| Series Title | Wolverine |
|---|---|
| Story Title | I'm Wolverine. |
| Issue Number | 1-4 |
| Volume | 1 |
| Cover Date | Sep 1982 |
| Cover Price | 60¢ |
| Printing | First Print |
| Variant Description | Newsstand & CPV |
| Page Count | 36.00 |
| Genre | Superhero |
| Age Era | Bronze Age |
| Publisher | Marvel |
| Writer | Chris Claremont |
| Artist | Frank Miller |
| Cover Artist | Frank Miller |
| Inker | Joe Rubinstein |
| Letterer | Tom Orzechowski |
| Editor | Jim Shooter |
| First Appearances | First appearance of Sonar, John Stewart, C.F. |
| Character Appearances | Asano Kimura, Lord Shingen, Mariko Yashida, Noburu Hideki, Wolverine, Yukio |
| Series Title | Wolverine |
|---|---|
| Story Title | I'm Wolverine. |
| Issue Number | 1-4 |
| Volume | 1 |
| Cover Date | Sep 1982 |
| Cover Price | 60¢ |
| Printing | First Print |
| Variant Description | Newsstand & CPV |
| Page Count | 36.00 |
| Genre | Superhero |
| Age Era | Bronze Age |
| Publisher | Marvel |
| Writer | Chris Claremont |
| Artist | Frank Miller |
| Cover Artist | Frank Miller |
| Inker | Joe Rubinstein |
| Letterer | Tom Orzechowski |
| Editor | Jim Shooter |
| First Appearances | First appearance of Sonar, John Stewart, C.F. |
| Character Appearances | Asano Kimura, Lord Shingen, Mariko Yashida, Noburu Hideki, Wolverine, Yukio |
Wolverine's first solo series was the four-issue limited series from September to December 1982, created by Chris Claremont and Frank Miller. This miniseries marked a crucial evolution for the character, who had grown increasingly popular since joining the X-Men in 1975. Set primarily in Japan, the series redefined Wolverine from a one-dimensional berserker into a complex character torn between his animalistic nature and desire for honor. Miller's noir-influenced art and Claremont's psychological depth transformed Wolverine into Marvel's most compelling anti-hero. The limited series sold over 400,000 copies per issue, extraordinary numbers that proved Wolverine could anchor solo stories. The story, featuring Wolverine's doomed romance with Mariko Yashida and conflicts with her father Shingen and the Hand ninja clan, established Japan as central to the character's mythology and introduced his catchphrase about being "the best at what I do."
The success of the 1982 limited series directly led to the ongoing Wolverine series launching in November 1988. The six-year gap between limited and ongoing series reflected Marvel's cautious approach to solo books for team characters, despite Wolverine's obvious popularity. During this interval, he starred in other limited series including Kitty Pryde and Wolverine (1984-1985) and appeared across Marvel's line. The ongoing series, initially by Claremont and John Buscema, built upon the limited series' foundation, placing Wolverine in Madripoor where he operated as "Patch." Issue #1 sold over 500,000 copies, validating Marvel's decision to grant him a regular series. The ongoing maintained the noir atmosphere Miller established while expanding Wolverine's world beyond X-Men adventures.
Larry Hama's decade-long run (issues #31-118, 1990-1997) defined Wolverine's mythology for the ongoing series. Hama explored the character's psychology through a Vietnam veteran's perspective, adding military authenticity while maintaining the samurai elements from Claremont/Miller. Major storylines included revealing bone claws as natural mutations rather than Weapon X additions, his devolution after losing adamantium, and extensive exploration of his forgotten past. The series balanced Marvel-wide crossovers with intimate character studies. Sales peaked during the 1990s boom, with key issues selling over 1 million copies. Hama proved that Wolverine could sustain long-form storytelling beyond his initial "mysterious loner" appeal.
The character's evolution from Hulk antagonist to Marvel's most overexposed hero reflected broader industry changes. By 1995, Wolverine appeared in numerous monthly titles, becoming both Marvel's biggest draw and a symbol of market excess. His popularity spawned countless imitators - violent anti-heroes with healing factors and mysterious pasts flooded comics. The original limited series' artistic achievement became obscured by commercial exploitation. However, that 1982 series remains a watershed moment in comics history, demonstrating how established characters could be fundamentally reimagined through creator vision rather than editorial mandate. Miller's visual storytelling and Claremont's psychological complexity created a template for "prestige" superhero stories.
Multiple ongoing series followed, with Marvel often publishing several Wolverine titles simultaneously. Notable runs include Greg Rucka's noir stories, Mark Millar's "Old Man Logan," and Jason Aaron's exploration of Wolverine's extended history. The character's death in 2014 generated massive sales but proved temporary, highlighting both his commercial importance and death's meaninglessness in superhero comics. Origin (2001) finally revealed his 19th-century beginnings, ending decades of mystery but proving controversial among fans who preferred ambiguity. X-23 and other characters assuming the Wolverine identity demonstrate the brand's importance beyond Logan himself.
Wolverine's impact on comics is immeasurable. The 1982 limited series established that violent heroes could carry emotional depth, influencing everything from Batman's darker interpretations to Image Comics' 1990s aesthetic. His healing factor solved ongoing series' injury problems while creating power escalation issues. The character proved mysterious backgrounds could sustain decades of stories, though his origin revelation showed the difficulty of satisfying built-up expectations. From four issues in 1982 to thousands of appearances generating billions in revenue, Wolverine embodies both superhero comics' creative potential and commercial excess. That original Claremont/Miller series remains one of comics' most influential works, proving that superhero stories could be simultaneously violent and introspective, action-packed and character-driven, commercial and artistic.
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