6 Lesser-Known Versions of Famous Pop Culture Characters
Who you gonna call? Not “the other” Ghostbusters.
Who you gonna call? Not “the other” Ghostbusters.
While Cap is the most successful and enduring patriotic superhero, he’s far from the only one. There have been many flag-wrapped heroes in the long, weird history of comics.
In comics, time travel is as commonplace as the superhero team-up.
The ultimate comic-book-turned-‘70s-cartoon-turned-guilty pleasure movie just turned 15.
Na-na-na-na-na-na-na-na-na...doubt it!
Witness the 75-year evolution of Batman's car.
Today, comic book movies are ubiquitous. But these comic book superheroes might never have made the move from the page to the screen if it weren't for the success of Richard Donner’s 'Superman: The Movie' (1978).
Who needs Spark Notes when you have these drawings?
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt will use drawings from Randall Munroe’s work 'The Thing Explainer' in its physics, chemistry, and biology books.
A handful of comics stand out now as being very much keyed into the styles of their times.
At a time comics cost 75 cents, DC's $2.95 take on Batman flew off shelves (almost) as fast as Frank Miller could deliver it.
Burt Ward didn't have anything to fear from villains: The show itself did a pretty good job of nearly killing him.
The celebrity chef and TV personality is also a celebrated comic book artist.
The three-part installment is called "Angel Catbird." Yes, it's about a man who's part cat, part bird.
Darth Vader wanted to attack the Kennedy Space Center.
Charles Schulz's 'Peanuts' comic strip made its debut on October 2, 1950, and has been an indelible part of American culture ever since.
… Featuring a catchy 1944 cartoon starring the one-and-only Ms. Banana.
94-year-old Betty Tokar Jankovich dumped the 'Archie' creator when she was 18.
Mistakes happen. Sometimes, like in these mixups, those mistakes end up in print with a distribution in the hundreds of thousands.
The sometimes controversial—but never boring—cartoonist turns 72 years old today.
You may have noticed his cameo at the end of "Guardians of the Galaxy," but Howard the Duck has been around longer than you might remember.
In 1968, a correspondence with a schoolteacher led to Charles Schulz creating the Peanuts’s first African-American character.
Everyone knows Robin, Alfred, and Commissioner Gordon, but these 7 Batman allies are a little less familiar to the average Bat-fan.
With great budget restrictions come great disappointments.