Kiss (comics)

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Comic books have been an integral and popular part of the American rock group Kiss' merchandising since 1977, beginning with their appearance in Marvel Comics' Howard the Duck #12.[1] Over their career of nearly four decades, Kiss has licensed their name to “more than 3,000 product(s) . . . to become nearly a one-billion-dollar brand.”[2]

Licensed Kiss stories and adventures have been published by Marvel Comics, Image Comics, Dark Horse Comics, Platinum Studios, Archie Comics, and IDW Publishing; unlicensed stories have been published by Revolutionary Comics, among others. Ironically, according to frontman Gene Simmons, all the band members save himself "hate comic books."[3]

Publishers

Marvel Comics

Kiss’ first comic book appearance was in issue #12 of Marvel’s Howard the Duck in May 1977, titled “Mind Mush!”. The group also appeared in issue #13 of the series titled, “Rock, Roll Over and Writhe!”.[4]

In 1977 Marvel Comics published a magazine-format full-color comic book, titled, A Marvel Comics Super Special!: Kiss presenting the band Kiss as superheroes. It was the first in the Marvel Comics Super Special series which featured other well known musicians such as the Beatles. Blood from each band member was drawn by a registered nurse, witnessed by a notary public, and poured into the vats of red ink used for printing the comic at Marvel's Borden Ink plant in Depew, New York.[5] Marvel also published a second Kiss comic magazine, issue #5 in the Super Special series, in 1978, with much less fanfare.

In 1995 Marvel printed a trade paperback issue compiling issue #1 and #5 of the Super Special series titled, Kiss Klassics. A year later Marvel released the magazine Kissnation, which featured interviews and photographs concerning the band's reunion and subsequent Alive/Worldwide Tour. Kissnation also came with the Kiss Meets the X-Men comic.

Title list

  • Howard the Duck #12: "Mind-Mush!" (May 1977)
  • Howard the Duck #13: "Rock, Roll Over and Writhe!" (June 1977)
  • A Marvel Comics Super Special #1: A Marvel Comics Super Special!: Kiss (1977)
  • A Marvel Comics Super Special #5: A Marvel Comics Super Special!: Kiss (1978)
  • Kiss Classics (1995)
  • Kissnation (1996)

Revolutionary Comics

Ever since the phenomenon created around the first Kiss comic in 1977, many unlicensed comics featuring the Kiss characters have been published.[6] The most notable of these were published by Revolutionary Comics, known for their titles Rock N’ Roll Comics and Hard Rock Comics. Although Revolutionary's comics were not sanctioned by Kiss or the group's lawyers, Gene Simmons was especially vocal in his support of the company, seen wearing a Hard Rock Comics t-shirt in videos for Alive III and on the back cover of the album itself. Both Simmons and Stanley granted interviews for the Revolutionary Kiss comics, and the same Hard Rock Comics creative team also did the comic bio section of Kiss' own KISStory hardcover book, as well as a comic adaptation of The Elder which has so far only been published in Metal Edge Magazine.

Title list

  • Rock 'N' Roll Comics #9 (March 1990) — by Robert Conte and Greg Fox
  • Hard Rock Comics #5: "Kiss: Tales from the Tours" (June 1992) — by Spike Steffenhagen and Scott Pentzer
  • Kiss Pre-History #1–3 (Spring 1993) — by Spike Steffenhagen, Jay Allen Sanford, and Scott Pentzer

Image Comics

Psycho Circus

In 1997 Image began printing the first officially licensed non-Marvel Kiss comic, Todd McFarlane’s Kiss: Psycho Circus. It lasted for 31 issues and was compiled into four trade paperback issues.[7] The series was based on a tour theme that Kiss were working on at the time,[8] and spawned five magazines that focused on the comic series. Wizard also printed a special edition magazine detailing the characters that appeared throughout the comic series. The series was completed in the year 2000.

Issue list

  1. The Witching of Adam Moon, Part 1
  2. The Witching of Adam Moon, Part 2
  3. The Nature of the Beast
  4. Smoke & Mirrors, Part 1
  5. Smoke & Mirrors, Part 2
  6. Smoke & Mirrors, Part 3
  7. Bottle Full of Wishes
  8. Forever
  9. Four Sides to Every Story
  10. Destroyer, Part 1
  11. Destroyer, Part 2
  12. Destroyer, Part 3
  13. Year of the Fox, Part 1
  14. Year of the Fox, Part 2
  15. World Without Heroes, Part 1
  16. World Without Heroes, Part 2
  17. Sunburst Finish
  18. Fragments
  19. Make Believe, Part 1
  20. Make Believe, Part 2
  21. Mirror Image, Part 1
  22. Mirror Image, Part 2
  23. Cat’s Eye
  24. The Devil’s Tale
  25. The Nightingales Song, Part 1
  26. The Nightingales Song, Part 2
  27. Perdition Blues
  28. Shadow of the Moon, Part 1
  29. Shadow of the Moon, Part 2
  30. Sins of Omission

Kiss Special Wizard Edition

  • 1 promo Issue (Wizard, 1998)

Kiss: Psycho Circus Comic Magazine

  • 5 issues (published by McFarlane/Medina/Image, 1999)

Trade paperbacks

  1. Psycho Circus
  2. Destroyer
  3. Whispered Scream!
  4. Leg & Nigh!

Dark Horse Comics

Dark Horse Comics began the next Kiss comic series, simply titled Kiss, in 2002, with X-Men writer Joe Casey. The series lasted for unnamed 13 issues, with each issue having a variant photograph cover (with the exception of issues #1 and #7 which each had a third variant cover) and was compiled into four trade paperback issues.[9] Dark Horse completed the Kiss series in 2004.

