Marvel Preview

Marvel Preview

Marvel Preview #9 (Winter 1976). Cover art by Earl Norem.
Publication information
Publisher Magazine Management
Marvel Comics Group
Schedule Quarterly
Format Magazine
Genre
    Publication date 1975 - Winter 1980 (as Marvel Preview)
    March 1981 - February 1983 (as Bizarre Adventures)
    Number of issues 34 (#1-24 as Marvel Preview #25-34 as Bizarre Adventures)
    Creative team
    Writer(s) Bill Mantlo, Gil Kane, Steve Englehart, Doug Moench, Christopher Claremont, Roger Stern, others
    Penciller(s) John Byrne, Howard Chaykin, Keith Giffen, Gil Kane, Michael Netzer (Nasser), George Pérez, Mike Ploog, Jim Starlin

    Marvel Preview is a black-and-white comics magazine published by Magazine Management for 14 issues and the affiliated Marvel Comics Group for 10 issues.[1] The final issue additionally carried the imprint Marvel Magazines Group.

    Publication history

    An umbrella title that showcased a different heroic-adventure, science-fiction or sword-and-sorcery character in virtually every issue. The title introduced the Marvel Comics characters Dominic Fortune in issue #2, Star-Lord in #4,[2] and Rocket Raccoon in #7.[3] The vigilante character the Punisher, introduced as an antagonist in the comic book The Amazing Spider-Man, had his first solo story in issue #2.

    The magazine had scheduling difficulties, with various "Next Issue" announcements proving unreliable. Issue #2 promised an adventure of the Marvel superhero Thor in #3, but a Blade story appeared, with the Thor story unseen until #10. As well, two different issues, #20 and #24, are dated "Winter 1980." Issue #20 was to have included photographs from a Japanese Spider-Man television program but instead featured Howard Chaykin's Dominic Fortune.[4] In addition, Robert A. Heinlein's lawyers threatened legal action over the cover of Marvel Preview #11, which featured a blurb that described the Star-Lord content as "a novel-length science fiction spectacular in the tradition of Robert A. Heinlein," leading to the issue being pulled and reprinted.[5]

    With #25 (March 1981), the title was changed to Bizarre Adventures, which published an additional ten issues before ending publication.[6] To offset the dark tone of most of the stories, editor Denny O'Neil had writer Steve Skeates produce a humor feature called Bucky Bizarre to close out each issue.[7] The final issue, #34, was a standard-sized color comic book, cover-blurbed "Special Hate the Holidays Issue", with anthological Christmas-related stories including one starring Howard the Duck.

    Issues

    Issue (cover date) Feature Notes
    #1 (1975) "Man-Gods From Beyond the Stars"
    #2 (1975) "The Punisher" back-up: debut of Dominic Fortune
    #3 (September 1975) "Blade the Vampire-Slayer"
    #4 (January 1976) "Star-Lord" (debut) back-up: The Sword in the Star with Prince Wayfinder
    #5 (April 1976) "Sherlock Holmes" adaptation of the novel The Hound of the Baskervilles part 1
    #6 (Spring 1976) "Sherlock Holmes" The Hound of the Baskervilles part 2
    #7 (Summer 1976) "Satana" back-up: The Sword in the Star with Prince Wayfinder with the debut of Rocket Raccoon
    #8 (Fall 1976) "The Legion of Monsters" Morbius, the Living Vampire, Blade, and Anubis
    #9 (Winter 1976) "Man-God" (Hugo Danner) Part 1 of an uncompleted adaptation of the novel Gladiator by Philip Wylie
    #10 (Winter 1977) "Thor" back-up: Hercules
    #11 (Summer 1977) "Star-Lord"
    #12 (Fall 1977) "The Haunt of Horror" Lilith and Dracula
    #13 (Winter 1978) "The UFO Connection"
    #14 (Spring 1978) "Star-Lord"
    #15 (Summer 1978) "Star-Lord"
    #16 (Fall 1978) "Masters of Terror" Lilith
    #17 (Winter 1979) "Blackmark"
    #18 (Spring 1979) "Star-Lord"
    #19 (Summer 1979) "Kull the Destroyer" back-up: Solomon Kane
    #20 (Winter 1980) "Bizarre Adventures" reprints including Dominic Fortune
    #21 (Spring 1980) "Moon Knight" back-up: The Shroud
    #22 (Summer 1980) "Merlin"
    #23 (Fall 1980) "Bizarre Adventures 2"
    #24 (Winter 1980) "Paradox"

