Comics are Awesome II

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Sparky Prime
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Re: Comics are Awesome II

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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 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.
A reboot doesn't necessarily mean they have to retread old stories. Like O6 pointed out, very few of the New 52 titles actually redid origins, and plenty of the pre-reboot stories we have seen still counts. I like to use New 52 Green Lantern as a particularly good example of this because it didn't even skip a beat with the New 52 reboot. They literally picked up right where the War of the Green Lanterns storyline left off before the reboot.
That's why I passed on the new Spidey movie. Seen the origin, don't care, this movie looks dumb anyway.
I'd have to say I wasn't as interested in it, at first, because it rehashed the origin story all over again as well, but that's not the only reason they rehash the origin in that film. The origin of Spidey in that film actually deals with a larger plot element, so it makes sense they would need to revisit the origin anyway. And it was actually a pretty good movie. Better than the first Raimi film IMO. I'd say you're actually missing out for skipping it just because it recovers the origin.
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.
Like the reboot Spidey film, the impression I get is that there is going to be more to the origin story than simply for the sake of rehashing the origin story. And I've seen a lot of positive buzz about the film.

And another point, the Ultimate Universe and Marvel Adventures titles were originally conceived in place of what a company wide reboot would do. Refresh, reintroduce and modernize characters in order to bring in new readers. Course those titles pretty much took on a life of their own once they got under way...
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Re: Comics are Awesome II

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I know, it's hard to get any replies in with that pesky day job thing. Oh crap, gotta go, my supervisor's coming....
I used to have a work ethic. I swear to god, I used to be professional when I was in a work place.

Right now, I have a client standing near my desk, and I am pretending to type out a memo. Oh my god....what have I become?

I don't want to reread the first Galactus story. Better creators have already done that.
You better be talking about Busiek and Ross. (Because, ya know, Lee fucking sucked then and he sucks now.)

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?"
Or, it could be "Flash, go in a completely different direction that does not end with being defined by a poorly planned story that is tied to a specific moment in history..."

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.
The problem is with you.

A reboot doesn't necessarily mean they have to retread old stories.
Exactly. Superman and Wonder Woman streamlined in 1986.

Can anybody tell me that "Spider-Man" would not be a much better property over-all if the last 25 or so years were struck from the record?

And another point, the Ultimate Universe and Marvel Adventures titles were originally conceived in place of what a company wide reboot would do. Refresh, reintroduce and modernize characters in order to bring in new readers. Course those titles pretty much took on a life of their own once they got under way...
"Ultimate" has picked up so much baggage over the last 10+ years that it needed a big event to to give it a new jumping on point. And, if 616 ends up being more movie like, "Ultimate" will arguably be redundant. "Marvel Adventures" are so simplified that they are barely worth reading.


Marvel needs a significant reboot more than it needs to appease long-term fans.
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Re: Comics are Awesome II

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I asked the owner of my comic shop yesterday and he seemed %100 sure that it was not going to be a reboot but a jumping on point for new readers and that the issues would restart their numbers from number one. So it sounds like they're doing a "new 52 Marvel".

Anyway...

Masters of the Universe: Volume II, #1: The cover of this issue shows a female version of Hordak fighting the Masters. I was a little dubious about what this would mean in context. The issue starts off with Man At Arms, Adam and Teela heading to a funeral. It's apparently the Funeral for the Sorceress of Greyskull. Teela goes on about hating mages and being glad she's dead, King Randor gives a long speech, and during all of this, the Horde opens several portals from Etheria to Eternia and attacks. We see the "female Hordak" talking to actual Hordak with him warning her to watch for a warrior and a particular energy signature, which obviously turns out to be Adam changing to He-Man. the final confrontation with She-Hordak and He-Man has Teela telling him to kill her and the She-Hordak telling her that they both think alike and could have been friends in another univers. She Hordak is then seen without her helmet and revealed to be Adora, Adam's sister. It'll be interesting to see where this goes. Once again we have good guys being bad guys and not knowing it'll be interesting to see how the Masters bring Adora around to being the hero that we all know is within her.
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Re: Comics are Awesome II

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Giffen's "Masters of the Universe" is tempting. But, I just cannot bring myself to buy in on that comic, given how badly the franchise as a whole has burned me over the last decade or so.

