Stan Lee
Stan Lee
does anyone know where i can find pictures of Stan Lee's versions of Batman and Superman
A few years ago Stan Lee was commissioned to draw his interpretation of the classic DC comic characters Batman and Superman. Does anyone know where i might find these pictures?
try googling stan lee presents.
For Stan Lee Deals Click The Blue Links Below
![]() Incredible Hulk TPB by Stan Lee Fireside Book 1978 Rare US $4.99
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![]() Signed Stan Lee Romeo Juliet The War Poster from NYC Comic Con US $60.00
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![]() Vintage 1975 Monsters of the Movies Horror of Dracula by Curtis and Stan Lee US $6.00
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![]() NYCC 2011 ASM 666 VARIANT – SIGNED by STAN LEE US $174.99
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![]() Silver Surfer 1 CGC 45 SS STAN LEE US $169.99
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![]() Amazing Spider man 42 CGC 75 OW WP STAN LEE JOHN ROMITA US $189.99
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![]() THE LAST FANTASTIC FOUR STORY 1 NEARMINT Stan Lee John Romita Jr NM US $1.95
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![]() 1995 Marvel Limited SILVER SURFER Hardcover HC Stan Lee Jack Kirby 742 Scarce US $135.00
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![]() MY FRIEND IRMA 11 OCTOBER 1951 DAN DE CARLO STAN LEE COMPLETE 10 CENT COMIC US $30.60
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![]() Spider Man India Stan Lee Signed Autograph Comic Book Amazing Spider Man Marvel US $24.95
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![]() Vrg 1979 1st Edition Doctor Strange Master of the Mystic Arts by Stan Lee PB US $9.49
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![]() amazing spider man 642 NYCC variant CGC 98 signed by romitas stan lee 5 more US $182.50
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![]() The New Mutants 98 First Appearance of Deadpool signed by Stan Lee US $200.00
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![]() Amazing Spider man 583 Obama 1st Print Signed by Stan Lee US $200.00
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![]() Amazing Spider Man 107 Apr1972 Stan Lee John Romita VG US $4.99
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![]() Fantastic Four 2 3 4 5 Stan Lee Jack Kirby G to G US $1,500.00
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![]() Fantastic Four 7 8 9 10 11 12 1962 1963 Stan Lee Jack Kirby Fair to VG US $575.00
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![]() SPIDER MAN newspaper hcs 1 2 Stan Lee John Romita LOW PRICE US $29.99
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![]() SPIDERMAN 642 LTD NYCC ED SIGNED BY STAN LEE JOHN ROMITA SR JOHN ROMITA JR US $52.11
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![]() SPIDERMAN 500 SIGNED BY STAN LEE JOHN ROMITA SR ROMITA JR J SCOTT CAMPBELL US $249.99
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The Comics Code Authority is a self-regulatory body that governs content in comic books.
In 1954, psychologist Frederic Wertham published Seduction of the Innocent,  a scathing book discussing how the media in general and comic books in particular corrupt young minds. The book was such a sensation that it catapulted Wertham into celebrity, and the US Congress convened the Senate Subcommittee on Juvenile Delinquency to address the issues brought up in the book. The primary target for both Wertham and the Senate was EC Comics' horror and crime titles. EC had established a strong niche for itself in the industry for publishing what would be considered "mature" titles today. But since comic books at the time were considered solely as children's entertainment, Wertham considered EC Comics as especially dangerous for children.
In a proactive move, EC Comics publisher William Gaines gathered together the other comic book publishers and suggested they create their own governing body to regulate content, in order to not be officially censored by the government. In an ironic twist, the body that was formed, the Comics Code Authority, created guidelines that were so strictly enforced that EC Comics was not able to publish the kinds of comics they specialized in. Gaines and EC Comics were all but forced out of the comic book business. Their final title, MAD, switched to a magazine format to bypass the restrictions of the Comics Code Authority. It has been in continuous publication since 1952.
Some of the restrictions in the Code as originally written include:
- No comic magazine shall use the word horror or terror in its title.
- Crimes shall never be presented in such a way as to create sympathy for the criminal, to promote distrust of the forces of law and justice, or to inspire others with a desire to imitate criminals.
- In every case, the criminal must be punished in every case.
- The letters of the word "crime" on a comics-magazine cover shall never be appreciably greater in dimension than the other words contained in the title. The word "crime" shall never appear alone on a cover.
- Scenes dealing with, or instruments associated with walking dead, torture, vampires and vampirism, ghouls, cannibalism, and werewolfism are prohibited.
- Divorce shall not be treated humorously nor represented as desirable.
- Illicit sex relations are neither to be hinted at nor portrayed. Violent love scenes as well as sexual abnormalities are unacceptable.
- Sex perversion or any inference to same is strictly forbidden.
By agreement of the publishers, no comic book would be published without the CCA's authority, which would be symbolized by a stamp on the cover of each issue approved. The first mainstream super-hero comic published after 1954 without the Code's approval was
Amazing Spider-Man
#96 in 1971. It was written by Stan Lee at the request of the US Department of Health, Education and Welfare to warn about the dangers of drug abuse. It was rejected by the CCA for violating the clause about depicting drug abuse in any fashion. Marvel Comics published the story anyway, and it resulted in the first of many revisions and reversals of the Code.
Since the rise of the direct market as the primary distribution model for comics, more and more comic books have been published without the Code. Marvel Comics dropped the Code entirely for their own in-house rating system in 2001. DC Comics only submits comics from their Johnny DC and DCU lines, and only some of the latter. The only publisher that still submits all of their titles to be approved is Archie Comics.
R. Wesley Smith has been following comic books and the comic book industry for over twenty-five years. He is a freelance writer and regularly publishes columns at Examiner.com. For all of Wesley's most recent columns about comic books and the comic book industry, check out http://www.examiner.com, keyword: "Wesley Smith."

























