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{{short description|Comic books series by Frank Miller}}
{{This article is about|Sin City, not to be confused with ] (computer game).}}
{{about|the series of comics by Frank Miller|the film|Sin City (film)|other uses}}
{{otheruses}}
{{distinguish|SimCity}}
]'' ]]
{{Infobox comics meta series <!--Misplaced Pages:WikiProject Comics-->
'''''Sin City''''' is the title for a series of stories by ], told in ] form in a ]-like style. The first story originally appeared in ] from April of ] to June of ], under the title of ''Sin City'', serialized in thirteen parts. Several other stories of variable lengths have followed. All stories take place in Basin City, with frequent recurring characters and intertwining stories.


|image = Sin City Hard Goodbye.jpg
A ], ] by ] and ] with "special guest director" ], was released on ], ]. The '''Sin City''' graphic novels were reprinted with new covers and in a reduced size to coincide with the motion picture's theatrical release. Rodriguez has expressed a desire to begin filming two sequels back-to-back starting February ] for release sometime in ].
|caption = Cover of '']'' showing ] walking through the rain
|alt =
|debut = '']''
|debutmo = April
|debutyr = 1991
|schedule =
|format =
|limited = y
|anthology = '']''
|graphicnovel = y
|1shot = y
|individual =
|titles = ''Dark Horse Presents Fifth Anniversary Special''<br /><!--
-->'']'' #51–62<br /><!--
-->'']'' #1–5<br /><!--
-->'']'' #1–6<br /><!--
-->'']''<br /><!--
-->'']'' #1–9<br /><!--
-->'']'' #1–6
|genre = ], ], ]
|publisher = ]
|startmo = April
|startyr = 1991
|endmo = <!-- optional in lieu of date-->
|endyr = 2000
|issues =
|main_char_team = ]<br />]<br />]<br />]<br />]<br />]<br />]<br />]
|writers = ]
|artists = Frank Miller
|pencillers =
|inkers =
|letterers =
|colorists =
|editors =
|creative_team_month =
|creative_team_year =
|creators = ]
|reprint =
|TPB = The Hard Goodbye
|ISBN = 1-59307-293-7
|TPB1 = A Dame to Kill For
|ISBN1 = 1-59307-294-5
|TPB2 = The Big Fat Kill
|ISBN2 = 1-59307-295-3
|TPB3 = That Yellow Bastard
|ISBN3 = 1-59307-296-1
|TPB4 = Family Values
|ISBN4 = 1-59307-297-X
|TPB5 = Booze, Broads & Bullets
|ISBN5 = 1-59307-298-8
|TPB6 = Hell and Back
|ISBN6 = 1-59307-299-6
|subcat =
|altcat = Sin City
|limsub = Dark Horse Comics
|sort = Sin City
}}
'''''Sin City''''' is a ] of ] ] by American comic book writer-artist ]. The first story originally appeared in '']'' (April 1991), and continued in ''Dark Horse Presents'' #51–62 from May 1991 to June 1992, under the title of ''Sin City'', serialized in thirteen parts. Several other stories of variable lengths have followed. The intertwining stories, with frequently recurring characters, take place in Basin City.


A ] of ''Sin City'', ] by ] and ], was released on April 1, 2005. A sequel, '']'', was released on August 22, 2014.
=='''Sin City''' yarns==
These are the individual stories, usually referred to as "yarns", set in Frank Miller’s '''Sin City''' universe. They are listed here in order of publication. The chronology of '''Sin City''' is described below.


==Publication history==
===The Hard Goodbye===
Writer-artist Frank Miller rose to fame within the American comics industry with his 1981–1983 work on ]' '']'', and the 1986 ] miniseries '']'', both of which exhibited subtle elements of ].<ref name=ComicsAlliance>{{cite web | last=Sims | first=Chris | date=May 26, 2011 | url=http://comicsalliance.com/best-noir-comics/ | title=8 of the Best Noir Comics: Crime Does Pay | publisher=] | access-date=June 18, 2017 | archive-date=March 4, 2016 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304074604/http://comicsalliance.com/best-noir-comics/ | url-status=live }}</ref> Miller's venture into the film noir genre deepened with his creator-owned series ''Sin City'', which began publishing in serialized form in the ] anthology series '']'' #51–62. The story was released in a ] and later re-released in 1995 under the name '']''.
First Published as ''Sin City'' in '']'' issues #51-62 and 5th Anniversary Special (June ]&ndash;June ]), and reprinted as ''Sin City (The Hard Goodbye)'' (January ])


In a 2016 interview with the ], Miller explained his inspiration for ''Sin City'' thus:
'''''The Hard Goodbye''''' is the first ] story that ] drew and wrote about the desperate denizens of Basin City (the first story in the ''Sin City'' saga). It was originally titled simply ''Sin City'' when it was released in the ''] Fifth Anniversary Special'' and issues ''Dark Horse Presents'' #51-62 , but it was given its own title in trade paperback form. The ] is Marv, a dangerous, possibly ]ic man. Marv wakes up after a one-night stand to discover Goldie, the woman he had just met and had sex with, has been killed in the night. The thirteen-part serial follows Marv on his brutal, single-minded quest to understand why Goldie was killed and bring ] upon her murderers.


<blockquote>I've been a fanatic for a long time for old crime movies and old crime novels. But it started with the movies. And the old ] movies. ] and all that. I loved just how the morals of the stories are. They're all about right and wrong. But in ''Sin City'' in particular I wanted them all to happen to in a world where virtuous behavior was rare, which greatly resembled the world I lived in. It's kinda like the old ], where every cop's a criminal, and all the sinners are saints, where the lowlifes would often be heroic, and the most stridently beautiful and sweet women would be prostitutes. I wanted it to be a world out of balance, where virtue is defined by individuals in difficult situations, not by an overwhelming sense of goodness that was somehow governed by this godlike ].<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191116191402/https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xo7frKC0N2E&t=2431s |date=2019-11-16 }}. ]. ]. June 29, 2016. 36:36 mark.</ref></blockquote>
{{spoiler}}


The film noir influence on the series' artwork<ref name=ComicsAlliance/><ref name=AVClub>Robinson, Tasha (December 5, 2001). {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170819094130/http://www.avclub.com/article/frank-miller-13748 |date=2017-08-19 }}. '']''.</ref><ref>Fortune, Drew (August 25, 014). {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161224122921/http://www.avclub.com/article/robert-rodriguez-and-frank-miller-talk-new-and-old-208337 |date=2016-12-24 }}. ''The A.V. Club''.</ref><ref>Clayton, James (August 22, 2014). {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191221074911/https://www.denofgeek.com/movies/sin-city/31816/sin-city-and-the-eternal-seductive-allure-of-film-noir |date=2019-12-21 }}. ]</ref> is seen in its use of shadow and stark backgrounds. Black and white are the sole colors most of the time, with exception of red, yellow, blue, and pink, of which limited use is made in some stories to draw attention to particular characters.<ref name=ComicsAlliance/><ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210203234602/https://books.google.com/books/about/Booze_Broads_and_Bullets.html?id=eBlKPgAACAAJ |date=2021-02-03 }}. ]. Retrieved June 17, 2017.</ref>
Marv, a huge, heavily scarred hulk of a man, is approached in a seedy saloon by a beautiful woman named Goldie. Later they meet in an equally run-down hotel room for a night together. The two of them have sex, and when Marv wakes up she is lying in the bed next to him, murdered. Heavily armored soldiers from Basin City's corrupt police force storm the apartment, and Marv fights his way through them and escapes into the streets.


The writing style also draws heavily on detective and crime ].<ref name=AVClub/><ref>Howe, Sean (August 20, 2014). . '']''. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150122001104/http://www.wired.com/2014/08/frank-miller-sin-city-a-dame-to-kill-for/ |date=2015-01-22 }}</ref><ref>Suderman, Peter (March 29, 2016). {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170403232656/http://www.vox.com/2016/3/29/11323132/frank-miller-best-batman |date=2017-04-03 }}. ].</ref>
As he roams the streets in pursuit of the truth, Marv has to deal with several issues. First, he feels indebted to Goldie for her kindness and wishes to repay her by avenging her death. He suffers from a medical condition in which he experiences vivid ]s, and wonders if he actually murdered Goldie (especially because the two of them were alone and he feels sure he would have detected anyone entering the room to kill Goldie). Finally, Marv is attacked several times by stormtroopers and detectives from the Basin City police department, whom he brutally slaughters in self-defense.


Miller's ''Sin City'' work challenges some conventions of comic book form. The letters of ] words like "blam" are often incorporated into scenes via lighting effects, or are suggested by the negative space between panels, or are created by the outline of the panels themselves. This is especially evident in early "yarns," such as ''The Hard Goodbye'', which were more experimental.<ref>{{cite journal|last=Arnott|first=Luke|title=BLAM! The Literal Architecture of Sin City|journal=The International Journal of Comic Art|date=Fall 2008|volume=10|issue=2|pages=380–401|url=http://lukearnott.weebly.com/blam-the-literal-architecture-of-sin-city.html|access-date=2012-12-10|archive-date=2012-08-17|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120817151333/http://lukearnott.weebly.com/blam-the-literal-architecture-of-sin-city.html|url-status=live}}</ref>
At one point in his journey, Marv stops by the strip club Kadie's, where he watches the dancing act of Nancy Callahan (from ''That Yellow Bastard'').


