Daredevil #169 - Frank Miller art & cover

Daredevil #169 bullseye marvel comic book cover art by Frank Miller
Frank Miller
Daredevil v1 #169, 1981 - Bullseye returns, just as his obsession with Daredevil begins to unhinge his mind. The first few pages are illustrated from his point of view, seeing everyone as the "man without fear". Frank Miller's artwork becomes looser, almost impressionistic. Some pages work better than others, notably DD's monologue on the last page. Like his cover, Miller's drawings are less artfully drawn than later issues, but his storytelling skills continue to improve. Also, Elektra makes a brief cameo appearance on two pages. This is 11 of 33 Daredevil issues by Miller
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Miller cover pencils (Klaus Janson inks) = **
"Devils"
Miller story pencils (Klaus Janson inks) 22 pages = **

Daredevil v1 #169 marvel comic book page art by Frank Miller
Frank Miller
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Daredevil #169 - Frank Miller art & cover Daredevil #169 - Frank Miller art & cover Reviewed by Ted F on 9:29 PM Rating: 5

2 comments:

DanMan said...

I'm going to take a dissenting opinion on this one. Sure the artwork is a bit looser- this may be because he only recently took over writing duties on the book. In terms of visual storytelling this issue was a career breakthrough. Miller is freed from the flashback devises he used in the previous issue and he delivers some terrific moment-to-moment sequences (including the page you included). Most of the story takes place at night and Miller adds so many nice film noir touches. The cover is classic- Bullseye is now the crazed killer we know rather than the weird hired assassin he was before.

Dave Ryan said...

As great as Millers DAREDEVIL is (both the McKenzie-scripted issues from 158-167, as well as the Miller-scripted issues from 168-191) I've consistently been disappointed with the work that came after it over the last 20 or so years.
In some ways I like the McKenzie-scripted issues better, mostly single-issue stories, and nive human dramas. There was a noticeable change from 168-up, and I thinkeditor Dennis O'Neil might be the uncredited co-plotter for much of that latter half.
RONIN was interesting, but overly violent, and too derivative of Kojima and Moebius.
BATMAN YEAR ONE and DARK KNIGHT RETURNS were Miller's last great work, for my money.

This story (issue 169) and issue 191 got inside the head of Bullseye and DD in very interesting ways, defining both the similarities and differences between them.

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