I asked the owner of my comic shop yesterday and he seemed %100 sure that it was not going to be a reboot but a jumping on point for new readers and that the issues would restart their numbers from number one. So it sounds like they're doing a "new 52 Marvel".
Uh, "New 52 Marvel" would be a reboot.

In any case, if Marvel simply renumbers everything less than a year after "Marvel NOW" (and after so much build-up), I will be very annoyed.
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Re: Comics are Awesome II

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The renumbering is going to happen, that much was confirmed (at least by my comic shop owner, who seems to know what he is talking about). It was also mentioned that it would not be a reboot because previous 616 stories would still count.

Giffen is definitely doing something different which is good. MOTU tends to be one of those "story based" franchises that more or less has a static core story and as such does not leave much room for other naration. Giffen is definitely staying true to it while shaking up the status quo and exploring some interesting ideas as well. Definitely worth a look if you can swing it.
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Re: Comics are Awesome II

Post by BWprowl »

Dominic wrote:But, carrying on about how the bad movie is ruining what came before is another. If you are the type (like me) who tends to link one part of a series to another, then you can simply move on. (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.)
See, this is just silly. Those comics are by completely different writers with, I presume, a whole other set of editors behind them. That era’s Spider-Man comics and today’s Spider-Man comics are linked by the fact that they have Spider-Man on the cover and little else, it’d be like expecting a football team today to play horribly because the version of the team from twenty years ago (with completely different players and coaching staff) was terrible.

Along this line, I’m currently reading and loving Scarlet Spider, a series starring Kaine. Kaine! One of THE worst characters to come out of the Clone Saga, and endemic of everything wrong with characters created in the 90’s. But Yost takes the few interesting things from Kaine’s past that he can make work for his story (primarily the thing about how he used to be a supervillain) and just kind of disregards all the other stupid convoluted bullshit. And the result is a great book.

But yeah, it only dawned on me this morning that my favorite thing on the shelf stars Kaine. I wonder if this is what Scourge went through when he realized he was reading and enjoying Venom and Punisher books.
Why the hell should I piss away time on comics that are not really going anywhere? Why should I waste time reading a comic that is trying to change so little that it is actively trying to pretend that crudely illustrated and written junk from 30 or more decades ago is still relevant? Hell, even when the old content is good, why should I bother with a comic that is trying to piggy-back on work that was done so long ago rather than doing something new and (just maybe) better?

I have been reading comics for over a quarter century. I would be okay reading them for at least that long again. But, I will be damned if I want to be reading the same comics at that point that I am reading now.

I am not reading for the characters. I am not reading comics because I love the universe or somesuch. I am reading comics because I like comics. Maybe if JSA had actually stuck to some kind of legitimately progressing story (even since the 90s), I would be more upset to see it go. (Seriously, how many times were Garrick, Scott and some of the others de-aged?) Maybe if the guys who were fighting crime the 1940s actually aged, died and were replaced, seeing the book end would matter. But, that is not what JSA has been, ever.
This bit confuses me and almost seems hypocritical to a degree. You say you want to read comics that are ‘going somewhere’, but what do you mean by that? Do you just want changes in the status quo to stick? Because that sort of thing hardly seems important, in my eyes. Honestly, wording it that way makes it sound like you just wanna see ‘stuff happen’. I know you read for ideas, and here you’re claiming that you do not read for characters or universes, but when you say you want to see ‘progression’ and ‘changes sticking’ it sounds like you’re saying you want to invest in watching the progression and development of fictitious characters in a fictitious universe, which is…just as inconsequential as said fictitious characters not making any progress in a universe that never changes. It’s all fiction in the end anyway, and a writer can conceivably make just as good a point or bring just as interesting an idea to the table with a character who was recently rebooted to an earlier spec as one who’s been through lots of Big Changes in the past few years of events. Why should the mounting pretend history driving a storybook world matter, especially to a reader like you?

