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I recently was looking at ALIEN WORLDS 3-D # 1 (and only), July 1984. Among one of the last books published by Pacific Comics before they folded. And I'm always impressed on re-reading at the quality of the 3-D separations. This is a book that works, like no other 3-D book I've looked at, with really nice art, and 3-D images that separate really well into foreground/middleground/background and often even more layers of 3-D effect. With stories by: 1) Jim Sullivan/Dave Stevens, 3 pages 2) John Bolton, 7 pages 3) Bill Wray, 4 pages 4) Arthur Adams, 5 pages (his first published story!) 5) Rand Holmes, 9 pages. So a really nice assembly of talent, with storytelling in an EC S-F style. 3-D books are pretty rarely published, although there was a modest surge of them in the mid/late 1980's. Feel free to list any 3-D books you like or recommend. I have a half-dozen or so, above all of them this is the one I'd recommend to sample the 3-D reading experience with both good art, combined with very effective 3-D separations.
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The above cover is by Joe Chiodo.
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Last night I re-read MR MONSTER SUPER-DUPER SPECIAL 1 (on the cover titled MR MONSTER'S 3-D HI-OCTANE HORROR), that has some well-crafted 3-D separation effects.  It begins with a 4-page framing sequence by Michael T. Gilbert, inked by Mike Mignola. ( A reminder of the first 3 years of Mignola's career where he was an inker, 1984 to 1986 or so, before he switched to pencilling.) And then reprints two of the first 3-D stories by Joe Kubert and Bob Powell. The opening page of the Kubert story in particular stands out for me, a horrific giant face of the devil in the background, looming over the man running from him toward the reader. It also includes a 3-D version of one of Gilbert's own stories that ran as a backup in CEREBUS 42, in 1982. The only downside of 3-D is it's a strain on the eyes to look at too long. And they say porn will make you go blind, they should try 3-D !
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Despite that it has only one 3-D story, and that the 3-D effects are not the best, I love the Steranko version of " 'Repent, Harlequin!' said the Ticktockman" in THE ILLUSTRATED HARLAN ELLISON, published in 1978.  They're some of the most beautiful Steranko pages I've seen, and an interesting twist is the color separations are by Neal Adams! This page, although with text in spanish, shows both the 3-D separations, as well as the black-and-white portfolio version. And even an ad for the portfolio that appeared in Steranko's PREVUE magazine in the late 1970's. In one of my better acts of judgement, I bought the portfolio version of it from Bud Plant a month or so after I purchased the book, allowing me to enjoy the images in black-and-white without the 3-D effect, and in a larger size closer to the original art. The regular stories, including "The Discarded" by Tom Sutton, "Shattered Like a Glass Goblin" by William Stout, and "I'm Looking for Kadak" beautifully airbrushed by Overton Lloyd, along with a feature on Eliison book covers by artists Leo and Diane Dillon, all make this book very much worth having.
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Here's an extensive look back at "The History of 3-D Comics", and the 3-D comics craze from when it began in the 1950's, showing a lot of covers and interior pages. I honestly didn't realize there were so many. Here's the Kubert devil-page I mentioned above:  More impressive on paper and with 3-D glasses. The separations have a great 3-D effect. An outgrowth of 3-D movies, and like the movies, was a passing trend and novelty that is revived periodically. From the article, multiple publishers jumped on the 3-D trend in 1953-1954, initially had good sales that quickly diminished, then had huge piles of unsold copies and stopped publishing 3-D titles after 1954. To my knowledge, another 3-D comic wasn't done until 1984 with ALIEN WORLDS 3-D, and a number of 3-D titles for a nche market after, for about 7 years. The one exception being the 10-page Steranko adaptation of "Repent Halequin" in THE ILLUSTRATED HARLAN ELLISON, one 3-D section out of a larger 100-page book. The SHEENA 3-D issue listed was reprinted in 1985 with a dynamite Dave Stevens cover.
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One of the 3-D titles is "3-D LOVE".
Man, just imagine what Robert Crumb or Larry Welz could have done with that!
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 A 1984 reprint of the SHEENA 3-D comic book, with a new Dave Stevens cover. Back in the day when I had no interest in 3-D, I bought this for the cover alone.
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. I was recently looking at several one-shots and series by Ray Zone, and looking for more information about him, ran across this... https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ray_ZoneRay Zone (1947–2012) was an American film historian, author, artist, and pioneer in methods of converting flat images (in particular, comic books) into stereoscopic images. Born May 16, 1947 Died November 13, 2012 (aged 65)
Starlog called him the "King of 3-D Comics", and Artsy Planet called him the "3D King of Hollywood".
Zone attributed his interest in 3D to having read Mighty Mouse comic books in 3D at the age of 6, in 1953.[2] He moved to Los Angeles in the early 1980s and began converting flat art to 3D images. He began working in comic books in 1983, and his early collaborations with Jack C. Harris and Steve Ditko drew the attention of Archie Goodwin, who recruited him to work with John Byrne on the 1990 Batman 3-D, a full-length 3D graphic novella.[3] Zone produced 3D adaptations of art for over 150 comic books, for clients such as Disney, Warner Bros and the Simpsons, and including stories by Alan Moore and Grant Morrison which were specifically written to accommodate stereoscopy.
