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Neal Adams Draws Scott Kurtz's Player VS Player

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Uploaded by on Dec 10, 2009

Comic book creator and Legend Neal Adams, drawing a daily strip involving Scott Kurtz and Player VS Player.

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Entertainment

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Standard YouTube License

  • likes, 5 dislikes

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Uploader Comments (nealadamsdotcom)

  • you call yourself a legend?

  • @FurlogTheGiant No I don't. OTHERS DO. has nothing to do with me.

Top Comments

  • This is amazing. Scott Kurtz you are a lucky man.

  • Just five stars? I need six stars for Super Freaking Awesome.

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All Comments (31)

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  • @ComicBookGo

    And you know what gives Don even more extra points for me?

    Back in the 60s he had all the disney comcis from his sister, getting older he sold them and got everything he could from the superman line, jimmy olsen, lois lane, superman, action comics, he has every marvel and Dc comics from the silver age, he also started buiying complete bronze age runs, but sold them becausde he didn't like it.

    His favorite Superheroe Artists are the 2 big C/Kurts, Curt Swan and Kurt Schaffenberger.

  • here's a quote i found:

    Writer-artist Will Eisner called him "the Hans Christian Andersen of comic books."

    The quality of his scripts and drawings earned him the nicknames The Duck Man and The Good Duck Artist (because back then at disney they still wanted the kids to believe disney did everything by himself, while DC also didn#t use names Mort and co still had no problem mentioning them in letters and so on, but it was impossible to know who that artists was, so the nickname came to be) .

  • @ComicBookGo

    Barks mostly did 10 pagers, most where with donald and the nephews, the 10 pagers where gag stories for the most, for the advenutre stories he's got up to 30 pages per storie, and boy, does he use them.

    Or when he drew Mein Kampf lying on the Trashyard, you should try to get some of his work, and Don, i love Rosa, his life and times of scrooge mcduck, he deserved his eisner for it, collection every barks reference about scrooges life and making it one huge awesome story.

  • @ComicBookGo

    you really should give barks a read, he's really one of the alltime greatest comic book writers/artists, he's funny, he even made a political statement about the vietnam war in 66 in the story Treasure of Marco Polo, spielberg and lucas are big fans of him, a sequence from one of carls best advenuture stories, called The Seven Cities of Cibola, inspired the opening sequence with the idol and the rolling stone, there's a dial b for blog article on it.

  • @OropherThranduil I got a few of DonRosa, he's GREAT. Sorry cant say I kno CarlBarks. Fact is, originally "comicBook" means literally FunnyBooks (hence comic) so truly the real comics are those first funny-toony art like Mickey Mouse,DonalDuck,Popeye,ect. I'm not really familiar w/the abstract toony stuff honestly, I just love their animations and T&J is the best. When Suprman came Sheroes made the industry successful, I think WillEisner is a nice balance between the two; toony+Sprheroes.

  • Oh yeah, the Fleischer Brothers were awesome.

    I mean the man who did most for Animation surely was Walt Disney himself, Snow White alone gives him that position, inventing the animated future film. despite everybody telling him nobody would watch it, i love the special oscar he got for it, (one big and 7 little statues).

    Did you read some carl barks or Don Rosa Comics?

    My 2 favorite Disney Artists, in german comic scene superheroes aren't too important, more francobelgian, itlaian and disney.

  • @OropherThranduil I agree 100% w/u on Kirbys people, they werent as realistic as most comic book art, but it was still good.His forte was definitely action on how he would actually use Angles, a concept not even conceived before, and showing multiple events happening in one shot. Curts action was also good but basic than Kirbys and man his women were pretty and just the realism is elegant. Aside from it's animation, Flieshers drawings actually LOOKED like Shusters.

  • @ComicBookGo

    , like cap and johnny storm, look pretty close to one another while Curt on the other hand gave every Legionaire distinctive Features and even Hairdos, ImO he's an overlooked Giant, i wonder what he would have looked like doing marvel, i mean when Jack did Olsen and the new Gods it looked more like a Marvel, i think Curt could have quite well adopted a bit to the marvel style.

  • yeah, the fleishcger superman loooked awesome, as i said, 40s animation just had some kind of tightness perfection too it that the more on the loose 60s style can't match ImO.

    Yeah realism is harder to draw, and that's a reason why Curt Swan's Superman was so distinctive back then i think, he just had a perfect sense of Bodys and faces, unlike Jack Kirby for example, who's perfect for action, but some of his people look like deformed monsters, and some of his characters

  • @OropherThranduil I thought they did a pretty decent rendition of Ditko's art on the Spidey toon tho. Sure it wasn't 100%, but it was in range (maybe 70%). As long as the art hit's the ball park figure, I'm cool with it because 70-90% is a large chunk. You can tell that they're trying to follow the art (plus realist art is hard to draw frame for frame, toony art is easier). I thought that "the New Adventures of Superman" cartoon was definitely Curt Swan and the Fleischer is def JoeShuster

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