Honestly, this whole point is kind of tough for me to articulate, but you’re saying you want comics that ‘will matter’ and so forth, but they’re all disposable fiction in the end, so none of them really ‘matter’, so are you basically just wanting a story that ‘lasts longer’ and keeps its elements relevant to its own storytelling for longer? Because that’s actually close to what Anderson, as well as those ‘whiny fans’ we’ve discussed, want to see in their comics, and a reboot would be the opposite of that.
I can still respect Starlin's work, (which tended to be stories with a linear structure), without pretending that something published when I was 4 years old is still relevant to modern Marvel.
I don’t see why a story needs to be seen as ‘relevant’ to impact your enjoyment or impression of it. As long as the story works in and of itself, its canonicity in current context should be irrelevant. Look at Dreamwave’s G1-based TF comics: Not only is that entire line dead, buried, and completely non-relevant to TF stories today, a lot of it was pretty mediocre or just plain awful. But I still really like War Within! It’s one of the last decent TF stories Furman turned in for a while and it has absolutely magnificent art. It’s about as non-canon as possible these days (with stuff like Optimus’s pre-Prime form being ‘Optronix’ and the Oracle Chamber and weird stuff) but it’s still a solid story with some decent points about growing into leadership and the extent of acceptable losses and so forth. Just because it’s not relatable to modern content, just because it doesn’t ‘matter’ to the current canon, doesn’t diminish the story, it can stand on its own.
Onslaught Six wrote: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.
Also worth noting that when they rebooted Spider-Man, they didn’t have to have some stupid thing at the beginning of Amazing Spider-Man showing the universe exploding and being reformed or whatever to explain why the rebooted film existed in the first place. They understood that viewers could grasp that the previous iteration of the story was over, finished, and this other one was starting anew with its own take on things. Why the hell can’t comics just do this?

If all the comics DC was publishing two years ago had actually reached denouements and climaxed and resolved and actually ended and gotten a proper send-off, and THEN they’d rolled out the New 52, I guarantee you there would have been less bitching. There would still be some bitching, because these are comic fans we’re talking about here, but there would have been less of it.
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.
As a side-note on this, this is actually something I’m worried about regarding the Marvel Cinematic Universe or whatever it’s called. Sure, you’ve got this big, awesome, cohesive, linked-together movie-verse now, but as actors age out and move on from roles and new content gets piled on it’s going to become more of an unmanageable clusterfuck of revisions and reworkings. I truly think what they’ve pulled off here is impressive, but they should plan to just end the whole shebang with like Avengers 3 if they want to leave it standing with any degree of integrity.
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.
I can be more apprehensive about this sort of thing, depending. You give Back to the Future as an example below, that’s one of my all-time favorite sets of movies. I live in perpetual fear of it getting a horrible remake sometime in my lifetime. Granted, I know that the original BttF films would still be there, and I could still easily go back and enjoy them, I think it’s more a case of not wanting to see the good name of a film series I enjoy so much tarnished. I dunno, it’s weird. (Of course, I similarly tease a friend of mine who loves Jurassic Park by warning him that some douchebags WILL remake JP within our lifetime, so)
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.

