robot archieの例文
- After that, Robot Archie entered publishing limbo but remained well-loved by fans.
- Robot Archie is featured on the cover of the first issue, which was drawn by Dave Gibbons.
- Robot Archie was built by Professor C . R . Ritchie to be the world's most powerful mechanical man.
- It began to feature an increasing number of anti-hero characters such as The Spider and The Sludge ( who would later battle Robot Archie in his own strip ).
- The strip lasted 25 weeks before it took a five-year hiatus and returned in 1957 as " Archie, The Robot Explorer ", eventually becoming better known as " Robot Archie ".
- Robot Archie's swan song was in " Albion ", where he was found in the basement of a Manchester pub by Penny Dolmann, who repaired and modified him in order to rescue her father.
- However, " Robot Archie " strips did appear in colour ( with re-drawn art from the Dutch series ) in " Vulcan ", a short-lived weekly title which lasted until 1976.
- In 2005, it was announced that Robot Archie, as well as all of IPC's adventure heroes, would appear in a new six-issue mini-series, to be published by the Wildstorm imprint of DC Comics.
- Undoubtedly his most famous creation was for " Lion ", for which he conceptualised " Robot Archie " ( initially known as " The Jungle Robot " ) which he would script for much of the strip's run.
- When Robot Archie re-appeared in the pages of Grant Morrison's " Zenith " as " Acid Archie ", he was part of a team of heroes called " Black Flag "; there, he helped Zenith fight the evil, supernatural race known as the Lloigor.
- Robot Archie's adventures started off as conventional action-thrillers, with Archie and his friends battling criminals and jungle creatures, but over time, he began to fight more fantastic and dangerous villains and aliens, including " The Sludge ", a monster that had previously had its own strip in " Lion ".
- In the Netherlands, beginning in 1971, " Robot Archie " appeared in the comics magazine " Sjors ", for which Bert Bus drew new Archie material ( which was translated into French, as well ), and two or three series of albums, which-- like the Archie publication in France-- were halted in the early'80s.