's look at some of the characters:
I think that Bullseye the character was OK but uninspiring. His repeated revivals (a few weeks after major brain surgery and he is back in action???)is boring. His motivation was also truly one-dimensional. Driven insane due to some brain tumour, him remaining insane after the brain operation was ridiculous.

Wilson Fisk was OK as the Kingpin, albeit drawn too large. Heather was the passe fiancee. Her character was completely uninteresting. Foggy was completely underdeveloped as a supporting character. There was some attempt to inject humour into a new character Turk, the second-rate hood and also to create a bar ambience in Josie's. However, this setup was just too similar to early Wolverine issues where bar room brawls were occurring in every other issue.

Finally Matt Murdock himself. His fearless creed stands him in good stead when he rushes in wounded, completely defensely into various encounters with Bullseye holding a gun, into a noisy subway. etc. but he always manages to defeat Bullseye. Sounds like a reckless type. The motivation of these superheroes when the chips were down was that they battled against all the odds. It was done with Spiderman as well besides others. So no surprises here.

The whole look of these comics was slightly campy,too. Take a good long hard look at these comics again and stay objective.
Macage
Frank Miller's work on Daredevil contained in this graphic novel ranks among some of the best comics I've ever read -- alongside (if not better than) such comic book masterpieces as Claremont's & Byrne's X-Men, Alan Moore's Watchmen & Swamp Thing, and more recent works as Batman (The Long Halloween) and Kingdom Come. These Daredevil comics still contain some of the innocence and naivete of the late Silver Age comics, but the artwork is beautiful, the characterization is completely believable, and the stories are nothing short of amazing. Frank Miller really set a new standard when these issues first came out. If you want to read comics storytelling at its best, treat yourself to the comics in this graphic novel!
Bragis
Forget what Kevin Smith is doing with Daredevil in the comics. It pales in comparsion with Frank Miller's Daredevil stories. Frank really develops Daredevil's character in this story, DD is presented as a human hero with real human problems. Even the Kingpin, as repulsive as he is, still comes around as character that readers can at least have some sympathy for, as he tries to break away from running a criminal empire but fate has other plans for him. This epic reminds me a lot of the Godfather movies.
Zeli
This book was awesome. Frank Millers high crime/drama stories are some of the best out there and this proves why. The book is awesome. The story see's the return of the Kingpin and Bullseye and features one of the coolest gang wars in the Marvel Universe. Bullseye is the coolest villian out there and his hatred for Daredevil is awesome. It deals with them removing a tumor from Bullseye's brain. The artwork is nothing to brag about but it is still okay for that time. This is a must have for any Daredevil or Frank Miller fan.
MOQ
The stories in this book are notable in their transformation of the Kingpin from one of MARVEL"S lamest villians to one of their best. The original Kingpin got in dirct conflicts with Spiderma, carried a goofy obliterator cane and was not interesting. Miller makes Kingpin a businessman who is legal enough to avoid the law while engaging in amultitude of brutal crinimal enterprises. These stories are preparation for Miller's best Daredevil work,the Born Again series.
In this one we get to see DD vs. Bullseye. It's a keeper. I wouldn't be surprised if the movie is based on the material written in this paperback. If you like Daredevil and the best Miller art ....in my opinion no one has ever surpassed his work on this title...buy this one. It's before Sin City and his run on the Dark Knight. It has all the elements of his later work.

Related to Daredevil: Gang War fb2 books: