![]() ![]() “Some popular fiction is like folklore and mythology, it somehow resonates with people and can be reinterpreted again and again,” he says. When asked about Elric’s longevity - the character first appeared in an issue of Science Fantasy in 1961 - Moorcock goes back to the universal nature of the character. “I’m extremely visual and think in terms of symbols.” That’s probably why the character seems to go naturally into visual media,” Moorcock reasons. I tend to think in pictures and always like to write scenes possessing the dynamic you find in comics. 14, and continued through material published by Marvel Comics, First Comics, DC Comics and BOOM! Studios, before the new Titan Comics release. The Ruby Throne continues a long tradition of comic book versions of the character, which began in 1972’s Conan the Barbarian No. We are good friends and I would work with him again in an instant,” he says, before joking, “It’s fair to say, however, that Walter doesn’t have a decadent bone in his body.” Referring to earlier collaborations with artist Walter Simonson, the writer says, “I’m still very proud of the work we did on Michael Moorcock’s Multiverse as well as Elric: Making of a Sorcerer. ![]() Inside 'The Flash' Ending and That Cameo Secretly Filmed 6 Months Ago ![]()
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