An internationally recognized expert in all things 3-D, Zone had a special interest in stereoscopic cinema and Large Format 3-D (15/70) filmmaking. He created stereo conversions and stereoscopic images for a wide variety of clients in publishing, education, advertising, television and motion pictures. In 2006 Zone was the 3D Artist on the Tool album 10,000 Days, which won that year's Grammy Award for Best Recording Package. He received numerous awards for his 3-D work, among them a 1987 Inkpot Award from the San Diego Comic-Con for "Outstanding Achievement in Comic Arts", and
He was the author of "3D Filmmakers, Conversations with Creators of Stereoscopic Motion Pictures" (Scarecrow Press: 2005), "Stereoscopic Cinema and the Origins of 3-D Film, 1838 - 1952" (University Press of Kentucky: 2007), "3-DIY: Stereoscopic Moviemaking on an Indie Budget" (Focal Press: 2012), and "3-D Revolution: The History of Modern Stereoscopic Cinema" (University Press of Kentucky: 2012).
In 2008 Zone worked as 3D Supervisor on Dark Country with director/star Thomas Jane, and in 2010 as 3D Producer on "Guardians of the Lost Code", the first animated 3D feature film made in Mexico. Sorry to see he died, 11 years ago now. But he left behind some of the best examples of 3-D comics, that I still enjoy re-reading. And apparently Ray Zone left quite a mark with 3-D effects in film and other media as well.
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. One of several projects self-published by Ray Zone is TEX BENSON 1-4 (1990, second series), written and illustrated by Chuck Roblin. That as best I can describe it, is a beautifully illustrated and deliberately silly parody of Flash Gordon, with a clear Wallace Wood influence as well. Before that was an SQ Productions 4-issue TEX BENSON series (1986, first series). https://www.mycomicshop.com/search?TID=157701And then the even nicer above 4-issue second series published by Ray Zone in 1990. But beyond the first issue that was fairly easy to get hold of, man were the other 3 issues hard o find. The back covers were the only 3-D portion of these 4 issues.
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. In the listing for actor Thomas Jane : https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_JaneIn addition to starring in the film, he contributed his voice to the video games The Punisher and Gun. He also co-owns RAW, an entertainment company which he runs with Steve Niles and Tim Bradstreet. RAW Studios, the company's comic-book division, released BAD PLANET (written by Jane) through Image Comics.
Jane became a spokesperson for Niles and the cover model for comic-book character Cal McDonald in 2006.[11] I picked up the 6-issue BAD PLANET series (2005), and aside from some exceptionally nice covers by Berni Wrightson, Michael Kaluta, Dave Stevens and others, found the story and interior art pretty mediocre. But an interesting inclusion was 3-D glasses, and a few segments in the story done in 3-D separations. The 3-D was well-done, but too brief , just a page or two here and there, inside a regular non-3D story(mostly in issue 3, with a few scattered 3-D pin-up house ads in the other issues) . I would have preferred if they did backup stories of 6 or 10 pages, where that whole portion of the book was in 3-D, rather than having to take the glasses on and off for a page or so, to read just a few brief sections of 3-D. But it does have the distinction of being the last 3-D work I've seen published in comics. With separations by the aforementioned Ray Zone. There was also a brief ALIEN PIG FARM 1-4 series (in 2007, with no 3-D work) that was in a similar EC style/ alien-invasion genre. (But ALIEN PIG FARM has no 3-D sections). If you like (or dislike) one of the two series, you'll probably feel the same about the other. You can read them at : BAD PLANET https://viewcomiconline.com/bad-planet-1/ALIEN PIG FARM https://viewcomiconline.com/alien-pig-farm-3000-issue-1/
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I recently was looking at ALIEN WORLDS 3-D # 1 (and only), July 1984. Among one of the last books published by Pacific Comics before they folded. And I'm always impressed on re-reading at the quality of the 3-D separations. This is a book that works, like no other 3-D book I've looked at, with really nice art, and 3-D images that separate really well into foreground/middleground/background and often even more layers of 3-D effect. With stories by: 1) Jim Sullivan/Dave Stevens, 3 pages 2) John Bolton, 7 pages 3) Bill Wray, 4 pages 4) Arthur Adams, 5 pages (his first published story!) 5) Rand Holmes, 9 pages. So a really nice assembly of talent, with storytelling in an EC S-F style. 3-D books are pretty rarely published, although there was a modest surge of them in the mid/late 1980's. Feel free to list any 3-D books you like or recommend. I have a half-dozen or so, above all of them this is the one I'd recommend to sample the 3-D reading experience with both good art, combined with very effective 3-D separations. ALIEN WORLDS 3-D https://viewcomiconline.com/three-dimensional-alien-worlds-full/Several years later, now I can post the full issue for you to read online. As long as you have a pair of 3-D glasses laying around to use. This one has the best selection of artists, and best 3-D separations of any 3-D comic I've sampled. And now it's even online !
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Joined: Sep 2001
Posts: 25,525 Likes: 37
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