Doug: Dark Age, Copper Age, Best-Forgotten Age... Whatever you call the 1990s, there is no doubt some noise was made. Thomas F. is along today to shepherd us through a conversation on one of the decade's (and beyond) iconic artists -- Todd McFarlane.
Thomas F.: This entry assumes that the reader is a fan, or at least to some
degree appreciative, of Todd McFarlane’s undeniably unique and extremely
detailed artwork. That being said, I fully recognize that the criticism
of Nineties artwork—McFarlane’s included—is
valid. The countless complaints of human anatomy grossly out of
proportion, ridiculously exaggerated muscles, and the gimmicky covers
that were so obviously a cash-grab—all this is undeniably true.
In
retrospect, no doubt we’ve all had our fill of hologram covers,
embossed covers, glow-in-the-dark
covers, foil covers, chromium covers, die-cut image covers, polybag
issues, slide motion covers, thermal ink covers, multiple interlocking
covers, etc. At least I’ve had enough of them to last a lifetime.
Nevertheless,
I believe that there was at least some late Eighties/early Nineties
artwork that had its
appeal—with plenty of iconic covers—and like many fans at the time of
McFarlane’s tenure at Marvel, I felt that McFarlane drew the
“spideriest” Spider-Man my preteen eyes had ever seen. Caught up in the
craze of McFarlanemania, I snapped up nearly everything
and anything he’d penciled.
By the way, for a few dollars I recently picked up a copy of
All-Star Squadron #47, from July 1985, “The Secret
Origin of Dr. Fate.” The cover and interiors were drawn by a 24 year-old
McFarlane early on in his career, just shortly after he’d broken into
the comic book industry.
The covers reproduced below are some of my personal favorite McFarlane covers. If you have any favorite
McFarlane covers of your own that aren’t portrayed here, please feel free to point them out!