Afbeelding van de auteur.

Joe Staton

Auteur van Huntress: Darknight Daughter

38+ Werken 304 Leden 15 Besprekingen

Over de Auteur

Bevat de naam: Joe Staton

Fotografie: Luigi Novi

Werken van Joe Staton

Huntress: Darknight Daughter (2006) — Illustrator — 79 exemplaren
Ayn Rand's Anthem: The Graphic Novel (2011) — Illustrator — 55 exemplaren
Millennium (2008) — Illustrator — 29 exemplaren
Superboy and the Legion of Super-Heroes, Volume Two (2018) — Illustrator — 27 exemplaren
Classics Illustrated #16: A Christmas Carol (1990) — Illustrator — 20 exemplaren
All Star Comics: Only Legends Live Forever (2019) — Illustrator — 10 exemplaren
Family Man Volume 2: Take Me Out To The Ballgame (1995) — Illustrator — 7 exemplaren
E-Man: The Early Years (2011) 6 exemplaren
Showcase No. 98 (1978) — Illustrator — 5 exemplaren
The Brave and the Bold [1955] #197 (1983) — Illustrator — 4 exemplaren
Showcase No. 99 (1978) — Illustrator — 4 exemplaren
Showcase #94 Presenting The New Doom Patrol (Comic) (Vol. 16) (1977) — Illustrator — 4 exemplaren
Showcase No. 97 (1978) — Illustrator — 4 exemplaren
Showcase #100 (Awesome Anniversary Edition!) (1978) — Illustrator — 4 exemplaren
Superboy and The Legion of Super-Heroes [1973] #244 (1978) — Illustrator — 4 exemplaren
Scooby-Doo [1997] #81 (2004) — Illustrator — 3 exemplaren
Scooby-Doo [1997] #82 (2004) — Illustrator — 3 exemplaren
Munden's Bar Annual #1 (1988) — Medewerker — 3 exemplaren
Superboy and The Legion of Super-Heroes [1973] #243 (1978) — Illustrator — 3 exemplaren
Scooby-Doo [1997] #84 (2004) — Illustrator — 2 exemplaren
Showcase No. 96 — Illustrator — 2 exemplaren
Showcase No. 95 (1977) — Illustrator — 2 exemplaren
Badger and Luthor Ironheart in Low Moon at Stonehenge (1988) — Illustrator — 2 exemplaren
Scooby-Doo! Space Fright! (2011) — Illustrator — 2 exemplaren
The Six Million Dollar Man #2, Aug. 2 (1976) — Illustrator — 1 exemplaar
The Six Million Dollar Man #1, June 1976 (1976) — Illustrator — 1 exemplaar
Scooby-Doo! The Big Squeeze! (2010) — Illustrator — 1 exemplaar
Scooby-Doo! All Wrapped Up! (2010) — Illustrator — 1 exemplaar
Scooby-Doo! Surf's Up! (2011) — Illustrator — 1 exemplaar
Scooby-Doo [1997] #97 (2005) — Illustrator — 1 exemplaar
Dick Tracy #4 (Shanda Fantasy Arts) — Auteur — 1 exemplaar

