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James Bond (comics)

James Bond's success after the start of the film franchise in 1962 spawned a number of comic books around the world. Initially, these were adaptations of various movies. In the late 1980s and continuing through to the mid-1990s, however, a series of original stories were also published. After a hiatus in 1996, the Bond comic book publishing license was picked up again and made a revival debut in 2015. The comics were published by various past and present companies, including DC Comics, Marvel, Eclipse Comics, Dark Horse and Dynamite Entertainment.

Showcase #43 – Doctor No (Mar/Apr 1963)

English publications edit

Adaptations edit

The first James Bond comic book appeared in December 1962 — an adaptation of the first Bond film Dr. No. Originally published by Classics Illustrated in the United Kingdom, it was later reprinted in the United States by DC Comics as part of its Showcase anthology series in January 1963.

The next James Bond comic book did not appear for nearly 20 years, when Marvel Comics published a two-issue adaptation of the 1981 film For Your Eyes Only (which was also published in a single-issue magazine edition and a paperback release). Marvel later adapted the 1983 film Octopussy in magazine format.

In 1989 comic books featuring Bond began to appear on a semi-regular basis for a few years, starting with an adaptation of Licence to Kill published in 1989 by Acme Press/Eclipse Comics and illustrated by Mike Grell, which was published in both trade paperback and hardcover edition. Grell would go on to write the miniseries Permission to Die, the first James Bond comic book storyline not adapted from a previous work, which was published over a two-year period by Acme/Eclipse.

In 1995, Topps Comics obtained the rights to publish an adaptation of the new Bond film, GoldenEye, which was announced as a three-issue miniseries. The second issue of the miniseries was delayed due to concerns over the cover art for the issue, and ultimately Topps chose to discontinue publishing the adaptation, and also canceled plans for an ongoing James Bond comic book series.[1]

A graphic novel adaptation of Charlie Higson's first Young Bond novel SilverFin was released in the UK on October 2, 2008. The book is illustrated by Kev Walker.[2]

Dynamite Entertainment's senior editor Joseph Rybandt, hinted that a graphic novel adaptation of Fleming's first Bond thriller, Casino Royale is in the pipeline, while they work on an original monthly series,[3] but it wasn't officially announced until July 2016 with Van Jensen adapting the novel closely into comic book format and Matthew Southworth illustrating it, aiming for a November release later that year.[4] However, Southworth left the project due to "creative differences",[5] and was replaced with Dennis Calero as the artist, while the cover artwork is provided with by Fay Dalton.[6] After months in the pipeline, Dynamite released the graphic novel on 11 April 2018.[7]

Original series edit

Dark Horse Comics edit

In 1992, Dark Horse Comics obtained the rights to produce James Bond comics (acquired via the UK publisher Acme Comics, formerly known as Acme Press)[8] and issued a number of limited series and stand-alone stories that began with Serpent's Tooth, a three-issue miniseries published over the course of two years, with an original story written by Doug Moench and illustrated by Paul Gulacy. The second miniseries made of supposedly four issues debuted in 1993, called A Silent Armageddon was delivered by Simon Jowett and John M. Burns, but only two of the planned four issues were released. The miniseries, to this day, remains incomplete in its publication.

Light of My Death was the third Bond story to be published by Dark Horse Comics which, unlike its predecessors, was released alongside different intellectual property franchise titles in four issues, a period piece set in the 1960s written by Das Petrou and illustrated by John Watkiss, including a reprisal appearance of Tatiana Romanova from From Russia with Love.

Following the instalment was a Dark Horse/Acme two-issue miniseries Shattered Helix in 1994, with Jowett returning to pen the story, and the art receiving its illustration by David Jackson and David Lloyd. The next one followed in the footsteps of Light of My Death in its publication vein, released alongside an unrelated franchise title in Dark Horse Comics #25, called Minute of Midnight from Doug Moench and Russ Heath, which was supposed to be setting up a major story arc for a planned ongoing series on Dark Horse's behalf before their rights on the Bond comics were expired.

