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Mister X (Vortex)
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Mister X (Vortex) : ウィキペディア英語版
Mister X (Vortex)

Mister X was a series of comic books first published in 1983–90 by Toronto-based Vortex Comics. Created by album and book cover designer Dean Motter, it was developed for a year in close collaboration with comic artist and illustrator Paul Rivoche, whose series of poster illustrations stirred up great interest in the project. The series published early work by comic artists who would later emerge as important alternative cartoonists, including Jaime Hernandez, Gilbert Hernandez, Mario Hernandez, Seth, Shane Oakley and D'Israeli.
In the early 1990s, a CD-ROM computer animated version of Series Two, issues seven and eight, was created by the now-defunct Kinetic Opera Company.
==Publication history==
According to creator Dean Motter, "The germ of the idea (''Mister X'' ) goes back to my college days, in journals, in the writing that I was doing back then. I was fascinated by the ideas of sleeplessness and somnambulism." Hardboiled detective stories and silent films were also an influence, and after privately working out details of the story and premise of ''Mister X'' for a year, Motter turned to Paul Rivoche to illustrate the work.〔
A highly successful promotional campaign with posters and ads followed for the next year, while Motter and Rivoche struggled to produce an actual issue of ''Mister X''. When Rivoche quit, Vortex Comics president Bill Marks became more skeptical than ever that Motter would be able to produce the series on time, and decided to turn the work over to the Hernandez brothers.〔 Sales suffered from the long delay; while orders for the originally scheduled shipping date of August 1983 exceeded 40,000 copies, they had dropped to 26,000 copies by the time ''Mister X'' #1 was actually published. The first four issues were written and illustrated by Jaime and Gilbert Hernandez, with additional writing by Mario Hernandez. They missed the deadlines for all but the first issue of the officially bimonthly series, but Bill Marks accepted their tardiness as a necessary consequence of producing a quality comic.〔 The Hernandez brothers quit over payment delays from Vortex.〔"Hernandez Brothers Leave ''Mister X'' Over Payment Dispute," ''The Comics Journal'' #101 (August 1985), pp. 19–20.〕 Issues 5 through 14 of the series were then written by Motter, with issues 6 through 13 illustrated by Seth.
After the first volume of the Motter-based series ended in 1985, a second 12-issue black-and-white series concluding the saga was written by Jeffrey Morgan. The first six issues were penciled by Shane Oakley, and the remaining six by D'Israeli with inks by Ken Holewczynski.
Although a 13th issue of Volume II was published, beginning a story by Seth (writing as "Wilbur Webb") the rest of the story remained unpublished until it appeared in ''New Worlds Anthology''. In 1996, Caliber Comics published Volume 3, a 4-issue story by Deborah Marks.
The character reappeared in Motter's ''Electropolis'' mini-series from Image Comics in 2001-03. Motter's Vortex issues, along with the covers by Michael Kaluta, Bill Sienkiewicz, Howard Chaykin, Dave McKean, and others, were reprinted in ''Mister X: The Definitive Collection'' (Volumes I and II) from iBooks in 2005.
In 2008, Dark Horse Comics published a hardcover book titled ''Mister X: The Archives'', collecting the Volume I run along with additional material including an introduction by Warren Ellis (''Transmetropolitan''), and a thesis written by Volume II writer Morgan. In 2011, they later published a hardcover collection of Volume II #1–#12, Mister X Special #1, and other stories as ''Dean Motter’s Mister X: The Brides of Mister X and Other Stories''.
The character was rebooted by Motter in the miniseries, ''Mister X: Condemned'', first published December 24, 2008 by Dark Horse.〔(CCI: X-25 - Motter talks Mister X ), Comic Book Resources, July 25, 2008〕 He appeared in ''Dark Horse Presents'' #12-14 (2012) and #33-35 (2014) and in the mini-series Mister X: Eviction #1-3 (2013).

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