Comics are Awesome II

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andersonh1
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Re: Comics are Awesome II

Post by andersonh1 »

BWprowl wrote:Because frankly, they're just ficticious stories that have nothing to do with the real world?
Of course they're fictitious, just like the movies or television I watch, or the books I read, or just about any entertainment choice of mine. How is that relevant?

I like Coca Cola. I griped about it when they changed it to New Coke back in the 80s (as did a lot of people and sales weren't good). Why should I have done that? It was just a soft drink. Drop it and move on, right?
When a company makes changes to their stories, universe, or characters, you as a reader have a couple of choices: either whine and complain about it,
What else are message boards for, if not to discuss what we like and dislike about our hobbies, comics included? And that includes negative feelings. There's no requirement that everything we say be positive.
despite the fact that as leisure entertainment reading it really has no effect on your life
It gives me some escapism, some entertainment, a break from the real world. It sucks away some of my entertainment money every month. It has an effect on my life, small though it may be.

It's a product that I consume. And like any other product, I have preferences.
and there's pretty much nothing you can do to change the company's mind on it, or just go "Well I guess that's that" and move on and find something else to do. And honestly, society as a whole generally expects 'grown-ups' to do the latter, and not get all wound up and ticked off because their favorite cartoon character's pants are a different color.
Again, if you believe that, why are you here discussing things? Why do the various comic companies solicit feedback from readers?

I have moved on. DC doesn't get any of my money every month. That doesn't preclude me from discussing the fact that their new universe is awful though.
Good God, really? There was over 75 years of content from the 'old' DC Universe, and you were still wanting more? There was no desire to move on or see it finished and put to bed at all? I can't imagine wanting to see a story like that.
#1 - has anyone ever read all 75 years worth of DC material? I doubt it.
#2 - There are many different eras, writers, artists, storytelling methods, storytelling tones and philosophies, and minor continuity adjustments. There isn't one continuous, all in one continuity pre-New 52 DC Universe. There are eras I've read, and those I haven't. There were many stories I enjoyed and remember fondly that made the characters I like what they were. I had no desire to see them wrapped up and ended, no.

I get the feeling that Dom sees fans who don't like the major changes as crybabies, stamping their feet and saying "I want what I"ve always had!" And yeah, that would be childish, but I doubt that's the way it plays out, most of the time. We're allowed to criticize changes and products we don't like. :mrgreen:
Shockwave wrote:I get why Anderson is little miffed. Example: I like Baskin Robins Dacquiri Ice. A few years ago they changed the flavor of it and it was terrible. And I was miffed that I would no longer be able to enjoy my favorite ice cream. Fortunately the next summer they changed it back and it's been back to the same ever since.
Exactly. BR had a product you liked and then they changed it. It wasn't just that "change is terrible, how dare they!", it was a case of comparing the old with the new and finding the new version significantly lacking.

Change isn't something that happens in a vacuum. There's nothing sacrosanct about change that compels us to accept it just because "change is good" or some such philosophy. Some changes are not good, objectively or subjectively.
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Re: Comics are Awesome II

Post by BWprowl »

Scarlet Spider #16:
After the intense shake-ups of last month’s issue (which I didn’t review but rest assured it was good) the best cape book on the rack right now takes a well-deserved breather- Kaine goes to a rodeo and hilarity ensues. Granted it’s not all sunshine and rainbows, as this one primarily deals with the long-unresolved romantic tension between Kaine and Annabelle, with the book springing the point on us that there really isn’t anything *wrong* with a guy who may be a ‘monster’ getting his girl, as long as he’s got his shit under control. That focus I love so much about Yost’s Scarlet Spider is strong and present throughout this issue, showing people and their goofy romantic entanglements and that it’s all not nearly as trite and impossible as an angstbucket like Kaine almost seems to want it to be. And the Armadillo shows up in this issue, the goddamn Armadillo! I flippin’ cheered when he popped up on the page. This book is great. The Vol. 2 trade is out, I neeeeeed to get it. (As a side note, I’ll admit to really liking Annabelle’s design. I dig how unapologetically pink she looks.)

