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Lego Batman – Dark Knight Coffee


Music of DC Comics: 75th Anniversary Collection


Music of DC Comics: 75th Anniversary Collection


$9.21


The Music of DC Comics: 75th Anniversary Collection celebrateshighlights of DC Comic s rich musical history including many rare themesongs that have never before been released. The compilation beginsin 1941 with the theme song from Max Fleischer s Academy AwardNominated Superman Cartoons and moves through the decades. Themesongs from the DC Superhero Filmation cartoons from the 1960 sincluding Jus…

To the Batmobile let's Go; 1988 Vinyl LP


To the Batmobile let’s Go; 1988 Vinyl LP



VINYL LP!!!…Not a cd…. 1988 USA Pressing…. Fresh records LPRE-82009X……BANGO—–YOU’RE THE ONE—–IT’S JUST INHUMAN—–BACK TO THE BEAT—–JUST WANNA DANCE —MADE BY THE MAN—–THE CIRCUS—-SENSE…


Batman: The Animated Series, Vol. 4 (From the New Batman Adventures)


Batman: The Animated Series, Vol. 4 (From the New Batman Adventures)


$14.99


BATMAN:ANIMATED SERIES VOL 4 – DVD Movie…

Batman Collection: Four Film Favorites (Batman / Batman Returns / Batman Forever / Batman & Robin)


Batman Collection: Four Film Favorites (Batman / Batman Returns / Batman Forever / Batman & Robin)


$10.10


4 FILM FAVORITES:BATMAN COLLECTION – DVD Movie…

Four Film Favorites (Superman The Movie / Superman II / Superman III / Superman IV: The Quest for Peace)


Four Film Favorites (Superman The Movie / Superman II / Superman III / Superman IV: The Quest for Peace)


$6.00


Titles include: Superman, Superman II, Superman III and Superman IVProduct Measures: 0.5 x 5.5 x 7.5…

Pez Candy Dispenser Batman DC Comics Super Hero - In Original Package From 1985


Pez Candy Dispenser Batman DC Comics Super Hero – In Original Package From 1985


$5.35


Hard to find old Pez collectible, in great condition….

The Joker's Back Batman and Joker Red


The Joker’s Back Batman and Joker Red


$8.48


Licensed by DC Comics to Camelot Cottons, this cotton print features Batman and the Joker. Colors include yellow, blue, red, black and white. Use for quilting and craft projects.

The Joker's Back Batman Blue/Red


The Joker’s Back Batman Blue/Red


$8.48


Licensed by DC Comics to Camelot Cottons, this cotton print features Batman and Joker scenes. Colors include yellow, blue, red, black and grey. Use for quilting and craft projects.

The Joker's Back Batman Action Scenes Multi


The Joker’s Back Batman Action Scenes Multi


$8.48


Licensed by DC Comics to Camelot Cottons, this cotton print features cameos of Batman and the Joker. Colors include yellow, blue, red, black and grey. Use for quilting and craft projects.

Batman Flannel Blue


Batman Flannel Blue


$7.98


Licensed by DC Comics for Eugene Textiles, this soft, double napped (brushed on both sides) flannel fabric is perfect for quilting, apparel and home décor accents. Color include yellow, grey, black and blue.

The Joker's Back Batman Logo Stripe Yellow/Blue/Red


The Joker’s Back Batman Logo Stripe Yellow/Blue/Red


$8.48


Licensed by DC Comics to Camelot Cottons, this cotton print features a stripe in blue, red and yellow. The stripe is vertical to the selvedge. Use for quilting and craft projects.

Batman Live Tickets


Batman Live Tickets


$345


Buy Batman Live tickets. TicketNetwork.com gets you in!



 Batman: The Brave and the Bold


Batman: The Brave and the Bold


$55


High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! The Brave and the Bold is an American animated television series based in part on the DC Comics “team-up” series The Brave and the Bold. Like the comic series, it features two or more super heroes coming together to solve a crime or foil a super villain, but like the original comic series (and unlike the current one), the cartoon focuses on Batman working with the different heroes. The series debuted on November 14, 2008 on Cartoon Network.