The last miniseries to be published by Dark Horse/Acme was The Quasimodo Gambit in three issues, an original experience written by Don McGregor, who completed scripting it six years prior to its publication, and illustrated by Gary Caldwell, completing its run in May 1995.

The list of comics published by Dark Horse (many with Acme Comics' packaging) includes:

  • Serpent's Tooth (1992–1993) by Doug Moench and Paul Gulacy
  • A Silent Armageddon (1993, incomplete) by Simon Jowett and John M. Burns
  • Light of My Death (1993, appearing in Dark Horse Comics #8, #9, #10, #11) by Das Petrou and John Watkiss
  • Shattered Helix (1994) by Simon Jowett, David Jackson and David Lloyd
  • Minute of Midnight (1994, appearing in Dark Horse Comics #25) by Doug Moench and Russ Heath
  • The Quasimodo Gambit (1995) by Don McGregor and Gary Caldwell

Dynamite Entertainment edit

In October 2014, Dynamite Entertainment acquired the license from Ian Fleming Publications to produce and publish a series of comic books concentrating on Fleming's literary hero in two different timelines. One will be a period piece, expanding on his days prior to the events of Casino Royale with original stories. The other, by Warren Ellis and Jason Masters with a contemporary setting,[9] has been published as a monthly comic since November 2015.[10] The first six-issue story arc was titled Vargr,[9] followed by a second arc titled Eidolon.[11] The monthly ongoing series, as revealed in October 2016, was taken over by writer Benjamin Percy.[12] The title was announced as Black Box, written by Percy and illustrated by Rapha Lobosco.[13]

On 18 June 2018, James Bond Origin was officially unveiled by Dynamite as a long-lasting period-piece series, of which the first issue will be making its debut in September later in the year, with the first story arc being delivered by Jeff Parker and Bob Q.[14] It focuses on a seventeen year old Bond at the height of World War II as he bursts on his way out fighting to survive, thus leading him to make a decision that will change his life forever.

Additional standalone series are also in the pipeline, of which the first in arrival was unveiled as Hammerhead, a six-issue miniseries, bringing new creators Andy Diggle as the writer and Luca Casalanguida as the artist on board, debuting in October 2016.[15] In February 2017, Dynamite unveiled another standalone instalment called Service by creators Kieron Gillen and Antonio Fuso, presenting a 48-page comic book set to come out in May 2017.[16] On 17 April 2017, a new miniseries was announced with Diggle and Casalanguida, along with the rest of the crew returning from Hammerhead in a follow-up, called Kill Chain, offering many variant covers for the first issue, set to debut in the month of July.[17] In August 2017, Dynamite unveiled yet another one-shot Bond comic to be brought by writer and illustrator Ibrahim Moustafa, titled Solstice, set for a November 2017 release.[18] On 4 October 2017, Dynamite announced a new six-issue miniseries entitled The Body written by Ales Kot, debuting in January 2018.[19] On 10 October 2023, Dynamite announced a new ongoing series written by Garth Ennis, debuting in January 2024.[20]

Spin-off miniseries has also been announced in October 2016 with the role of the protagonist given to Bond's known CIA ally, Felix Leiter, starring in his own first ever adventure and solo ride, simply called Felix Leiter, written by James Robinson and illustrated by Aaron Campbell, set to come out sometime in January 2017.[21] On 23 May 2017, another spin-off was announced, Moneypenny, which centers on M's secretary and security agent, Moneypenny herself.[22] On 21 November 2017, a third spin-off was announced aimed for February 2018 release, a 40-page one-shot comic book centered on M himself, exploring his backstory as well as dealing with his past that comes back to haunt him, delivered by creators Declan Shalvey and P.J. Holden.[23]

The list of comics published by Dynamite Entertainment includes:

  • James Bond (monthly series) (2015–Present):
    • Vargr (2015) by Warren Ellis and Jason Masters
    • Eidolon (2016) by Warren Ellis and Jason Masters
  • Black Box (2017) by Benjamin Percy and Rapha Lobosco
  • Hammerhead (2016) by Andy Diggle and Luca Casalanguida
  • Service (2017) by Kieron Gillen and Antonio Fuso
  • Kill Chain (2017) by Andy Diggle and Luca Casalanguida
  • Solstice (2017) by Ibrahim Moustafa
  • The Body (2018) written by Ales Kot, illustrated by Luca Casalanguida, Antonio Fuso, Rapha Lobosco, Eoin Marron and Hayden Sherman
  • James Bond Origin (2018) by Jeff Parker and Bob Q

Spin-offs:

  • Felix Leiter (2017) by James Robinson and Aaron Campbell
  • Moneypenny (2017) by Jody Houser and Jacob Edgar
  • M (2018) by Declan Shalvey and P.J. Holden

Swedish publications edit

Swedish comic book publisher Semic Press started a James Bond comic book magazine in 1965,[24] which was simultaneously published in Norwegian, Danish, and Finnish editions. Originally, the contents were derived from the James Bond newspaper strips; translated and edited to fit the comic book format. As time passed the archive of newspaper strip stories was depleted and was reprinted over and over again.

By the early 1980s, Semic decided to acquire rights to produce their own Bond stories directly for the comic book. The first James Bond story produced by Semic was published in Swedish James Bond #1/1982[a] It was called "Den gyllene triangeln" ("The Golden Triangle"), drawn by Escolano and written by Norwegians Terje Nordberg and Eirik Ildahl under the pseudonym "Johann Vlaanderen." About half a dozen new 24-page black & white stories were produced each year. The main artists were Sarompas, Josep Gual, and Manuel Carmona. The main writers were Sverre Årnes, Jack Sutter, and Bill Harrington.

Between 1982 and 1991, Semic produced 42 comic magazine stories and five (graphic novel) albums, of which three[which?] were based on Bond movies. Two of the albums were completely original, never having appeared in the newspaper. Some of the Swedish James Bond comic issues used material from Dark Horse Comics' Bond comics, including one limited series and the 1994 Shattered Helix series.[24]

Eight of these issues were also published in the Netherlands by Semic Press. Attempts were made to sell the Semic Bond stories to other European countries — Spain and Germany for example — but this was limited to only a few episodes.[citation needed]

The episode "Operation: Blücher" from James Bond #12/1984 was written by Norwegian Sverre Årnes and centered on a sunken Nazi ship outside Norway. The plot of this story (minus James Bond) was later adapted into the script for the movie Blücher, released in 1988.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Scandinavian comic magazines usually restart the numbering each year.