Also, we got a double dose of Pony comics this week, and both issues were really firing on all cylinders. The Rarity Spotlight/Micro-Series was by the team that did the previous arc of the main comic, and I love the art there, and the writing itself was full of great asides and characterization. Plus the cover I got, with hippie Rarity? Pretty much one of the best things ever, cool as hell. The main series issue that came out was great too, the artist on this one has a very good sense of cinematic style, with well drawn-in ‘lighting’ and ‘camera’ work. The story’s moving along nicely, giving each member of the team some quick focus (in the type of story that the show did a few times itself), as well as revealing that Luna’s previous transformation might not have been as involuntary as she initially made it out to be (so breathe a sigh of relief, Dom). My only complaint is that I feel they could have come up with a more creative name for Rarity’s corrupted form than ‘Nightmare Rarity’. ‘Nightmarity’ maybe? I dunno, something. But again, towards Dom, there’s some inspiration for a possible custom. Both comics also have a preview for the upcoming MLP:FiM novel that’s coming out, though I haven’t really read it yet. There’s also some minor personalization/activity pages in the back, IDW presuming that they may be able to sell these comics to actual little girls. Which is a nice thought, but then there’s a big ad for Danger Girl on the back page. Sigh…
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Re: Comics are Awesome II

Post by Dominic »

I skipped both of them, largely for money reasons. If the one-short is still there on Friday, I will likely pick it up.

Yeah, advertising a "Danger Girl" comic on the back of an MLP comic is just idiotic. If nothing else, if a parent sees it, they might decide that comics are not such a good idea for their daughters (or their sons). Or, the girl will hit the age where they "start understanding stuff" (which can happen much earlier for them than it does for boys) and decide that they want nothing to do with "those guys" at the comic shop. Some of these girls will grow up to whine and cry about how the hobby and the fandom are sexist and hostile towards women. But, the more mature and stable girls (the ones that any sensible business would want to cater to) are more likely to say "hooookay, time to leave the boys in their creepy man-cave".

It will be interesting to see how this plays out over the next 10 years or so.


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Re: Comics are Awesome II

Post by Onslaught Six »

Dom wrote:The problem is that some of the more obsessive and vocal fans do not like reboots.
They don't like reboots because they're usually unnecessary and don't pan out good, and because they're usually done very poorly and messy and without a proper send-off to the original stories, just like Prowl said.

If DC announced today that they were officially rebooting the Batman film franchise again, I'd be fine with it, because the last movie was a well-done send-off. Likewise with the Spiderman franchise--which wasn't as well-done but at least had a kind of "ending" where a lot of its overarching plotlines coalesced into a thing.

If Marvel announced, however, that they were rebooting the Iron Man franchise after IM3? That'd enrage me, because it makes no sense to do so at this juncture--there's still a lot of life left in there, and this universe has a lot of room for Tony Stark and Iron Man in it.

I don't mind reboots when they make sense. Transmetropolitan is one of my favourite books, but it had a beginning, middle and end--and boy did it end, a long-ass time ago, too. If they chose to reboot it, or somehow integrate its main character into the mainstream DC universe, I wouldn't mind at all. (I might be apprehensive, depending on creative team, but I wouldn't immediately reject the idea.) Likewise with Valiant's new Shadowman--I haven't gotten around to reading it yet, but the last new Shadowman comics were around 2002 or so. I have no problem with that guy getting rebooted.
If they market this well, with the intention of bringing mainstream readers back to the comic stores, then it could actually help Marvel and the industry as a whole.
Honestly, the fact that they don't have an honest-to-God set of Movie Universe comics astounds me. Marvel and Disney know enough about the future of their movie universes that they could easily write some "inbetweener" comics that could be take-it-or-leave-it in terms of continuity bits. (For example, there are enough no-name dudes in superpowered armour for Tony Stark to punch out on the comics page that will never make it into the movies, or were even integrated into other characters. Movie Whiplash cribbed elements of the Crimson Dynamo, so there could easily be a comics-only Crimson Dynamo who was a different type of character.)

