A new hardback edition was published in 2005 featuring improved printing and coloring. Later collections include reissued paperbacks, published in the US by DC's Vertigo imprint ( ISBN 0-93) and in the UK by Titan Books ( ISBN 1-85286-291-2). The entire series has appeared collected in paperback ( ISBN 0-5) and hardback ( ISBN 1-4012-0792-8) form, including Moore's "Behind the Painted Smile" essay and two "interludes" outside the central continuity. Tony Weare drew one chapter ("Vincent") and contributed additional art to two others ("Valerie" and "The Vacation") Steve Whitaker and Siobhan Dodds worked as colourists on the entire series. 7, which included the unpublished episodes that would have appeared in Warrior No. The first new material appeared in issue No. In 1988, DC Comics published a ten-issue series that reprinted the Warrior stories in colour, then continued the series to completion. When the publishers cancelled Warrior in 1985 (with two completed issues unpublished due to the cancellation), several companies attempted to convince Moore and Lloyd to let them publish and complete the story. But with five or six strips an issue, regular only needed two or three favorites to justify their buying the title." The strip was one of the least popular in that title editor/publisher Dez Skinn remarked, "If I'd have given each character their own title, the failures would have certainly outweighed the successes, with the uncompromising 'V for Vendetta' probably being an early casualty. The first episodes of V for Vendetta appeared in black-and-white between 19, in Warrior, a British anthology comic published by Quality Communications. ^ Includes the interludes "Vertigo" and "Vincent".^ Warrior #20 ( Jul 1984) includes the vignette "Vincent".^ Warrior #17 ( Mar 1984) includes "Behind the Painted Smile" by Alan Moore, but no comic.
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