On April 28, 2022, it was officially announced that Miller was launching the comic book publishing company ] (FMP), with one of his initial contributions being a Western tale set in Sin City's past, titled ''Sin City 1858''.<ref name="Hollywood Reporter 2022-04-28">{{Cite web |last=Kit |first=Borys |date=April 28, 2022 |title=Frank Miller Launches Independent Publishing Company, New 'Sin City,' 'Ronin' Comics in the Works (Exclusive) |website=] |publisher=] & ] |location=] |url=https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/movies/movie-news/frank-miller-independent-publishing-company-new-sin-city-ronin-comics-1235136741/ |access-date=April 29, 2022 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220429144703/https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/movies/movie-news/frank-miller-independent-publishing-company-new-sin-city-ronin-comics-1235136741/ |archive-date=April 29, 2022 }}</ref>
Marv's investigation eventually leads him to The Farm (the same place Detective Hartigan and Yellow Bastard had their final confrontation in ''That Yellow Bastard''), where he defeats a pet ] and discovers human remains. Marv finally encounters the real killer, a small, shadowy figure with glowing glasses and a ] sweater. The killer is supernaturally silent and quick, and manages to sneak up on and beat up Marv (quite a feat, as Marv had earlier shown the ability to slaughter several armed opponents at once, and was pretty much unaffected by being shot in the chest by a ]).


==Setting==
Marv wakes up in a holding cell, where he is greeted by the sight of several stuffed female heads, mounted on the wall like trophies. Also held in the cell is Marv's parole officer, Lucille (Hartigan's ] lawyer), who explains that the killer kills women so that he can dine on their flesh. Lucille is understandably quite shaken, as the killer had previously forced her to watch while he sucked the flesh off one of her hands. From the cell, Marv watches the killer being picked up by a ], and learns that his name is Kevin.
]
Basin City, almost universally referred to by the nickname "Sin City", is a fictional town in the ]. The climate is hot and arid, although Sacred Oaks{{clarify|date=August 2014}} is characterized as being heavily wooded. A major river runs through the city, which has an extensive waterfront. Usually twice a year, a major downpour comes, and the city is prone to heavy snowfall in the winter. Desert lizards and palm trees are common, while tar pits, desert areas, mountain ranges and flat farmland make up the landscape around the city.{{citation needed|date=July 2017}}


The Basin City Police Department are more or less along the lines of paramilitary or ], as they have to deal with incredibly high crime rates among criminals and civilians alike, which is why they have access to what most would consider "heavy weaponry" and full body armor. Those who make up the force have been described as commonly being lazy, cowardly and/or corrupt. Only a handful of the cops are honest, though frequently the wealthy of the city bribe the corrupt members of the police into performing their duty (usually as a result of some crime being committed or threatened against a member of their family).{{citation needed|date=May 2022}}
Marv and Lucille escape, but are intercepted by a ] team. Unwilling to die in a shootout, Lucille knocks Marv down and runs towards the cops. Believing she has been rescued, Lucille attempts to convince them not to kill Marv. The cops quickly kill her, to eliminate any witnesses. Marv kills the cops, and learns from torturing the lead detective that the man who wants him dead is Cardinal Roark, brother to Senator Roark and a member of the powerful and corrupt Roark family that founded and runs Basin City.


During the ], the ] "imported" a large number of attractive women to keep the miners happy, making a fortune and turning a struggling mining camp into a thriving, bustling city. Over the years, as the Roark family migrated into other areas of business and power, these women ended up forming the district of Old Town, the ] quarter of the city where they rule with absolute authority. In addition, the people charged with governing the city, most of them from the Roark line, remained in power for generations, running it as they saw fit.{{citation needed|date=July 2017}}
Marv is soon captured by the Old Town ]s, led by Goldie's twin sister Wendy, who believe Marv is responsible for Goldie's death and thus intend to ] and kill him. Marv convinces them that he is innocent (stating that no prostitute would let someone as ugly and fearsome looking as him close enough to kill her), and they provide him with the ordnance he needs to confront Kevin.


As the various yarns progress, the audience gradually becomes familiar with key locations in and around Basin City:
Armed with explosives and razor wire, Marv sets up a series of traps around the Farm, then flushes Kevin out by bombarding the Farm with ] bombs. Kevin manages to avoid Marv's traps, and the two of them fight it out. Marv takes quite a beating, but keeps on fighting and eventually manages to outsmart Kevin by handcuffing himself to him, allowing him to knock out Kevin with a strong punch to the face. Wendy shows up and wants to kill Kevin, but Marv knocks her out, because he intends to torture Kevin, and doesn't want Wendy to have ]s from witnessing it.


*'''The Projects''', the run-down and poor side of Sin City, are a tangle of high-rise run-down and desolated apartments where crime runs rampant with no police inside. Its inhabitants have apparently evolved their own independent society with almost no legal contact with the outside world and SWAT teams rarely go in The Projects. Marv was born in the Projects, and currently resides there. Dwight avoids The Projects and hates the neighborhood.
Marv proceeds to ] Kevin with a hacksaw, then feeds his still-living torso to Kevin's pet wolf. Even as his entrails are being devoured by his own pet, Kevin simply smiles calmly and doesn't utter a sound.
*'''The Docks''', a collection of wharfs and warehouses that are local to the Projects, since The Docks overlook The Projects. Hartigan and Roark Junior have their first confrontation here in ''That Yellow Bastard'', and Marv drives a stolen police car off one of the piers at the beginning of ''The Hard Goodbye''.
*'''Kadie's Club Pecos''' is a strip club and bar in Old Town, where Nancy Callahan and Shellie work, and where Dwight McCarthy and Marv spend their spare time. Despite being filled with drunk and violent men, Kadie's bar is one of the safest areas in Sin City since it is heavily guarded by prostitutes and their protectors. Marv, who possesses an extraordinarily high sense of chivalry, protects the female employees of Kadie's from any violence that makes its way inside.
*'''Roark Family Farm''' (a.k.a. "The Farm") is located at North Cross and Lennox on the hills outside Basin City and shows up in several stories, including ''The Hard Goodbye'', ''That Yellow Bastard'', '' The Babe Wore Red'' and ''Hell and Back''. It was also home to Kevin, a ] with ties to the Roark family. Marv burns down one of the buildings, and the Farm is abandoned sometime after the initial ''Sin City'' storyline. The Farm is the only location in the comic books that is outside Basin City.
*'''Old Town''' is the ], where the city's population of prostitutes reside. Old Town is run by Goldie and Wendy. Old Town is off limits to the police. Though willing to engage in almost any sexual act for the right price, the women of Old Town show no mercy to those who "break the rules," and back up their independence with lethal force. The mafia families and pimps who were into Old Town's business were thrown out of the neighborhood.
*'''Sacred Oaks''' is the home to the rich and powerful of Sin City. This suburb is located on the outskirts of Basin City as a protection. A university is located in Sacred Oaks, and the entire area is patrolled by armed employees of its wealthy inhabitants, mostly SWAT teams.
*'''Basin City Central Train Station''', which has a direct connection to ]. It is located in the outskirts near The Docks and it is considered one of safer places.
*'''Mimi's''', a small run-down motel on the far outskirts of Basin City, with only few rooms and a place where young couples make love. Nancy and Hartigan hid in Mimi's where she confessed her love to him. Junior also attacked Hartigan here and left him to die, although he saved himself.
*'''The Santa Yolanda Tar Pits''', an abandoned amusement park of sorts outside the city, where several ] are located and dinosaur bones were excavated at some time. After a "big-budget dinosaur movie" caused a sensation, the county put up concrete statues of dinosaurs there to draw crowds. However, after an old lady fell through a railing into one of the pits and had a heart attack, the place was shut down indefinitely. They are frequently used as a place to dump things that people don't want found; high-schoolers also tend to sneak in there a lot. This is where Delia tells Phil to drive in ''Wrong Turn'' and where Dwight takes the corpses of Jackie Boy and his friends in ''The Big Fat Kill''. Frank Miller has admitted the main reason the Tar Pits exist is as an excuse to draw the dinosaur statues.


==Characters==
Robbed of any satisfaction from Kevin's death, Marv ] him and goes on to storm Cardinal Roark's heavily guarded fortress. Marv kills Roark's men and confronts the naked Cardinal in his bed. Marv then presents Kevin's still smiling head to Roark, and demands an explanation. Roark, anguished over Kevin's death, confesses that he shielded the killer, because he had a "voice like an angel". Roark babbles on about how Kevin not only ate his victims' bodies, but also their ]s, making him pure and clean. Roark confesses to envying Kevin's "gift", ultimately joining Kevin in his meals of murdered women in order to experience it for himself. Goldie found out about Kevin, so Kevin killed her, and Roark sent in the police to kill Marv, frame him, and cover up Kevin's crimes. Roark rationalizes that the killings were justified because the victims were merely hookers and nobodies.
{{Main|List of Sin City characters}}


===Individuals===
Marv proceeds to tear Cardinal Roark apart, but just as he's really getting it going, SWAT storms the room and fills Marv with machine gun fire.
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* Detective ]
* ]


===Organizations===
Marv survives, is hospitalized, and ultimately is charged not only with the murders of the cops he'd killed, but also of the ] committed by Kevin as well. A hotshot Assistant ] threatens to have Marv's mother killed if Marv doesn't confess to the crimes, so Marv breaks the ADA's arm in three places, then confesses.
Because a large majority of the residents of Basin City are criminals, there are several organizations and cartels central to the stories who are vying for monopoly over the various criminal enterprises in the city. Listed below are crime syndicates, gangs and other low-lifes who figure heavily in the Sin City mythos.


