Plastic Man V01+V02 by Gil Kane, Arnold Drake and many others.
Requirements: CBR Reader, 174 MB.
Overview: Plastic Man was once Quality Comics’ signature super hero of the Golden Age, but he had yet to flex his malleable DC muscles a decade after the company acquired rights to the character. Resilient as his name suggests, though, Plastic man put his best foot forward in 1966. After being called up briefly by Robby Reed in the "Dial H for H-E-R-O" feature in issue # 160 of House of Mystery, Plastic Man finally starred in his own series.
Written by Arnold Drake with art by Gil Kane, "the slyest, slippery-est, slinky-est super hero of them all" was targeted by Dr. Dome, a helmeted heavy who utilized weapons devised by the notorious Professor X. With the aid of Dome’s seductive daughter, Lynx, and Fawnish, the disgruntled butler of Plastic Man’s rich girlfriend "Mike" Dome and Professor X made many attempts to end Plas’ elasticated life. Ultimately, though, they just couldn’t cut short the long arm of the law. Plastic Man apprehended Professor X, while Dr Dome and the others remained at large for future battles.
- Plastic Man – who was revealed as the Golden Age Plastic Man’s son, Eel O’ Brien Jr – wouldn’t enjoy and extended run, however. After only 10 issues, Plastic Man unfortunately bounced into creative limbo for a decade.
Genre: Comics, Super-Hero.
Plastic Man V01+V02
Created by writer-artist Jack Cole
- Joe Orlando[, Winslow Mortimer penciler, inker
Arnold Drake writer, production
Gil Kane pencils, cover
Carmine Infantino penciler
Mike Esposito, Teny Henson inker
Ramona Fradon penciler
Steve Skeates writer
Tatjana Wood colorist, cover
Gerry Conway editor
Published by DC Comics. 1966-1977.
- Plastic Man (Patrick "Eel" O’Brian) is a fictional comic-book superhero originally published by Quality Comics and later acquired by DC Comics. Created by writer-artist Jack Cole, he first appeared in Police Comics #1 (August 1941).
One of Quality Comics’ signature characters during the Golden Age of Comic Books, Plastic Man can stretch his body into any imaginable form. His adventures were known for their quirky, offbeat structure and surreal slapstick humor. When Quality Comics was shut down in 1956, DC Comics acquired many of its characters, integrating Plastic Man into the mainstream DC universe. The character has starred in several short-lived DC series, as well as a Saturday morning cartoon series in the early 1980s, and as a recurring character on Batman: The Brave and the Bold.
Although the character’s revival has never been a commercial hit, Plastic Man has been a favorite character of many modern comic book creators, including writer Grant Morrison, who included him in his 1990s revival of the Justice League; Art Spiegelman, who profiled Cole for The New Yorker magazine; painter Alex Ross, who has frequently included him in covers and stories depicting the Justice League; writer-artist Kyle Baker, who wrote and illustrated an award winning Plastic Man series; artist Ethan Van Sciver has an affinity for the character as he always toys with the idea of launching a regular monthly Plastic Man series and often draws him for fun, and Frank Miller, who included him in the Justice League in the comics All Star Batman and Robin the Boy Wonder and Batman: The Dark Knight Strikes Again.
See also Plastic Man by Kyle Baker
Download Instructions:
01 The Dirty Devices of Dr. Dome! — http://corneey.com/wK6oGK
02 The Three Faces of Plastic Man — http://corneey.com/wK6oGB
03 The Biggest Wheel in Town — http://corneey.com/wK6oG1
04 Dr. Dome’s Dame of Doom — http://corneey.com/wK6oG7
05 The 1,001 Plas-Sassins — http://corneey.com/wK6oH0
06 The Sly, Slippery, Slithery Sphinx! — http://corneey.com/wK6oHy
07 Plastic Man’s Fantastic Old Man! — http://corneey.com/wK6oHg
08 The Unforgettable Wot’s-Iz-Name! — http://corneey.com/wK6oHx
09 Joe, the Killer Pro — http://corneey.com/wK6oHR
10 The Terrible Plastic Twin! — http://corneey.com/wK6oHP
11 Hamsters of Doom — http://corneey.com/wK6oHC
12 The Bogus-Men Will Get You if You don’t wacht out — http://corneey.com/wK6oHN
13 If I Kill Me, Will I Die? — http://corneey.com/wK6oH5
14 Meat By-Product and Sludge — http://corneey.com/wK6oJu
15 The Snuffer — http://corneey.com/wK6oJd
16 Brains Washed While You Wait — http://corneey.com/wK6oJl
17 untitled — http://corneey.com/wK6oJn
18 Professor Klean The Mad Crusader — http://corneey.com/wK6oJI
19 The Mouse that Soared — http://corneey.com/wK6oJF
20 The Snooping Snitches! — http://corneey.com/wK6oJV