A 1940s retro sci-fi style painting in a cottagecore futurism style featuring a robot and a human woman on a desolate rocky planet.
Adentrarse en el mundo de las portadas de cómics de ciencia ficción (Sci-Fi) Pulp de Wally Wood es como emprender un viaje a través de la imaginación
The Best Of The Worst
STARLIGHT #3 Variant Cover by Francesco Francavilla I was honored to contribute a cover to this new, beautiful series by the great duo of Mark Millar and Goran Parlov, published byImage Comics. If you are not reading it yet, I highly suggest you to pick it up (#3 is out this week so it shouldn’t be…
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I may or may not have squealed when I saw illustrator Laurent Durieux's The Iron Giant poster. And then I got a little emotional. Because that's what I do when I'm confronted with anything The Iron Giant-related, OK? But once I got myself under control I was able to look at and fully appreciate some of Durieux's other posters, and let me tell you—they are amazing. I'm not as well-versed in classic horror movies as I would like to be, but this art made me want to go and watch everything. (And rewatch The Bride of Frankenstein, because it's excellent and deserves it.)
This is such a wonderful cover. The look on the lady's face, the ridiculous zero-G fighting, and the bullets in the ray-gun are all fantastic. As I was looking over all…
A movie poster from the film adaptation of H.G. Wells' work of the same title. Notable to think how, in 1964, such speculation as this poster makes was still viable in the popular mind. Cities? Little moon men? Canals? Ray-gun fights? Sure, why not? Made by the same stop-motion animator, Ray Harryhausen, who was also behind 20 Million Miles to Earth, The 7th Voyage of Sinbad, and Jason and the Argonauts. In Lunacolor!
In the 1960s and ’70s, tens of millions of eyeballs a month looked forward to the latest surreal compositions on the covers of Mexican pulp fiction. Unl...
I’ve never had the pleasure of going to Disneyland Paris, but thanks to the Disney and More blog, everyone can enjoy these retrofuture style...
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It’s not news that Quentin Tarantino is a lover of hard-boiled crime fiction. His most successful movie is, of course, even called Pulp Fiction, which memorably featured a character (John Travolta’s Vincent Vega) who liked to read the first installment of Peter O’Donnell’s Modesty Blaise series while using the toilet. Tarantino’s follow-up to Pulp Fiction, 1997’s excellent Jackie Brown, was based on Elmore Leonard’s 1992 novel Rum Punch. Tarantino threw in a shot of Robert Forster’s Max Cherry reading Len Deighton’s spy thriller Berlin Game while waiting for Jackie to be released from prison. And Tarantino’s interest in Leonard doesn’t stop there: it’s been rumored that Tarantino has shown an interest in adapting the crime fiction master’s 1972 western 40 Lashes Less One—but considering that Tarantino’s last two movies were westerns, that didn’t seem too likely, but Tarantino brought it up again as recently as last December—it seems he might want to do it as a TV series. Tarantino’s strengths as a filmmaker track those of the dime-store fiction category, so a French art director named David Redon had the bright idea to concoct a...
Below we have several images of the 19th century sci-fi related airships. KD: Basically, I have only one question. Could something like this fly...
I found this amazing 1950’s Spanish Sci-Fi Novel group on Flickr. I love these illustrations! My favorites are below.
Far be it for us to say who is The World’s Greatest Male Model but according to James Bama, an American ‘Western’ illustrator who created the Doc Savage paperback covers, Steve Holland earned that particular nom-de-plume. Whilst Bama was an illustrator his style was what is known as ‘photo-realistic’ whereby photos of the subject matter [&hellip
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The Best Of The Worst