'''The Basin City Police Department''': So deep does corruption and criminality run in Basin City that even their police officers qualify as a gang of paid thugs, turning a blind eye to the affairs of those too poor to pay them off. Few among them are considered incorruptible; even the honest officers are unable (or unwilling) to curtail the criminal actions of the dishonest ones. Notable characters in the series who are police include Detective ], his partner Bob, Lieutenants ] and Mort, ] Liebowitz, and Officers Manson and Bundy from ''Hell and Back''.
Marv is sentenced to death, much to the glee of Basin City's inhabitants. On his last day, he is visited by Wendy, who says that he can pretend that she's Goldie, in one final moment of love.


''']''': A dynasty of corrupt landowners and politicians whose influence over Basin City has stretched as far back as the days of the Old West. Famous Roarks of this generation include a senator, a cardinal, an attorney general, and ].
Finally, Marv is electrocuted in the ], but survives. With his last words, he defiantly mocks his executioners, asking if "That's the best you can do, you pansies?" They electrocute him again, which finally kills him.


''']''': Populating the region of Basin City known as Old Town is a group of women in ], having made a truce with the cops to allow them to govern and police themselves. As of ''A Dame to Kill For'', they were led by the twins, Goldie and Wendy.
]


''']''': A powerful crime syndicate led by Herr Wallenquist, a mysterious crime lord with a broad range of criminal enterprises to his name. Although they are one of the city's two "normal" criminal organizations, the Wallenquist management seems to be the most peaceful and forgiving of the various leaders. It is unknown which crime rings they hold.
This story is one of three Sin City stories retold in the movie '']''. In the film version, ] plays Marv, ] plays Goldie/Wendy, Carla Gugino plays Lucille, ] plays Kevin, and ] plays Cardinal Roark.


''']''': The undisputed heads of the local ], the Magliozzi family seems to be the purest example of "true" ] lifestyle. While they appear in only one story, it is hinted that the Mafia influence in Basin City's underworld is a lot larger than just their family and that there are more families.
Cardinal Roark is killed by Marv in the same gruesome manner as Tyrell is killed by Roy Batty in the movie '']''. Rutger Hauer also played Roy Batty. Whether this is a coincidence or a deliberate homage is unknown.


Other groups that have been seen or mentioned in the comics include:
===A Dame to Kill For===
First published (November ]&ndash;May ])


'''] gangsters''': Mentioned, but not seen as of ''A Dame to Kill For''. Miho's life was saved by Dwight when he secretly protected her during a fight with several Tong gangsters in a dark alleyway.
'''''A Dame to Kill For''''' is the second compilation of the '']'' series. It chronicles Dwight's and Marv's attempts to rescue Ava Lord, Dwight's former fiance, from her ] husband. But Dwight begins to suspect that things aren't what they seem with Ava...


'''White slavers''': Mentioned, but not seen as of ''A Dame to Kill For''. Led by a man named Manuel, whose brothers were also involved. Were "taken care of" by Dwight prior to the events of ''A Dame to Kill For''.
===The Babe Wore Red and Other Stories===
First published (November ])
'''''The Babe Wore Red and Other Stories''''' is a publication of short stories. It reprints a serial run in ''Previews'' dated November ]:


'''Irish mercenaries''': Seen during ''The Big Fat Kill'', most of them are evidently former ] members, as implied by one of the mercenaries referring to his glee at blowing up a ] (] pubs were targeted by the IRA). All are killed by Dwight and Miho.
*The 3-page story ''The Customer is Always Right''.
*The 4-page story ''And Behind Door Number Three?''
*The 24-page story ''The Babe Wore Red''.


==''Sin City'' yarns==
''The Customer is Always Right'' served as the opening sequence for the movie '']''. It featured ] and ]. The sequence served as the original ] footage that director ] used to convince Frank Miller to allow him to adapt ''Sin City'' to the silver screen.
{{main|List of Sin City yarns}}


These are the individual stories, usually referred to as "yarns," set in Frank Miller's Sin City universe.
===Silent Night===
'''Silent Night''' is a one-shot short story that Frank Miller released in November 1994. It is a 15-page story about Marv's rescuing a little girl, in which no one speaks. It is unknown when this actually happened in relation to Miller's other ] stories. It is best to believe that this is unrelated in any way directly to the other stories.
{{spoiler}}
Against a backdrop of heavy snow, Marv, a hulking, trenchcoat-clad figure, approaches a door in a dark alley. He intimidates the bouncer with his sheer size and is led inside and down a flight of stairs. He is met by two armed men and a leather-clad woman, who is apparently their boss. Marv hands her a wad of bills and is shown to a steel door in the far wall. Through a small viewing slit, he can see a terrified little girl crouching in darkness in the room beyond. Marv draws two pistols and kills the pair of henchmen, then executes the woman. He retrieves the little girl, saying, "Your momma's been callin' after you, Kimberly." With the girl in his arms, he walks off into the distance, as the snow obscures his receding form.


===The Big Fat Kill=== ===Collected editions===
The stories have been collected into a number of ] and hardcover editions. There is also a collection of art, ''The Art of Sin City''.
]
'''''The Big Fat Kill''''' was first published in (November ]&ndash;March ])


In 2016, Dark Horse Comics released an ambitious, oversized edition titled ''Frank Miller’s Sin City The Hard Goodbye Curator’s Collection''.<ref name=":0">{{Cite web|url=https://aeindex.org/reviews/frank-millers-sin-city-the-hard-goodbye-curators-collection/|title=Frank Miller's Sin City: The Hard Goodbye Curator's Collection|date=2016-08-29|website=Artist's Edition Index|language=en-CA|access-date=2020-01-30|archive-date=2020-01-30|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200130044450/https://aeindex.org/reviews/frank-millers-sin-city-the-hard-goodbye-curators-collection/|url-status=live}}</ref> This 15 x 21 inch book reprints the entire first storyline, scanned and reproduced exactly from the original art at 1:1 size. When referencing the production process in an interview with Michael Dooley for ], editor/designer John Lind gave the anecdote “When Frank and I first reviewed some of the scanned pages from ''Sin City'', he pulled one aside and said, ‘You can see details in some of the scans where you can tell what the humidity was like when I was lettering because you can see the smudging from my hand.’ That type of reaction represents the level of detail I'm working hard to achieve with the production.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.printmag.com/comics-and-animation/sin-city-collectors-edition/|title=How Frank Miller's Sin City Got the Deluxe Treatment|date=2017-12-04|website=Print Magazine|language=en-US|access-date=2020-01-30|archive-date=2020-01-30|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200130044446/https://www.printmag.com/comics-and-animation/sin-city-collectors-edition/|url-status=live}}</ref>
{{spoilers}}


====Trade paperbacks====
''The Big Fat Kill'' opens in Shellie's apartment, where a drunken former fling is furiously rapping on her door, demanding to be let in. Shellie is obviously scared, but is comforted by Dwight who has gotten a new face. Dwight tells the barmaid to let the man, and his ensuing entourage, in. Reluctantly Shellie opens the lock while Dwight hides in the back.


{| class="wikitable"
The drunken man, named Jack, begins to boast of his conquest over Shellie, culminating in slapping her across the face. He then goes to the bathroom where Dwight is hiding in the shower stall. Getting the jump on Jack, Dwight holds a knife to his neck and tells him to stop bothering Shellie. When Jack scoffs at the threat Dwight dunks his head into the toilet (where Jack had been ] the minute before) until his body goes limp.
|-
!Name
!Contents
!ISBN
|-
|'']''
|Episodes #1–13 of 13 from Dark Horse 5th Anniversary Special and '']'' issues #51–62
|{{ISBN|1-59307-293-7}}
|-
|'']''
|Issues #1–6 of 6
|{{ISBN|1-59307-294-5}}
|-
|'']''
|Issues #1–5 of 5
|{{ISBN|1-59307-295-3}}
|-
|'']''
|Issues #1–6 of 6
|{{ISBN|1-59307-296-1}}
|-
|'']''
|128-page original ]
|{{ISBN|1-59307-297-X}}
|-
|'']''
|A number of ]
|{{ISBN|1-59307-298-8}}
|-
|'']''
|Issues #1–9 of 9
|{{ISBN|1-59307-299-6}}
|}


==== Hardcovers ====
Jack awakens a few seconds later and storms out, demanding that his group not mention these events. Shellie investigates the apartment and finds Dwight on the railing outside the building. After ensuring her safety, Dwight becomes worried that Jack will cause more trouble and must be stopped somehow. He jumps off the building, ignoring Shellie's muffled yells.
{| class="wikitable"

|+
As Dwight speeds toward Jack's car, he sees his target speed by him. A police car follows them both, but stops and turns around once the cars enter Old Town, the area of Sin City full of and run by the prostitutes of the area.
!Name

!Contents
As Jack spots a young girl named Becky walking alone in a dark alley, he follows beside her, asking coyly for her services and constantly being rejected. Dwight follows close behind and is then caught off guard by Gail, one of Old Town's most experienced hookers and guardians. She advises Dwight to stay put and let things with Jack work themselves out. As Dwight spots Miho on the roof, he agrees and watches as the alley is closed off.
!Release Date

!ISBN
Meanwhile, Jack continues to pester Becky, escalating to outright anger at the egging on of his friends. He finally pulls out a handgun and aims it at her. Instead of being scared or surprised, Becky is instead filled with pity, proclaiming that he has just done the dumbest thing in his life. Immediately afterward Miho throws a ]-shaped bladed weapon that takes off Jack's hand, then proceeds to descend on the car, quickly killing every man but Jack.

