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Faust (comics)

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(Redirected from Rebel Studios) American series of comics by David Quinn & Tim Vigil This article is about the comic book series by David Quinn and Tim Vigil. For the film, see Faust: Love of the Damned (film).

Faust
Cover of Faust 1 (December 1988), art by Tim Vigil
Character information
First appearanceFaust #1 (1988)
Created byDavid Quinn
Tim Vigil
In-story information
Alter egoJohnny Faust
Jonathan "John" Jaspers
Johnny Jaspers
SpeciesHuman
Abilities
  • Peak human physical condition
  • Expert hand-to-hand combatant
  • Retractable forearm talons
Publication information
PublisherNorthstar Publishing
Rebel Studios
Avatar Press
ScheduleVaried
Title(s)
Faust: Love of the Damned
Faust/777: The Wrath
Faust: Book of M
Faust: Singha's Talons
Faust: Claire's Lust
FormatsOriginal material for the series has been published as a set of ongoing series.
Genre
Publication dateDecember 1988 – 2012
Number of issues15
Creative team
Writer(s)David Quinn
Artist(s)Tim Vigil
Penciller(s)Tim Vigil
Inker(s)Tim Vigil

Faust is the lead superhero character and title of a collective series of comic books by Tim Vigil (art) and playwright David Quinn (stories), released by American publishers Northstar Publishing, Avatar Press, and principally by Vigil and Quinn's own Rebel Studios.

Alongside contemporaries Watchmen, The Crow, and The Dark Knight Returns, Faust was credited with popularizing the "deconstructed superheroes" genre and the notion that "comics aren't just for kids." One of the bestselling independent comics of the era, Faust issue 1 sold over 100,000 copies with later issues averaging 50,000 sales per issue, most of which sold through several printings and editions.

The series features strong graphic violence and sexual situations. The main series is known as Faust: Love of The Damned and debuted in 1988, with new issues published irregularly, roughly once a year, or sometimes every two years. David Quinn completed a script in 1996 (when writing the proposal to sell the film). The gap between issues grew wider with time. Issue 13 was published in 2005. It then took seven years for the authors to deliver the two last issues, 14 and 15, which concluded the story 25 years after the first episode.

In 2000, Lionsgate Films released the Brian Yuzna produced feature film adaptation Faust: Love of the Damned and in July 2021, it was announced Sony Pictures Television would adapt the comic as an animated series.

Plot

In New York City, Beef and Hapi, two hitmen who work for a mysterious Mephistophelian crime boss known as "M", kill a drug dealer and his girlfriend. This violence is detailed in the newspaper articles of Ron Balfour, a journalist who meets Doctor Jade DeCamp in a cafe. Jade has been fired from Bellevue Hospital and is furious over the accidental death of her patient and secret lover, John Jaspers. After Jade leaves the cafe, she and Balfour are assaulted by a gang of street punks. A horn-masked figure, Faust, then appears, laughing and singing while he slaughters the street punks with a pair of retractable forearm talons. Jade realizes in horror that Faust is John Jaspers.

Jaspers later wonders if he has spilled too much blood, or not enough. He, apparently hallucinating, sees demons everywhere. One night from his Brooklyn Heights mansion, M calls a radio station and requests to play the song "Are You Lonesome Tonight?" repeatedly, saying it should be dedicated "From M to the new kid in town", Faust. Later, it is shown that M played a role in Jaspers' Bellevue treatment. M's criminal colleagues want him to unleash his secret "Project Assassin", to eliminate Faust, unaware that Faust is M's prized killer. Jaspers then regains his lost memories of being an assassin for M, as well as the rebellion that led to his supposed "death".

Publications

Anthology appearances

  • Raw Media Mags #1 (published by Rebel Studios in 1991; includes "2020: Giant Step", a then-futuristic Faust tale)
  • Threshold #7 (published by Avatar Press in 1998; includes Faust/777: The Wrath prelude)
  • Threshold #24 (published by Avatar Press c. 2000; includes Faust: Singha's Talons prelude)

References

  1. McCulloch (2013)
  2. Johnston (2012)
  3. Gerick-Gutierrez (2012); Miller (2012a); and Piskor & Rugg (2019)
  4. Miller (2012b)
  5. For information on the 2001 film, see Holland (2001). For information on the upcoming television series, see Del Rosario (2021).
  6. Burgas (2014)
  7. For the Northstar Publishing issues, see Grand Comics Database (n.d.d). For the Rebel Studios issues, see Grand Comics Database (n.d.e).
  8. Grand Comics Database (n.d.f)
  9. Grand Comics Database (n.d.g)
  10. Grand Comics Database (n.d.i)
  11. Grand Comics Database (n.d.h)
  12. Grand Comics Database (n.d.a)
  13. Grand Comics Database (n.d.b)
  14. Grand Comics Database (n.d.c)

Bibliography

Works based on Faust
Folk legend
Seminal works
Prose
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