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The Big Book of Urban Legends (The Big book Series) (1995) — Illustrator — 312 exemplaren
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The Big Book of Hoaxes (1996) — Illustrator — 162 exemplaren
The Big Book of the Unexplained (Factoid Books) (1997) — Illustrator — 161 exemplaren
The Amazing Adventures of the Escapist, Volume 2 (2004) — Medewerker — 143 exemplaren
The Big Book of Losers (1997) — Illustrator — 125 exemplaren
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The Big Book of Martyrs (1997) — Illustrator — 118 exemplaren
The Big Book of Scandal! (1997) — Illustrator — 116 exemplaren
The Big Book of the '70s (2000) — Illustrator — 91 exemplaren
The Life Story of The Flash (1997) — Illustrator — 69 exemplaren
Batman in the Seventies (1999) — Illustrator — 52 exemplaren
Spirit Jam (1998) — Medewerker — 51 exemplaren
Legion of Super-Heroes: The Curse (2011) — Illustrator — 49 exemplaren
Legion of Super-Heroes: 1050 Years of the Future (2008) — Guest Artist — 39 exemplaren
Legion of Super-Heroes Archives, Volume 12 (2003) — Inks — 39 exemplaren
Wonder Woman: Featuring over Five Decades of Great Covers (1972) — Illustrator — 29 exemplaren
Legion of Super-Heroes: Before the Darkness, Volume One (2021) — Illustrator — 24 exemplaren
Legion of Super-Heroes Archives, Volume 13 (2012) — Illustrator — 23 exemplaren
De strijd bij de blauwe berg (1987) — Illustrator, sommige edities22 exemplaren
Elfquest 23: Het luchtgevecht (1981) — Illustrator, sommige edities20 exemplaren
Elfquest 26: Het hol van het verraad (1991) — Illustrator, sommige edities20 exemplaren
Elfquest 21: Het net van de wraak (1992) — Illustrator, sommige edities19 exemplaren
Elfquest 27: De kamer van het ei (1989) — Illustrator, sommige edities19 exemplaren
De Havikrijder (1987) — Illustrator, sommige edities19 exemplaren
Justice Society of America: A Celebration of 75 Years (2015) — Illustrator — 19 exemplaren
Elfquest 25: De bewaarders (1989) — Illustrator, sommige edities17 exemplaren
Munden's Bar (2008) — Medewerker — 15 exemplaren
Justice League: The Detroit Era Omnibus (2017) — Illustrator — 13 exemplaren
Batman: Shadow of the Bat Vol. 2 (2017) — Illustrator — 13 exemplaren
DC Super Friends Comic: For Justice! (2009) — Illustrator — 12 exemplaren
Justice Society of America: The Demise of Justice (2021) — Illustrator — 11 exemplaren
Batman: Shadow of the Bat Vol. 3 (2018) — Illustrator — 9 exemplaren
Batman: Shadow of the Bat Vol. 4 (2019) — Finished Pencils — 6 exemplaren
The Incredible Hulk: A Man-Brute Berserk! (1991) — Illustrator — 3 exemplaren
Star*Reach #6 — Illustrator — 3 exemplaren
Grimjack #5 (1984) — Illustrator — 3 exemplaren
Badger Goes Berserk #3 (1989) — Illustrator — 3 exemplaren
Grimjack #33 (1987) — Illustrator — 3 exemplaren
Superman Family [1974] #196 (1979) — Illustrator — 2 exemplaren
Superman Family [1974] #193 (1979) — Illustrator — 2 exemplaren
The Batman Family #19, August/September 1978 (1978) — Illustrator — 2 exemplaren
Haunted #45, Oct. 1979 — Illustrator — 2 exemplaren
Ghost Manor #3, February 1972 (1971) — Illustrator — 1 exemplaar
Rugrats Comic Adventures, Vol. 3, No. 5 (2000) — Illustrator — 1 exemplaar
Rugrats Comic Adventures, Vol. 3, No. 2 (1999) — Illustrator — 1 exemplaar
Rugrats Comic Adventures, Vol. 2, No. 9 (1999) — Illustrator — 1 exemplaar
Rugrats Comic Adventures, Vol. 2, No. 8 (1999) — Illustrator — 1 exemplaar
Rugrats Comic Adventures, Vol. 2, No. 6 (1999) — Illustrator — 1 exemplaar
Rugrats Comic Adventures, Vol. 2, No. 4 (1999) — Illustrator — 1 exemplaar
Rugrats Comic Adventures, Vol. 2, No. 3 (1998) — Illustrator — 1 exemplaar
Rugrats Comic Adventures, Vol. 2, No. 2 (1998) — Illustrator — 1 exemplaar
Scooby-Doo [1997] #76 (2003) — Artiest omslagafbeelding — 1 exemplaar
Monster Hunters #13 (Charlton Comics) (1978) — Illustrator — 1 exemplaar
Midnight Tales #6, Nov. 1973 (1973) — Illustrator — 1 exemplaar
Ghost Manor #73, March 1984 — Illustrator — 1 exemplaar
Adventures with the DC Super Heroes (2000) — Illustrator — 1 exemplaar