The same could arguably be said about DC. After I saw The Dark Knight, the first thing I did was run to a bookstore to buy some comics based on it. I didn't find any, and walked out with The Killing Joke instead. (Kind of regret it, too, if only because I paid $18 for The Killing Joke.)
We can probably kiss Gruenwald's run on "Captain America" and David's run on "The Incredible Hulk" good-bye. The only problem with this is that we should have done both about 15 years ago, because neither run has been relevant for at least that long.

The reboot just means that Marvel is going to stop pretending that those runs are relevant, and that the fans have to accept that said runs are no longer relevant.
The important thing that comics fans need to learn is also that just because those runs of comics are no longer "relevant," or may not have "happened," doesn't mean that those comics actually physically blink out of existence! In fact, Marvel will probably continue to reprint them for as long as they continue to sell. (I can go out right now and buy a fresh copy of Crisis On Infinite Earths, which is arguably the least relevant reboot ever at this point.)

Under the New 52, Gaiman's Sandman is arguably overwritten. Never happened. That doesn't stop the comics from physically existing, though, and it doesn't stop them from being a great comic series. Watchmen has had things stapled onto it in the form of a half-dozen prequel stories, but that doesn't in any way physically change how good the original comic is. Valiant (and Acclaim's) Shadowman runs are now arguably overwritten, but they are still readable and entertaining, even if they didn't "happen" anymore. And that's the important part.

Dragonball Z recently got a "remastering" abridged version in Japan and the US, called Dragonball Z Kai. Basically editing down filler so that it was "closer to the manga version." Essentially, retconning the series, the same way a comic reboot does. But at the same time, the original series is still on sale and still available--and still as good as it ever was. People who prefer the original are free to go back and enjoy it. And, nothing is stopping us from actually discussing it.

If Peter David's Hulk run gets retconned out, that's totally fine, but it doesn't mean we can't stop and actually talk about it. That discussion just won't be relevant to the current status quo. If someone asks, "Who can beat Superman in a fight?" the first response is usually, "Pre-Crisis Superman, or Post-Crisis?" You can acknowledge the old still existing as long as you recognize that it's old and no longer technically "relevant."
Prowl wrote:Do yourself a favor and never get into Japanese heroes. Kamen Rider Fourze's adventures were over and done in 50 episodes, and the next week his show was replaced with Kamen Rider Wizard's.
Yeah, this. I actually love the Japanese model for a few reasons--not only does it pretty much guarantee your story will have a fucking ending, but it also guarantees that it's going to end before it gets too unweildy and crappy.

That Tweet I sent in response to Roberts a few weeks ago has more truth to it than most of the other things I've said: Every good story has to end, because if it goes on too long, it'll become bad. Inevitably.
Dom wrote:(I have still not quite gotten over "Spider-Man: The Clone Saga". Seriously, I still cannot read a 616 "Spider-Man" comic without having some association with that god-awful two years worth of comics ~20 years ago.)
In all seriousness, read the new Scarlet Spider. It almost redeems that entire thing.
ShockTrek wrote:I get why Anderson is little miffed. Example: I like Baskin Robins Dacquiri Ice. A few years ago they changed the flavor of it and it was terrible. And I was miffed that I would no longer be able to enjoy my favorite ice cream. Fortunately the next summer they changed it back and it's been back to the same ever since.
Here's the thing, though: Let's say they kept it changed. They never changed it back. You might be disappointed, but I'm assuming you'd act like an adult, and either find a new flavour to get (maybe even one you'd like better!) or start getting some other ice cream at a different place, like TCBY or something.

