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AndyFish

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Everything posted by AndyFish

  1. Made the 90 minute trip up solely to say hello to son's #2 and #2 who were manning the SUPERWORLD Booth and to get my STERANKO Hardcover signed. There's a story here, so please excuse me; I've always been a big Steranko fan but none of his reprinted works fit on a shelf in my art studio where I keep "inspirational" work-i.e. some Kirby collections, some Eisner, etc. So I made a hardcover of all of Jim's original Marvel work, complete with a slipcover and as an edition of 1/1. I not only love the work of Steranko, I love the guy-- he and I have a bond in that we both learned to box to get ourselves out of bad neighborhoods where bullying was the norm. We both knew Mickey Spillane and we've got other connections as well, so it was great to spend so much time with him. For anyone who came up behind me to his line, I happily stepped aside so he could interact with other fans but it was late enough in the day that things had slowed down. We talked old movies, serials, pulps, art supplies, painting techniques, gallery shows and made plans to get together later in the summer. He's the best. Highlight for me was when he made me an official Steranko Henchmen, complete with the secret password and a T-Shirt you cannot buy. The irony there is that I don't wear T-Shirts, never have. I'm a collared shirt guy and always have been, and I don't like printed T-Shirts but if I'm going to be someone's henchman it would be Steranko. I made a lightning fast pass through the show, said hello to Mike Royer and checked in on my boys who had already gathered a box of books from the show which they kindly give me dibs on should there be something that catches my eye. On the way back my wife and I stopped at a good deli that was at the plaza with the New Hampshire State Liquor store and I picked up a few bargains there too. Life is good. Little Giant is an impressive little show that seems to bring in the good stuff.
  2. You should just be able to add an addendum to your homeowner's policy. They'll want some paperwork or an evaluation but it's not the hard to do and it's not that expensive.
  3. Big Budget CGI laden movies without an actual plot or characters of interest are boring to me, so I've not seen 90% of comic book movies. I like a story told in around 90 minutes using actual people. GHOST WORLD is probably the best comic book movie I've ever seen, for example. To me even good CGI just looks lousy. When the last Spider-Man movie came out with Michael Keaton I remember him showing a clip on David Letterman or some similar show, and it was The Vulture and Spidey fighting-- after it was over Keaton just sat there, clearly not excited to be promoting anything and asked why he's showing a clip that doesn't feature any real people.
  4. Mandarake has the Revoltech figure for $35 before shipping, I think your son might like this more than a statue. They’ve also got the Black Ox figure further down the page. Shipping via DHL shouldn’t be too crazy, I just got a Medicom Connery Bond figure for under $50 with shipping, and it’s a 1/6 scale figure. https://order.mandarake.co.jp/order/listPage/list?keyword=Tetsujin 28&lang=en
  5. I had this very conversation with some good friends recently, be hesitant to sell your collectibles no matter the situation, unless you have zero attachment to them. Thirty years ago I sold off my near complete run of pre-Robin Detectives (was missing #27 and #37 and all other non-Batman covers except for #34) and I got a good price for them at the time. Let's say for the sake of simple numbers I got $10k for them then and paid off $10k worth of debt or whatever it was I needed the money for (I'd suspect it was now ex-wife then current wife related). Now if I'd simply gone out and got a personal loan from a bank and paid a reasonable interest rate I MIGHT have paid the bank $12,500 for that $10k. Well looking at the value of those Detective Comics I probably paid $100k for that same $10k back then. Why didn't I go to the bank? Because I thought it would be easier than going to the bank and asking for a loan (I could have used the comics for collateral on a personal loan and I'd still have the comics). Many years later and many dealings with bankers later and I realize it's no harder than dealing with a golden age comic book dealer and my credit score is 840 (near perfect). I bring this up for the sake of a younger collector who's contemplating selling the equivalent of what I did, go a different route and you'll be better served in your later years.
  6. Not sure what you're asking-- do you know what's in the box? It says something about a car and "white iron man" -- you might be having a hard time searching because in Japan he's not called Gigantor he's Tetsujin 28-go. With all Japanese items my first stop is always Mandarake.com-- they have a half dozen + stores all over Japan (I've been to six of them) and they have amazing DHL shipping which gets your item to the states, even during the height of the pandemic when nothing was getting delivered, in three to five days. If you sign up for a free account with their website you can choose "english" as an option to display items on the web-page. Expect zero help customer service wise, except for their Tokyo store they speak very little english. After Mandarake try the Tetsujin search on eBay and I bet you'll get better results.
  7. This made me laugh- why is this such a hard concept for so many? I’d also add was your clothes, you know those pants/shirt you give the sniff test to? Yeah, test failed. Wash ‘em. Wash your hands in the bathroom with soap, don’t sit on the con floor. Where were these people raised?
  8. I think he said it was Bob Kane's file copy, for what its worth.