Showing posts with label Wonder Tot. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wonder Tot. Show all posts

Sunday, August 21, 2011

The Top 20 Wonder Woman Covers of the 1960s

The sixties were probably Princess Diana's worst decade in comics. The evangelical fire and brazen oddness of the Golden Age was gone, as was the sweet romance of the fifties. In its place were gimmicks, endless love dodecahedrons, a Steve Trevor you wished terrible ill upon, and closing out as a non-powered Emma Peel knock-off. Hopefully you don't weary just over the course of the top 20...

Honorable Mentions:
Wonder Woman #112 (February, 1960)
Wonder Woman #185 (November-December, 1969)

20 (tie) Wonder Woman #183-184 (July-October, 1969)

While there are elements of each of these covers deserving of attention, they are equally weak. The seeming death of Diana's mother is strong material, but the execution is rather weak. Meanwhile, Diana falling in battle is potent, but not when she and her all-male cohorts are indistinguishable from any random sword & sorcery comic.

19) Wonder Woman #122 (May, 1961)

A King Kong-sized Wonder Woman has run a normal sized one up to the very tip of the Empire State Building. Do I have to explain this?

18) Wonder Woman #177 (July-August, 1968)

The Amazing Amazon and her opponent Supergirl look great, but then you've got this dillhole in the middle taking up valuable space. This is an A-B throwdown, so see your way out, K?

17) Wonder Woman #176 (May-June, 1968)

This is another one of those "let's show Wonder Woman humiliated in the most misogynistic and sexualized possible under the Comic Code" cover, and yet it works.

16) Wonder Woman #118 (November, 1960)

Nice to see dudes in distress, but how the hell did Mer-Man get on top of a plateau in the first place?

15) Wonder Woman #126 (November, 1961)

I find that one of the easiest ways to validate my choices is to simply say them aloud. Wonder Tot punching a meteor while riding Mister Genie. Who needs to elaborate on that?

14) Superman's Girl Friend, Lois Lane #93 (July, 1969)

On the one hand, it's kinda wicked to see Diana Prince judo-up Lois Lane while Superman cheers her on. Yet, since when is Diana a trained monkey, and where's the honor in walloping a perpetually imperiled reporter unskilled in the martial arts? Finally, Diana's only really recognizable attribute is her hair, which is not a progressive means of identification.

13) Wonder Woman #155 (July, 1965)

She married a monster. It's kind of a big deal.

12) Wonder Woman #181 (March-April, 1969)

I love the skier's P.O.V. and the weird masks, but the nondescript Diana Prince is the weak link of the image. I Ching seems awfully tall, as well.

11) Wonder Woman #175 (March-April, 1968)

There's something very weird and wrong about a comic where Wonder Woman attacks a child, even when the child is in fact Diana and the Wonder Woman is a serious see you next Tuesday from another dimension. I did a lengthy write-up of this story years ago for another blog, and haven't run it here because it would take forever to remove all the foul language and angry tirades.

10) Wonder Woman #124 (August, 1961)

Another great metatextual image, as the Amazing Amazon had to juggle all manner of contrivance across the decade, including competing with her own toddler and adolescent selves for page space.

9) Wonder Woman #151 (January, 1965)

Possibly the most striking non-Titans Wonder Girl image of the decade, though I believe this is the Diana version, or else it would have run in Donna's countdown.

8) Wonder Woman #179 (November-December, 1968)

Kind of a wimpy Diana, and this image would have had a lot more impact without the tears or coming before her heralded "permanent" reversion to Diana Prince, rather than after.

7) Wonder Woman #159 (January, 1966)

Pure salesmanship. The art is simple and buried in text, but the hype compels you to read on.

6) Wonder Woman #129 (April, 1962)

An excellent image to sum up oodles of stories from this decade. Wonder Tot and Wonder Girl in the foreground, Wonder Woman way in the back, all in peril, and the latter failing to save her mother. The only way it could be more representational is if Hippolyte was dropping Diana instead.

5) Wonder Woman #156 (August, 1965)

Deeply uncomfortable symbolism here, especially with Diana's splayed legs and vacant eyes. Still, you'll never forget it, right?

4) Wonder Woman #180 (January-February, 1969)

Somehow, both in-your-face sensational and subdued. That lime green border really makes it pop in a way only the sixties could get away with.

3) Wonder Woman #125 (October, 1961)

Only a Wonder Woman comic could revolve around a physical and emotional tug-of-war between Steve Trevor, Mer-Man, and Amoeba-Man over marriage. Again, a dick, a fish, and a giant sentient amoeba are romantic rivals. Just to bring it all home, let's stage all that before a fuchsia background.