During the attack, Dwight has an impending sense that something is wrong but can't place his finger on it. Miho and Jack get in a standoff. As Dwight tries to make Jack quit his foolish game, Miho sabotages his gun by throwing a plug into the barrel. When Jack tries to shoot the intervening Dwight his gun backfires, sending the barrel into his forehead. Miho finishes him off by slicing his neck.
]
As the girls loot all the ]s, Dwight searches Jack's person and finds a police badge revealing his last name as Rafferty. He finally remembers that Shellie was screaming "COP!". This new fact is bad for all of Old Town, as the shaky truce between the police and the girls is all but shattered. Gail starts calling for warriors while Dwight tries to recommend disposing of the bodies before anyone suspects anything. Finally, after revealing a past relationship between Gail and Dwight, the girls agree to hide the bodies in the ]s.

After acquiring a car, slicing up all the bodies to stuff in the back trunk and leaving Jack in the front seat due to lack of space, Dwight begins to hallucinate, and Jack begins to speak. Although Dwight knows he is hallucinating, unlike Marv, he cannot quiet the gabbering corpse. With his mind not completely focused, his driving suffers, attracting police attention. As he contemplates whether or not to kill the cop, he brakes hard. Jack's body slumps forward, hiding the neck wound and the gun casing lodged in his head. The cop looks through Dwight's window and notices the corpse, believing it to be an unconscious, drunken friend. Dwight tells the cop he's the designated driver. The cop then notifies Dwight that he's driving with a broken taillight, and lets him off with a warning.

At the tar pits Dwight is attacked by foreign ]. He quickly disposes of most of them, but loses Jack's head in the process and is left for dead drifting in the pits. Miho rescues him and Dwight begins to suspect that something might not be right.

Back at Old Town, Gail has been ambushed and kidnapped by gangsters. It seems that Becky had sold out Old Town for money and her mother's protection. Gail bites and rips a chunk off her neck in anger, vowing that she deserves worse.

Dwight and Miho realize they must now recover Jack's head. They ram the mercenaries car off the road. After dodging some ]s, Dwight corners the holder of the head before Miho finishes him off, using her swastika throwing blade to chop off the top of his head. With the head in tow they must now rescue Gail and Old Town.

As the gangsters prepare to torture and kill Gail and Becky, an arrow shoots through one of the henchmen with a note prompting a trade: The head for Gail.

As Dwight stands alone in an alley with the head, outnumbered and outgunned, the trade is made, Gail being freed and the head, now bandaged up, handed over. Soon the gangsters wonder why a bodiless head has bandages in the first place. Dwight triggers the grenades stolen from the mercenary, exploding the head.

]
The gangsters now realize they are in a trap as the girls of Old Town reveal themselves, heavily armed also, on the roof. Before any defensive measures can be taken, the men and Becky are gunned down.

The story ends with Dwight's musing on Gail, secure in the knowledge that the girls' home is safe.

The story is one of three from Sin City related in the film '']''. In the film, ] plays Dwight, ] plays Shellie, ] plays Jack, ] plays Gail, ] plays Miho, ] plays Becky, and ] plays Manute, the leading gangster.

A notable difference from the comic version is that Becky survives the final gunfight by hiding in a nook in the alley, leaving her alive for the final "epilogue" scene of the movie.

===That Yellow Bastard===
]
First published in (February ]&ndash;July ])
'''''That Yellow Bastard''''' is a six-issue ] miniseries, and the sixth in the ] series, and follows the usual black and white noir style artistry of previous Sin City novels.
''That Yellow Bastard'' is currently under publication by ], the first edition was available in July 1997 (ISBN 1569712255).

{{spoiler}}

The story begins with a good-hearted cop, Hartigan (who incidentally has a bad heart condition) on his final mission before his retirement. It seems that Roark Jr., son of one of the most powerful and corrupt officials in Basin City, has developed a penchant for ] and murdering innocent little girls. It is Hartigan's mission to rescue Junior's latest quarry, skinny little Nancy Callahan.

Hartigan succeeds in rescuing Nancy by disabling Junior's getaway car, and then proceeds to use his pistols to surgically shoot off Junior's ears, hand, and ]s. Before he can finish Junior off, Hartigan's corrupt partner Bob, who fears angering Senator Roark, shoots him in the back. Junior Roark lapses into a ] from his injuries, and Senator Roark takes issue with the abuse of his son. Hartigan finds himself framed for raping Nancy, is branded a ] and sentenced to a lengthy prison term amidst a public outcry that brands him one of Sin City's most hated citizens (which is quite an achievement.) Despite his innocence and the ] status he has achieved as a result of his conviction, he remains silent about his pain, knowing that Senator Roark would revel in his suffering.

Alone in prison, and abandoned by his wife and friends, he finds solace in the carefully disguised weekly letters he receives from Nancy. Hartigan quickly develops a paternal love for little Nancy, and sees her as the daughter he never had. For another eight years, he drags himself through his jail time, his only respite being the letters his young admirer sends him, until finally the letters stop coming. Although he initially believes Nancy has merely outgrown her childhood hero, Hartigan soon becomes increasingly worried that his enemies have finally found Nancy. His fears are confirmed when a deformed, hairless visitor with sickly yellow skin who smells distinctly like a garbage can, and whom Hartigan seemingly doesn't know, arrives at his prison cell. Hartigan is then given a letter that contains the index finger of a nineteen-year-old girl.
]
Believing Nancy to be in imminent danger, Hartigan's passive view of his current incarceration changes. He decides to find some way out, and contacts his lawyer, a woman named Lucille (Marv's ] parole officer from '']''). Much to his own lawyer's surprise and disgust, Hartigan claims he was guilty of the crimes he was accused of, asks for forgiveness, and is released on parole, apparently due to Senator Roark's satisfaction over his confession and submission.

Back on the streets, the 70-year-old ex-con/ex-cop eventually tracks Nancy, now nineteen, back to a strip-club in a dangerous part of town known as Kadies. Hartigan finds that she is no longer the little girl he rescued from a child-murderer 8 years ago, but is now a woman who works in the club as a stripper, and is unharmed. The letter containing the finger was merely a ploy to lure him out. Hartigan smells a set-up, and something far worse, the distinct odor of rotting garbage. "That Yellow Bastard", the man who arrived at the cell with the letter, has followed him, and he has revealed Nancy's position.

Hartigan and Nancy have a quick reunion when he pulls her out of the bar and into her car. With Nancy at the wheel, there is a high-speed pursuit with the "Bastard" close on their tail. Hartigan fires a precise shot that hits their pursuer in the neck, and he and Nancy hide out in a safe house. There, they share a kiss; but Hartigan refuses to move any further because of the paternalistic nature of his relationship to Nancy.

Hartigan is confronted once again by "That Yellow Bastard", who reveals himself to be none other than Junior Roark. Apparently Senator Roark used his vast financial resources to resurrect his son using means outside the boundaries of conventional science, hiring doctors, ]s, and ] to bring Junior out of his coma and reconstitute his severed body parts. As a result, Junior lives, but as an unnatural abomination. Roark knocks Hartigan unconscious with a single punch, lynches him with a noose, and escapes with Nancy.
]'' #6. Art by Frank Miller.]]''
Hartigan awakes in his noose, wills himself back to life, and manages to break free from the rope. Junior's henchmen, who had shown up to dispose of Hartigan's body, are quickly subdued, and forced to tell Hartigan that Junior had fled to the Roark Farm (described as a place where bad things happen) with Nancy, presumably to violate her again.

Racing to the farm, Hartigan suffers several severe ] attacks, but continues in order to save Nancy. At this time, Nancy is being flogged by Junior and, like Hartigan, won't give her torturer the pleasure of her pain by screaming. Hartigan shows up and rescues Nancy, then proceeds to ] Roark for a second time and then beat him to death. Nancy and Hartigan share another kiss, this time without Hartigan's paternalistic feelings getting in the way. Hartigan then tells Nancy to flee, lying to her that he will call up some old police friends of his to clean up the scene of the crime.

With Nancy gone, Hartigan realizes that by killing Junior Roark he has made a deadly enemy of Senator Roark, who would stop at nothing until Hartigan was dead. Hartigan also realizes that Senator Roark would most likely target Nancy first, in order to make Hartigan suffer for killing the Senator's son. In order to spare Nancy this fate, in an act of pure love, Hartigan commits ] to protect her, blowing his brains out with his own ].

]
In Rodriguez's adaptation, ] stars as Hartigan, ] as Nancy, ] as the Yellow Bastard/Junior, ] as Senator Roark and ] as Hartigan's partner, Bob. Some notable differences exist in the film version. For example: Roark Jr. never succeeded in raping Nancy, even as a child, as Hartigan arrived in time to rescue her on both occasions.

===Daddy's Little Girl===
''Daddy's Little Girl'' was first published in ''A Decade of Dark Horse'' #1 (July ]) and reprinted in ''Tales to Offend'' #1 (July ]), and ''Booze, Broads, and Bullets.''

===Lost, Lonely, & Lethal===
''Lost, Lonely, & Lethal'' was first published (December ]).

===Sex & Violence===
''Sex & Violence'' was first published in (March ]).

===Just Another Saturday Night===
''Just Another Saturday Night'' was first published in (August ])

===Family Values===
'''''Family Values''''' was first published in (October ]).
''Family Values'' is the fifth "yarn" in ] series of Sin City ] published by ]. Unlike the previous four stories, ''Family Values'' was released as a 128-page ] rather than in serialized issues that would later be collected in a trade paperback volume.

