1963: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[Crossover]]: The characters from different superhero teams are appearing together.
* [[Deliberate Values Dissonance]]: The sexism, the heavy-handed anti-communism, etc.
* [[Everything's Better With Monkeys]]: [[Pokémon -Speak|Queep!]]
* [[Evil Counterpart]]: In the last issue.
* [[Evil Gloating]]
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* [[Kinda Busy Here]]: The Fury absolutely ''has'' to call [[My Beloved Smother|his mom]] in the middle of a fight with a psychic dinosaur. Luckily, there's a phone booth nearby, since cell phones haven't been invented yet...
* [[Legacy Character]]: The Fury is the son of the original Fightin' Fury.
* [[Non-Human Sidekick]]: The Hypernaut has a mutant pink [[Everything's Better With Monkeys|monkey]] with two faces named [[Pokémon -Speak|Queep]].
* [[Pokémon -Speak]]: Queep
* [[Red Scare]]: A recurring theme.
* [[Shout -Out]]: To ''[[Watchmen]]'' and [[Marvel Comics]].
** Also, when the Voidoid is scanning the Fury in Issue #2, you'll notice that in one part, the name of a certain [[Superman]] character from the fifth dimension appears in one of the panels.
** And in the final issue, when the heroes are transported into another world, panels from various other ''Image'' comics are seen in the background - including one of ''normalman''... in reference to ''normalman'' having a Mystery, Inc cameo under similar circumstances.
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* [[Those Wacky Nazis]]
* [[Villain Team-Up]]: The Voidoid talks about how he teamed up with other villains in the past.
* [[Who Shot JFK?]]: USA actually saves Kennedy, but the shooter was Leo Harley Osborne, who was brainwashed by the Red Brain.
 
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Revision as of 04:10, 26 January 2014

1963 is a six-issue miniseries written by Alan Moore and published in 1993. Stylistically, it invokes The Silver Age of Comic Books (particularly, that of the early Marvel Comics), complete with spoof advertisements in the style of the day. This last item was repeated with a period-appropriate twist by Moore's later project with Kevin O'Neill, The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen.

The series has never been finished as initially intended. It was meant to be followed by an 80-page annual, in which the 1963 characters are catapulted forward 30 years to meet with the Dark Age characters of 1993.


1963 contains examples of:

  Everything's so harsh and vivid!