Tagged

Algemene kennis

Gangbare naam
Staton, Joe
Geboortedatum
1948-01-19
Geslacht
male
Nationaliteit
USA
Geboorteplaats
North Carolina

Leden

Besprekingen

The Huntress: Origins collects material that originally appeared in DC Super Stars no. 17, Batman Family nos. 18-20, and Wonder Woman nos. 271-287, 289-290, 294-295 written by Paul Levitz, penciled by Joe Staton, inked by Steve Mitchell, Bob Layton, Bruce Patterson, Jerry Ordway, Bob Smith, and Mike DeCarlo, colored by Adrienne Roy, Anthony Tollin, and Gene D’Angelo, and lettered by Todd Klein, John Costanza, Ben Oda, Janice Chiang, Bruce Patterson, Jean Simek, and Milt Snapinn. The stories in this volume tell of Helena Wayne, the daughter of Bruce Wayne and Selina Kyle on Earth-2: a parallel world in which the DC Golden Age heroes began their careers in the 1940s, just as they did in the comic books of our own world. In the story, Helena alternates between her public life as a consumer attorney and her secret life as the Huntress, defending Gotham against arsonists, corrupt councilmen, and criminals such as the Thinker, the Joker, Lionmane, and the Crime Lord. The stories are great, telling a fantastic serialized narrative with amazing art that leaps off the panels. While the current iteration of the Huntress no longer shares this version’s origin as Bruce Wayne and Selina Kyle’s daughter, this is a great way to see where the character began and enjoy some classic comic book storytelling.… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
DarthDeverell | 6 andere besprekingen | Jan 4, 2022 |
Access a version of the below that includes illustrations on my blog.

DC inches ever closer to plugging the gap between the last Legion of Super-Heroes Archive and The Great Darkness Saga with this, the second and final volume of Superboy and the Legion of Super-Heroes. (The just-annonced Before the Darkness series will continue from where this collection leaves off.) I'm glad this collection exists, but it's not the Legion's best material.

I don't know much behind-the-scenes information for this era, but the book gives every indication of being jerked around. First we have the five-part Earthwar saga scripted by Paul Levitz, where Earth is invaded by Khunds working for Mordru (to be honest, I don't remember who Mordru is). This is okay: it does nicely subvert your expectations at points, and the events are big... but they never feel big. When Levitz came back to the book for The Great Darkness Saga, he would do much better and more epic work than he did here, and it would feel meaningful to the characters in a way this sorely does not.

Then we get a couple issues written or co-written by Len Wein that read like inventory stories to me, with small references to the recent big events shoehorned in. I did kind of like the idea of "Savage Sanctuary!", where the Fatal Five kind of go legit, though the actual story got a bit stupid. The rule forbidding married couples to be in the Legion is rescinded, and thus Saturn Girl and Lightning Lad rejoin, and Lightning Lad is elected to leadership in short order, replacing Wildfire.

Then we have a couple stories by Gerry Conway that more directly deal with the aftermath of Earthwar-- suddenly Earth is a wreck in need of repair. These are okay, nothing special. (Brainiac is extra jerk-like, which I assume is to set up the next story, though.)

Then we have a couple stories by Steve Apollo (better known as Jim Starlin) that were clearly orignally written to slot in around the time of Earthwar, with some last-minute dialogue tweaks: lip service is given to the fact that Lightning Lad is leader, but he and Saturn Girl aren't in the story even though it supposedly features all active Legionnaires (even Tyroc turns up!); Wildfire is clearly in charge. In this story, Brainiac is revealed to be a murderer, having gone insane, and Matter-Eater Lad goes insane, too. Not a lot of it makes sense. I didn't really buy any of this, and why do we need another giant attack on Earth when we just had one?

Then Gerry Conway takes over permanently, dealing with the fallout of Apollo's story... but his stories are repetitive (three different ones are about people coming to take revenge on the Legion for slights, real or imagined) and contrived (the one where Superboy makes people think Legionnaires are dead by activating a latent chemical in their bloodstreams is particularly bad). Brainiac is healed in an entirely unconvincing way, and the Legion undertakes bizarre lengths to do it. The only thing I liked was the subplot about how R. J. Brande went bankrupt... but then realized he was a hoarder and gave away all his money.