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.)
This is such a good point! Why *don’t* Marvel and DC do this? Friggin’ IDW can do it for TF with the Movie comics (and they got some pretty good comics out of it!), but the Big Two can’t have ongoing titles based on the most successful iterations of their flagship properties? It’s especially weird, since DC puts out comics based on their video games or stupid daytime dramas (not to mention a lot of their cartoons), but Dark Knight comics are apparently too hard to do? What gives?
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.)
I think you and I try to make this point every time this discussion comes up. More people need to learn to enjoy things in a vacuum, context often only leads to annoyance with the technicalities of it all.
In all seriousness, read the new Scarlet Spider. It almost redeems that entire thing.
Seconded! This thing makes me want a Scarlet Spider movie, or cartoon series. Kaine exemplifies the Spider-Man core concept of ‘Guy tries his best to a be a super hero despite life shitting all over him’ better than Spider-Man himself ever has. This book *works*.
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.
Honestly, this example doesn’t really jibe with me, since while the ice cream flavor is gone and you can never taste it again since food only works once (most of the time), comics that get cancelled or overwritten are still *there* and you can still go back and read and experience them whenever you want.
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.)
I was largely dissatisfied with TFPrime too, but I didn’t even want them to ‘change it back’, I just wanted them to ‘change it to something else that I might like better’. Then they did, and we got Beast Hunters, and these toys (the Predacons at least) are great. The show I’m still ambivalent about, but it’s ending within like three months, and then I can get excited to be disappointed by whatever Hasbro does afterwards.
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 continue to maintain that the next Batman film franchise should be a live-action Batman Beyond, with Kevin Conroy playing old Bruce.
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?
Some of these guys should really check out /co/ sometime, just to put things in perspective.
andersonh1 wrote: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!
This is an interesting point, in that you enjoy the ‘sense’ of history, despite not knowing what a lot of it is. That sort of thing, that ‘sense of history’ can be conveyed in a story without the story needing to physically have decades of previous material told about it. Watchmen is a fantastic example of this, one of the main concepts of that book was that there were decades of stories with full ‘Golden Age’ and ‘Silver Age’ eras passing as the characters lived in them, and we were just now coming in at the end of the story.
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.
Yeah, this is just a foreign viewpoint to me. Maybe I just enjoy endings and resolution too much, but I would never want to see something continue on that long, indefinitely. Hell, a large part of why I just dropped DC during Brightest Day was because I was fed up with Geoff Johns’s complete inability to Finish The Fucking Story (seriously, the guy writes all this setup for big huge events that never actually resolve, they just dovetail into the setup for the NEXT big huge event). I guess your attention span is just stronger than mine, because I could never bring myself to keep following something to that degree. I need an arc, and I need it to complete itself eventually.
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?"
Honestly, I get burnt out on flavors, and foods, and stories, all the time. Really, if you have the same thing over and over for any extended period of time, it only makes sense that you’d get sick of it eventually. Stories that end before you get sick of them are the ones that leave the best impression.
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.
One thing though, is that for people like me, that’s something I *hate* about comics, and would love to see it change.
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? :)
Honestly, I don’t mean to lump you in with the ‘whiny’ fans we’ve mentioned before, since like you said, you’re downright civil in how you regard these things (and really can’t fault you for your feelings and expressing them over how badly the New 52 is doing, feeling vindicated is A-OK in that sort of situation!). It’s just that your viewpoints on ongoings and continuity and endings or not are so fundamentally different from how I feel about storytelling in comics that I can’t resist digging into that preference and rooting around in discussion with you to get a little more insight into the ‘why’. And you honestly put your points forward well. I still can’t really see wanting things the way you want things, myself, but you put your preferences forward in a way that makes them sound rational, at least.


COMPLETELY DIFFERENT THING THAT I THOUGHT WAS MILDLY INTERESTING AND WORTH MENTIONING/TALKING ABOUT: So I didn't mention it before, but the latest issue of Scarlet Spider has a cover homaging the #1 cover of 'Superior Spider-Man', which I think is probably the fastest turnaround time for an 'homage' cover. Furthermore, it's actually drawn by Stegman, the guy who drew the original cover, and he's signed it crediting *himself* for the original. Seriously, there's his 'Stegman' signature, with 'after Stegman' written below it. I find this more amusing than I probably should.
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Sparky Prime
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Re: Comics are Awesome II

Post by Sparky Prime »