It's like with Beast Hunters and me, right now! I'm not really interested in Beast Hunters, or Prime in general. So I just...don't really buy it. I buy Generations when it's good, and the rest of the time, I either don't buy anything, or I find a different toyline I'm interested in. (GI Joe is usually great for this. When TF is boring or bad, Joe is usually kickass.) I don't sit around bitching that Beast Hunters is terrible and they should "change it back" or anything. (Well, okay--I do sort of do that a little bit, but that's because this is a TF discussion board, and it keeps coming up.)
Mr. Anderson, welcome back! wrote:There were many stories I enjoyed and remember fondly that made the characters I like what they were. I had no desire to see them wrapped up and ended, no.
Why not, though?

I mean, okay. I like RID! RID ended in 2002. (Maybe 2003 for the toyline.) There's nothing new coming out of it. Occasionally, IDW or TFCC will put one of the characters in some comic books, but even then they're usually some weird mangling of them or they're in a different universe or whatever. (IDW's Skybyte has probably never been to Earth, and hasn't had to deal with Black Convoy stealing his thunder.) And I'm okay with that! I don't need the adventures of Fire Convoy and God Magnus to be indefinitely extended forever. They show up, they have an arc, and then they die or ride off into the sunset.

I mean, take a look at Back To The Future! (That's a franchise everybody here loves, right?) There were three whole movies out of that, and they were all pretty great. (Your enjoyment of Part 3 relies entirely on how much you like Westerns.) But the story *ends* at Part 3. Marty McFly is in 1985, where he belongs, and Doc and his family get to travel through time forever on a flying steampunk train. There *are* some further adventures in the universe, sure, like The Ride and the recent Telltale video game, but essentially, that franchise is done after the third movie. And that's fine! You don't need to indefinitely continue the life of Doc Brown or Marty McFly.

Sometimes, there just isn't anything else left to tell. The first Jurassic Park movie could have ended right there. In fact, JP3 largely implies that Alan Grant's life has mostly been a series of boring lectures and Being A Paleontologist, exactly as you'd expect it to be, until something else interesting happens to him--like getting pulled back to JP to rescue a kid. But you don't need to see what happened inbetween there, because it's not interesting. Just like, for example, Bruce Wayne's future life in the Nolan universe is probably pretty uninteresting!

I mean, sure, some things can get sequels and have the stories continue on, but it's got to make sense. Batman Beyond didn't have a Bruce Wayne in the future who had been fighting crime since 1992 or whatever--it had an old-ass Bruce Wayne who got fucking old, because that's what people do. They get old and they, eventually, die. And if the events of Batman Beyond hadn't happened, that's probably exactly what would happen to Bruce Wayne. He would get old and die, uneventfully. Rather than come up with some convoluted reason for why he's suddenly young again, or why time hasn't continued, or whatever, they just do what makes sense for reality--unlike comic books.

I mean, alright, there are obviously some superheroes who, arguably, COULD continue on indefinitely. A lot of more modern heroes have "functional immortality" on their power sets. In Dark Knight Returns, Superman is no visibly older than he is during Batman's heydey, even if Bruce is 60 or so. Wolverine can functionally outlive most of the X-Men without looking a day older. But! The world around them has to change, and evolve, and we have to acknowledge that time has actually passed, if we want the book to be taken seriously at all.

If I start a comic book today, and say, "This takes place in 2013," I don't think it's unreasonable to think that a year from now, the year in the comic will be 2014--unless the comic explicitly states otherwise. One of Willis' webcomics is set up in a way that one year of real time is basically one day of in-universe time, which makes it easy for him to explain why the characters aren't aging.

If Batman is established to have started Being Batman "five years ago" in 2013, it's not unreasonable to expect that in about five years, Batman will say he's been Batman for "about ten years." And on top of that, we, as readers, should expect that Batman should look and act about five years older than he did in the book we read five years ago.

