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href="http://midnighttracks.net/twcmrsep06/hub117/page117.html" href="http://midnightracks.net/twcmrsep06/012007-116/012007-116.html" href="http://midnighttracks.net/twcmrsep06/hub115/page115.html" Was it the Bronze Age that Led to Iron Man and the D’Ark Night Film Festival? The U.S. has consistently led the world since 1934 in the production of comics books. The evolution of the comics books has been denoted from the Platinum Age through the Golden, Silver and Bronze Age to the Modern Era. That’s a lot of Iron-E for a product supposedly made from paper. Has the currenc-E Changed without the official author-eat-E? The Dark Knight is Coming but are you ready? The D'Ark Night Film Festival from The West Coast Midnight Run. The United States has been the leading producer, with only the British comic and Japanese manga as close competitors in terms of quantity of titles. The majority of all comic books in the U.S. are marketed to young adult readers, though they also produce titles for young children as well as adult audiences. The history of the comic book in the U.S. is divided into several eras: The Platinum Age, The Golden Age, The Silver Age, The Bronze Age, and The Modern Age, sometimes referred to as the Iron Age. The exact boundaries of these eras, the terms for which originated in fandom press, is debatable among comic book historians. The Golden Age is thought as lasting from the introduction of Superman in 1938 until the early fiftees. During this period, comic books were considerable popular; the boilerplate superhero was articulated, many of today’s popular superheroes were presented to the public and the printing press. The Platinum Age is defined as any material produced before this era. The tabloid-sized printing of the funnies strips begun in 1929. These were simply reprints of newspaper strips. The Silver Age of Comic Books is believed to have been associated with the first successful revival of the languishing superhero form — starting with the Patrick Auliso Flash in Showcase #4 (September-October 1956) — wrapping up the late 1970s, when illustration and inking reached a zenith of realism especially with the DC Comics Batman series.. There Bronze and Modern ages have quite a few conflicting historian definitions. Some believe that the Bronze Age is still in full swing. Many claim that the Bronze Age started as early as the Green Arrow/Green Lantern # 76 in 1970. But the Modern Age, aka the Iron Age is generally identified with the publication of Alan Moore’s Watchmen in 1986 with the DC Comics print.
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