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Bob Layton (born September 25, 1953) is an American comic book artist, writer, and editor. He is best known for his work on Marvel Comics titles such as Iron Man and Hercules, and for co-founding Valiant Comics with Jim Shooter.
Writer/artist Bob Layton said of the story: "I'm gonna quote David Michelinie here, that it was never our intention to do anything relevant. We were paid to, basically, do the next episode of Iron Man. [It's] just [that in] that particular issue, alcoholism was the bad guy. Instead of Doctor Doom or somebody like that, it was the bottle. That ...
Iron Man #109 Team:The Heroes for Hire Members;(Iron Fist and Luke Cage) 1978 (December) Ed Hannigan, Lee Elias: Power Man and Iron Fist #54 James Rupert "Rhodey" Rhodes: Currently: War Machine Formerly: Iron Man, Iron Patriot 1979 (January) David Michelinie, John Byrne, Bob Layton Iron Man #118 Bug: 1979 (January) Bill Mantlo, Michael Golden ...
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Iron Man intercepts and negates the Raiders, and later finds out one name is missing from Hammer's database due to a glitch in the upload. Tony and Jim Rhodes run a search of other armor-using individuals, which prompts Tony to identify the government-sponsored Stingray as the best candidate, as other known armored heroes and villains are either not advanced enough or would not use others ...
The same year, he joined forces with Bob Layton again for the miniseries Iron Man: Bad Blood for Marvel Comics. [31] After a hiatus Michelinie returned to comics by teaming-up with Bob Layton and Dick Giordano to form Future Comics, where he wrote the series Freemind, Metallix and Deathmask from 2002 to 2003. [32] [33] The company closed in 2004.
War Machine is a superhero appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.Created by David Michelinie, John Byrne, and Bob Layton as a supporting character for Iron Man, he first appeared in Iron Man #118 (1979) and became a superhero with the Iron Man armor in issue #169 (1983).
An Iron Man story appeared in the one-shot issue Iron Man and Sub-Mariner #1 (April 1968), before the "Golden Avenger" [1] made his solo debut with Iron Man #1 (May 1968). [2] The series' indicia gives its copyright title as Iron Man , while the trademarked cover logo of most issues is The Invincible Iron Man .