Big Ass Comics

Big Ass Comics




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Big Ass Comics
Big Ass Comics #1

1st Printing / July, 1969 / 28 Pages / Rip Off Press

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One of those Robert Crumb comic books that continues to prosper, printing after printing. And it's easy to see why. After the epic lead story, "Eggs Ackley among the Vulture Demonesses," the comic just gets better with "Dale Steinberger, The Jewess Cowgirl," "Big Baby" and the sexfest "All Meat Comics."



HISTORICAL FOOTNOTES:
There are 11 known printings of this comic book, the first 9 by Rip Off Press, and it is currently unknown how many copies were produced during any the many printings, though the information is probably available somewhere for the two Last Gasp printings (10th and 11th). The early printing history of Big Ass Comics #1 is one of the toughest to identify in underground comics and there is new research still being conducted by collectors like Guy Borges and evaluated by the collector cognoscenti. My sources for printing identification information are Jay Kennedy's seminal Price Guide from 1982, the website ugcomix.info and Dan Fogel's 2006 Price Guide and 2010 Supplement. See the Comixjoint section on print editions for more details on these sources and my rationale for establishing printing history on this site.

The first six printings of Big Ass Comics #1 all have a 50-cent cover price and they are all by Rip Off Press. The 1st printing is easily identified by the "R. CRUMB" signature in the lower right corner of the front cover, which has a white background. In every subsequent printing, the background is red.

The 2nd through 6th printings are differentiated by the color of the pants and shoes of Crumb's male character on the front cover and the reflective properties of the cover stock (glossy vs. matt). I have found subtle variations in the colors of these printings that makes it difficult to confirm with certainty which printing every copy belongs to.

2nd printing: glossy stock, brown pants, brown shoes
3rd printing: glossy stock, green pants, green shoes
4th printing: matt stock, green pants, green shoes
5th printing: glossy stock, green pants, brown shoes
6th printing: matt stock, green pants, brown shoes

The 7th printing changes to a 75-cent cover price. The 8th printing also has a 75-cent cover price, but the inside front cover states "Produced by Keith Green." After the 8th printing, it becomes easier to identify printings because the cover price always changes. The 9th printing has a $1.00 cover, the 10th printing (first Last Gasp printing) has a $2.50 cover, and the 11th printing has a $4.95 cover.

COMIC CREATOR:
Robert Crumb - 1-28












3rd Printing
glossy cover stock, green pants, green shoes.

5th Printing (misprint)
glossy cover stock, green pants, brown shoes.
8th Printing
75-cent cover, Produced by Keith Green on IFC.
10th Printing
Last Gasp,
$2.50 cover.





