Pro Wrestling
Pro Wrestling
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===[[Valiant Comics]]===
 
===[[Valiant Comics]]===
*''WWF BattleMania'' series
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*''[[WWF BattleMania]]'' series
   
 
===[[Marvel Comics]]===
 
===[[Marvel Comics]]===

Revision as of 15:41, 1 May 2011

Comic book superheroes and professional wrestling characters have long been viewed in the same vein of entertainment as colorful characters that are larger than life, and numerous wrestlers have appeared or been referenced in comic books.

Spider-Man's first costumed appearance was the result of Peter Parker's need for a colorful gimmick, as he planned to enter and win a wrestling challenge.

Wrestlers in American comics

Azteca Productions

Valiant Comics

Marvel Comics

Chaos! Comics

Image Comics

Warrior Productions

Angel Gate Press

  • 10th Muse: Book Of Lights special also based on Mero

Wrestlers in International comics

Mexico and Japan have also had characters crossover into comic books. Mexican Wrestling Comic Books

Pro Wrestling Superstar Retsuden is a series of biographic manga published in Japan in the 1980s.

Comics based on or including wrestling

  • Rival Angels webcomic,[1]
  • Futaba-Kun Change! manga, Studio Ironcat (US publisher)
  • Sonambulo
  • El Zombo Fantasma 3-issue mini-series, 2004, tpb, 2005, Dark Horse Comics [2]
  • The Nail by Steve Niles and Rob Zombie, limited series, 2004, Dark Horse Comics [3]
  • Rob Zombie's Spookshow International series, 2003-current, CrossGen Comics, MVCreations and Image Comics
  • The Haunted World of El Superbeasto, by Rob Zombie. Also being turned into an animated film too.
  • Love and Rockets, by Los Bros Hernandez. One of the main storylines, Hoppers 13, by Jaime Hernandez, includes many prominent wrestler characters.
  • Headlocked
  • Johnny Cougar a comic strip about a Native American (Cherokee)professional wrestler appearing in the British comic magazine Tiger
  • Kinnikuman manga

Comics in wrestling

  • "Arachnaman" (portrayed by Brad Armstrong) appeared in World Championship Wrestling (WCW) in the early 1990s wearing a costume resembling that of Spider-Man's aside from its yellow coloration instead of red. His gimmick included shooting 'webs' upon his ring entrance.
  • Sting changed from a colorful flamboyant performer to a dark brooding figure after being falsely accused of betrayal in the nWo storyline in late 1996. As a result he adopted a black and white look and brooded in the rafters of the arenas, mimicking The Crow by James O'Barr in appearance to the point of actual birds appearing as well. Scott Hall suggested the idea to Sting, knowing of the concept but not having seen or read any of the materials himself.
  • Tiger Mask was originally a popular Japanese manga character; as a result, New Japan Pro Wrestling (NJPW) decided to capitalize on this by employing the young Satoru Sayama to play the character as an actual wrestler. The resultant success led to the character being re-assigned, following Sayama's retirement, to other wrestlers, namely the now high-profile Mitsuharu Misawa and Koji Kanemoto. The current incarnation is the fourth, played by Yoshihiro Yamazaki.
  • Gangrel was a vampire character from the White Wolf brand of comics and role-playing games. World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) employed a wrestler previously known as the Vampire Warrior (real name: David Heath) to play the character, as the leader of a cult-like faction called The Brood, which also consisted of the wrestlers Edge and Christian.
  • Gregory Helms wrestles as The Hurricane, a superhero gimmick with elements of The Green Lantern.

Other connections

  • Rob Van Dam is an avid collector, who cites Ghost Rider as his favorite character, and operates his own store, RVD's Five Star Comics, in California, and plans to write his own series.
  • Raven wrote an issue of Spider-Man: Tangled Web for Marvel Comics. The issue featured a partial rewrite of Spider-Man's history, and focused on Crusher Hogan, the wrestler whom Spider-Man first tested his powers on.

References

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