Something I noticed in watching the clips was the artwork used for the covers...
Obviously, these two covers were mocked up specifically for the show (I like how, in that second one, the artist clearly ran out of room on the page and twisted the heck out of Spidey's leg to get it all on the cover) but they should look familiar to long-time fans of Amazing Spider-Man and/or John Romita and Gil Kane...
Now, my question comes up with this next cover, which is obviously a bit more generic and was used for multiple show introductions...
The image looks familiar to me, certainly, but I'm sure part of that comes from regularly having watched The Electric Company in my youth. Was this based on/copied from some general promotional Spider-Man art, or is this a cover that I simply don't see anywhere? I'd be curious to know this image's origins, as well as what other covers were used as visual springboards for the show.
UPDATE: Corrected one cover image and credit, based on Jeff Gutman's comment. Thanks, Jeff!
2 comments:
OK, first off - As far as the two covers you have up there - You're right that the first one is Amazing Spider-Man #134, but the second one is NOT Amazing #160. Its actually Amazing #98 if you look at Spideys body position.
And as far as the mystery cover, its actually a redrawn version of the John Romita artwork thats on the record cover to the "Spider-Man: Beyond the Grave" album. The album came out in 1972 and that pose of Spidey was on the cover.
-Jeff Gutman
Hope that helps!
This is fun. Here's a link someone found, to a review of the comic book version of "Spider-Man vs. The Wall." Hilarious!
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