David Hine | |
---|---|
Nationality | British |
Area(s) | Writer, Artist |
Notable works
|
Silent War, The Bulletproof Coffin |
David Hine is an English comic book writer and artist, known for his work on Silent War and The Bulletproof Coffin.
Hine has been working in comics since the early 1980s. For Crisis he drew the series Sticky Fingers (written by Myra Hancock) in 1989, and wrote and drew a number of short pieces in 1990 and 1991. For 2000 AD he drew Tao De Moto in 1991 (again written by Hancock) and wrote and drew the futuristic police series Mambo from 1994 to 1996.
He wrote and drew the black and white horror comic Strange Embrace, originally published as a mini-series by Atomeka Press in 1993, and later as a collected graphic novel by Active Images in the U.S., reprinted again as a color series by Image Comics.
Hine is currently best known as a writer on Marvel Comics titles, like X-Men: The 198 and Civil War: X-Men. One of his most recent projects there was Silent War a six-issue mini-series featuring the Inhumans with art by Frazer Irving. Hine has also written a number of What if? stories which look at alternate outcomes to stories like Annihilation and Deadly Genesis.