(There's also a couple issues of DC Comics Presents by Levitz included, where Superman gets told by the Legion that he has to let Pete Ross's son be kidnapped by aliens to preserve future history. I found this kind of gross.)

Finally, the last issue writes out Superboy from the comic that used to bear his name (Superboy vol. 1 became Superboy and the Legion of Super-Heroes became Legion of Super-Heroes vol. 2). I liked how this was done, actually: Superboy finds out how his parents will die. The problem is that when he travels back to the 1950s, he loses his knowledge of future history only to regain it up returning to the 2970s. This means that every time he travels to the future from now on, he will be newly hit with the knowldge of how his parents die. Ouch! He promises to keep up his visits, but the Legion (okay, this part I like less) plant a telepathic block to stop him from doing so, so he flies off to the past for the last time.

Conway is often not a great writer (I found his run on All Star Comics around this same time pretty bleh), and Legion feels typical of his lesser output. Lots of bombast, not a lot of sense. Which you can kind of get away with in other comics, but Legion is trying to have an ongoing story with ongoing consequences, and those just don't play to Conway's strengths. There are some good artists on the book (e.g., Joe Staton, Jim Starlin), but it's no one's best work. James Sherman, who I really like, does the first couple issues but that's it. His characterful work could have kept this all a bit more grounded, I reckon.
… (meer)
1 stem
Gemarkeerd
Stevil2001 | Oct 12, 2020 |
Access a version of the below that includes illustrations on my blog.

The Huntress was, I think, the first concept original to Earth-Two to receive an ongoing feature since Earth-Two became Earth-Two, i.e., since the end of the Golden Age and the return of its characters as alternate reality denizens in the Silver Age. It demonstrates the potential of the concept: the Huntress is a character who could only exist on Earth-Two, a young woman trying to find her own way in the world while living up to the legacies of her superhero father and supervillain mother. You couldn't tell this story on Earth-One, but this kind of thing would become the backbone of Earth-Two stories, and then with the integration of Earth-Two, into DC's approach to its superheroes in general.

The individual stories here are probably nothing special, but they work. Helena works at a public-interest law firm by day and fights crime by night. There's a nice sense that this is all grounded in the social realities of Gotham; you've read much more fanciful Batman-adjacent stories. The Huntress was always a feature in an anthology title, so the stories are typically serialized across installments of about eight pages, which keeps them moving briskly. I couldn't single any one story out, but I know that as I read them, I was always interested and engaged.

Part of that is because of Joe Staton. Staton, I think, is a now-neglected heavyweight of 1980s comics, an era where he did good work on Legion of Super-Heroes, Green Lantern, Action Comics, and Millennium (among, I'm sure, others). I always like his atmospheric style, but it's particularly suited to adventures in Gotham City at night, sometimes blocky, but with Helena's athleticism and attractiveness always clear.

This volume collects the first five years of Huntress solo adventures, all of the ones written by Paul Levitz. Joey Cavalieri took over writing the character after that, with Staton continuing on art at first, up until the point the character was obliterated by the Crisis,* but none of that material has been collected. Unfortunately, as I'm willing to track down some pretty random stuff, but buying a ton of issues of Wonder Woman because of a back-up feature doesn't really appeal.

The Justice Society and Earth-Two: « Previous in sequence | Next in sequence »

* Well, beyond, actually, as Cavalieri also wrote the 1989-90 ongoing series that introduced the post-Crisis Huntress, who had no relationship to Bruce Wayne or Selina Kyle.
… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
Stevil2001 | 6 andere besprekingen | Jun 26, 2020 |

Lijsten

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Steve Apollo Contributor, Illustrator
Bob Smith Illustrator
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Adrienne Roy Colorist
Jim Aparo Cover Art
Karen Matchette Illustrator
Vincent Deporter Cover artist
Mike Grell Cover artist
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Statistieken

Werken
38
Ook door
63
Leden
304
Populariteit
#77,406
Waardering
½ 3.6
Besprekingen
15
ISBNs
19

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