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Umbrella title for DC Comics one-shots From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
DC Special Series was an umbrella title for one-shots and special issues published by DC Comics between 1977 and 1981. Each issue featured a different character and was often in a different format than the issue before it. DC Special Series was published in four different formats: Dollar Comics,[1] 48 page giants, digests, and treasury editions. Neither the umbrella title nor the numbering system appear on the cover; the title "DC Special Series" appeared only on the first page in the indicia. Most issues featured new material, but eight issues were reprints of previously published material.[2]
DC Special Series | |
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Publication information | |
Publisher | DC Comics |
Format | Ongoing |
Publication date | September 1977 – fall 1981 |
No. of issues | 27 |
Creative team | |
Written by | |
Artist(s) | List
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Penciller(s) | |
Inker(s) | |
Colorist(s) | List
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Editor(s) | List
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DC Special Series was preceded by the theme-based reprint title DC Special, which ceased publication the month before DC Special Series debuted. The first issue included "The Dead on Arrival Conspiracy", a Batman vs. Kobra story by Martin Pasko, Michael Netzer (Nasser), and Joe Rubinstein originally scheduled for the unpublished Kobra #8.[3] DC Special Series #1 also included the story, "How to Prevent a Flash", which introduces Patty Spivot. That character would later appear in season two of The Flash TV series, portrayed by actress Shantel VanSanten.[4]
DC Special Series started out as a biweekly title in 1977 until Spring 1978, when it became quarterly. The series went on hiatus after the Fall 1978 issue and was revived in Summer 1979. Two stories originally scheduled to appear in DC Special Series were split apart and published in other titles due to the DC Implosion.[5]
The final three issues were in the oversized treasury format. Issue #25 was a tie-in to the Superman II film and #26 featured "Secrets of Superman's Fortress" by Roy Thomas, Ross Andru, and Romeo Tanghal.[6] The last issue was a DC-Marvel crossover between Batman and the Hulk.[7]
Issue | Contents | Date | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1 | 5 Star Super-Hero Spectacular | September 1977 | Dollar Comic format; features Aquaman, the Atom, the Batman, the Flash, and Green Lantern.[8] |
2 | The Original Swamp Thing Saga | 48-page giant; reprints Swamp Thing #1–2 by Len Wein and Bernie Wrightson.[9] | |
3 | Sgt. Rock Special | October 1977 | 48-page giant[10] |
4 | The Unexpected Special | 48-page giant[11] | |
5 | Superman Spectacular | November 1977 | Dollar Comic format[12] |
6 | Secret Society of Super-Villains Special | 48-page giant[13] | |
7 | Ghosts Special | December 1977 | 48-page giant[14] |
8 | The Brave and the Bold Special | 1978 | 48-page giant; Batman, Deadman, and Sgt. Rock team-up.[15] |
9 | Wonder Woman Spectacular | Dollar Comic format[16] | |
10 | Secret Origins of Super-Heroes Special | 48-page giant; origins of Doctor Fate, Lightray, and Black Canary.[17] | |
11 | The Flash Spectacular | Dollar Comic format[18] | |
12 | Secrets of Haunted House Special | Spring 1978 | 48-page giant[19] |
13 | Sgt. Rock Spectacular | Dollar Comic format[20] | |
14 | The Original Swamp Thing Saga | Summer 1978 | 48-page giant; reprints Swamp Thing #3–4 by Len Wein and Bernie Wrightson.[21] |
15 | Batman Spectacular | Dollar Comic format; "Death Strikes at Midnight and Three", text story written by Dennis O'Neil with spot illustrations by Marshall Rogers. "I Now Pronounce You Batman and Wife!", marriage of Batman and Talia al Ghul, by Dennis O'Neil, Michael Golden, and Dick Giordano.[22][23] See also Batman: Son of the Demon | |
16 | Jonah Hex Spectacular | Fall 1978 | Dollar Comic format; "The Last Bounty Hunter!", death of Jonah Hex, by Michael Fleisher and Russ Heath.[24][25] |
17 | The Original Swamp Thing Saga | Summer 1979 | Dollar Comic format; reprints Swamp Thing #5–7 by Len Wein and Bernie Wrightson.[26] |
18 | Sgt. Rock's Prize Battle Tales | Fall 1979 | Digest size; all reprints[27] |
19 | Secret Origins of Super-Heroes | Digest size; all reprints except for new origin of Wonder Woman by Cary Burkett, José Delbo, and Vince Colletta.[28] | |
20 | The Original Swamp Thing Saga | January–February 1980 | Dollar Comic format; reprints Swamp Thing #8–10 by Len Wein and Bernie Wrightson.[29] |
21 | Super-Star Holiday Special | Spring 1980 | Dollar Comic format; features Legion of Super-Heroes, Jonah Hex, Sgt. Rock, the House of Mystery. "Wanted: Santa Claus -- Dead or Alive!" first Batman story drawn by Frank Miller.[30][31] |
22 | G.I. Combat Special | September 1980 | Dollar Comic format[32] |
23 | World's Finest Comics Digest | February 1981 | Digest size; all reprints[33] |
24 | The Flash and His Friends | Digest size; all reprints[34] | |
25 | Superman II | Summer 1981 | Treasury format; photos and background material from the film.[6][35] |
26 | Superman and His Incredible Fortress of Solitude | Treasury format[6][36] | |
27 | Batman vs. the Incredible Hulk | Fall 1981 | Treasury format; DC-Marvel crossover by Len Wein, José Luis García-López, and Dick Giordano.[7][37][38] |
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