Ladies' man Dwight and the silent killer Miho, stars of ''A Dame to Kill For'' and ''The Big Fat Kill'', return for a gritty story of revenge and corruption.

After one of the Old Town hookers is killed in the cross fire of a botched ] drive-by, Dwight starts asking questions at a run-down diner. After getting the inside dirt from an aging starlet, he follows a lead through Basin City's underworld that ultimately brings him into the upper tiers of the mob and city hall. Watching out for him at every turn, the ] Miho carves a relentless path of severed limbs on her trusty roller blades.

While ''Family Values'' is not one of the yarns appearing in the Sin City movie, Dwight and Miho both still appear. Dwight is played by ] and Miho is played ].

===Hell and Back (a Sin City Love Story)===
*''Hell and Back (a Sin City Love Story)'' was first published in (July ]&ndash;April ])

===Booze, Broads, & Bullets ===
'''''Booze, Broads, & Bullets''''' is a compilation of stories from the ''Sin City'' series of comic books by ]. It reprints the following stories:

*''Just Another Saturday Night'' (from ''Sin City #1/2'' and ''Just Another Saturday Night'')
*''Fat Man and Little Boy'' (from ''Lost, Lonely, & Lethal'').
*''The Customer is Always Right'' (from ''The Babe Wore Red and Other Stories'')
*''Silent Night'' (from '']'')
*''And Behind Door Number Three?'' (from ''The Babe Wore Red and Other Stories'')
*''Blue Eyes'' (from ''Lost, Lonely, & Lethal'')
*''Rats'' (from ''Lost, Lonely, & Lethal'')
*''Daddy's Little Girl'' (from ''A Decade of Dark Horse'' #1 and reprinted in '']'' #1),
*''Wrong Turn'' (from ''Sex and Violence'')
*''Wrong Track'' (from ''Sex and Violence'')
*''The Babe Wore Red'' (from ''The Babe Wore Red and Other Stories'')

==Compilations==

{| border=0 cellpadding=0 cellspacing=2
|'''Name'''
|'''Contents'''
|- |-
|''Sin City (The Hard Goodbye)'' |Frank Miller's Sin City Library Set Vol. 1
|The Hard Goodbye, A Dame to Kill For, The Big Fat Kill and That Yellow Bastard
|Episodes #1-13 of 13 from ] issues #51-62 and 5th Anniversary Special
|December 2005
|{{ISBNT|978-1-59307-421-0}}
|- |-
|Frank Miller's Sin City Library Set Vol. 2
|''A Dame to Kill For''
|Family Values, Booze, Broads and Bullets, Hell and Back, and The Art of Sin City
|Issues #1-6 of 6
|June 2006
|{{ISBNT|978-1-59307-422-7}}
|- |-
|''The Big Fat Kill'' |Big Damn Sin City
|The Hard Goodbye, A Dame to Kill For, The Big Fat Kill, That Yellow Bastard, Family Values, Booze, Broads and Bullets, Hell and Back, and The Art of Sin City
|Issues #1-5 of 5
|June 2014
|{{ISBNT|978-1-61655-237-4}}
|- |-
|Frank Miller's Sin City Vol.1: The Hard Goodbye Curator's Edition
|''That Yellow Bastard''
|The Hard Goodbye scanned from the original artwork in Frank Miller's archives and reproduced at full size. Introduction by Robert Rodriguez, with an afterword by Mike Richardson and an interview about the artistic process with Frank Miller.
|Issues #1-6 of 6
|August 2016
|{{ISBNT|978-1-5067-0070-0}}
|- |-
|Frank Miller's Sin City Vol.1: The Hard Goodbye Deluxe Edition
|''Booze, Broads, & Bullets''
|Episodes #1–13 of 13 from Dark Horse 5th Anniversary Special and '']'' issues #51–62
|Various
|November 2021
|{{ISBNT|978-1-5067-2837-7}}
|- |-
|Frank Miller's Sin City Vol.2: A Dame to Kill For Deluxe Edition
|''Hell and Back (a Sin City Love Story)''
|Issues #1-9 of 9 |Issues #1–6 of 6
|December 2021
|{{ISBNT|978-1-5067-2838-4}}
|-
|Frank Miller's Sin City Vol.3: The Big Fat Kill Deluxe Edition
|Issues #1–5 of 5
|February 2022
|{{ISBNT|978-1-5067-2839-1}}
|-
|Frank Miller's Sin City Vol.4: That Yellow Bastard Deluxe Edition
|Issues #1–6 of 6
|May 2022
|{{ISBNT|978-1-5067-2840-7}}
|-
|Frank Miller's Sin City Vol.5: Family Values Deluxe Edition
|128-page original ]
|June 2022
|{{ISBNT|978-1-5067-2841-4}}
|} |}


==Setting== ==Adaptations==
===Films===
'''Basin City''', almost universally referred to by the nickname '''Sin City''', is a fictional town in the American West, located somewhere in the desert, presumably in ] or ]. It hardly ever rains, and the rain it does get is sparse. The Basin City Police are either lazy cowards or corrupt.
A ] of ''Sin City'', ] by ] and ], was released on April 1, 2005. A sequel, '']'', was released on August 22, 2014.

During the ], The Roark Family brought a large number of women to keep the miners happy. These women ended up forming the district of Old Town, the ]s' quarter . In addition, the people in charge of the city remained in charge, running it as they saw fit.

As the various yarns progress, the audience gradually becomes familiar with key locations in and around Basin City.
{{spoiler}}
*'''Old Town''' is the red-light-district and is off limits to police. This is where the city's population of prostitutes reside; it recently came under the control of the twins Goldie and Wendy.
*'''Sacred Oaks''', home to the rich and powerful of Basin City. This suburb lies outside the city proper, a half an hour drive uphill. A university of some sort is also located there.
*'''Kadie's''', a stripper joint/bar where Nancy Callahan and Shellie work, and Dwight McCarthy and Marv hang out.
*'''Basin City Central Train Station''', which has a direct connection to ].
*'''The Projects''', the run-down and poor side of Sin City, is a tangle of high-rise apartments where crime runs rampant. Marv was born in the Projects.
*'''Roark Family Farm''' (a.k.a. "The Farm") is located at North Cross and Lennox, this farm shows up in several stories, including ''The Hard Goodbye'', ''That Yellow Bastard'', and ''Hell And Back''. It was also home to Kevin, a serial killer with ties to the Roark family. Marv burns down one of the buildings, and the Farm is abandoned sometime after the inital Sin City storyline.

== Characters ==
===Protagonists===
*'''Marv''', a tough, violent, big bruiser of a man, who spends his time on the streets doing odd jobs for various people. He suffers from a mental condition that causes him to hallucinate. His personal code of honor dictates the repayment of ]s and a sort of ] towards women.
*'''Dwight McCarthy''', a ] who, recently surgically bestowed with a new face, is deeply in debt to the women of Old Town and will go to great lengths to help them out.
*'''Det. John Hartigan''', good-hearted 70-year-old ex-con/ex-cop. He has a distinguishing ] on his forehead.
*'''Goldie/Wendy''', the twin prostitutes who are currently in control of the Old Town.
*'''Gail''', a prostitute and ] whose specialty is knot-tying. She is six feet tall and is one of the authority figures of Old Town. She has a love/hate relationship with Dwight McCarthy.


===Antagonists=== ===Television===
*'''Kevin''', a mute ] who resides at "The Farm", kills women, and ]izes their remains. He is sheltered by Cardinal Roark.
*'''Cardinal Patrick Henry Roark''', a ] ], who is brother to Senator Roark. Roark occasionally uses Kevin as his personal assassin, and even joins him in his cannibalistic rituals.
*'''Det. Jack "Jackie Boy" Rafferty''' is Shellie's former (]) boyfriend. Miho kills him and his four buddies after they threaten Becky with a gun.
*'''Roark Jr.''' aka Junior/That Yellow Bastard is the son of Senator Roark. He is handsome, young, and rich; he is also a sadistic pedophile who rapes and murders pre-pubescent girls, a past-time that is covered up by his father and city police. In ''That Yellow Bastard'', Hartigan horribly disfigures him while rescuing his latest victim; his father pays millions in physical rehabilitation treatments that turn his skin bright yellow and make him smell like rotting meat.
*'''Senator Roark''', a very corrupt politician with huge political and financial power, he has the influence to eliminate whomever he chooses. The Senator's brother is Cardinal Roark.
*'''Manute''', a huge black man who is very gentlemanly and polite in all situations, even while committing ].
*'''The Colonel''', ]s Becky with her mother's safety in exchange for inside information on Old Town.


