





Now don't get me wrong on this. I don't argue that Jim Steranko swiped the Mystery in Space covers above. But I am struck by how many of the vintage DC covers by Carmine Infantino and Gil Kane resemble in the most fundamental ways several of Steranko's classic SHIELD covers.
In this post, I present my theory on the origin of SHIELD #4. Could there be a connection for the covers above?
Are Nick and Adam brothers from other covers?
Rip Off
No comments:
Post a Comment