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All-Winners Comics #3

All-Winners Comics (1941-1946) #3

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A mysterious artist paints portraits that portray the death of the person looking at it. Once they take a glance at it, their death is written in stone. What will Captain America do about this terrifying, otherworldly phenomenon?

66 pages, Kindle Edition

Published July 18, 2017

2 people are currently reading
6 people want to read

About the author

Stan Lee

7,563 books2,347 followers
Stan Lee (born Stanley Martin Lieber) was an American writer, editor, creator of comic book superheroes, and the former president and chairman of Marvel Comics.

With several artist co-creators, most notably Jack Kirby and Steve Ditko, he co-created Spider-Man, the Fantastic Four, Thor as a superhero, the X-Men, Iron Man, the Hulk, Daredevil, the Silver Surfer, Dr. Strange, Ant-Man and the Wasp, Scarlet Witch, The Inhumans, and many other characters, introducing complex, naturalistic characters and a thoroughly shared universe into superhero comic books. He subsequently led the expansion of Marvel Comics from a small division of a publishing house to a large multimedia corporation.

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Alex.
721 reviews
September 28, 2022
The Human Torch
After America enacts a trade embargo with Japan, the Japanese army starts running out of oil, so they decide to buy a large oil plant in Texas with plans of smuggling it to Japan in cargo submarines (which I thought was a little funny). The story was fine, but my main thing was that Torch and Toro spend most of the story in flame in underground oil lines and it only ignites some of the time.

Captain America
The bad guy in this story was a disguised American colonel who paints picture of people in their death pose, the subject the kills themself in the way of the painting. The story says this was one of their most dire battles, but it's just an old man with a canvas and a knife.

The Whizzer
Once again the most powerful stopping force in the Marvel universe is a silken net. However it did only stop Whizzer for a few moments before he hurls it back at the bad guy, knocking off a prison guard wall, where he falls to his death.

The Sub-Mariner
Namor helps out a ship captain after a mutiny, stopping the criminals and collecting the treasure that the crew was after for them. Namor was talking about keeping some treasure as payment, which I thought was a little funny, but then he just donates it to war-bonds, booooooring.

The Destroyer
So did Marvel Comics or the Nazi's forget that they've already tried drilling a tunnel under the ocean to Britain. It wasn't any more successful than the last time they tried. I do like that the Destroyer hits the Nazi's so hard and fast that they can barely react to his onslaught.
Profile Image for Simon Mac.
88 reviews
February 25, 2020
A comic full of copycat heroes and utter convenience. Whizzer is just the Hurricane. And how many times am I going to see “oh my ties were loose”. The Destroyer story was lame beyond reason. It zoomed past the plot like a scratchy movie that skips scenes. And where was the black dragon? And why was there a dynamite switch so accessible to the Destroyer. Poor comic.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews

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