Narfstar:
"I must have been in the minority but I did not like Kane's Marvel covers. Avengers 38 is one of my all time least favorite covers"I liked certain Kane, but most of it-- AUGH! What I thought was funny was a few years back, when I started doing "fantasy" versions of some covers, that an awful lot of them were Kane covers. Like, there was some decent work, but buried under horrible (early-70's) design .
Kane did
AVENGERS #37 ("To Conquer A Collossus") &
38 ("In Our Midst...An Immortal"). I hated BOTH of them. Awhile back, I discovered the first one had replaced a AMAZING cover by Don Heck-- one of his BEST!
http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-CMJNp-CxR4A/TtLbAA2s5VI/AAAAAAAAAYs/sN4U04TIm0w/s1600/AV+037_ca_HA++HK.jpgJust today, Roy Thomas sent me this...
"I really don't recall how Gil happened to be doing those covers, except that he was looking to get away from DC to at least some extent... and he liked the idea of doing one big drawing instead of several small ones for what I believe was the same rate. I don't think I went after him specifically myself... Stan was still more taking more personal involvement with covers then (1967, early 68?)... and I hadn't really worked with or gotten to know Gil... didn't until we worked together on CAPTAIN MARVEL."Even so, it's interesting that at least twice a cover, done by a book's current artist, was rejected in favor of one by Gil Kane, and both time, it was on a book Roy was writing. Roy later worked with Kane on
CAPTAIN MAR-VELL, AMAZING SPIDER-MAN, WARLOCK, IRON FIST, CONAN, and probably some other things I'm forgetting.
Also, I recall once reading that Stan Lee "hated" Gil Kane's art. On another occasion, Stan Lee claimed he thought Gil Kane's version of Spider-Man was "
the best he'd ever seen!" This makes me think that maybe Lee "hated" the earlier, "transitional" Kane (as seen on his 4 episodes of
HULK and 4 episodes of
CAPTAIN AMERICA, where he was clearly and deliberately in the process of MUTATING his style into something else). Kane worked with Lee on those. The "later" Kane-- the style he developed and KEPT for the remainder of his entire career-- really made its debut (as far as I can tell) on his 5 issues of
CAPTAIN MAR-VELL. Kane was with Thomas on those. Right after, he took over
AMAZING SPIDER-MAN, where he worked with John Romita. According to Romita, HE was writing the stories on all those issues, even when he wasn't doing either pencils or inks! (Lee would write dialogue, and "course-direct" after-the-fact where he felt it needed.) The issues with Kane, Kane was "contributing" ideas. It's inescapable, the fact that when Kane gets on a series, it goes completely off the deep end into manic, intense, downbeat and ultra-violent. And almost every one of his covers has the word
"DEATH!!!" on it somewhere.
"DEATH! DEATH TO ALL WHO OPPOSE US!!!!!"--Barbarian Leader /
HEAVY METAL (1981)