TF has actually been better about all of this than most. While its books arguably don't happen quite in "real time," the books usually jump forward a year or so to compensate whenever the creative team changes. (All Hail Megatron probably takes place over the course of a month or so, given a conservative estimate, but took place over about 16 months real time. When Costa took over with the Ongoing, it was said to be about a year since AHM.) And the changes it makes usually tend to stick better than most comics. (We bitch, but the number of characters who have died and stayed dead is a much better estimate than Marvel or DC, who regularly kill and revive fourth-tier characters I've never even fucking heard of.
I get the feeling that Dom sees fans who don't like the major changes as crybabies, stamping their feet and saying "I want what I"ve always had!" And yeah, that would be childish, but I doubt that's the way it plays out, most of the time.
You don't know any other comics fans, do you?
Prowl wrote:The Vol. 2 trade is out, I neeeeeed to get it.
You should send somebody your single issues when you do...just sayin'...
BWprowl wrote:The internet having this many different words to describe nerdy folks is akin to the whole eskimos/ice situation, I would presume.
People spend so much time worrying about whether a figure is "mint" or not that they never stop to consider other flavours.
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Re: Comics are Awesome II

Post by andersonh1 »

If Marvel reboots, I think I'll be a bit disappointed, but since I'm only reading one book it won't be that big a deal. I have to say that despite having only read Daredevil for 24 issues, I quite enjoy the fact that the character has a long history behind him. I'm not sure I really want to read about a young Matt Murdock just learning the ropes and meeting all his villains for the "first" time. I like the sense of history that's there, even if I don't have a clue what most of it is!
Onslaught Six wrote:
Mr. Anderson, welcome back! wrote:There were many stories I enjoyed and remember fondly that made the characters I like what they were. I had no desire to see them wrapped up and ended, no.
Why not, though?
Because they were good, and the characters still had mileage in them as they were, at least from my point of view.

Just to pick one example of a character I really enjoyed reading, look at what's been done to Jay Garrick, the original Flash. He's one of my favorite characters. He was fairly unique in that he was old, still active as a superhero, and had decades of life behind him with experiences to draw stories from or that the character could use to help the younger superheroes, something the modern JSA was all about. All of that is gone now, replaced with a young Jay Garrick in Earth-2. To borrow an analogy from Shockwave, same name, different flavor. Everything I enjoyed about him is gone, and the stories featuring the character I liked have ended. Not in a satisfactory manner, but they've ended.

Yeah, I can go back and read the old stories, and I do from time to time. JSA had a good ten year run in the modern day, and there are a ton of stories from the 40s that I've never read. But I wasn't ready to say goodbye to the character. I didn't particularly want to see his story end. There was room for more, particularly since as a secondary character in DC's roster of characters, he hasn't been in every conceivable situation many times like some of the big name characters have.

The potential for quite a bit more good storytelling was there. Now it's gone. Going back to the Shockwave's ice cream analogy, it's like saying of someone's favorite ice cream flavor: "When are you going to stop enjoying that? Don't you think you should stop at some point?"

If I enjoy something, and it's still good, it's entirely reasonable to want to see it continue.
I mean, okay. I like RID! RID ended in 2002. (Maybe 2003 for the toyline.) There's nothing new coming out of it. Occasionally, IDW or TFCC will put one of the characters in some comic books, but even then they're usually some weird mangling of them or they're in a different universe or whatever. (IDW's Skybyte has probably never been to Earth, and hasn't had to deal with Black Convoy stealing his thunder.) And I'm okay with that! I don't need the adventures of Fire Convoy and God Magnus to be indefinitely extended forever. They show up, they have an arc, and then they die or ride off into the sunset.
I'm reminded of some of my comments to JT in another thread in that I have different expectations for different entertainment mediums. Comic books tell the stories of certain characters for decades, and at this point, short of a character failing or the company shutting down, I expect more stories next month about that character. With Transformers lines, at this point I'm used to them resetting every few years so having one end and another begin just feels like the natural order of things. Maybe if comics had done the same thing, I'd feel the same, but they haven't. There's always a new issue next month, another story about Superman or Spiderman, or whoever, and it's been that way for many decades. People expect that to continue.
I mean, take a look at Back To The Future! (That's a franchise everybody here loves, right?) There were three whole movies out of that, and they were all pretty great. (Your enjoyment of Part 3 relies entirely on how much you like Westerns.) But the story *ends* at Part 3. Marty McFly is in 1985, where he belongs, and Doc and his family get to travel through time forever on a flying steampunk train. There *are* some further adventures in the universe, sure, like The Ride and the recent Telltale video game, but essentially, that franchise is done after the third movie. And that's fine! You don't need to indefinitely continue the life of Doc Brown or Marty McFly.