Dominic wrote:"Ultimate" has picked up so much baggage over the last 10+ years that it needed a big event to to give it a new jumping on point.
Ultimatum wasn't about creating a new jumping on point. I think it was more about distinguishing the Ultimate Universe from the 616 universe as Marvel tried to redefine what the Ultimate Universe was. It's no longer a universe about modernizing characters from the 616 universe. It has become a universe with it's own unique qualities, like characters saying (more or less) dead starting with what Ultimatum did.
And, if 616 ends up being more movie like, "Ultimate" will arguably be redundant.
When the Ultimate Universe first began perhaps, but as I pointed out above, it has changed significantly since it was first created. With characters like Peter Parker having been killed off, and new characters like Miles Morales having been introduced. It's become a very different universe compared to the 616 universe.
"Marvel Adventures" are so simplified that they are barely worth reading.
I've only ever read a few issues of Spider-Man. Marvel Adventures you do have to keep in mind is aimed for a much younger audience, which is why it is simplified, but I didn't find it so simplified that it was 'barely worth reading'.
Marvel needs a significant reboot more than it needs to appease long-term fans.
I'll believe Marvel would do a significant reboot when I see it. They've long held onto the idea that they don't need to do such an event event in order to keep their storylines going.
BWprowl wrote:Also worth noting that when they rebooted Spider-Man, they didn’t have to have some stupid thing at the beginning of Amazing Spider-Man showing the universe exploding and being reformed or whatever to explain why the rebooted film existed in the first place. They understood that viewers could grasp that the previous iteration of the story was over, finished, and this other one was starting anew with its own take on things. Why the hell can’t comics just do this?
Because when the comics do an event like that, they are making changes to the existing universe in order to refresh and to keep those stories going, rather than ending that storyline and starting over again in a brand new fictional setting. And the comics sometimes do create separate fictional settings in order to do something different than their main universe. The aforementioned Ultimate Universe Marvel created for example. Or the various Elseworld stories DC has made.
Last edited by Sparky Prime on Fri Apr 26, 2013 4:31 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Comics are Awesome II

Post by Dominic »

The renumbering is going to happen, that much was confirmed (at least by my comic shop owner, who seems to know what he is talking about). It was also mentioned that it would not be a reboot because previous 616 stories would still count.
The guy at my shop said that it was going to be a "Flashpoint" style reboot, with changed back-stories and such. He cited a source, though I forget what that source was. We are going to find out by June.
See, this is just silly. Those comics are by completely different writers with, I presume, a whole other set of editors behind them. That era’s Spider-Man comics and today’s Spider-Man comics are linked by the fact that they have Spider-Man on the cover and little else, it’d be like expecting a football team today to play horribly because the version of the team from twenty years ago (with completely different players and coaching staff) was terrible.
Marvel brands their 616 books as "counting" relative to each other. In that sense, 616 Spider-Man cannot be dis-associated from "the Clone Saga". I can read pre-Clone "Spider-Man" comics, but have a very hard time reading anything that has come out since. It probably does not help that so many of the comics since have been bad as well.

bit confuses me and almost seems hypocritical to a degree. You say you want to read comics that are ‘going somewhere’, but what do you mean by that?
As much as I read for ideas, I accept that comics are event driven. If the publishers are going to market their product as being "super big and important", then it had damned well better stick. This goes double for comics that are more event-driven than idea-driven.

don’t see why a story needs to be seen as ‘relevant’ to impact your enjoyment or impression of it. As long as the story works in and of itself, its canonicity in current context should be irrelevant.
I generally agree with this. Look at my favourite "Superman" comics, "All Star Superman" and "Red Son". Neither is relevant to anything being published today. But, they are damned good comics.

The thing is that an ongoing comic can do things that a self-contained comic cannot. If writers and editors would let changes stick, then even comics might actually live up to the hype. "Crisis on Infinite Earths", while irrelevant to current DC, was an event comic that delivered on the hype and had a significant long-term impact.

They understood that viewers could grasp that the previous iteration of the story was over, finished, and this other one was starting anew with its own take on things. Why the hell can’t comics just do this?
Because comic book fans cannot do that. Remember, comic fans in the 50s (when they were much more fragmented and there was no internet) were pushing for DC to make their then-modern comics somewhat consistent with their old comics. ("Where is the original Flash? Where is *my* Flash?")

Whenever a property changes hands, comic fans are the ones who want the relaunch to incorporate what came before. ("Star Trek" fans are very similar. How many shows have relaunches and spin-offs decades apart and still have to monitor for consistency?)
As a side-note on this, this is actually something I’m worried about regarding the Marvel Cinematic Universe or whatever it’s called. Sure, you’ve got this big, awesome, cohesive, linked-together movie-verse now, but as actors age out and move on from roles and new content gets piled on it’s going to become more of an unmanageable clusterfuck of revisions and reworkings. I truly think what they’ve pulled off here is impressive, but they should plan to just end the whole shebang with like Avengers 3 if they want to leave it standing with any degree of integrity.
I have no idea what Marvel will do about this. I would imagine that they have thought about it. But, I have no idea what they plan to do about it.

