J’aime bien que l’on donne au faucon des origines indienne, ce qui me semble très bien allé avec ce que pourrait être le perso.
Raaahhh ça me donne envie de relire Earth X.
J’aime bien que l’on donne au faucon des origines indienne, ce qui me semble très bien allé avec ce que pourrait être le perso.
Raaahhh ça me donne envie de relire Earth X.
Je peux le faire.
Je vais nuancer : tu dois le faire.
C’est quoi, en haut à gauche, le personnage avec un tapis volant ?
Tori.
Edit : j’ai trouvé, c’est Wally the Wizard.
Que du bon !
Ce n’est pas la comédie musicale de la série Hawkeye, mais presque.
EDIT : Captain America: Marvel’s Musical That Never Happened
I was doing some research and this is apparently legit and was in many Marvel comic books, advertising back when it was announced in 1985.
Here’s how the New York Times described the plot of the musical back then:
Captain America boasts a hero-sized $4 million budget. It’s going to be a big one, if everything works out as befits a musical named Captain America. Big, in this case, means a budget of $4 million—a lot of money, even for a superhero fighting for the American dream, the flag and the woman he loves. The superhero will not, in fact, be particularly super when the curtain goes up. The book by Mel Mandel and Norman Sachs (who are also responsible for music and lyrics) has Captain A. going through a mid-life crisis. Fortunately, the action speeds up—his girlfriend, a candidate for President, is captured by terrorists and held hostage at the Lincoln Memorial. That’s enough of the plot—when you invest millions, as are Shari Upbin, James Galton and Marvel Comics and some as yet untapped sources, you’re entitled to a few secrets.