References edit

  1. ^ . Archived from the original on 2007-10-08. Retrieved 2006-11-10.
  2. ^ . The Young Bond Dossier. Archived from the original on February 12, 2009. Retrieved October 2, 2008.
  3. ^ "Dynamite's first "James Bond 007" comic will be VARGR by Warren Ellis". The Book Bond. July 6, 2015. Retrieved February 19, 2015.
  4. ^ "Casino Royale Graphic Novel". MI6-HQ.com. July 7, 2016. Retrieved July 9, 2016.
  5. ^ "Matthew Southwort on Twitter". October 8, 2016. Retrieved March 19, 2017.
  6. ^ "Denis Calero Replaces Matt Southworth On Van Jansen's Adaptation Of Casino Royale, The Original James Bond Novel". Bleeding Cool. June 20, 2017.
  7. ^ "Review: JAMES BOND: CASINO ROYALE". Comicosity. 11 April 2018.
  8. ^ Curson, Natasha. "Acme – take two Earthquake Pills and exit over cliff...," Natasha Curson blog (August 18, 2010).
  9. ^ a b "Exclusive: Warren Ellis brings genius storytelling to Dynamite's "James Bond 007"". Comic Book Resources. July 6, 2015. Retrieved July 7, 2015.
  10. ^ "Comics, Dynamite Comics Gets JAMES BOND Worldwide License". Newsarama. October 7, 2014. Retrieved July 7, 2015.
  11. ^ "Dynamite Entertainment JUNE 2016 Solicitations". Newsarama. March 23, 2016. Retrieved March 23, 2016.
  12. ^ "'Green Arrow' writer grabs 'James Bond' franchise". Newsarama. October 5, 2016. Retrieved October 6, 2016.
  13. ^ "007 Returns To The French Alps In JAMES BOND #1". Newsarama. January 9, 2017. Retrieved February 22, 2017.
  14. ^ "EXCLUSIVE: James Bond Origin Reveals 007's Teenage Years During WWII". Comic Book Resources. June 18, 2018.
  15. ^ "Andy Diggle to pen James Bond miniseries "Hammerhead"". Comic Book Resources. July 19, 2016. Retrieved July 19, 2016.
  16. ^ "KIERON GILLEN WRITES SPY THRILLER TOUR DE FORCE IN ALL-NEW, OVERSIZED JAMES BOND SPECIAL!". Dynamite Entertainment. February 20, 2017. Retrieved February 22, 2017.
  17. ^ "James Bond Returns in Kill Chain". The Beat. 17 April 2017.
  18. ^ "JAMES BOND Holiday Special Coming This Winter". Newsarama. August 24, 2017.
  19. ^ "Ales Kot to Write JAMES BOND: THE BODY at Dynamite". Comicosity.com. October 4, 2017. Retrieved October 9, 2017.
  20. ^ Club, Comic Book (2023-10-10). "Garth Ennis Writing New James Bond Comic From Dynamite". Comic Book Club. Retrieved 2023-10-10.
  21. ^ "'James Bond' gets CIA spin-off with 'Felix Leiter'". Newsarama. October 3, 2016.
  22. ^ "JAMES BOND's MONEYPENNY Goes Solo In Her Own Title". Newsarama. May 23, 2017.
  23. ^ "Dynamite to explore backstory of 'M' in new comic". The Book Bond. November 21, 2017.
  24. ^ a b "James Bond (Semic, 1965 Series)," Grand Comics Database. Retrieved July 2, 2021.

