The Bizarro Encyclopedia Of Film Volume 1

Bizarro is an internationally syndicated, surreal comic panel where eyeballs hover, dynamite sizzles, upside-down birds soar and a slice of pie hides in every corner.

The Bizarro Encyclopedia Of Film Volume 1 1

Bizarro (/ bɪˈzɑːroʊ /) is a supervillain appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics. The character was created by writer Otto Binder and artist George Papp as a "mirror image" of Superman, and first appeared in Superboy #68 (1958). [1] Debuting in the Silver Age of Comic Books (1956 – c. 1970), the character has often been portrayed as an antagonist to Superman, though on ...

Home of Bizarro by Dan Piraro, a single-panel comic strip making people laugh for over 30 years.

Read the Bizarro comic strip from , and check out other Bizarro comics by Wayno & Piraro.

Bizarro is the bizarre and imperfect duplicate of Superman, acting as his antagonist or ally depending on the situation. Originally created to be Superman's clone by his nemesis Lex Luthor, his poorly constructed genetics caused him to become the opposite. There have since been many Bizarros based on other characters, and they all live on the alternate Bizarro World. The original wears a rock ...

The Bizarro Encyclopedia Of Film Volume 1 5

Bizarro: Year None #1 main cover by Nick Pitarra In truly terrible news for fans everywhere—which is to say, incredible—DC today announced Bizarro: Year None, a four-issue limited comic book series exploring the origin of Bizarro, Superman’s legendary backwards doppelgänger. From writers Kevin Smith (Green Arrow) and Eric Carrasco (Supergirl), with art and main cover by Nick Pitarra ...

The Bizarro Encyclopedia Of Film Volume 1 6

Bizarro is a doppelgänger of Superman. Due to a somewhat disjointed continuity, several versions of Bizarro have appeared in DC comic books, all of them inversions of Superman with gray or chalk-white skin, a twisted sense of logic which typically manifests as a superficial "opposite" of anything Superman would do or say and a resultant speech pattern ("Me am going to kill you" would mean "I ...

The Bizarro Encyclopedia Of Film Volume 1 7