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What happens when all the form-fitting spandex gets far too confining? Find out as CBR explores 15 comic books that showed off a whole lotta skin!
Being a superhero has never been the most modest profession out there. Doctors wear white coats and lawyers wear suits, but most superheroes take to the streets decked out in skintight spandex, thigh-high boots and more exposed skin than is likely practical for such a dangerous career. With such costumes so ill-suited for the job, it’s no wonder so many superheroes show off more skin than they mean to. Wardrobe malfunctions happen frequently in this business. Sometimes they even shed their clothes on purpose, because that’s just how they like to roll.
Comic books are filled with depraved heroes and villains of all kinds who are just looking to get a little action when they can. Sometimes we see superheroes getting it on with one another, other times it’s simply normal people doing what they usually do to have a little fun. Comic books can be voyeuristic like that, especially the independent titles from the likes of Image Comics. Those books show us pretty much everything! We’ve come a long way since the Comics Code Authority reigned supreme over the industry. Comic book characters and their creators can now let their freak flags fly. Here are 15 comics that have shown the most skin.
By issue #34 of Buffy the Vampire Slayer Season Eight , the evil Twilight had just been revealed to be Angel in disguise. Brad Meltzer and Georges Jeanty then take things in a weird direction by establishing that Angel was under the influence of the real Twilight. This being further manipulates him and Buffy to have superpowered sex for the entire issue so they can give birth to him.
The issue is actually subtitled “Them F#©$ing” and we get far more than we ever asked to see. Over 22 pages, Buffy and Angel do it in every way imaginable while flying through the air and smashing through mountains. The story ends with a climax in space. Was it gratuitous? Yes. Was it entertaining, though? Absolutely.
During Geoff Johns and John Romita Jr.’s run on the New 52 Superman title, Superman develops a new superpower called the Solar Flare. This new ability allows the Man of Steel to unleash all the solar power from his cells in one gigantic blast; however, it isn’t the greatest skill when you still want to keep your clothes on.
In Superman #40, John Romita Jr. tells a story about Clark trying to figure out how to better control his new power. He blows up his supersuit and is left naked in a crater. Batman picks him up and brings him to the Justice League so he can test his ability against them. After another blow up, he’s naked again and Wonder Woman is checking him out.
Many people were upset that Marvel would kill off Peter Parker, only to have Doctor Octopus inhabit his body in the pages of Superior Spider-Man . When the real Spider-Man finally returned in 2014, Dan Slott and Humberto Ramos wanted to make sure everyone was aware that Peter Parker was back to normal, so they decided to remove all his clothes!
In Amazing Spider-Man #1, Peter confronts The Menagerie, a group of animal-themed criminals that includes the White Rabbit, Panda-Mania, Hippo and Skein. Gypsy Moth — we mean Skein — has the ability to manipulate fabric, so over the course of battle, she is able to destroy Spider-Man’s costume. This forces Peter to create underwear with his webshooters, and it’s not a pretty sight. The media gets a good look of our hero, and the superhero community sees that Spider-Man is back to business as usual.
In the Ultimate universe, the Hulk was a major threat to society. Not only did he destroy things constantly but he also actually ate people. In 2008’s Ultimate Hulk Annual by Jeph Loeb, Marko Djurdjevic, and Ed MCGuinness, Banner is on the loose again, but this time he’s absolutely buck naked! He shows up to a diner demanding pancakes with money that he kept we don’t want to know where.
When the Hulk is told that his nakedness will get him no service, Zarda stops him from killing everyone by instead punching him through the window and starting a brawl in the streets. Zarda punches Hulk directly in the nether regions and finishes him off. She finally finds him some pants so the diner will serve him. They then take thing to a motel room for some “wholesome” fun.
During Peter Milligan and Mike Allred’s run on X-Statix , the team comes into conflict with the Avengers over the remains of Doop’s exploded brain. Members of each team square off in battles around the world to gain the right to collect these explodey bits. Things get a bit weird when Mister Sensitive and Iron Man fight without any clothes on.
When their battle in issue #24 lands them in the middle of the Church of Naked Truth, the leader of the cult demands that the heroes either stop their fight or take off their clothes. Not wanting to insult their customs, the two oblige and continue the battle completely naked. They continue with a series of finger flicks and pressure points that prove to be too much for one side to be declared the winner.
Frank Miller’s black and white comic book series Sin City shows off a lot of skin. Miller escalates things in That Yellow Bastard by showing us a little bit of everything. There are strippers, naked men hanging from ropes, and disgusting sex criminals letting it all hang out. In this yarn, John Hartigan hunts down and brutally dismembers Roark Junior before going to jail in order to protect Nancy from danger.
When he gets out, he finds that Junior was saved from death and brought back as a grotesque yellow monster. That Yellow Bastard attempts to kill Hartigan by stringing him up by his neck while he’s completely naked. Our hero is able to free himself and finds Junior in the buff while he’s attempting to sexually assault Nancy. Hartigan goes on to beat the yellow right out of him.
Wolverine’s past has always been a mystery to both the reader and Logan himself. While his connection to the Weapon X program was established early on, the full gory details were never shared until the 1991 storyline called “Weapon X.” Told in Marvel Comics Presents #72-84 by Barry Windsor-Smith, we see all the horrors the government did to his body.
Any time we’ve ever looked back on Logan’s time as an experiment, it’s always the same imagery: doctors poking and prodding his naked body as they attempt to create the perfect killing machine. In issue #77, Weapon X is set against a pack of wolves and we see what Wolverine is truly capable of, even when he could probably use a coat. After pages and pages of our nude hero going through all sorts of unspeakable experiments, it’s hard not to feel for the guy.