 Canadian Webcomics


Canadian Webcomics


$20.75


Purchase includes free access to book updates online and a free trial membership in the publisher’s book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Chapters: User Friendly, Least I Could Do, Sam and Fuzzy, Clone Manga, Dinosaur Comics, Adventurers!, Sexy Losers, Vg Cats, Earthsong, Antihero for Hire, Zeros 2 Heroes Media, Demon Candy: Parallel, Demonology 101, a Softer World, Bob the Angry Flower, Avalon, Lethargic Lad, Ghastly’s Ghastly Comic, Alice!, White Ninja. Excerpt: Least I Could Do (LICD) is a humor webcomic by Ryan Sohmer and Lar deSouza (also the creators of the fantasy webcomic Looking for Group), which debuted on February 10, 2003. Although Lar deSouza is the current artist, the comic was previously drawn by Chad WM. Porter, for two years, and before that, Trevor Adams. The primary theme of the strip is sexuality, especially the promiscuity of the primary character, Rayne Summers. The strip updates every day with Sunday having a Least I Could Do: Beginnings strip. The Beginnings storylines are unrelated to the rest of the strip, instead following Rayne at age 8. Stories tend to last for only a few strips, but some have gone several weeks. The strip has done fairly long parodies of characters, such as those from The Lord of the Rings, X-Men, G.I. Joe, and Justice League (with Rayne respectively as Aragorn, Wolverine, Flint, and Batman) each taking place where Rayne is either struck unconscious, falls asleep or blacks out. In late 2004, I Have My Moments, a full color book featuring the first year of LICD with Chad Porter as the artist, was published. The original artist for the strip was Trevor Adams, who drew the strip from its debut until July 18, 2003, later moving on to create his own comic Gemini Paradox. Chad took over on July 28 of that year. In early 2005, the strip underwent a major change when Rayne’s friend Noel arrived. Noel was often given roles that previously would hav… More:

 Captain Action: The Original Super-Hero Action Figure


Captain Action: The Original Super-Hero Action Figure


$30


Captain Action, the original super-hero action figure, was introduced in 1966 in the wake of the Batman TV show craze, and later received his own DC comic book with art by Wally Wood and Gil Kane. Able to assume the identities of 13 famous super-heroes, his initial career was short-lived, but continuing interest in the hero has led to two different returns to toy-store shelves.Lavishly illustrated with over 200 toy photos, this second edition of the critically acclaimed volume by author Michael Eury chronicles the history of this quick-changing champion, including photos of virtually every Captain Action product ever released, spotlights on his allies Action Boy and the Super Queens and his arch enemy Dr. Evil, an examination of his comic-book appearances, and “Action facts” that even the most-diehard Captain Action fan won’t know!Features a foreword, cover image, and previously unseen package illustrations by Murphy Anderson, as well as historical anecdotes by the late Gil Kane, Jim Shooter, Stan Weston (co-creator of G.I. Joe, Captain Action, and Mego’s World’s Greatest Super-Heroes), and Larry Reiner and Larry O’Daly, formerly of Ideal Toys, plus never-before-published and classic Captain Action artwork by Gil Kane, Joe Staton, Carmine Infantino, Jerry Ordway, Paul Gulacy, Mark Sparacio, Ruben Procopio, and Tom Yeates.This revised second edition also includes behind-the-scenes material covering Captain Action’s triumphant 2008 return to comics shelves in his new series from Moonstone Books, and spotlights on the new wave of Captain Action collectibles.

 Clayface


Clayface


$99.36


High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! Clayface is a name used by several DC Comics fictional characters, most of them possessing clay-like bodies and shapeshifting abilities. All of them have been enemies of Batman. Created by Bob Kane, the original Clayface, Basil Karlo, was a B movie actor who began a life of crime using the identity of a villain he portrayed in a horror film. In the late 1950s, Batman began facing a series of science fiction-inspired foes and Matt Hagen, a treasure hunter given vast shapeshifting powers and resiliency by radioactive protoplasm, became the new Clayface. He retained the title for the next several decades of comic book history. In the late ’70s, Preston Payne became the third Clayface. A scientist suffering from hyperpituitarism, Payne used Hagen’s blood to create a cure but became a clay-like creature that needed to pass his condition onto others to survive. His condition was used as a metaphor for drug abuse and sexually transmitted disease. Sondra Fuller, of Strike Force Kobra, used the terrorist group’s technology to become the fourth Clayface, also known as Lady Clay.

 Comic Book Movies


Comic Book Movies


$17.95


Superheroes are back! Since the 1970s, the film world has found inspiration in comic books and graphic novels. Now, no summer is complete without a major blockbuster movie based on a comic, including Superman, Batman, Spider-Man, X-Men, Men in Black, Daredevil, and The Hulk. Modern special effects have made large-scale superhero epics possible, while the diversity of the comics being published has made for a wide variety of subjects, as evidenced by Ghost World, From Hell, Akira, and Road to Perdition. This book details 20 key titles, covering every step of the development from comic book panel to feature film frame. It includes interviews with key creative artists about the evolution of the films from the original comics, and speculates about future films. It explains development, production, sequels, and spin-offs, and analyzes the huge success of the Superman and Batman franchises and such misfires as Mystery Men and Dick Tracy.