    Bizarre Adventures

    Issue (cover date) Feature Notes
    #25 (March 1981) "Lethal Ladies" Black Widow; Lady Daemon (debut); Daughters of the Dragon
    #26 (May 1981) "Kull the Barbarian" King Kull; "Demon in a Silvered Glass"--story by Doug Moench, art by John Bolton
    #27 (July 1981) "Secret Lives of the X-Men" Phoenix; Iceman; Nightcrawler
    #28 (October 1981) "...These Are the Unlikely Heroes" Elektra; the Shadow Hunter (debut); the Huntsman; Triton; and Bucky Bizarre
    #29 (December 1981) "Stephen King's 'The Lawnmower Man'" Adaptation of the Stephen King short story "The Lawnmower Man"; and stories starring Greenberg the Vampire[8] and Bucky Bizarre
    #30 (February 1982) "Paradox" back ups: Silhouette; Bucky Bizarre
    #31 (April 1982) "A Hard Look at Violence" Dr. Deth with Kip and Muffy (debut); the Hangman; Bucky Bizarre
    #32 (August 1982) "Thor and Other Gods" backups: the Aquarian; Bucky Bizarre
    #33 (December 1982) "The Tomb of Dracula" "Haunt of Horror" "Tales of the Zombie" "Vault of Evil"
    #34 (February 1983) "Special Hate the Holidays Issue" Christmas-themed anthology including the Son of Santa, Howard the Duck, Dr. Deth, and Bucky Bizarre.

    Collected editions

    References

    1. Marvel Preview at the Grand Comics Database
    2. Englehart, Steve (n.d.). "Star-Lord". SteveEnglehart.com. Archived from the original on August 24, 2014. Retrieved December 26, 2010.
    3. Collins, Sean (July 29, 2014). "The Rise of Guardians of the Galaxy's Rocket Raccoon". Rolling Stone. Archived from the original on August 21, 2014. An alien transformed by cruel experiments into a warrior with a wicked sense of humor, his first appearance lasted a handful of pages in the black-and-white science-fantasy story 'The Sword in the Star' in Marvel Preview #7.
    4. Saffel, Steve (2007). "Amazing Friends and Secret Wars The 1980s". Spider-Man the Icon: The Life and Times of a Pop Culture Phenomenon. Titan Books. p. 124. ISBN 978-1-84576-324-4. Since Marvel Preview was printed on cheap newsprint, it's possible that [Marvel's editorial staff] decided the photos would look terrible when screened and printed.
    5. Cronin, Brian (February 12, 2009). "Comic Book Legends Revealed #194". Comic Book Resources. Retrieved January 13, 2013. Heinlein’s lawyers contacted Marvel and a new printing was done and the text was removed. In fact, relatively few copies of Marvel Preview #11 exist with the original text.
    6. Bizarre Adventures at the Grand Comics Database
    7. Schwirian, John (June 2009). "The Unique Voice and Vision of Steve Skeates, part 3". Back Issue! (TwoMorrows Publishing) (34): 81–87.
    8. DeFalco, Tom; Gilbert, Laura, ed. (2008). "1980s". Marvel Chronicle A Year by Year History. Dorling Kindersley. p. 202. ISBN 978-0756641238. Writer J. M. DeMatteis and artist Steve Leialoha explored a new take on the vampire myth with Greenberg.

    External links

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