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''American Flagg!'' is an American comic book series created by writer-artist Howard Chaykin, published by First Comics from 1983 to 1989. A science fiction series and political satire, it was set in the U.S., particularly Chicago, Illinois, in the early 2030s. Writers besides Chaykin included Steven Grant, J.M. DeMatteis, and Alan Moore. ==Publication history== ''American Flagg'', which ran 50 issues (Oct. 1983 – March 1988),〔(''American Flagg'' ) at the Grand Comics Database〕 was one of the first titles to be published by First Comics, an early alternative press comics company founded in Evanston, Illinois in 1983. Unusually for the time, the company offered its freelance writers and artists creator rights, including ownership of their creations.〔 Regardless, writer-artist Howard Chaykin, then living in New York City, felt trepidation when First Comics approached him to do a project. He recalled in 2010, Chaykin devised a series set in 2031, a high-tech but spiritually empty, consumerist world in which the American government has relocated to Mars, leaving what remains of the U.S. to be governed by the all-encompassing corporation the Plex. The series star is Reuben Flagg, a former TV star drafted into the Plexus Rangers and posted as a deputy in Chicago, Illinois.〔Schweier, p. 4.〕 The first 12 issues, running through cover-date September 1984, consisted of four interlocking, three-issue story arcs.〔 Chaykin recalled his difficulty in producing 28 pages of art and script monthly. "I was still a smoker and a drinker at the time. And (output was such that ) I'd never done anything like that before, and it was insane. It just devoured my life I had no assistants. I didn't know how to work with an assistant at that point, and it was a very difficult process. ... I was trying to do a fairly high-quality product and I didn't want to slough it off."〔 Chaykin made wide use of Craftint Duoshade illustration boards for ''American Flagg!'', which in the period before computers, enabled him to add shaded textures to the finished art. Ken Bruzenak's lettering and logowork also won notice, as it was integral to ''American Flaggs futuristic, trademark-littered ambiance. ''American Flaggs first dozen issues form one complete story that has influenced comic creators including Brian Michael Bendis and Warren Ellis.〔 After issue #12, Chaykin continued the series while also working on such other projects as his revamp of ''The Shadow'' for DC Comics and the graphic novel ''Time2'', based on characters introduced in a one-off ''American Flagg!'' special in 1986. During this time, Alan Moore wrote a back-up story that ran several issues and concluded in an issue-length story. Eventually, Chaykin left, to be replaced on a regular basis by first Steven Grant then J.M. DeMatteis, during whose run the title began a sales decline. Chaykin returned for a brief run to wrap up storylines before the first volume ended in March 1988. The title was relaunched a few months later as ''Howard Chaykin's Amerikan Flagg!''. This run saw Chaykin return to writing the series, with Mike Vosburg and Richard Ory penciling and inking the interior art, but the franchise failed to recapture its early success and was canceled after 12 issues. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「American Flagg!」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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