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PUBLISHER: DC
COMMENTS: 1st Captain Cold cover; COMIC BOOK IMPACT rating of 6 (CBI)
Read Description ▼
1st Captain Cold cover; COMIC BOOK IMPACT rating of 6 (CBI)One of the great nemeses of the Silver Age Flash was Captain Cold, who would use his cyclotron gun to disrupt and confound the Flash during their many clashes. Clad in a stylish parka with his trademark visor, Captain Cold cuts a striking figure on the cover of this SA classic. The Carmine Infantino cover design is a darling of fans of the series that showcases his deft touch and incredible skill when it comes to depicting motion, which breathed life into his beloved run on the title. Extremely difficult to find in higher grades this book is a perennial fave amongst Flash fans young and old.
Artists Information
High School of Art & Design alum Carmine Infantino got his start in the industry working Timely, a precursor to Marvel Comics, where he would do spot work on anthology features, in his first work at DC he helped create Black Canary and began his long-running involvement with the Flash during his Golden Age era, as well as illustrating the original Green Lantern. After the post-war comic book slump Infantino collaborated with writer Robert Kanigher and editor Julius Schwartz to help bring back superheroes and launch the Silver Age by updating the Flash in the pages of Showcase, the reboot was a huge success and led to the superhero rebirth that has continued into the modern day, Infantino's ability to capture speed and movement on a page made his Flash believable and engaging. Carmine was promoted to Art Director and then Publisher at DC over the course of his illustrious career,
Joe Giella is an American comic book artist best known as a DC Comics inker during the late 1950s and 1960s Silver Age of comic books. Giella's career began in the 40's at Hillman and later working with C.C. Beck on Captain Marvel stories at Fawcett. He would also assist on Captain America, Human Torch, Sub-Mariner and other stories at Timely. It was the Silver Age where he would come to his most prominence, working at DC on many of their biggest titles, including Batman, Green Lantern and Strange Adventures, working often with artist Carmine Infantino.