After an unsuccesful get-together at William & Rita's where Angel insults their ugly child, she and Dragon are visited by Mighty Man / Ann Stevens. Follwing the revelation that Dragon and Alex are once again 'involved,' Dragon answers a Police report detailing a bank robbery. While confronting the villain in question, Dragon and an innocent bystander fall victim to the crook's weapon - a leftover Martian shrinking ray.
Graduating Clash! When you're the son of the Savage Dragon, anything you do is a major media event! So when Malcolm Dragon graduates from high school, it's all-out mayhem! It's the event of the century and you're invited!
Angered that she cannot receive a commitment from Dragon, Alex apparently 'dumps' him at his house - where he then finds Powerhouse waiting for him. Dragon and Powerhouse then engage in a furious and prolonged battle, all the while debating their respective ideologies.
Savage Dragon was dead, to begin with and by the end of this earth-shattering epic, the world as we knew was dead as well. Featuring the resurrection of the Savage Dragon, the return of OverLord, the resurgence of the Vicious Circle and the revenge of Darklord. All this, and Dragon get married, gets widowed, and gets small. It's 25 action-packed issues of fandom's favorite fin-head! A thrill on every page! Collects SAVAGE DRAGON #51-75.
Over thirty years after his initial ascent to super stardom, Todd McFarlane (b. 1961) remains one of the most popular and contentious comic artists ever. The interviews compiled in this volume offer a nuanced portrait of McFarlane’s polarizing character. Beginning with his earliest days on Spider-Man to the months before the hotly anticipated release of Spawn and ending with his writing ventures decades later, the interviews offer compelling perspectives from the renowned creator. As the most vocal representative of Image Comics, McFarlane, alongside Jim Lee, Rob Liefeld, Erik Larsen, Jim Valentino, Marc Silvestri, and Whilce Portacio, was a veritable rock star. Eager fans swarmed into lengthy lines around comic book stores and conventions, waiting for their chance at a thirty-second autograph. This book offers a glimpse into the comic book world of the early 1990s, a world rampant with variant covers, impossibly exaggerated bodies, and wild speculation about what would be the next comic to explode in value. The volume also includes the momentous public debate between McFarlane and Peter David, former collaborator on The Incredible Hulk, moderated by the late George Pérez at a standing-room-only event at ComicsFest in 1993. While this world sounds almost inconceivable to the comic book fan of today, it was the milieu in which McFarlane rose to stardom and excelled like no other, leaving his mark on the medium forever.