Trade paperbacks

  • volume #1: Rediscovery
  • volume #2: Return of the Phantom
  • volume #3: Men and Monsters
  • volume #4: Unholy War

Platinum Studios

In 2007 the KISS Comics Group launched a joint venture with Platinum Studios to publish a new Kiss comic, Kiss 4K. The series was launched at the Los Angeles Wizard World Convention in March 2007 with the unveiling of the oversized Destroyer Edition, which measured 20 ”x 30” and was released in five variant editions. The series was written by Ricky Sprague and the art was by Daniel Campos, Kevin Crossley & Thomas Ruppert.

Kiss 4K released six print issues, in addition to the Destroyer Edition, a preview issue, and the Kissmas special.[10] Three more issues were published online. In 2009 a lithograph boxed set of exclusive art from the Kiss 4K series was released.

  • Destroyer Edition — variants: black & white, yellow bar, white bar, black bar, "Scott’s Vault" yellow bar
  • 4K Preview Issue
  • Kissmas (ssue #0) — variant: "Scott's Vault" silver foil
  • Legends Never Die
    • issues #1–6 — #1 variant: "Scott’s Vault" silver foil edition, red foil, gold foil, sketch cover, untrimmed version
    • issues #7–9 — online editions
  • The Art of Kiss 4K — lithograph box set

Archie Comics

In 2011 Kiss announced the release of Archie Meets Kiss, a new four-issue comic book series in conjunction with Archie Comics. Each issue was released with two variant covers and all four issues were compiled into both a trade paperback and trade hardcover book.

Issue list

  1. Riverdale Rock City
  2. Creatures of the Night
  3. Rock N’ Roll All Fright!
  4. Shout It Out Loud!

IDW Publishing

Kiss

Kiss is the current comic series being printed by IDW Publishing, written by Chris Ryall and illustrated by Jamal Igle. The first issue was released in June 2012 and so far eight issues have been published. The first issue is titled “Dressed to Kill” and has six variant covers. Part 2 of “Dressed to Kill” was released in July and has five variant covers.

  1. Dressed to Kill, Part 1 — 6 variant covers
  2. Dressed to Kill, Part 2 — 5 variant covers
  3. World Without Heroes, Part 1 — 5 variant covers
  4. A World Without Heroes, Part 2 — 5 variant covers
  5. Kiss Meets the Phantom, Part 1
  6. Kiss Meets the Phantom, Part 2
  7. Into The Void, Part 1
  8. Into The Void, Part 2

Greatest Hits

IDW has announced that they would begin releasing a series of trade paperbacks titled, Kiss Greatest Hits which will compile every series of Kiss comics, starting with Kiss’ Marvel comics. The first issue is to be titled Kiss Greatest Hits, Vol. 1: The Marvel Years and will compile issue #1 and #5 of the Marvel Comics Super Special series featuring the Kiss characters. The second edition collects issue 1-6 of the Todd McFarlane Psycho Circus series.

  • vol. 1: The Marvel Years
  • vol. 2
  • vol. 3

Mars Attacks: Flaming Youths

On January 9, 2013 IDW released a special one-shot issue of their Mars Attacks series. The series was written by Chris Ryall, with art by Alan Robinson.[11]

  • Mars Attacks: Flaming Youths — 2 variant covers

Kiss Solo

Beginning in March 2013, IDW released a four-issue series starring the Demon, the Starchild, the Catman and the Spaceman, starting with Demon. The series was illustrated by Angel Medina and was once again written by Chris Ryall.[12]

  1. The Demon — 3 variant cover
  2. The Starchild — 1 variant cover
  3. The Celestial — 1 variant cover

Kiss Kids

The first issue was released on April 10, 2013. The series will be illustrated by José Holder.[13]

Kiss Kompendium

The Kiss Kompendium is a hardcover collection of Kiss comics released on December 8, 2009. It compiles both issues of the Marvel Comics Super Special, the Marvel Kissnation comic, the comic printed especially for 1995 book, KISStory, along with the Psycho Circus and the Dark Horse comic series. The book also features exclusive Kiss photos taken backstage during the band's Sonic Boom tour, as well as commentary by band members Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley.[14]

See also

References

  1. Gerber, Steve. "Mind-Mush!", Howard the Duck #12 (Marvel Comics, May 1977).
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  6. Sanford, Jay Allen. "Komplete Kiss Comix Kronicles," San Diego Reader blog (September 12, 2007).
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  11. cGt2099. "Comic Review: Mars Attacks KISS," Geeks of Doom (Jan. 15, 2013).
  12. Dukes, Billy."Kiss Characters to Star in 2013 Individual Comic Book Issues," Ultimate Classic Rock (Dec. 17, 2012).
  13. cGt2099. "KISS Continues To Dominate Comics, This Time With ‘KISS Kids’!", Geeks of Doom (Apr. 1, 2013).
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External links