I would like to see them actually let things end. Imagine if Marvel allowed the characters to age over time. Imagine if the movies replaced characters as the actors aged out. Imagine if those changes were reflected in the comics. If Robert Downey Junior retires, so does Tony Stark. He has to be replaced, on screen and on the page.

Of course, it is more likely that Marvel will simply do a "Crisis" style reboot every decade or so.
Some of these guys should really check out /co/ sometime, just to put things in perspective.
Because knowing about the larger fandom has made me so happy, right?

Hell, a large part of why I just dropped DC during Brightest Day was because I was fed up with Geoff Johns’s complete inability to Finish The Fucking Story (seriously, the guy writes all this setup for big huge events that never actually resolve, they just dovetail into the setup for the NEXT big huge event).
In marketing terms, this makes perfect sense. They want to get and keep readers. The "Crisis Trilogy" was essentially a rolling event that ran from '04 to '08. The problem is that readers eventually recognize the trick. And, it only takes so many bad comics to deter readers from picking up more comics.
Taking it from the original concept of just a modernized interpretation of characters, to a world where characters die and stay dead (mostly) and things change in big ways - and not necessarily for the better.
Were I not trying to cut back on comics, the "Ultimate" line would definitely be on my pull-list simply because the changes (mostly) stick.


Dom
-notes that the most predicatable changes are often changing things back.....
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Shockwave
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Re: Comics are Awesome II

Post by Shockwave »

BWprowl wrote:
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.
Honestly, this example doesn’t really jibe with me, since while the ice cream flavor is gone and you can never taste it again since food only works once (most of the time), comics that get cancelled or overwritten are still *there* and you can still go back and read and experience them whenever you want.
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?"
Honestly, I get burnt out on flavors, and foods, and stories, all the time. Really, if you have the same thing over and over for any extended period of time, it only makes sense that you’d get sick of it eventually. Stories that end before you get sick of them are the ones that leave the best impression.
Well they actually brought back the original flavor so I can actually still enjoy my favorite ice cream, but putting aside the differences between food and comics, the analogy of actually trying the new thing and then hating vs just hating it on fact of being different and not even giving it a chance is still a valid one. And I get getting burnt out on eating the same thing every day but let's face it, comics don't come out every day. New issues of a single title comes out once a month. If I only eat my favorite ice cream once a month I'm probably not going to get burnt out on it (unless I get stuck in a rut but that's another issue entirely). Either way, my main concept was trying to illustrate that at least Anderson gave the new 52 a chance before saying arbitrarily that it sucks. In other words, he thinks it sucks because it actually sucks not it sucks because it's different.
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Re: Comics are Awesome II

Post by Onslaught Six »

Dom wrote:Or, it could be "Flash, go in a completely different direction that does not end with being defined by a poorly planned story that is tied to a specific moment in history..."
The only reason Scourge would want Flash Thompson to go through all that again is to give him an excuse to be Venom in a theoretical new continuity. This is because the new Venom book is fucking awesome.
"Marvel Adventures" are so simplified that they are barely worth reading.
I still say you undercut this stuff. Go read Clevinger's Infinity Gauntlet!
Prowl wrote:Honestly, this whole point is kind of tough for me to articulate, but you’re saying you want comics that ‘will matter’ and so forth, but they’re all disposable fiction in the end, so none of them really ‘matter’, so are you basically just wanting a story that ‘lasts longer’ and keeps its elements relevant to its own storytelling for longer? Because that’s actually close to what Anderson, as well as those ‘whiny fans’ we’ve discussed, want to see in their comics, and a reboot would be the opposite of that.
Nah, it's not that. Whiny fans are people who bitch because Venom isn't Eddie Brock anymore--people who outright refuse to acknowledge the book, and want Flash Thompson to be killed off and for Eddie Brock to resume being Venom, and go back to mid-90s spec of eating brains and shit. Those are the kind of fans Dom is talking about.