 Crisis on Infinite Earths


Crisis on Infinite Earths


$19.99


A spectacular and original novel based on the epic comics series that forever changed the universe of Superman and Batman by the man who created the original tale! Trapped in a timeless limbo, Barry Allen, the Flash, can only watch in silent and helpless horror as, one by one, countless universes fade from existance in order to feed the insatiable need for power of the Anti-Monitor, a being from the anti-matter universe of Qward. Under the guidance of the Monitor, his benevolent opposite, the

 Fictional Sex Workers: Fictional Courtesans and Prostitutes, Fictional Dominatrices, Fictional Erotic Dancers, Fictional Pimps


Fictional Sex Workers: Fictional Courtesans and Prostitutes, Fictional Dominatrices, Fictional Erotic Dancers, Fictional Pimps


$63.11


Purchase includes free access to book updates online and a free trial membership in the publisher’s book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Chapters: Fictional Courtesans and Prostitutes, Fictional Dominatrices, Fictional Erotic Dancers, Fictional Pimps, Fictional Pornographic Film Actors, La Traviata, Catwoman, X-23, Whore of Babylon, Josephine Mutzenbacher, Niki Sanders, Fanny Hill, Phèdre Nó Delaunay, Kelly Taylor, Janine Butcher, Pat Evans, Loretta Jones, Hooker With a Heart of Gold, Kimber Henry, Darla, Alex Nuñez, Leanne Battersby, Lao Ma, Rachel Mason, Donna Beck, Mantis, Typhoid Mary, Omaha the Cat Dancer, Echo, Victor, Lady Heather, Nikki Newman, Mary Smith, Geneviève Dieudonné, Sierra, Orlando, Holly Robinson, Charity Tate, Hannah Baxter, Randi Morgan, Speedy, Moll Flanders, Black Mamba, Dolemite, Evey Hammond, Voodoo, Nana, List of Dominatrices in Popular Culture, Rapture, Donna Ludlow, Nina Harris, Marcus Álvarez, Jessica Bennett, Nancy, the Girls of Old Town, Zombie Strippers, the Lady of the Camellias, Stacy X, Karen Page, a Pimp Named Slickback, Emily Stewart, Electric Eve, Marlo Chandler, Copycat, Martin Soap, Nancy Callahan, Bianca, Eileen Callan, Stephanie, Jana Von Lahnstein, Coagula, Tristessa, Charlotte the Harlot, Cheri Love, Eden Lord, Codename: Knockout, Georges Querelle, Tracy Kavanagh, Laura Palmer, Sindi Parker, Rosa Coote, Hank Schillinger, Amber Moore, Roxana: the Fortunate Mistress, Mrs Lechworthy, Daphne Clarke, Cat Mackenzie, Nevada, Lara the Illusionist, Willie Dynamite, Karen Charlene “K.c.” Koloski, Josie Russell, Ulla Winblad, Eccentrica Gallumbits, Mimi Marquez -rent. Excerpt: Catwoman is a fictional character associated with DC Comics’ Batman franchise. The supervillain was created by Bill Finger and Bob Kane, partially inspired by Kane’s second cousin by marriage, Ruth Steel . The original and most widely known Catwoman, Selina

 Filmation Produced Superman Television Series: The New Adventures of Superman, the Batmansuperman Hour, the Supermanaquaman Hour of Adventure


Filmation Produced Superman Television Series: The New Adventures of Superman, the Batmansuperman Hour, the Supermanaquaman Hour of Adventure


$8.96


Purchase includes free access to book updates online and a free trial membership in the publisher’s book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Chapters: The New Adventures of Superman, the Batman/superman Hour, the Superman/aquaman Hour of Adventure, the Adventures of Superboy. Excerpt: The New Adventures of Superman was a series of six-minute animated Superman adventures produced by Filmation that were broadcast on CBS between 1966 and 1970. The 68 segments appeared as part of three different programs during that time, packaged with similar shorts featuring The Adventures of Superboy other DC Comics superheroes. These adventures were the first time that Superman (and his guise of Clark Kent), Lois Lane and Perry White had been seen in animated form since they were immortalized in the Superman short films of the 1940s. The first TV series produced by Filmation Associates, The New Adventures of Superman was extremely popular in its Saturday morning time slot and, despite having obviously been developed for young children, employed the services of several DC comic book writers including George Kashdan. Many of the character designs (later based upon the artwork of Superman artist Curt Swan in the show’s third season) stayed true to their comic book counterparts; iconic shirt-rip shots and related transformations from Clark Kent into Superman were incorporated into almost every episode, and such lines as “Up, up, and away!” and “This is a job for Superman!” were also borrowed from comics and the original Superman radio show. In addition, this series marked the animation debut of Jimmy Olsen and classic Superman villains such as Lex Luthor, The Toyman, and Brainiac. Due to a limited production budget, stock animation was often re-used for certain shots of Superman flying (or switching identities from Clark Kent into the Man of Steel), while character movement was often kept at a minimum. Produc… More:

 Flash Gordon Films (Study Guide)


Flash Gordon Films (Study Guide)


$9.8


Purchase includes free access to book updates online and a free trial membership in the publisher’s book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Excerpt: Flash Gordon is a 1980 science fiction film, based on the eponymous comic strip character Flash Gordon, created by Alex Raymond. The film was directed by Mike Hodges and produced and presented by Dino De Laurentiis. It stars Sam J. Jones, Melody Anderson, Chaim Topol, Max von Sydow, Timothy Dalton, Brian Blessed and Ornella Muti. The screenplay was written by Lorenzo Semple, Jr., and adapted by Michael Allin. It intentionally uses a camp style similar to the 1960s TV series Batman (for which Semple had written many episodes) in an attempt to appeal to fans of the original comics and serial films. The film is notable for its soundtrack composed, performed and produced by the rock band Queen. The story opens with the voice of Emperor Ming the Merciless (Max von Sydow) indicating he will destroy Earth with a variety of natural disasters. Sometime later on Earth, New York Jets football star Flash Gordon (Sam J. Jones) boards a small plane when the hot hail begins. Onboard, he meets travel journalist Dale Arden (Melody Anderson) who is also flying back to New York City. Mid-flight, the disasters become progressively worse and the pilots are sucked out of the cockpit. Flash takes control of the plane, but it promptly crash lands in a greenhouse owned by Dr. Hans Zarkov (Chaim Topol). According to Dr. Zarkov’s research, the disasters are being caused by an unknown physical source in space which is sending the moon out of orbit and toward the Earth. Zarkov had been secretly working on a rocket ship for several years to test his theory, and now intends to go to the coordinates for the source of the attacks. He launches the rocket with all three on board and it flies off into space, even sailing into the black hole where they finally land on the plane… More:

 Frank Miller


Frank Miller


$14.14


Purchase includes free access to book updates online and a free trial membership in the publisher’s book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Chapters: Characters Created by Frank Miller, Comics by Frank Miller, Films Based on Comics by Frank Miller, Films Directed by Frank Miller, Screenplays by Frank Miller, Sin City, Works Inspired by Frank Miller, the Dark Knight Returns, Batman: Year One, Frank Miller, 300, Batman Begins, Daredevil, Elektra, the Spirit, Sin City, List of Characters in Sin City, List of Sin City Yarns, Robocop, Karma, the Hard Goodbye, All Star Batman and Robin the Boy Wonder, Robocop 3, Give Me Liberty, Ronin, the Dark Knight Strikes Again, Marv, Elektra, Daredevil: Born Again, Dwight Mccarthy, Robocop 2, Wallace, Roark Family, Carmine Falcone, Holly Robinson, Nuke, That Yellow Bastard, the Big Fat Kill, 300, Martha Washington, Hell and Back, Miho, Carrie Kelly, the Hard Goodbye, Elektra: Assassin, John Hartigan, the Girls of Old Town, Robocop Versus the Terminator, Holy Terror, Batman!, Jack Rafferty, Wallenquist Organization, Ava Lord, Yukio, Nancy Callahan, Robocop Versus the Terminator, Gillian B. Loeb, Shingen Yashida, Kirigi, Mauler, Sin City, a Dame to Kill For, Stick, Arnold John Flass, 300 Original Motion Picture Soundtrack, Family Values, Sarah Essen Gordon, the Big Guy and Rusty the Boy Robot, 300: March to Glory, Lynn Varley, Hard Boiled, Spawn/batman, Bad Boy, Magliozzi Crime Family, Silent Night, Legends of the Dark Knight. Excerpt: Detective Arnold John Flass is a fictional comic book character, a member of the Gotham City Police Department in the Batman series. He was created by Frank Miller . Although he is a minor character, Flass plays a pivotal role in the Dark Knight’s modern origin and, as such, has been adapted into the film Batman Begins .Fictional character biography 1986′s Batman: Year One introduced Flass as a cheerfully mean jock. Burly, blond, and

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