External links edit

  • When Bond Battled Dinosaurs – A History of James Bond Comics

james, bond, comics, james, bond, success, after, start, film, franchise, 1962, spawned, number, comic, books, around, world, initially, these, were, adaptations, various, movies, late, 1980s, continuing, through, 1990s, however, series, original, stories, wer. James Bond s success after the start of the film franchise in 1962 spawned a number of comic books around the world Initially these were adaptations of various movies In the late 1980s and continuing through to the mid 1990s however a series of original stories were also published After a hiatus in 1996 the Bond comic book publishing license was picked up again and made a revival debut in 2015 The comics were published by various past and present companies including DC Comics Marvel Eclipse Comics Dark Horse and Dynamite Entertainment Showcase 43 Doctor No Mar Apr 1963 Contents 1 English publications 1 1 Adaptations 1 2 Original series 1 2 1 Dark Horse Comics 1 2 2 Dynamite Entertainment 2 Swedish publications 3 See also 4 Notes 5 References 6 External linksEnglish publications editSee also List of James Bond comics Adaptations edit The first James Bond comic book appeared in December 1962 an adaptation of the first Bond film Dr No Originally published by Classics Illustrated in the United Kingdom it was later reprinted in the United States by DC Comics as part of its Showcase anthology series in January 1963 The next James Bond comic book did not appear for nearly 20 years when Marvel Comics published a two issue adaptation of the 1981 film For Your Eyes Only which was also published in a single issue magazine edition and a paperback release Marvel later adapted the 1983 film Octopussy in magazine format In 1989 comic books featuring Bond began to appear on a semi regular basis for a few years starting with an adaptation of Licence to Kill published in 1989 by Acme Press Eclipse Comics and illustrated by Mike Grell which was published in both trade paperback and hardcover edition Grell would go on to write the miniseries Permission to Die the first James Bond comic book storyline not adapted from a previous work which was published over a two year period by Acme Eclipse In 1995 Topps Comics obtained the rights to publish an adaptation of the new Bond film GoldenEye which was announced as a three issue miniseries The second issue of the miniseries was delayed due to concerns over the cover art for the issue and ultimately Topps chose to discontinue publishing the adaptation and also canceled plans for an ongoing James Bond comic book series 1 A graphic novel adaptation of Charlie Higson s first Young Bond novel SilverFin was released in the UK on October 2 2008 The book is illustrated by Kev Walker 2 Dynamite Entertainment s senior editor Joseph Rybandt hinted that a graphic novel adaptation of Fleming s first Bond thriller Casino Royale is in the pipeline while they work on an original monthly series 3 but it wasn t officially announced until July 2016 with Van Jensen adapting the novel closely into comic book format and Matthew Southworth illustrating it aiming for a November release later that year 4 However Southworth left the project due to creative differences 5 and was replaced with Dennis Calero as the artist while the cover artwork is provided with by Fay Dalton 6 After months in the pipeline Dynamite released the graphic novel on 11 April 2018 7 Original series edit Dark Horse Comics edit In 1992 Dark Horse Comics obtained the rights to produce James Bond comics acquired via the UK publisher Acme Comics formerly known as Acme Press 8 and issued a number of limited series and stand alone stories that began with Serpent s Tooth a three issue miniseries published over the course of two years with an original story written by Doug Moench and illustrated by Paul Gulacy The second miniseries made of supposedly four issues debuted in 1993 called A Silent Armageddon was delivered by Simon Jowett and John M Burns but only two of the planned four issues were released The miniseries to this day remains incomplete in its publication Light of My Death was the third Bond story to be published by Dark Horse Comics which unlike its predecessors was released alongside different intellectual property franchise titles in four issues a period piece set in the 1960s written by Das Petrou and illustrated by John Watkiss including a reprisal appearance of Tatiana Romanova from From Russia with Love Following the instalment was a Dark Horse Acme two issue miniseries Shattered Helix in 1994 with Jowett returning to pen the story and the art receiving its illustration by David Jackson and David Lloyd The next one followed in the footsteps of Light of My Death in its publication vein released