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THERE aren’t many habits that hold a worse reputation than nail biting, and still, that never seems to stop us.http://mobile.news.com.au/lifestyle/health/why-biting-your-nails-could-actually-be-good-for-you/story-fneuzlbd-1227055862972
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10. Bruce Wayne (Batman) Douglas Fairbanks As they would do almost exactly a year later with the Joker, Bob Kane and Bill Finger drew their inspiration for their seminal comic book hero Batman from a movie role. Douglas Fairbanks’s depiction of Zorro in the 1920 silent classic Mark of Zorro showcased Fairbanks’s charm, humor, and (most of all) his athleticism. Kane would later say that that athletic ability, along Zorro’s mask and costume, his secret lair and his dual identity—especially the identity of a wealthy businessman—were all incorporated into Batman. There were other contributors. Sleuths Doc Savage and Sherlock Holmes inspired Batman’s scientific proclivities. Kane wanted Batman to have wings similar to those in Leonardo da Vinci’s sketch of an ornothopter, but Finger changed it to a cape. Finger thought a hooded cowl—complete with the trademark pointed ears—looked more like a bat than Kane’s simple mask. Finger also contributed the name Bruce Wayne, which was a combination of the Scottish hero Robert the Bruce (or King Bruce I) and the American Revolutionary hero General “Mad Anthony” Wayne. http://listverse.com/2015/01/15/10-real-life-inspirations-for-comic-book-characters/
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9. Elmer Fudd Robert Ripley Elmer Fudd, the slow-witted foil for Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck, did not get his start as a comic book character but as regular in Warner Brothers Looney Tunes cartoons. Beginning in 1941, however, Dell began publishing Warner’s cartoon characters, including Elmer, in comics. When Warner Brothers purchased the Vitagraph Company along with the Brooklyn Vitaphone Studios in 1925, they began to produce “talkies,” the first of which was 1927′s Jazz Singer, the first full-length movie with synchronized dialogue. Over the next three years, Warner Brothers produced hundreds of experimental short films called “Vitaphone Varieties,” featuring vaudeville acts, comedians, and singers. In 1930, Warner Brothers offered Robert Ripley, creator of “Ripley’s Believe it or Not,” a contract to produce 10-minute shorts. Ripley was already a popular icon.
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8. Wolverine Paul D’Amato Like many comic book characters, Wolverine’s origins are complicated. He was originally created as a throwaway character tasked only to take on Hulk when he traveled to Quebec in The Incredible Hulk No. 180 (October 1974). Stan Lee and editor-in-chief Roy Thomas had told writer Len Wein and artist John Romita Jr. to create a Canadian “hero-villain” that was “named after a Northern animal.” Wein later recalled: “I was conflicted between ‘wolverine’ and ‘badger’ and finally decided badger had the connotation of mere heckling or nagging, while wolverine virtually had the word wolf in it.” Romita added: “At the time, I thought a wolverine was a female wolf!” The next year, Wolverine appeared in Giant Sized X-Men No. 1 and officially became part of the team in X-Men No. 94. But for two years, Wolverine’s backstory and personal life were neglected. By the time artist John Byrne joined writer Chris Claremont to helm X-Men beginning in 1977, Marvel wanted to drop Wolverine as a character. Byrne, a Canadian, chafed at dumping a Canadian character and spent the next few years rounding out Wolverine, making him the icon he is today. By the time Byrne took over, Wolverine had already been unmasked, and his signature pointy hairstyle had already been established. Byrne hardened Logan’s look, inspired by a minor character in the 1977 movie Slap Shot. .
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7. Princess Diana (Wonder Woman) Elizabeth Marston & Olive Byrne We’ve already discussed how Wonder Woman was created in 1941 by William Moulton Marston as a feminist ideal. A press release put it this way: “ ‘Wonder Woman’ was conceived by Dr. Marston to set up a standard among children and young people of strong, free, courageous womanhood; to combat the idea that women are inferior to men, and to inspire girls to self-confidence and achievement in athletics, occupations, and professions monopolized by men.” Pretty straightforward and laudable, right? But Marston didn’t think women were just equal to men but superior to them. He wrote: “Frankly, Wonder Woman is psychological propaganda for the new type of woman who should, I believe, rule the world.” He added: “When women rule, there won’t be any more [war] because the girls won’t want to waste time killing men . . . I regard that as the greatest—no, even more—as the only hope for permanent peace.” Marston was hired in 1940 by Maxwell Charles Gaines, the inventor of the comic book and co-owner of All-American Publications, the precursor to DC Comics. Gaines was already publishing Superman and Batman comics and was receiving criticism for the violence they glorified, even as World War II was heating up. .
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6. J. Jonah Jameson Stan Lee Peter Parker’s (Spider-man’s) caustic boss at The Daily Globe (and later New York City mayor) was named J. Jonah Jameson and was modeled after one of his creators, Stan Lee. “He was me!” Lee said. “He was irascible, he was bad tempered, he was dumb, he thought he was better than he was. He was the version that so many people had of me!” Steve Ditko was the other creator.Over at DC Comics, Clark Kent’s boss, Perry White, was a big fan of Superman. Lee and Ditko liked the irony of having Peter Parker work for a boss who hated Parker’s alter ego. They liked the tension of Jameson needing photos of Spider-man to sell newspapers even as he worked to defame the superhero. Worse, Jameson hated teenagers, Marvel’s target audience.
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5. Joker Conrad Veidt The debate over who created the Joker, arguably the best villain in comic book history, has been raging for decades. Bob Kane, Bill Finger, and Jerry Robinson all worked together at Detective Comics, and both Kane and Finger claim they had already created the Joker for the debut of Batman No. 1, when Robinson brought a playing card to them with the Joker imprinted on it. Kane claimed they used the player card as a prop, not as an inspiration.Robinson, however, claimed he created the Joker. “I wanted somebody visually exciting,” he said. “I wanted somebody that would make an indelible impression, would be bizarre . . . I wanted a villain that had some attribute that was some contradiction in terms, which I feel all great characters have. To make my villain different, to have a sense of humor would be different . . . So once I thought of the villain with a sense of humor, I began to think of a name and the name ‘the Joker’ immediately came to mind. There was the association with the Joker in the deck of cards, and I probably yelled literally, ‘Eureka!’ because I knew I had the name and the image at the same time. I remember searching frantically that night for a deck of cards in my little room in the Bronx . . . ” Whoever was responsible for the creation of the Clown Prince of Crime, all three credited the Joker’s look to German actor Conrad Veidt and his role as Gwynplaine in 1928′s silent classic The Man Who Laughs. The movie adapts a Victor Hugo novel where the title character, Gwynplaine, has his face mutilated into a hideous grin. Veidt had a storied career, playing Grand Vizier Jaffar in The Thief of Bagdad, the sleep-walking Cesare in the classic The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari, and the Nazi major Heinrich Strasser in Casablanca. He is also credited for playing the first gay character—Paul Korner—written for the silver screen (in the 1919 movie Different From the Others).
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