Dimension Films planned to develop a soft reboot of the series for television; Stephen L’Heureux who produced the second film was to oversee the series with ''Sin City'' creator Frank Miller.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://deadline.com/2017/05/frank-miller-sin-city-tv-series-glen-mazzara-len-wiseman-stephen-lheureux-1202104935/|title=Frank Miller's 'Sin City' TV Series Enlists Glen Mazzara, Len Wiseman & Stephen L'Heureux|last=Fleming|first=Mike Jr.|date=2017-05-31|work=]|access-date=2018-03-27|language=en-US|archive-date=2018-04-02|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180402145405/https://deadline.com/2017/05/frank-miller-sin-city-tv-series-glen-mazzara-len-wiseman-stephen-lheureux-1202104935/|url-status=dead}}</ref> The new TV series would feature new characters and timelines and be more like the comics rather than the films.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://collider.com/sin-city-tv-show/#images|title='Sin City' TV Series in the Works with Glen Mazzara and Len Wiseman|date=2017-05-31|work=]|access-date=2018-03-27|language=en-US|archive-date=2018-09-03|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180903215502/http://collider.com/sin-city-tv-show/#images|url-status=live}}</ref> On November 15, 2019, ] bought the rights for the television series.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.thewrap.com/legendary-close-to-deal-with-frank-miller-for-sin-city-tv-series/|title=Legendary Close to Deal with Frank Miller for 'Sin City' TV Series|date=15 November 2019 |access-date=2021-01-27|archive-date=2020-08-02|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200802234715/https://www.thewrap.com/legendary-close-to-deal-with-frank-miller-for-sin-city-tv-series/|url-status=live}}</ref>
===Others===
*'''Det. Bob''', Hartigan’s corrupt partner.
*'''Lucille''', Marv's ] officer and Hartigan's ].
*'''Becky''', an Old Town prostitute who works for the Colonel, mainly due to the fact the Colonel holds her mother hostage.
*'''Miho''', a ] ] who works out of Old Town.
*'''Shellie''', a ] at Kadie's. She is Dwight McCarthy's occasional girlfriend.
*'''Nancy Callahan''', a ] who works at Kadie's and was saved as a child by Det. John Hartigan. According to Hartigan her free time is spent studying, reading, and writing, so she would seem to be highly intelligent as well.
*'''The Salesman''', a shadowy, poetic freelance assassin who performs a lot of jobs for the Ladies, the Cops and the Mafia. He kills Becky at the end of the movie adaptation.


==Chronology== ==Awards==
* 1993:
While it was the first story written, ''The Hard Goodbye'' was the last chronologically, while the first section of ''That Yellow Bastard'' is the first. The Dwight-related stories fall in between these. Here is a rough chronology of the "Yarns":
** '']'' won the "Best Graphic Album: Reprint (Modern Material)" ]<ref name=eisner1993>{{cite web |url=http://www.hahnlibrary.net/comics/awards/eisner93.php |title=1993 Will Eisner Comic Industry Award Nominees and Winners |publisher=Hahnlibrary.net |access-date=2010-10-05 |archive-date=2012-07-23 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120723015324/http://www.hahnlibrary.net/comics/awards/eisner93.php |url-status=live }}</ref>
{{spoilers}}
** Frank Miller won the "Best Penciller/Inker, Black & White Publication" Eisner Award, for ''The Hard Goodbye''<ref name=eisner1993 />
* The first section of ''That Yellow Bastard'', wherein Detective John Hartigan rescues Nancy Callahan from Roark Jr., resulting in Hartigan and Junior winding up in the hospital, occurs about 12 years before the events of ''The Hard Goodbye''. Hartigan is framed as a pedophile and charged with raping Nancy Callahan. He is placed into solitary confinement for eight years.
** Frank Miller won the "Best Writer/Artist" Eisner Award, for ''The Hard Goodbye''<ref name=eisner1993 />
* Ava leaves the devastated Dwight for the rich Damien Lord.
** ''Sin City'' won the "Best Graphic Novel Collection" ]<ref>ER. "International Miscellanea: 1993 UK Comic Art Awards," ''The Comics Journal'' #161 (August 1993), p. 40.</ref>
* Soon after, Hartigan finds the 19-year-old Nancy Callahan when he is out on parole. Marv witnesses the reunion, as shown in the story ''Just Another Saturday Night''. Then the remaining events of ''That Yellow Bastard'' play out within a day or two. This occurs roughly four years before ''The Hard Goodbye''.
* 1994:
* Three years before ''A Dame to Kill For'', Dwight rescues Miho from two gangsters.
** Frank Miller won the "Best Writer/Artist" UK Comic Art Award for his work on ''Sin City''<ref>MT. "Newswatch: 5th UK Comic Art Awards," ''The Comics Journal'' #168 (May 1994), p. 44.</ref>
* The twins, Goldie and Wendy, take over old town, Ava Lord calls Dwight, and the following events form ''A Dame to Kill For'', with Marv taking an injured Dwight to Old Town. Not long after, Shelly is informed that Dwight is still alive, setting events into place for the beginning of ''The Big Fat Kill''. Also around this time, Delia becomes an assassin for the Colonel (as recounted in the story ''Blue Eyes'').
* 1995:
* ''The Hard Goodbye'' begins with Marv waking up and finding Goldie’s lifeless body.
** '']'' won "Best Limited Series" Eisner Award<ref name=eisner1995>{{cite web |url=http://www.hahnlibrary.net/comics/awards/eisner95.php |title=1995 Will Eisner Comic Industry Award Nominees and Winners |publisher=Hahnlibrary.net |access-date=2010-10-05 |archive-date=2014-10-10 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141010132130/http://www.hahnlibrary.net/comics/awards/eisner95.php |url-status=live }}</ref>
* A few days into Marv’s rampage, Bob (Hartigan's former partner in ''That Yellow Bastard'') is shot dead by his partner Mort, who takes his own life (''A Dame to Kill For'').
** "The Babe Wore Red," won "]" Eisner Award<ref name=eisner1995 />
* Less than three months later, Ava and Wallenquist unite their criminal empires. Dwight McCarthy, Miho, and Gail raid Ava Lord’s estate, with Manute being gravely injured and Ava dying at Dwight’s hands.
*1996:
* ''The Babe Wore Red'' occurs, and in the story Dwight states that Marv is on death row. ''The Big Fat Kill'' and then ''Family Values'' take place soon after, within a few months.
** '']'' won the "Best Limited Series" Eisner Award<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.hahnlibrary.net/comics/awards/eisner96.php |title=1996 Will Eisner Comic Industry Award Nominees and Winners |publisher=Hahnlibrary.net |access-date=2010-10-05 |archive-date=2013-09-22 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130922005135/http://www.hahnlibrary.net/comics/awards/eisner96.php |url-status=live }}</ref>
* Eighteen months after the beginning of ''The Hard Goodbye'', Wendy visits Marv on death row. A day later, he is executed, after two attempts.
** '']'' won the Favorite Limited Series ]<ref name=ComicBuyers1995>{{cite web |url=http://www.hahnlibrary.net/comics/awards/cbg95.php |title=1995 1996 Comics Buyers Guide Fan Awards |publisher=Hahnlibrary.net |access-date=2018-01-31 |archive-date=2018-03-01 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180301204943/http://www.hahnlibrary.net/comics/awards/cbg95.php |url-status=live }}</ref>
** ''Sin City'' won the "Best Continuing or Limited Series" ]<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.hahnlibrary.net/comics/awards/harvey96.php |title=1996 Harvey Award Nominees and Winners |publisher=Hahnlibrary.net |access-date=2010-10-05 |archive-date=2012-02-20 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120220012950/http://www.hahnlibrary.net/comics/awards/harvey96.php |url-status=live }}</ref>
*1998:
** '']'' won the "Best Graphic Album-Reprint" Eisner Award<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.hahnlibrary.net/comics/awards/eisner98.php |title=1998 Will Eisner Comic Industry Award Nominees |publisher=Hahnlibrary.net |access-date=2010-10-05 |archive-date=2015-09-05 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150905200018/http://www.hahnlibrary.net/comics/awards/eisner98.php |url-status=live }}</ref>
** '']'' won the "Best Graphic Album of Original Work" Harvey Award<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.hahnlibrary.net/comics/awards/harvey98.php |title=1998 Harvey Award Nominees and Winners |publisher=Hahnlibrary.net |access-date=2010-10-05 |archive-date=2014-04-28 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140428232154/http://www.hahnlibrary.net/comics/awards/harvey98.php |url-status=live }}</ref>
* 2000:
** '']'' won the "Favourite Black & White Comicbook" ]


== See also ==
Other events take place at unknown times, like ''Wrong Turn'' and ''Hell and Back'', as their characters do not intersect in any way with the major Hartigan-Dwight-Marv chronology. It is only known that ''Wrong Turn'' must precede ''Hell and Back'', due to events in the later story.
{{Portal|United States|Comics}}
* ]
* '']''


== Awards == ==References==
{{Reflist}}
''Family Values'' won the prestigious 1997 Harvey Award and Eisner Award.


==Trivia== ==External links==
* at Dark Horse Comics
* at ] from the original on June 4, 2017.


