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  #155  
Vieux 20/03/2019, 14h58
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-Généalogiste Sénile--Sentinelle du Temple-
 
Date d'inscription: août 2002
Localisation: bordeaux
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Citation:
Amazing Adult Fantasy was, in many ways, very much a companion piece to FF. The title started with a six-issue run as Amazing Adventures, but in August 1961, the same month that FF #1 hit, it morphed with a new title.

Lee wrote in 1974’s Origins of Marvel Comics that he was looking to “upgrade the stories as much as possible” in AAF. He aimed the shocker, twist endings at a more adult crowd. Lee knew what he was trying to accomplish with the FF, and he tried to accomplish the same in Amazing Adult Fantasy. The books were promoted together in house ads, and even had the same type treatment in the logos.

“Sol Brodsky designed that Fantastic Four logo,” says Roy Thomas, speaking of Marvel’s longtime production manager. “Probably not that exact lettering; that was probably Artie Simek or someone. But he was very proud of that.”

And Amazing Adult Fantasy turned out to be something to be proud of as well. The “adult” format didn’t click all too well, so title changed once again, becoming plain ol’ Amazing Fantasy for its 15th and final issue, an issue that just happened to contain the first ever appearance of Spider-Man.
https://www.newsarama.com/37715-marvel-mysteries.html
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