Jimmy Palmiotti and Amanda Conner’s Harley Quinn team-up book ends with a bang (wink) when she crosses paths with Lobo and his dog named Dawg in a sexy adventure through space. The two have a lot in common, from a love for motorcycles to a love for violence, so it makes sense that they would want to hook up.
Over the course of their adventure together, Lobo loses his pants, Harley takes off her top (more than once), and they kill a bunch of aliens. Things get so raunchy that DC Comics had to censor the creative team with little flags inserted over Simon Bisley’s art. It’s pretty hilarious. Thankfully, everything worked out in the end with Harley finally getting some alone time with the Main Man.
Voodoo was created in 1992 by Brandon Choi and Jim Lee for WildC.A.T.S. #1. After Flashpoint brought Wildstorm characters into the New 52 DC Universe, Priscilla Kitaen was established to be a human-Daemonite hybrid working undercover as a stripper while doubling as a Daemonite spy. In the first issue of her ongoing series from 2011, we get to see her at work, and there’s plenty of skin to go around.
Priscilla is under observation by federal agents, but one cop gets a little too close. He gets an eyeful while she’s on a stage, then he gets a private dance with her. The agent attempts to get Voodoo to turn herself in, but he underestimates what she would be willing to do to stay out of sight. Priscilla turns back into her alien form, murders him, and steals his identity.
Created for Edgar Rice Burrough’s series of Martian novels, Dejah Thoris is the princess of Helium, a city-state of Mars, and the love interest of John Carter, hero of the books. The thing about the people of Mars that Burroughs was apparently very into was the fact that none of them wore any clothing. Apparently that was super sexy back in 1912.
Obviously, the comic book adaptations can’t have people running around naked on every page, but luckily, Martians wear enough jewelry to cover key places. This means in Dynamite Entertainment’s Warlord of Mars and spinoff series Warlord of Mars: Dejah Thoris , the princess can be covered with a tiny loincloth and what appear to be golden nipple clamps. This has become Dejah Thoris’ standard dress code, played up for obvious cheesecake whenever possible.
Barbara Gordon and Selina Kyle have an intimate moment together in Batman Confidential #18 during Fabian Nicieza and Kevin Maguire’s “The Bat and the Cat” storyline from 2008. Batgirl and Catwoman fight over a valuable notebook, and their chase around Gotham leads them into a nudist club.
Inside the Gotham City Hedonist Society, Batgirl is forced to take off all her clothes in order to gain entry and follow her nemesis. Everyone in the place is naked and getting handsy with each other. Barbara wades through the crowd, showing it all and hoping no one makes a move on her. She starts a fistfight with Catwoman, gets the notepad, and creates utter chaos within the club. Batgirl is finally able to make it out, with her costume, and make a run for it.
In Garth Ennis’ The Boys , the world’s superheroes are actually horrible, amoral monsters behind closed doors. No comic shows how depraved these heroes actually are more so than The Boys: Herogasm . When the public believes Homelander and the rest of the superhero community are off to fight a major villain, they are in fact attending an annual orgy instead.
At the annual Herogasm, the superheroes take part in all kinds of debauchery, including vast amounts of sex and drugs. The whole thing is funded by the corporation that created American superheroes. We are forced to watch page after page of endless “relations” without much in the way of censorship. The Boys infiltrate the isolated island resort in order to monitor the festivities and investigate the government’s connection to the party.
Matt Fraction and Chip Zdarsky’s Sex Criminals follows the activities of Jon and Suzie, a couple that can stop time when they orgasm. The book explores their relationship as they share past sexual experiences and how they managed their ability before meeting one another. Of course, given their powers, it isn’t long before they decide to rob a bank, and hijinks ensue.
As you might imagine, there’s loads of sex in this book and the characters watch plenty of adult entertainment, most of which is uncensored. When our heroes find out they aren’t the only ones who can stop time, things get out of control. Fraction has likened the book to a romantic sex comedy like The 40-Year-Old Virgin , only, you know, much better than that.
In Joe Casey and Mike Huddleston’s Butcher Baker, the Righteous Maker , the world’s all-American hero comes out of retirement for one last mission to save the world. When he is recruited, Jay Leno and Dick Cheney (don’t ask) find him surrounded by women and drugs in an endless orgy. They even bring their own ladies to offer him an incentive.
Butcher Baker was a test subject who received a new, genetically modified heart that gave him superhuman abilities. He resembles The Comedian from Watchmen, longing to return to a life of violence and superhero crimefighting. He is tasked with blowing up a maximum security prison for supervillains and then must kill several escapees. He goes on to fight his nemesis Jihad Jones in an epic battle of total nakedness. It’s all a little nuts.
Joe Casey and Piotr Kowalski explore what happens when the superhero power fantasy comes to an end in Sex . Simon Cooke gives up being a superhero and returns to Saturn City in order to run his company and live a normal life. When you spend most of your formative years running around in spandex, it’s not surprising when you end up feeling a little bit repressed.
Saturn City is a place of criminal dealings and carnal pleasure, where high-end sex workers are everywhere and crime is growing in the absence of its former hero. Simon has trouble embracing his new lifestyle because he never truly grew up like most normal adults do. After years spent holding himself to a firm moral code, he’s just not into all this sex stuff.
Do you know of another comic that should be included above? Tell us about it in the comments!
Jason Cohen is a freelance comic book writer and a devoted follower of almost anything published by DC Comics. He likes Batman a lot, but anything about some obscure superhero that no one has ever heard of or wants to talk about will do. He's hoping for the return of Bloodwynd soon.
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