{{Sin City}}
* In the film verson of ''Sin City,''Cardinal Roark, Senator Kevin Roark and Kevin Roark, Jr. all have the homonymic last name as the actor playing their killer (Marv): Mickey Rourke.
{{Frank Miller}}


== External links ==
*
* - Fan site containing detailed information about characters and locations
*, from the personal website of a ] game player
*, from an ad-supported website "devoted to the sophisticated study of comic books"
* , The most comprehensive listing of all of Frank Miller's works. Includes very detailed information on each book as well as a discussion forum.
*, The Short Story out of '''Lost, Lonely, & Lethal'''.
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Latest revision as of 03:18, 18 November 2024

Comic books series by Frank Miller This article is about the series of comics by Frank Miller. For the film, see Sin City (film). For other uses, see Sin City (disambiguation). Not to be confused with SimCity.
Sin City
Cover of The Hard Goodbye showing Marv walking through the rain
First appearanceDark Horse Presents Fifth Anniversary Special (April 1991)
Created byFrank Miller
Publication information
PublisherDark Horse Comics
Title(s)
Dark Horse Presents Fifth Anniversary Special
Dark Horse Presents #51–62
The Big Fat Kill #1–5
A Dame to Kill For #1–6
Family Values
Hell and Back (A Sin City Love Story) #1–9
That Yellow Bastard #1–6
FormatsOriginal material for the series has been published as a strip in the comics anthology(s) Dark Horse Presents and a set of limited series, graphic novels, and one-shot comics.
GenreCrime fiction, neo-noir, thriller
Publication dateApril 1991 – 2000
Main character(s)Marv
John Hartigan
Gail
Dwight McCarthy
Nancy Callahan
The Roark Family
Wallace
Miho
Creative team
Writer(s)Frank Miller
Artist(s)Frank Miller
Reprints
Collected editions
The Hard GoodbyeISBN 1-59307-293-7
A Dame to Kill ForISBN 1-59307-294-5
The Big Fat KillISBN 1-59307-295-3
That Yellow BastardISBN 1-59307-296-1
Family ValuesISBN 1-59307-297-X
Booze, Broads & BulletsISBN 1-59307-298-8
Hell and BackISBN 1-59307-299-6

Sin City is a series of neo-noir comics by American comic book writer-artist Frank Miller. The first story originally appeared in Dark Horse Presents Fifth Anniversary Special (April 1991), and continued in Dark Horse Presents #51–62 from May 1991 to June 1992, under the title of Sin City, serialized in thirteen parts. Several other stories of variable lengths have followed. The intertwining stories, with frequently recurring characters, take place in Basin City.

A film adaptation of Sin City, co-directed by Robert Rodriguez and Frank Miller, was released on April 1, 2005. A sequel, Sin City: A Dame to Kill For, was released on August 22, 2014.

Publication history

Writer-artist Frank Miller rose to fame within the American comics industry with his 1981–1983 work on Marvel Comics' Daredevil, and the 1986 DC Comics miniseries The Dark Knight Returns, both of which exhibited subtle elements of film noir. Miller's venture into the film noir genre deepened with his creator-owned series Sin City, which began publishing in serialized form in the Dark Horse Comics anthology series Dark Horse Presents #51–62. The story was released in a trade paperback and later re-released in 1995 under the name Sin City: The Hard Goodbye.

In a 2016 interview with the Kubert School, Miller explained his inspiration for Sin City thus:

I've been a fanatic for a long time for old crime movies and old crime novels. But it started with the movies. And the old Cagney movies. Bogart and all that. I loved just how the morals of the stories are. They're all about right and wrong. But in Sin City in particular I wanted them all to happen to in a world where virtuous behavior was rare, which greatly resembled the world I lived in. It's kinda like the old Rolling Stones song, where every cop's a criminal, and all the sinners are saints, where the lowlifes would often be heroic, and the most stridently beautiful and sweet women would be prostitutes. I wanted it to be a world out of balance, where virtue is defined by individuals in difficult situations, not by an overwhelming sense of goodness that was somehow governed by this godlike Comics Code.

The film noir influence on the series' artwork is seen in its use of shadow and stark backgrounds. Black and white are the sole colors most of the time, with exception of red, yellow, blue, and pink, of which limited use is made in some stories to draw attention to particular characters.

The writing style also draws heavily on detective and crime pulp fiction.

Miller's Sin City work challenges some conventions of comic book form. The letters of onomatopoeic words like "blam" are often incorporated into scenes via lighting effects, or are suggested by the negative space between panels, or are created by the outline of the panels themselves. This is especially evident in early "yarns," such as The Hard Goodbye, which were more experimental.

On April 28, 2022, it was officially announced that Miller was launching the comic book publishing company Frank Miller Presents (FMP), with one of his initial contributions being a Western tale set in Sin City's past, titled Sin City 1858.

Setting

An example of Frank Miller's use of high contrasts in Sin City

Basin City, almost universally referred to by the nickname "Sin City", is a fictional town in the Western United States. The climate is hot and arid, although Sacred Oaks is characterized as being heavily wooded. A major river runs through the city, which has an extensive waterfront. Usually twice a year, a major downpour comes, and the city is prone to heavy snowfall in the winter. Desert lizards and palm trees are common, while tar pits, desert areas, mountain ranges and flat farmland make up the landscape around the city.

The Basin City Police Department are more or less along the lines of paramilitary or SWAT, as they have to deal with incredibly high crime rates among criminals and civilians alike, which is why they have access to what most would consider "heavy weaponry" and full body armor. Those who make up the force have been described as commonly being lazy, cowardly and/or corrupt. Only a handful of the cops are honest, though frequently the wealthy of the city bribe the corrupt members of the police into performing their duty (usually as a result of some crime being committed or threatened against a member of their family).

During the California Gold Rush, the Roark family "imported" a large number of attractive women to keep the miners happy, making a fortune and turning a struggling mining camp into a thriving, bustling city. Over the years, as the Roark family migrated into other areas of business and power, these women ended up forming the district of Old Town, the prostitute quarter of the city where they rule with absolute authority. In addition, the people charged with governing the city, most of them from the Roark line, remained in power for generations, running it as they saw fit.

As the various yarns progress, the audience gradually becomes familiar with key locations in and around Basin City:

  • The Projects, the run-down and poor side of Sin City, are a tangle of high-rise run-down and desolated apartments where crime runs rampant with no police inside. Its inhabitants have apparently evolved their own independent society with almost no legal contact with the outside world and SWAT teams rarely go in The Projects. Marv was born in the Projects, and currently resides there. Dwight avoids The Projects and hates the neighborhood.
  • The Docks, a collection of wharfs and warehouses that are local to the Projects, since The Docks overlook The Projects. Hartigan and Roark Junior have their first confrontation here in That Yellow Bastard, and Marv drives a stolen police car off one of the piers at the beginning of The Hard Goodbye.
  • Kadie's Club Pecos is a strip club and bar in Old Town, where Nancy Callahan and Shellie work, and where Dwight McCarthy and Marv spend their spare time. Despite being filled with drunk and violent men, Kadie's bar is one of the safest areas in Sin City since it is heavily guarded by prostitutes and their protectors. Marv, who possesses an extraordinarily high sense of chivalry, protects the female employees of Kadie's from any violence that makes its way inside.
  • Roark Family Farm (a.k.a. "The Farm") is located at North Cross and Lennox on the hills outside Basin City and shows up in several stories, including The Hard Goodbye, That Yellow Bastard, The Babe Wore Red and Hell and Back. It was also home to Kevin, a serial killer with ties to the Roark family. Marv burns down one of the buildings, and the Farm is abandoned sometime after the initial Sin City storyline. The Farm is the only location in the comic books that is outside Basin City.
  • Old Town is the red-light district, where the city's population of prostitutes reside. Old Town is run by Goldie and Wendy. Old Town is off limits to the police. Though willing to engage in almost any sexual act for the right price, the women of Old Town show no mercy to those who "break the rules," and back up their independence with lethal force. The mafia families and pimps who were into Old Town's business were thrown out of the neighborhood.
  • Sacred Oaks is the home to the rich and powerful of Sin City. This suburb is located on the outskirts of Basin City as a protection. A university is located in Sacred Oaks, and the entire area is patrolled by armed employees of its wealthy inhabitants, mostly SWAT teams.
  • Basin City Central Train Station, which has a direct connection to Phoenix. It is located in the outskirts near The Docks and it is considered one of safer places.
  • Mimi's, a small run-down motel on the far outskirts of Basin City, with only few rooms and a place where young couples make love. Nancy and Hartigan hid in Mimi's where she confessed her love to him. Junior also attacked Hartigan here and left him to die, although he saved himself.
  • The Santa Yolanda Tar Pits, an abandoned amusement park of sorts outside the city, where several tar pits are located and dinosaur bones were excavated at some time. After a "big-budget dinosaur movie" caused a sensation, the county put up concrete statues of dinosaurs there to draw crowds. However, after an old lady fell through a railing into one of the pits and had a heart attack, the place was shut down indefinitely. They are frequently used as a place to dump things that people don't want found; high-schoolers also tend to sneak in there a lot. This is where Delia tells Phil to drive in Wrong Turn and where Dwight takes the corpses of Jackie Boy and his friends in The Big Fat Kill. Frank Miller has admitted the main reason the Tar Pits exist is as an excuse to draw the dinosaur statues.

Characters

Main article: List of Sin City characters

Individuals

Organizations

Because a large majority of the residents of Basin City are criminals, there are several organizations and cartels central to the stories who are vying for monopoly over the various criminal enterprises in the city. Listed below are crime syndicates, gangs and other low-lifes who figure heavily in the Sin City mythos.

The Basin City Police Department: So deep does corruption and criminality run in Basin City that even their police officers qualify as a gang of paid thugs, turning a blind eye to the affairs of those too poor to pay them off. Few among them are considered incorruptible; even the honest officers are unable (or unwilling) to curtail the criminal actions of the dishonest ones. Notable characters in the series who are police include Detective John Hartigan, his partner Bob, Lieutenants Jack Rafferty and Mort, Commissioner Liebowitz, and Officers Manson and Bundy from Hell and Back.

Roark family: A dynasty of corrupt landowners and politicians whose influence over Basin City has stretched as far back as the days of the Old West. Famous Roarks of this generation include a senator, a cardinal, an attorney general, and Roark Junior, 'That Yellow Bastard'.

The Girls of Old Town: Populating the region of Basin City known as Old Town is a group of women in the world's oldest profession, having made a truce with the cops to allow them to govern and police themselves. As of A Dame to Kill For, they were led by the twins, Goldie and Wendy.