2) Wonder Woman #160 (February, 1966)

Cheetah swung by the tail into a mass of monkeys with damned ugly human faces. So much awesome in one cover, including an advertized rare Dr. Psycho reprint. Such a glorious Golden Age throwback. Finally, one word: purple.

1) Wonder Woman #178 (September-October, 1968)

Despite the misgivings of some, can you honestly say that this wasn't the most shocking, iconic, and memorable Wonder Woman cover of the decade? No more secretarial work, pining for Steve, or running around in circles under mommy's command. There may have been a lack of outright wonder, but for the first time in too long, there was a woman behind the wheel.

Top Character Covers Countdown

Friday, July 1, 2011

The Wonder Woman Gallery



Charlie Adlard
2010 JLA 100 Project Sketch Cover

alexmax
2010 "DCUniverse Vol.7: The Injustice Gang" The Cheetah
2010 DC Universe Vol.3: The Wards Wonder Girl art

Ramon Fernandez Bachs
2010 JLA 100 Project Sketch Cover

Mark Bagley
2010 JLA 100 Project Sketch Cover

Ben Bates
2010/11 JLA 100 Project Sketch Cover

David Michael Beck
Wonder Woman

Brian Bolland
The Warner Bros. Studio Store Wonder Woman Lithograph
1992 Wonder Woman Corner Box Figure
1992 Wonder Woman #68 Unused Cover Concept Sketch
1995 Wonder Woman #95 Unused Cover Concept Art
1995 Wonder Woman #96 Unused Cover Concept Art
1995 Wonder Woman [#100?] Unused Cover Concept Rough
1995 Wonder Woman #100 Cover Silhouette art

Brett Booth
2010 Wonder Woman Redesign art
2011 DCnÜ Wonder Girl Design Sketch
2011 Rejected DCnÜ Wonder Girl Concept Art

Dave Bullock
2010/11 JLA 100 Project Sketch Cover

Nick Bradshaw
2011 JLA 100 Project Sketch Cover

Shelton Bryant
2009 "The Wonder Woman" Watercolor

John Byrne
1995 DC Comics Wonder Woman Book "Dump"

Ivan Camelo
2011 Wonder Woman art

Eric Canete
2006 "Princess & King" Wonder Woman and Aquaman Commission
2010 Long Beach Comic Con Wonder Woman Commission

Anthony Castrillo
2011 JLA 100 Project Sketch Cover

Amanda Conner
1996 Wonder Woman Gallery pin-up

Dale Eaglesham
2004 Wonder Girl Donna Troy Convention Sketch

Nathan Fox
2011 DC Fifty-TOO! Wonder Woman #1

Timothy Green II
2011 Wonder Woman art

Gene Ha
2011 JLA 100 Project Donna Troy Sketch Cover

Matt Haley
2003 Emerald City Comicon Wonder Woman Commission
2006 Wonder Woman Day "Lynda Carter" Charity Auction Piece

Glen Hanson
Rule 63: Wonder Woman

Phil Hester
2005 Wonder Woman Commission
2005 Wonder Woman Meets Swamp Thing Commission

Tan Eng Huat
2009 Wonder Woman Gift Art

Rogan Josh
2010 Wonder Woman Print

Dan Jurgens
2010 JLA 100 Project Sketch Cover

Marcus Kelligrew
2009 "JLA-Wonder Woman"

Rafael Lam
2007 Wonder Woman Bordered
2010 Wonder Woman - Minimalismo

Ken Lashley
2010/11 JLA 100 Project Sketch Cover

Stanley “Artgerm” Lau
2010 “Wonder Woman Return”

Jim Lee
Wonder Woman Gallery by Jim Lee
New 52 Wonder Woman design by Jim Lee from Justice League #1 (October, 2011)
2011 Rejected DCnÜ Wonder Girl Concept Art by Jim Lee

Joseph Michael Linsner
2011 JLA 100 Project Sketch Cover

Michael “mic?” Magtanong
2011 “Goddess vs. Amazon” Artemis art

Richard Manship
2008 Wonder Woman Icon Wallpaper

Mike McKone
2011 NYCC Wonder Woman Color Commission

Marat Mychaels
2010/11 JLA 100 Project Sketch Cover

Michael Myers
2010 Vintage-style Wonder Woman Character Poster

Michael Netzer
2010 FBCC Sketch | Golden Age Wonder Woman

Cliff Nielsen
1996 Rogues Gallery #1: Cheetah

Oliver Nome
2010 Baby Wonder Woman

Kevin Nowlan
2006 JBQ and friends commission

Rob Osborne
2010/11 JLA 100 Project Sketch Cover

Dan Panosian
2006 Wonder Woman

George Pérez
2011 JLA 100 Project Sketch Cover

Brandon Peterson
2005 Wonder Woman Art Book Piece
2006 Wonder Woman Art Book Piece