alongside an unrelated franchise title in Dark Horse Comics 25 called Minute of Midnight from Doug Moench and Russ Heath which was supposed to be setting up a major story arc for a planned ongoing series on Dark Horse s behalf before their rights on the Bond comics were expired The last miniseries to be published by Dark Horse Acme was The Quasimodo Gambit in three issues an original experience written by Don McGregor who completed scripting it six years prior to its publication and illustrated by Gary Caldwell completing its run in May 1995 The list of comics published by Dark Horse many with Acme Comics packaging includes Serpent s Tooth 1992 1993 by Doug Moench and Paul Gulacy A Silent Armageddon 1993 incomplete by Simon Jowett and John M Burns Light of My Death 1993 appearing in Dark Horse Comics 8 9 10 11 by Das Petrou and John Watkiss Shattered Helix 1994 by Simon Jowett David Jackson and David Lloyd Minute of Midnight 1994 appearing in Dark Horse Comics 25 by Doug Moench and Russ Heath The Quasimodo Gambit 1995 by Don McGregor and Gary CaldwellDynamite Entertainment edit Main article James Bond Dynamite Entertainment In October 2014 Dynamite Entertainment acquired the license from Ian Fleming Publications to produce and publish a series of comic books concentrating on Fleming s literary hero in two different timelines One will be a period piece expanding on his days prior to the events of Casino Royale with original stories The other by Warren Ellis and Jason Masters with a contemporary setting 9 has been published as a monthly comic since November 2015 10 The first six issue story arc was titled Vargr 9 followed by a second arc titled Eidolon 11 The monthly ongoing series as revealed in October 2016 was taken over by writer Benjamin Percy 12 The title was announced as Black Box written by Percy and illustrated by Rapha Lobosco 13 On 18 June 2018 James Bond Origin was officially unveiled by Dynamite as a long lasting period piece series of which the first issue will be making its debut in September later in the year with the first story arc being delivered by Jeff Parker and Bob Q 14 It focuses on a seventeen year old Bond at the height of World War II as he bursts on his way out fighting to survive thus leading him to make a decision that will change his life forever Additional standalone series are also in the pipeline of which the first in arrival was unveiled as Hammerhead a six issue miniseries bringing new creators Andy Diggle as the writer and Luca Casalanguida as the artist on board debuting in October 2016 15 In February 2017 Dynamite unveiled another standalone instalment called Service by creators Kieron Gillen and Antonio Fuso presenting a 48 page comic book set to come out in May 2017 16 On 17 April 2017 a new miniseries was announced with Diggle and Casalanguida along with the rest of the crew returning from Hammerhead in a follow up called Kill Chain offering many variant covers for the first issue set to debut in the month of July 17 In August 2017 Dynamite unveiled yet another one shot Bond comic to be brought by writer and illustrator Ibrahim Moustafa titled Solstice set for a November 2017 release 18 On 4 October 2017 Dynamite announced a new six issue miniseries entitled The Body written by Ales Kot debuting in January 2018 19 On 10 October 2023 Dynamite announced a new ongoing series written by Garth Ennis debuting in January 2024 20 Spin off miniseries has also been announced in October 2016 with the role of the protagonist given to Bond s known CIA ally Felix Leiter starring in his own first ever adventure and solo ride simply called Felix Leiter written by James Robinson and illustrated by Aaron Campbell set to come out sometime in January 2017 21 On 23 May 2017 another spin off was announced Moneypenny which centers on M s secretary and security agent Moneypenny herself 22 On 21 November 2017 a third spin off was announced aimed for February 2018 release a 40 page one shot comic book centered on M himself exploring his backstory as well as dealing with his past that comes back to haunt him delivered by creators Declan Shalvey and P J Holden 23 The list of comics published by Dynamite Entertainment includes James Bond monthly series 2015 Present Vargr 2015 by Warren Ellis and Jason Masters Eidolon 2016 by Warren Ellis and Jason Masters Black Box 2017 by Benjamin Percy and Rapha Lobosco Hammerhead 2016 by Andy Diggle and Luca Casalanguida Service 2017 by Kieron Gillen and Antonio Fuso Kill Chain 2017 by Andy Diggle and Luca Casalanguida Solstice 2017 by Ibrahim Moustafa The Body 2018 written by Ales Kot illustrated by Luca Casalanguida Antonio Fuso Rapha Lobosco Eoin Marron and Hayden Sherman James Bond Origin 2018 by Jeff Parker and Bob QSpin offs Felix Leiter 2017 by James Robinson and Aaron