Sometimes, there just isn't anything else left to tell. The first Jurassic Park movie could have ended right there. In fact, JP3 largely implies that Alan Grant's life has mostly been a series of boring lectures and Being A Paleontologist, exactly as you'd expect it to be, until something else interesting happens to him--like getting pulled back to JP to rescue a kid. But you don't need to see what happened inbetween there, because it's not interesting. Just like, for example, Bruce Wayne's future life in the Nolan universe is probably pretty uninteresting!

I mean, sure, some things can get sequels and have the stories continue on, but it's got to make sense. Batman Beyond didn't have a Bruce Wayne in the future who had been fighting crime since 1992 or whatever--it had an old-ass Bruce Wayne who got fucking old, because that's what people do. They get old and they, eventually, die. And if the events of Batman Beyond hadn't happened, that's probably exactly what would happen to Bruce Wayne. He would get old and die, uneventfully. Rather than come up with some convoluted reason for why he's suddenly young again, or why time hasn't continued, or whatever, they just do what makes sense for reality--unlike comic books.
I remember talking to one of my co-workers about The Dark Knight Rises, and telling him that one of the things I appreciated about the movie trilogy was indeed that it gave Bruce Wayne's story some closure. But I also said I wouldn't want to see the comics do that. And again, it's because I have different expectations of different media. Movies tell their stories, maybe get a sequel or three, and they're done. Television series run for a few years, and then they're done. Comics run for decades. The approach to storytelling is different.
You don't know any other comics fans, do you?
Admittedly, no I don't, not in everyday life. Just online. :lol:

Anyway, I don't go around constantly grumbling about DC or letting the fact that I don't enjoy their current books ruin my life. Honestly, the only time I think about it are when I hit the comic shop for my Transformers fix and see all those DC books I don't buy, or when it comes up in discussion here or elsewhere. And when the topic comes up for discussion in a thread like this, I discuss it. I make my feelings known. This would seem to be the appropriate time and place to do that, right? :)
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Re: Comics are Awesome II

Post by BWprowl »

Onslaught Six wrote:
Prowl wrote:The Vol. 2 trade is out, I neeeeeed to get it.
You should send somebody your single issues when you do...just sayin'...
Well, the only issue I have that would be collected there (I think) is #12. I didn't get into this series until about a year in, remember, so getting the trades until that point where I jumped on is how I'm reading those comics for the first time. I could, uh, totally send you issue #12 though (along with a shipping label or something if you can tell me how much my toys weigh).

You make a lot of great points in the above post and there was some other stuff of Dom's and Anderson's as well that I wanted to comment on but I need to get some work done so maybe later.
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Re: Comics are Awesome II

Post by Shockwave »

BWprowl wrote:
Onslaught Six wrote:
Prowl wrote:The Vol. 2 trade is out, I neeeeeed to get it.
You should send somebody your single issues when you do...just sayin'...
Well, the only issue I have that would be collected there (I think) is #12. I didn't get into this series until about a year in, remember, so getting the trades until that point where I jumped on is how I'm reading those comics for the first time. I could, uh, totally send you issue #12 though (along with a shipping label or something if you can tell me how much my toys weigh).

