- Source: Big Bang (comics)
- Source: Big Bang Comics
The Big Bang is a Milestone Comics event published by DC Comics. The event was first chronicled in Blood Syndicate #1 by Dwayne McDuffie, Ivan Velez Jr. and Denys Cowan, and Static #1 (April 1993) by Dwayne McDuffie and Robert L. Washington III.
Publication history
The Big Bang is an event where gang members were sprayed with a radioactive, mutagenic gas intended to act as a tracer. The gas kills most exposed to it and gives the survivors superpowers. The concept was created by Christopher Priest and inspired by urban legends of a chemical-laced soda that sterilizes black people.
In other media
The Big Bang appears in Static Shock. Additionally, Ebon attempts to initiate a second Big Bang on two occasions, but is foiled by Static.
See also
Metahuman
References
Big Bang Comics is an American comic book anthology series, designed to be an homage to Golden Age and Silver Age comics. Most stories in Big Bang Comics take place either on "Earth-A" during the 1960s, or on "Earth-B" during the 1940s, featuring characters such as Ultiman, Thunder Girl, and Dr. Weird.
Big Bang Comics first appeared in 1994, with a five-issue limited series (numbered #1–4 and #0), published by Caliber Comics. A second series lasting 35 issues, set in the Image Universe, was published by Image Comics from 1996 to 2001.
Publication history
Gary Carlson was exposed to Dr. Weird (who originally appeared in the fanzine Star-Studded Comics #1 in 1963) in one of the character's earliest collected appearances, Comic Crusader Storybook #1 (Al Greim, 1977), in a story by Howard Keltner and Dennis Fujitake. The Comic Crusader Storybook was a trade paperback fanzine anthology which included short stories featuring the work of many independent artists and writers. In 1994, Carlson co-created the Big Bang anthology series, alongside artist/writer Chris Ecker. In the 1990s Carlson wrote Berzerker for Caliber Press; one of the first canonical appearances of a Big Bang Comics character was by the Knight Watchman in Berzerker #1 (Feb. 1993). In 1993, Carlson and Edward DeGeorge acquired all rights to Dr. Weird from Howard Keltner, eventually folded him into the Big Bang universe and making him the only character with a genuine pedigree.
= Image Comics
=Through 2005, Image Comics published 35 issues of Big Bang Comics set in the Image Universe, followed by seven one-shot comics.
= Big Bang Presents
=As of the 2010s, Carlson self-publishes Big Bang Presents. Like its predecessor series Big Bang Comics, this is an anthology featuring a rotating cast of new and established characters in a self-contained fictional universe, written by Carlson and drawn by Ecker and various other artists. The company has also begun reprinting earlier comics in trade paperback form through Pulp 2.0 press.
Big Bang characters
Some of the iconic characters in the Big Bang Universe include:
The Beacon
Dr. Weird
Knight Watchman
Protoplasman
Thunder Girl
Ultiman
Superhero teams in the Big Bang Universe include the Round Table of America, the Knights of Justice, the Pantheon of Heroes, and the Whiz Kids.
Metafictional imprints
To give more depth to the various characters, in the world of Big Bang Comics, several invented publishing imprints were created which supposedly existed in the Golden Age and the Silver Age (a device later used by Amalgam Comics).
All of these false covers appeared on the reverse of the Caliber Press limited series issues in scaled-down shots, and again as full-page replicas in Big Bang #0.
In other media
A TV movie named Knights of Justice was made in 2000. Although it featured the Golden Age versions of Ultiman and Thunder Girl and used the name of the company's Golden Age superteam, the team also included Knight Watchman and a heroine called Masker (who appeared in BB #21), both of whom are exclusively Silver Age heroes in the published version of the universe. The team's mission was to defeat a supervillain and prove their usefulness to the President or face being disbanded.
The film is loosely based on the hyperactive Saturday-morning shows of the 1970s that combined special effects with live action, yielding a clearly Silver Age feel to the action.
= Big Bang Comics RPG
=A pen-and-paper role-playing game has also been released for Big Bang Comics (Pisces All Media, 2006). The Big Bang Comics RPG uses a streamlined version of the D20 system.
See also
America's Best Comics
References
External links
Official website — free webcomics every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday.
Official Knight Watchmen website
Big Bang Comics (Caliber) at the Grand Comics Database
Big Bang Comics (Image) at the Grand Comics Database
Big Bang Comics (Image) at the Comic Book DB (archived from the original)
Big Bang Comics on International Superheroes
Jazma Online interview: Gary Carlson June 5th, 2005
B-Independent.com: Gary Carlson b-independent interview August 25th, 1998
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- Big Bang (comics)
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- Big Bang (disambiguation)
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