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Rampaging Hulk : ウィキペディア英語版
The Rampaging Hulk

''The Rampaging Hulk'' is a black-and-white magazine published by Curtis Magazines (an imprint of Marvel Comics) from 1977–1978. With issue #10, it changed its format to color, and title to ''The Hulk!'', and ran another 17 issues before it folded in 1981. It was a rare attempt by Marvel to mix their superhero characters with the "mature readers" black-and-white magazine format.
With the change to color and the title to ''The Hulk!'', the magazine became Marvel's attempt to cash in on the popularity of ''The Incredible Hulk'' TV series, starring Bill Bixby and Lou Ferrigno, both of whom were prominently featured and interviewed〔Anonymous. "Bill Bixby Tells What It's Like to Play TV's Bruce Banner," ''The Hulk'' #10, August 1978, Marvel Comics, pp.45–49.〕〔Anonymous. "Green Muscles," ''The Hulk'' #12, December 1978, Marvel Comics, pp.29–32.〕 over the course of the magazine's run, as was executive producer Kenneth Johnson.〔Swires, Steven. "This Man Tell Hulk What to Do!", ''The Hulk'' #20, 1980, Marvel Comics, pp.38–42.〕
==Publication history==
''The Rampaging Hulk'' ran for 9 issues from January 1977 to June 1978. With issue #10, the bi-monthly magazine changed its title to ''The Hulk!'' and became a full-color book utilizing "Marvelcolor".
The magazine featured fully painted covers by such artists as Ken Barr, Earl Norem, and Joe Jusko. One cover in particular, painted by Norem, is one of the most iconic promotional/poster images of the Hulk: a darkly-lit close-up of his face, gritting his teeth with his knuckles raised, done for ''The Hulk!'' #17.
Artists such as Walter Simonson, John Buscema, Howard Chaykin, John Romita, Sr., John Romita, Jr. (doing some of his first professional work), Keith Pollard, Jim Starlin, Joe Jusko, Bill Sienkiewicz, Val Mayerik, Herb Trimpe, Roger Stern, Brent Anderson, and Gene Colan provided interior artwork; while writers such as Starlin, Doug Moench, Dennis O'Neil, and Archie Goodwin took on the scripting chores.
Through its run the magazine published backup features starring Ulysses Bloodstone (issues #1–6, #8) Man-Thing (issue #7) and Shanna the She-Devil (issue #9). Moon Knight was featured in issues #11–15, #17–18, and #20, featuring some of Bill Sienkiewicz' early work, when his style was similar to that of Neal Adams.
With issue #24, the title returned to black-and-white, though it published the last Dominic Fortune backup story in full color. The magazine was retired with issue #27.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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