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Justice Machine : ウィキペディア英語版
Justice Machine

The Justice Machine is a fictional team of superheroes originally created by Michael Gustovich and appearing in comic books from many small publishers in the 1980s and 1990s.
==Publication history==
Justice Machine debuted in Noble Comics' ''Justice Machine'' #1 (June 1981), created by writer-penciler Michael Gustovich, with the first issue cover penciled by John Byrne and inked by Gustovich. This initial series lasted five issues, cover-dated Winter 1981, April 1982, Fall 1982, and Winter 1983. The first three issues were published in magazine format. An annual publication, ''Justice Machine Annual'' #1 (1983) was published by Texas Comics, and featured a crossover with the then-defunct Tower Comics' superhero team T.H.U.N.D.E.R. Agents, by writer William Messner-Loebs (as Bill Loeb) and penciler Bill Reinhold. A second story, by writer-penciler Bill Willingham, introduced the superhero team the Elementals.
This led to a miniseries, ''Justice Machine featuring the Elementals'' #1-4 (May-Aug. 1986), by writer Willingham and artist Gustovich, published by Comico. That company subsequently published an ongoing ''Justice Machine'' series (vol. 2) that lasted 29 issues (Jan. 1987 - May 1989), plus a 1989 annual. That series' initial creative team consisted of writer Tony Isabella and artist Gustovich.
Innovation Comics published a three-issue miniseries, ''The New Justice Machine'' (Nov. 1989 - March 1990), by Mark Ellis with pencils by Darryl Banks and others, and inks by Gustovich. An accompanying one-shot, ''Justice Machine Summer Spectacular'' #1 (Summer 1990), by writer Messner-Loebs and penciler Reinhold, contained a story that had originally been created for publication by Texas Comics in 1983.〔(Grand Comics Database: ''Justice Machine Summer Spectacular'' #1 )〕 This was followed by a new ongoing series, ''Justice Machine'' vol. 3, which ran seven issues (April 1990 - April 1991), as well as the one-shot ''Hero Alliance & Justice Machine: Identity Crisis'' #1 (September 1990), by writer Ellis, pencilers Banks and Rik Levins, and inker Gustovich. Initially produced by Ellis and Banks, the series acquired creator Gustovich as both penciler and inker for issues #4-6, and Isabella as writer for the final three issues.
Ellis' Millennium Publications produced two issues of a fourth volume (Oct. & Dec. 1992), by writer Ellis and penciler Banks. These feature updated versions of the characters. Ellis had purchased the Justice Machine rights from Gustovich in 1991.〔(The Justice Machine )〕 This would be the last new appearance of the Justice Machine for over 20 years.
''The New Justice Machine: High Gear Edition, Volume One'' was released by Ellis' Millennial Concepts and Gary Reed's Transfuzion Publishing in March, 2009. The compilation volume collected the ''New Justice Machine'' mini-series and the first issue of the regular series published by Innovation.
''Object of Power'', an original Justice Machine graphic novel by Ellis and artists David Enebral and Ivan Barriga was published by Bluewater Productions in June, 2014.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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