Sorry Dom, but even Marvel TF back in the day had moments of "everything back like it was". Sure, the story was more or less linear, but how many times did Prime, Megatron, Jazz Starscream and Bumblebee come back? by the end of the run, virtually the entire '84 line up was back. And even IDW seems to be going that direction. Ironhide is now not dead on Earth, but was deactivated on Cybertron? WTF? Megs is on his way back albeit slowly, Thundy came back, and how long before Sunstreaker comes back? It's just the way comics are right now. Make big changes and then change everything back so that... you can change it again!
I do see your point. Maybe it is because most of the returned Marvel characters were changed in some way when they came back, it bothers me less. (The series also ended not long after the mass resurrection.) It also bothered me a bit less because death was consistently portrayed as temporary for TFs. Even after issue 50, it was stated in context that most of the guys killed in that issue could have been repaired but for time and parts. Soundwave showing up around issue 70 did not bother me for this very reason.
I have complained at some length about IDW bringing back characters and re-setting things. (I am however not going to calle "Ironhide" on anything until the series is over.)
How is he retreading the past? Sure, he's brought back several characters, but he isn't telling their same ol' stories over and over. He's telling new stories and building on what's been previously established in continuity. This is what good writers do.
The characters and settings are consistently restored to a previous state. None of the big "nothing will ever be the same" changes seem to stick. Johns is hardly the one one guilty of this. Marvel is currently doing this with "Heroic Age", setting things back to pre "Civil War", if not pre-90s hype, standard. (Bendis' "Avengers" keeps me from saying it is a fully pre-90s standard.) I am sticking with a few of the Bendis titles largely because Bendis' writing is very readable. I am thinking his "big ideas" ran out with "Dark Reign".
The character destruction of Green Lantern followed by the destruction of the JSA were the one-two punch that really made me disgusted with DC. I stuck with a few books for awhile after that (including Starman, one I now wish I hadn't dropped), but I had lost my enthusiasm for the "shock the reader" type of storytelling. It didn't take long for me to simply quit buying any comics at all.
Really? How was it disgusting?
As much as I liked the JSA, I "got" what DC was really doing with them. Extant aged them to where they were supposed to be. And, characters that had been around for 60+ years at the time were killed off and written out. (The Hourman fix is one of my least favorite elements of DC continuity.) How many times can they get de-aged?
As shocking as Heel Jordan was, I do think DC was trying to do more than give readers shock value. Kyle was clearly everything wrong with the 90s. That had to have been intentional. Then, DC had Kyle grow up a bit, and become an example of a modern hero.
I wasn't necessarily referring to you when talking about sour grapes. You've explained your position well enough that I don't think that's the case. But there are plenty out there to whom my charge definitely applies.
I see what you are saying. (There are plenty of backward looking fans in any hobby.)
My problem is that the more restoring/resetting there is, the less the hobby moves forward at all. Look at "GI Joe". IDW now has 3 continuities, movie, modern, retro-Hama. Hama has pretty much said that the continuation of the old Marvel book will effectively be "Archie with Guns". (He did not use those words. But, the meaning is clear. Time will not pass. Nothing will ever change....ever, despite the franchise being 25+ years old.) Despite the potential for hilarously bad customizing that "Archie with Guns" offers, is it really a comic worth reading?
If somebody wants to read the old stories, they can buy back-issues.
At the very least, publishers should stop telling us "that nothing, NOTHING, will ever be the same....for about 6 months". At least Hama is honest about how regressive retro-Joe is going to be.
I never said they were. Certainly there are different methods of gaining popularity, and not everyone gets it through talent. However, you cannot deny that isn't the case for Johns. He is popular because of his talent to write stories people enjoy. And as I said, whether or not you personally like it is another matter.
I agree, he does write what many people see to want to read.
Dom
-thinks we should market a TFV pin-up calendar. it would totally get us noticed.