Whilce Portacio
2005 Wonder Woman San Diego Comic-Con sketch

Joe Prado
2009 White Lantern Donna Troy design
2009 Black Lantern Wonder Woman version 1 design
2009 Black Lantern Wonder Woman version 2 design
2009 Black Lantern Wonder Woman version 3 design

Alex Ross
2006 Cheetah: From Bruce Wayne's private files in the Batcomputer
2010/11 JLA 100 Project Sketch Cover

Craig Rousseau
2010/11 JLA 100 Project Sketch Cover

Stephane Roux
2007 Wonder Girl Donna Troy Baltimore Comic-Con Sketch
2008 Heroes Convention Wonder Woman Commission
2009 NYCC Wonder Woman & Artemis Commission

Steffi Schütze
2010 "Superman, Wonderwoman, Batman"

Bart Sears
1991 Wizard Magazine #9 Unused Wonder Woman cover art

Evan “Doc” Shaner
2009 Wizard World Chicago Convention Sketch
2011 Wonder Woman! Sketch

Bill Sienkiewicz
1996 Rogues Gallery #1: Circe

Cat Staggs
Wonder Woman Day

Brian Stelfreeze
2008 Batgirl & Wonder Woman painting

Chris Stevens
2007 Wonder Woman Commission
2010 Golden Age Wonder Woman Commission

Tommy Tejeda
2001 Justice League Animated Art
2009 Tigra versus Cheetah
Tommy Tejeda Wonder Woman Art Gallery

Mark Texeira
2008 Color Commission

Bruce Timm
Wonder Woman Flying color pin-up

Dave Wachter
2009 "Wonder Woman vs Ares"

Mike Wieringo
1996 Wonder Woman Gallery pin-up
2006 Wonder Woman on Paradise Island sketch

Kent Williams
1995 Skybox DC Villains: The Dark Judgment Circe Trading Card #68
1995 Skybox DC Villains: The Dark Judgment Ares Trading Card #71

2010-2011 The Justice League of America 100 Project Donna Troy charity art gallery


Last Updated: 6/22/12

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Bizarro Comics: "Wonder Girl vs. Wonder Tot" (2001)



Wonder Girl, with a yawn, was flying at the crack of dawn toward Paradise Island. She spotted Wonder Tot making the same trip up ahead of her. Both were on their way to breakfast with Diana, but there was only one seat available next to her, and it was Tot's turn.
"It depends."
"On what?"
"On who gets there first!"

A red-faced Wonder Tot pursued Wonder Girl, who couldn't resist a premature victory lap, affording Tot the advantage. Wonder Girl caught up, but the force of their flight began knocking over pillars and generally wrecking havoc. Wonder Girl finally gave in, proclaiming Tot the fastest, but the little kid couldn't stop herself from speeding toward the ground. Wonder Girl managed to catch her by the ankle at the last second. After the race, all of the Amazons were sore, so both girls were placed on serving detail before receiving their own breakfast.

I wasn't won over by this story from Andi Watson and Mark Crilley. The art was nice enough, as was the coloring by Lee Loughridge, but it was mostly just a bunch of silent panels without any comedic punch. Also, the nerd in me must point out that neither character could fly in the source comics so much as glide on wind currents, plus at least one if not both of them were younger versions of Diana herself, so what was the big deal?


ElseWednesday

Wednesday, August 4, 2010

DC75: The Pygmalion Birth of Princess Diana (Wonder Woman #1, 1942)



I've been following Comics Should Be Good's 75 Most Memorable Moments in DC Comics History, and have found it so wanting, I'll be posting my own alternatives across multiple blogs and linking them through DC Bloodline's Truly Most Memorable Moments of the Dodranscentennial.

Pygmalion hated women, until he carved one out of ivory and fell in love with his statue. Aphrodite brought the statue to life, just as she would bestow a daughter upon Queen Hippolyte through the same means. Readers must have been as startled as the new mother when her molding of an infant was made flesh and sprang into her arms! Hundreds of creators may have traded ivory for clay and throttled readers with one devolution of Wonder Woman story after another, but we all remember this moment.