You make a lot of great points in the above post and there was some other stuff of Dom's and Anderson's as well that I wanted to comment on but I need to get some work done so maybe later.
I know, it's hard to get any replies in with that pesky day job thing. Oh crap, gotta go, my supervisor's coming.... :? :lol:
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Re: Comics are Awesome II

Post by 138 Scourge »

Okay, well, I'll talk some shit, then, if Prowl's busy.

I don't believe there will be a Marvel Reboot. I mean, I'm no Marvel insider or anything, but I'm not believing it until I see it. Now that said, here's why I'm opposed to the very idea...

Mainly, its because I've already been through that stuff. I don't want to go through rediscovering the entire Marvel Universe again. I don't want to reread the first Galactus story. Better creators have already done that. I don't want to see Peter Parker back in high school. Better creators have already done that. I don't want to see high school bully Flash Thompson in a comic and think "Fuck, join the army, get a drinking problem, and lose your fucking legs already, would you?" Been through all that, too. It sounds like all the aggravation of being in the middle of a game of God of War, but you lose your saved game and have to start over with Pong. That shits already been done, move the fuck on.

That's why I passed on the new Spidey movie. Seen the origin, don't care, this movie looks dumb anyway. Its why I'll pass on Man of Steel. Seen that origin, don't care, Zack Snyder hasn't made a movie I liked since Dawn of the Dead anyway.

And look, I gave DCs reboot a chance, I read three books that looked good. But Static was really bad, OMAC was cancelled, and Action gets to why I'm anti-reboot. Because if Grant Morrison, one of my favorite writers, can't get me excited for the new first meeting of Superman and Mettallo, then maybe that kind of thing's not for me.

Hey, if a reboot gets new readers in, good for them. But o was a new reader when I got into Marvel and DC in the eighties, and they didn't have to reboot shit to get me then. I'll be damnwd if I'll buy books that are retelling the same shit and hoping to get me now.
Dominic wrote: too many people likely would have enjoyed it as....well a house-elf gang-bang.
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Re: Comics are Awesome II

Post by andersonh1 »

138 Scourge wrote:Mainly, its because I've already been through that stuff. I don't want to go through rediscovering the entire Marvel Universe again. I don't want to reread the first Galactus story. Better creators have already done that.
I was thinking the same thing earlier today. How many times can we read a retelling of the same origin story, even with a slight twist on it here and there? And the bolded statment: agree completely.
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Re: Comics are Awesome II

Post by Onslaught Six »

BWprowl wrote:
Onslaught Six wrote:
Prowl wrote:The Vol. 2 trade is out, I neeeeeed to get it.
You should send somebody your single issues when you do...just sayin'...
Well, the only issue I have that would be collected there (I think) is #12. I didn't get into this series until about a year in, remember, so getting the trades until that point where I jumped on is how I'm reading those comics for the first time. I could, uh, totally send you issue #12 though (along with a shipping label or something if you can tell me how much my toys weigh).
I meant Dom.

(I have a job now. Expect your box by the end of May.)
andersonh1 wrote:
138 Scourge wrote:Mainly, its because I've already been through that stuff. I don't want to go through rediscovering the entire Marvel Universe again. I don't want to reread the first Galactus story. Better creators have already done that.
I was thinking the same thing earlier today. How many times can we read a retelling of the same origin story, even with a slight twist on it here and there? And the bolded statment: agree completely.
I am assuming that a Marvel reboot wouldn't be boneheaded enough to actually go through with that. (Very few of the new 52 titles are actually origin stories.) But, there is enough baggage at this point that many old runs of the books rightly should be jettisoned--and not so that they can be retold, either. (For example, you can lose most of Peter David's Hulk run. I loved the Banner-Hulk hybrid of the early 90s, but he hasn't been relevant in a long time.)
BWprowl wrote:The internet having this many different words to describe nerdy folks is akin to the whole eskimos/ice situation, I would presume.
People spend so much time worrying about whether a figure is "mint" or not that they never stop to consider other flavours.
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