Campbell Moneypenny 2017 by Jody Houser and Jacob Edgar M 2018 by Declan Shalvey and P J HoldenSwedish publications editSwedish comic book publisher Semic Press started a James Bond comic book magazine in 1965 24 which was simultaneously published in Norwegian Danish and Finnish editions Originally the contents were derived from the James Bond newspaper strips translated and edited to fit the comic book format As time passed the archive of newspaper strip stories was depleted and was reprinted over and over again By the early 1980s Semic decided to acquire rights to produce their own Bond stories directly for the comic book The first James Bond story produced by Semic was published in Swedish James Bond 1 1982 a It was called Den gyllene triangeln The Golden Triangle drawn by Escolano and written by Norwegians Terje Nordberg and Eirik Ildahl under the pseudonym Johann Vlaanderen About half a dozen new 24 page black amp white stories were produced each year The main artists were Sarompas Josep Gual and Manuel Carmona The main writers were Sverre Arnes Jack Sutter and Bill Harrington Between 1982 and 1991 Semic produced 42 comic magazine stories and five graphic novel albums of which three which were based on Bond movies Two of the albums were completely original never having appeared in the newspaper Some of the Swedish James Bond comic issues used material from Dark Horse Comics Bond comics including one limited series and the 1994 Shattered Helix series 24 Eight of these issues were also published in the Netherlands by Semic Press Attempts were made to sell the Semic Bond stories to other European countries Spain and Germany for example but this was limited to only a few episodes citation needed The episode Operation Blucher from James Bond 12 1984 was written by Norwegian Sverre Arnes and centered on a sunken Nazi ship outside Norway The plot of this story minus James Bond was later adapted into the script for the movie Blucher released in 1988 See also editJames Bond comic strips Outline of James BondNotes edit Scandinavian comic magazines usually restart the numbering each year References edit When Bond Battled Dinosaurs James Bond 007 CommanderBond net James Bond at Its Best Archived from the original on 2007 10 08 Retrieved 2006 11 10 SilverFin The Graphic Novel released in UK The Young Bond Dossier Archived from the original on February 12 2009 Retrieved October 2 2008 Dynamite s first James Bond 007 comic will be VARGR by Warren Ellis The Book Bond July 6 2015 Retrieved February 19 2015 Casino Royale Graphic Novel MI6 HQ com July 7 2016 Retrieved July 9 2016 Matthew Southwort on Twitter October 8 2016 Retrieved March 19 2017 Denis Calero Replaces Matt Southworth On Van Jansen s Adaptation Of Casino Royale The Original James Bond Novel Bleeding Cool June 20 2017 Review JAMES BOND CASINO ROYALE Comicosity 11 April 2018 Curson Natasha Acme take two Earthquake Pills and exit over cliff Natasha Curson blog August 18 2010 a b Exclusive Warren Ellis brings genius storytelling to Dynamite s James Bond 007 Comic Book Resources July 6 2015 Retrieved July 7 2015 Comics Dynamite Comics Gets JAMES BOND Worldwide License Newsarama October 7 2014 Retrieved July 7 2015 Dynamite Entertainment JUNE 2016 Solicitations Newsarama March 23 2016 Retrieved March 23 2016 Green Arrow writer grabs James Bond franchise Newsarama October 5 2016 Retrieved October 6 2016 007 Returns To The French Alps In JAMES BOND 1 Newsarama January 9 2017 Retrieved February 22 2017 EXCLUSIVE James Bond Origin Reveals 007 s Teenage Years During WWII Comic Book Resources June 18 2018 Andy Diggle to pen James Bond miniseries Hammerhead Comic Book Resources July 19 2016 Retrieved July 19 2016 KIERON GILLEN WRITES SPY THRILLER TOUR DE FORCE IN ALL NEW OVERSIZED JAMES BOND SPECIAL Dynamite Entertainment February 20 2017 Retrieved February 22 2017 James Bond Returns in Kill Chain The Beat 17 April 2017 JAMES BOND Holiday Special Coming This Winter Newsarama August 24 2017 Ales Kot to Write JAMES BOND THE BODY at Dynamite Comicosity com October 4 2017 Retrieved October 9 2017 Club Comic Book 2023 10 10 Garth Ennis Writing New James Bond Comic From Dynamite Comic Book Club Retrieved 2023 10 10 James Bond gets CIA spin off with Felix Leiter Newsarama October 3 2016 JAMES BOND s MONEYPENNY Goes Solo In Her Own Title Newsarama May 23 2017 Dynamite to explore backstory of M in new comic The Book Bond November 21 2017 a b James Bond Semic 1965 Series Grand Comics Database Retrieved July 2 2021 External links editWhen Bond Battled Dinosaurs A History of James Bond Comics Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title James Bond comics amp oldid 1212500328, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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