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==Villains== |
==Villains== |
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==Notes/trivia== |
==Notes/trivia== |
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+ | In "Gridiron Ghoul" Rozum has Mystery Inc. tackle a Fieldgoal Fantomas, and he gives the reader an extra kick by laying out a very clever red herring. Rozum furthermore carries a theme through the tale in which armchair--or bleacher--detective work provide the necessary clues to find the answers to two questions. |
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+ | Leo Batic--known for his ''Pinky and the Brain'' work--gives the Gang good scale and score. In fact it doesn't matter who is drawing Scooby-Doo and "those meddling kids." Joe Staton, Scott McRae, Leo Batic, Horacio Ottolini, Houngun meister Robert Pope and far from hayseed Pablo Zamboni acquit the Gang consistently and to the model of the cartoons.<ref>Ray Tate in [http://www.comicsbulletin.com/reviews/113177199948246.htm Line of Fire Reviews]</ref> |
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==Quotes== |
==Quotes== |
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[[Category:DC Comics stories]] |
[[Category:DC Comics stories]] |
Revision as of 00:39, 27 October 2011
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Gridiron Ghoul is a story in Scooby-Doo! #102 by DC Comics.
Premise
Synopsis
Characters
Character |
---|
Scooby-Doo |
Shaggy Rogers |
Fred Jones |
Daphne Blake |
Velma Dinkley |
Villains
Suspects
Culprits
Locations
Notes/trivia
Reception
In "Gridiron Ghoul" Rozum has Mystery Inc. tackle a Fieldgoal Fantomas, and he gives the reader an extra kick by laying out a very clever red herring. Rozum furthermore carries a theme through the tale in which armchair--or bleacher--detective work provide the necessary clues to find the answers to two questions.
Leo Batic--known for his Pinky and the Brain work--gives the Gang good scale and score. In fact it doesn't matter who is drawing Scooby-Doo and "those meddling kids." Joe Staton, Scott McRae, Leo Batic, Horacio Ottolini, Houngun meister Robert Pope and far from hayseed Pablo Zamboni acquit the Gang consistently and to the model of the cartoons.[1]
Quotes
References
- ↑ Ray Tate in Line of Fire Reviews