Today's Document
Mike Driver
official daine visual archive
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
will byers stan first human second
hello vonnie

Andulka
ojovivo
Noah Kahan
taylor price

titsay
we're not kids anymore.

if i look back, i am lost

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$LAYYYTER
Three Goblin Art
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH

shark vs the universe

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@rr1301907-blog
Concept art by Bruce Timm
Batman: Animated by writer Paul Dini and designer Chip Kidd. This book showed me an inside look into the creation of the series, presenting the archives of Warner Bros Animation Studio.
interview with Eric Radomski
It’s impossible to talk about Don Bluth without talking about Walt Disney. Bluth started as an animator and director at Walt Disney Animation Studios before founding a rival company that became Disney’s main competitor in the 1980s. During his roller coaster of a career, Bluth produced commercial hi
The unfortunate successor to The Golden Age of Animation, slowly setting in at the late 1950s and slowly fading out at some point during the '80s.note The Dark Age ended for animated movies some time before the change would spread to …
Back in July, we showed you a gallery depicting Batman: Gotham Crusaders, an original creation of artist Phil Cho. We got a look at Cho's version of the Dark Knight and company over the span of six hypothetical seasons. It as a job well done, and I still wish it was real. Cho has once again shown his love for Batman with a new gallery called "Batman of the Ages." The title pretty much explains it all. Ranging from 1939 to today, Cho has drawn some of the most iconic versions of the Caped Crusader. Here are some highlights. Here is Batman as he looked in his debut from Detective Comics #27 in 1939. To this day, I still can't understand the reasoning of the purple gloves. When you are wearing almost all black and grey to hide in the shadows, bright purple doesn't really fit the motif. While he is still sporting the classic suit of the 1960s TV show, I do like the little change Cho made, rendering this version of Adam West a tad more in shape thanks to the cape and cowl. June 23rd,
Batman Unmasked - Analyzing a Cultural Icon by Will Brooker
Tim Burton's Ôø?BatmanÔø? was so noirish and so far removed from Ôø?SupermanÔø? and Ôø?Flash Gordon,Ôø? that critics and audiences were upset by the dark
The Dark Knight arrives in movie theaters this weekend, in one of the most critically acclaimed sequels in recent memory (currently at 93% Fresh on Rotten Tomatoes). This fall, Batman returns to television in Cartoon Network's Batman: The Brave and the Bold, which promises to feature "nonstop action and adventure with a touch of comic relief." Making appearances in the series will be Blue Beetle, Green Arrow, and Aquaman. In celebration of the release of the Caped Crusader's latest cinematic feat, IGN TV is taking you on a history trip through the Batman's television adventures on the small screen so far, both live-action and animated.