Doom Patrol, Vol. 4: Musclebound
Originally conceived in the 1960s, a reinvigorated Doom Patrol burst out of the utterly unique imagination of writer Grant Morrison and heralded a new direction for American comics in the 1990s. Since then, the World's Strangest Heroes have left behind almost every vestige of normality. ...
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Originally conceived in the 1960s, a reinvigorated Doom Patrol burst out of the utterly unique imagination of writer Grant Morrison and heralded a new direction for American comics in the 1990s. Since then, the World's Strangest Heroes have left behind almost every vestige of normality. Though they are super-powered beings, and their foes are bent on world domination, all that is conventional ends there. Shunned as freaks and outcasts, and tempered by loss and insanity, the Doom Patrol faces mystifying threats – ones that must, at all costs, be defeated.
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Format: paperback
ISBN:
9781401209995 (1401209998)
Publish date: August 30th 2006
Publisher: Vertigo
Pages no: 256
Edition language: English
Category:
Fantasy,
Science Fiction,
Sequential Art,
Graphic Novels,
Comics,
Graphic Novels Comics,
Comix,
Comic Book,
Mythology,
Superheroes,
Dc Comics
Series: Grant Morrison's Doom Patrol (#4)
Grant Morrison is a mad man. A muscular man. Flex Mentallo uses his muscles to drop people to their knees. just by flexing them.The Beard Hunter. jealous he doesn't have one goes after everyone else's. Shaving cream and razor in hand.That's not all. The Brotherhood of Dada returns. and more really b...
Grant Morrison has made a career out of throwing around tons of wildly creative ideas and waiting to see which ones stick. Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't. But I admire his creativity and willingness to try to work out even his strangest ideas (and DC's willingness to let him do as he likes...
There is an odd kind of purity in this level of madness. The narrative just charges forward wherever its going without any concern for narrative, like a drunken dog on Halloween night.