Wallenquist Organization: A powerful crime syndicate led by Herr Wallenquist, a mysterious crime lord with a broad range of criminal enterprises to his name. Although they are one of the city's two "normal" criminal organizations, the Wallenquist management seems to be the most peaceful and forgiving of the various leaders. It is unknown which crime rings they hold.

Magliozzi Crime Family: The undisputed heads of the local Cosa Nostra, the Magliozzi family seems to be the purest example of "true" Mafia lifestyle. While they appear in only one story, it is hinted that the Mafia influence in Basin City's underworld is a lot larger than just their family and that there are more families.

Other groups that have been seen or mentioned in the comics include:

Tong gangsters: Mentioned, but not seen as of A Dame to Kill For. Miho's life was saved by Dwight when he secretly protected her during a fight with several Tong gangsters in a dark alleyway.

White slavers: Mentioned, but not seen as of A Dame to Kill For. Led by a man named Manuel, whose brothers were also involved. Were "taken care of" by Dwight prior to the events of A Dame to Kill For.

Irish mercenaries: Seen during The Big Fat Kill, most of them are evidently former IRA members, as implied by one of the mercenaries referring to his glee at blowing up a public house (British pubs were targeted by the IRA). All are killed by Dwight and Miho.

Sin City yarns

Main article: List of Sin City yarns

These are the individual stories, usually referred to as "yarns," set in Frank Miller's Sin City universe.

Collected editions

The stories have been collected into a number of trade paperbacks and hardcover editions. There is also a collection of art, The Art of Sin City.

In 2016, Dark Horse Comics released an ambitious, oversized edition titled Frank Miller’s Sin City The Hard Goodbye Curator’s Collection. This 15 x 21 inch book reprints the entire first storyline, scanned and reproduced exactly from the original art at 1:1 size. When referencing the production process in an interview with Michael Dooley for Print Magazine, editor/designer John Lind gave the anecdote “When Frank and I first reviewed some of the scanned pages from Sin City, he pulled one aside and said, ‘You can see details in some of the scans where you can tell what the humidity was like when I was lettering because you can see the smudging from my hand.’ That type of reaction represents the level of detail I'm working hard to achieve with the production.

Trade paperbacks

Name Contents ISBN
The Hard Goodbye Episodes #1–13 of 13 from Dark Horse 5th Anniversary Special and Dark Horse Presents issues #51–62 ISBN 1-59307-293-7
A Dame to Kill For Issues #1–6 of 6 ISBN 1-59307-294-5
The Big Fat Kill Issues #1–5 of 5 ISBN 1-59307-295-3
That Yellow Bastard Issues #1–6 of 6 ISBN 1-59307-296-1
Family Values 128-page original graphic novel ISBN 1-59307-297-X
Booze, Broads, & Bullets A number of one-shots ISBN 1-59307-298-8
Hell and Back Issues #1–9 of 9 ISBN 1-59307-299-6

Hardcovers

Name Contents Release Date ISBN
Frank Miller's Sin City Library Set Vol. 1 The Hard Goodbye, A Dame to Kill For, The Big Fat Kill and That Yellow Bastard December 2005 978-1-59307-421-0
Frank Miller's Sin City Library Set Vol. 2 Family Values, Booze, Broads and Bullets, Hell and Back, and The Art of Sin City June 2006 978-1-59307-422-7
Big Damn Sin City The Hard Goodbye, A Dame to Kill For, The Big Fat Kill, That Yellow Bastard, Family Values, Booze, Broads and Bullets, Hell and Back, and The Art of Sin City June 2014 978-1-61655-237-4
Frank Miller's Sin City Vol.1: The Hard Goodbye Curator's Edition The Hard Goodbye scanned from the original artwork in Frank Miller's archives and reproduced at full size. Introduction by Robert Rodriguez, with an afterword by Mike Richardson and an interview about the artistic process with Frank Miller. August 2016 978-1-5067-0070-0
Frank Miller's Sin City Vol.1: The Hard Goodbye Deluxe Edition Episodes #1–13 of 13 from Dark Horse 5th Anniversary Special and Dark Horse Presents issues #51–62 November 2021 978-1-5067-2837-7
Frank Miller's Sin City Vol.2: A Dame to Kill For Deluxe Edition Issues #1–6 of 6 December 2021 978-1-5067-2838-4
Frank Miller's Sin City Vol.3: The Big Fat Kill Deluxe Edition Issues #1–5 of 5 February 2022 978-1-5067-2839-1
Frank Miller's Sin City Vol.4: That Yellow Bastard Deluxe Edition Issues #1–6 of 6 May 2022 978-1-5067-2840-7
Frank Miller's Sin City Vol.5: Family Values Deluxe Edition 128-page original graphic novel June 2022 978-1-5067-2841-4

Adaptations

Films

A film adaptation of Sin City, co-directed by Robert Rodriguez and Frank Miller, was released on April 1, 2005. A sequel, Sin City: A Dame to Kill For, was released on August 22, 2014.

Television

Dimension Films planned to develop a soft reboot of the series for television; Stephen L’Heureux who produced the second film was to oversee the series with Sin City creator Frank Miller. The new TV series would feature new characters and timelines and be more like the comics rather than the films. On November 15, 2019, Legendary Pictures bought the rights for the television series.

Awards

See also

References

  1. ^ Sims, Chris (May 26, 2011). "8 of the Best Noir Comics: Crime Does Pay". ComicsAlliance. Archived from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved June 18, 2017.
  2. "Frank Miller Full Video" Archived 2019-11-16 at the Wayback Machine. Kubert School Media. YouTube. June 29, 2016. 36:36 mark.
  3. ^ Robinson, Tasha (December 5, 2001). "Frank Miller" Archived 2017-08-19 at the Wayback Machine. The A.V. Club.
  4. Fortune, Drew (August 25, 014). "Robert Rodriguez and Frank Miller talk new and old Sin City" Archived 2016-12-24 at the Wayback Machine. The A.V. Club.
  5. Clayton, James (August 22, 2014). "Sin City and the eternal, seductive allure of film noir" Archived 2019-12-21 at the Wayback Machine. Den of Geek!
  6. "Booze, Broads and Bullets" Archived 2021-02-03 at the Wayback Machine. Google Books. Retrieved June 17, 2017.
  7. Howe, Sean (August 20, 2014). "After His Public Downfall, Sin City's Frank Miller Is Back (And Not Sorry)". Wired. Archived 2015-01-22 at the Wayback Machine
  8. Suderman, Peter (March 29, 2016). "Frank Miller gave us the best Batman — and the worst" Archived 2017-04-03 at the Wayback Machine. Vox.
  9. Arnott, Luke (Fall 2008). "BLAM! The Literal Architecture of Sin City". The International Journal of Comic Art. 10 (2): 380–401. Archived from the original on 2012-08-17. Retrieved 2012-12-10.
  10. Kit, Borys (April 28, 2022). "Frank Miller Launches Independent Publishing Company, New 'Sin City,' 'Ronin' Comics in the Works (Exclusive)". The Hollywood Reporter. Los Angeles, CA: MRC Media & Info & Penske Media Corporation. Archived from the original on April 29, 2022. Retrieved April 29, 2022.
  11. "Frank Miller's Sin City: The Hard Goodbye Curator's Collection". Artist's Edition Index. 2016-08-29. Archived from the original on 2020-01-30. Retrieved 2020-01-30.
  12. "How Frank Miller's Sin City Got the Deluxe Treatment". Print Magazine. 2017-12-04. Archived from the original on 2020-01-30. Retrieved 2020-01-30.
  13. Fleming, Mike Jr. (2017-05-31). "Frank Miller's 'Sin City' TV Series Enlists Glen Mazzara, Len Wiseman & Stephen L'Heureux". Deadline Hollywood. Archived from the original on 2018-04-02. Retrieved 2018-03-27.
  14. "'Sin City' TV Series in the Works with Glen Mazzara and Len Wiseman". Collider. 2017-05-31. Archived from the original on 2018-09-03. Retrieved 2018-03-27.
  15. "Legendary Close to Deal with Frank Miller for 'Sin City' TV Series". 15 November 2019. Archived from the original on 2020-08-02. Retrieved 2021-01-27.
  16. ^ "1993 Will Eisner Comic Industry Award Nominees and Winners". Hahnlibrary.net. Archived from the original on 2012-07-23. Retrieved 2010-10-05.
  17. ER. "International Miscellanea: 1993 UK Comic Art Awards," The Comics Journal #161 (August 1993), p. 40.
  18. MT. "Newswatch: 5th UK Comic Art Awards," The Comics Journal #168 (May 1994), p. 44.
  19. ^ "1995 Will Eisner Comic Industry Award Nominees and Winners". Hahnlibrary.net. Archived from the original on 2014-10-10. Retrieved 2010-10-05.
  20. "1996 Will Eisner Comic Industry Award Nominees and Winners". Hahnlibrary.net. Archived from the original on 2013-09-22. Retrieved 2010-10-05.
  21. "1995 1996 Comics Buyers Guide Fan Awards". Hahnlibrary.net. Archived from the original on 2018-03-01. Retrieved 2018-01-31.
  22. "1996 Harvey Award Nominees and Winners". Hahnlibrary.net. Archived from the original on 2012-02-20. Retrieved 2010-10-05.
  23. "1998 Will Eisner Comic Industry Award Nominees". Hahnlibrary.net. Archived from the original on 2015-09-05. Retrieved 2010-10-05.
  24. "1998 Harvey Award Nominees and Winners". Hahnlibrary.net. Archived from the original on 2014-04-28. Retrieved 2010-10-05.

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