Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. People also ask

  2. Oct 12, 2020 · In a 1931 story called "People of the Dark," which deals with reincarnation, Howard first mentioned a black-haired barbarian named Conan, who worshiped a god named Crom.

    • The First Official Conan Story Was A Kull Rewrite.
    • But A “Proto-Conan” Story Preceded it.
    • Robert E. Howard Never Intended to Write These Stories in Order.
    • There Are Numerous Connections to The H.P. Lovecraft Mythos.
    • Several of Howard’s Stories Were Rewritten as Conan Stories posthumously.
    • Frank Frazetta’s Conan Paintings Regularly Sell For Seven Figures.
    • Conan’s First Marvel Comic Was Almost Canceled After Seven issues.
    • Oliver Stone Wrote A Four-Hour, Post-Apocalyptic Conan Movie.
    • Barack Obama Is A Fan (and Was Turned Into A Barbarian Himself).
    • J.R.R. Tolkien Was Also A Conan Devotee.

    Conan wasn’t the only barbarian on Robert E. Howard’s resume. In 1929, the writer created Kull the Conqueror, a more “introspective” brand of savage that gained enough interest to eventually find his way onto the big screen in 1997. The two characters share more than just a common creator and a general disdain for shirts, though: the first Conan st...

    A few months before Conan made his debut in Weird Tales, Howard wrote a story called "People of the Dark" for Strange Tales of Mystery and Terror about a man named John O’Brien who seemed to relive his past life as a brutish, black-haired warrior named … Conan of the reavers. Reave is a word from Old English meaning to raid or plunder, which is obv...

    Howard was meticulous in his world-building for Conan, which was highlighted by his 8600-word history on the Hyborian Agethe character lived in. But the one area the creator had no interest in was linearity. Conan’s first story depicted him already as a king; subsequent stories, though, would shift back and forth, chronicling his early days as both...

    For fans of the pulp magazines of the early 20th century, one of the only names bigger than Robert E. Howard was H.P. Lovecraft. The two weren’t competitors, though—rather, they were close friends and correspondents. They’d often mail each other drafts of their stories, discuss the themes of their work, and generally talk shop. And as Lovecraft’s o...

    Howard was only 30 when he died, so there aren’t as many completed Conan stories out in the world as you’d imagine—and there are even less that were finished and officially printed. Despite that, the character’s popularity has only grown since the 1930s, and publishers looked for a way to print more of Howard’s Conan decades after his death. Over t...

    Chances are, the imageof Conan you have in your head right now owes a lot to artist Frank Frazetta: His version of the famous barbarian—complete with rippling muscles, pulsating veins, and copious amounts of sword swinging—would come to define the character for generations. But the look that people most associate with Conan didn’t come about until ...

    Conan’s origins as a pulp magazine hero made him a natural fit for the medium’s logical evolution: the comic book. And in 1970, the character got his first high-profile comic launch when Marvel’s Conan The Barbarianhit shelves, courtesy of writer Roy Thomas and artist Barry Windsor-Smith. Though now it’s hailed as one of the company’s highlights fr...

    John Milius’s 1982 Conan movie is a classic of the sword and sorcery genre, but its original script from Oliver Stone didn’t resemble the final product at all. In fact, it barely resembled anything related to Conan. Stone’s Conan would have been set on a post-apocalyptic Earth, where the barbarian would do battle against a host of mutant pigs, inse...

    When President Barack Obama sent out a mass emailin 2015 to the members of Organizing for Action, he was looking to get people to offer up stories about how they got involved within their community—their origin stories, if you will. In this mass email, the former Commander-in-Chief detailed his own origin, with a shout out to a certain barbarian: T...

    The father of 20th century fantasy may always be J.R.R. Tolkien, but Howard is a close second in many fans' eyes. Though Tolkien’s work has found its way into more scholarly literary circles, Howard’s can sometimes get categorized as low-brow. Quality recognizes quality, however, and during a conversation with Tolkien, writer L. Sprague de Camp—who...

  3. Conan the Barbarian. Conan the Barbarian (also known as Conan the Cimmerian) is a fictional sword and sorcery hero who originated in pulp magazines and has since been adapted to books, comics, films (including Conan the Barbarian and Conan the Destroyer ), television programs ( animated and live-action ), video games, and role-playing games.

    • Blaine Turner
    • Features Writer
    • Conan’s Sword was Displayed Over the Governator’s Desk. Reflecting the reverence that his character showed for steel, Schwarzenegger retained the swords from the film set and seems to cherish them greatly.
    • The Original Script was Set in a Post-Apocalyptic Future. The first draft of Conan the Barbarian was written by Oliver Stone, who would later go on to direct such classic films as Platoon, JFK, and Natural Born Killers.
    • The Cast Enjoyed Drinking Blood. Well, kind of. The fake blood used on set was a deep-crimson concentrate made to be mixed with water before using. The extreme cold weather caused the blood-water mixture to constantly freeze, so the crew improvised and mixed the concentrate with vodka instead.
    • The Film Version of Conan More Closely Resembles Another Robert E. Howard Character. Although the main plot of Conan the Barbarian is based on many of Howard’s Conan stories, the actual character of Conan more closely resembles a different character created by the author: Kull the Conqueror.
  4. Based on a script Milius developed with Oliver Stone, Conan the Barbarian is the most impressive film adaptation to date and tells the tale of Conan’s origins and his quest for revenge upon the man who killed his parents.

  5. Aug 23, 2011 · Conan Reborn. Of all the ’80s treasures currently in line to be remade, Conan The Barbarian would seem one of the less obvious choices. An extremely camp Dungeons And Dragons -style romp, it’s ...

  6. Conan the Barbarian, fictional hero of pulp novels, comic books, and films whose fantasy adventures take place in a prehistoric past. Conan is an adventurer-warrior from Cimmeria who lives in the Hyborian age, an era that supposedly follows the disappearance of the mythical continent of Atlantis.

  1. People also search for