Along the same wavelength, these are the same kind of fans who demand things that happened For Fucking Ever Ago stay in the canon, even if they no longer make any sense. Armour Wars is a great example. For when it was published, sure, it was relevant, but if you read it now and try to pretend that it's in any way relevant to a modern Iron Man comic, it's just...a big fucking incongruency.
I don’t see why a story needs to be seen as ‘relevant’ to impact your enjoyment or impression of it. As long as the story works in and of itself, its canonicity in current context should be irrelevant. Look at Dreamwave’s G1-based TF comics: Not only is that entire line dead, buried, and completely non-relevant to TF stories today, a lot of it was pretty mediocre or just plain awful. But I still really like War Within! It’s one of the last decent TF stories Furman turned in for a while and it has absolutely magnificent art. It’s about as non-canon as possible these days (with stuff like Optimus’s pre-Prime form being ‘Optronix’ and the Oracle Chamber and weird stuff) but it’s still a solid story with some decent points about growing into leadership and the extent of acceptable losses and so forth. Just because it’s not relatable to modern content, just because it doesn’t ‘matter’ to the current canon, doesn’t diminish the story, it can stand on its own.
I wrote some other stuff but this actually is a better response than I could have ever written!

See, right there in your thing, you acknowledge that War Within "didn't happen." That's the part that comic fans get their panties in a twist over. For some reason, they can't wrap their heads around just straight up "losing" that part of the characters' histories. Right now, I would be perfectly fine if Marvel up and said, "Smart Banner-Hulk never happened," because his context isn't really relevant anymore.
As a side-note on this, this is actually something I’m worried about regarding the Marvel Cinematic Universe or whatever it’s called. Sure, you’ve got this big, awesome, cohesive, linked-together movie-verse now, but as actors age out and move on from roles and new content gets piled on it’s going to become more of an unmanageable clusterfuck of revisions and reworkings. I truly think what they’ve pulled off here is impressive, but they should plan to just end the whole shebang with like Avengers 3 if they want to leave it standing with any degree of integrity.
I am sure that's already the plan. (RDJ is already expressing thoughts about leaving the franchises. He's going to be 50 in a few years. Depending on how much cocaine he did in the 90s, that either means he's going to die soon or live to be 100.)

We already know they aren't shy about recasting roles (Banner is the most noticable example) but I doubt they would actually turn that around and try to "youngify" the characters, unless they were going to actually make any newer films with younger actors and still have time progress normally, the way comics do. (I have seen a detailed timeline that basically infers most of the Marvel cinematic universe is still taking place ~2008, so they still have a few years to catch up to the real world.)
I can be more apprehensive about this sort of thing, depending. You give Back to the Future as an example below, that’s one of my all-time favorite sets of movies. I live in perpetual fear of it getting a horrible remake sometime in my lifetime. Granted, I know that the original BttF films would still be there, and I could still easily go back and enjoy them, I think it’s more a case of not wanting to see the good name of a film series I enjoy so much tarnished. I dunno, it’s weird. (Of course, I similarly tease a friend of mine who loves Jurassic Park by warning him that some douchebags WILL remake JP within our lifetime, so)
I live in that fear too! But the thing is, a BTTF or Jurassic Park remake usually isn't going to pretend that the original still took place. (On the other hand, I've heard rumours that that's exactly what the Evil Dead remake is doing.) We might get a new adventure for Marty McFly, but he'll be a new young guy who travels from 2015 to 1985.

(As much as I'm afraid of that idea, part of me wants to see it.)
This is such a good point! Why *don’t* Marvel and DC do this? Friggin’ IDW can do it for TF with the Movie comics (and they got some pretty good comics out of it!), but the Big Two can’t have ongoing titles based on the most successful iterations of their flagship properties? It’s especially weird, since DC puts out comics based on their video games or stupid daytime dramas (not to mention a lot of their cartoons), but Dark Knight comics are apparently too hard to do? What gives?
Right?

The only reason I can think of for not doing it is out of some weird corporate fear of treading on water for the future movies. (Imagine that the Iron Man Movie Comic threw in The Mandarin shortly after the first movie. That'd cause a lot of problems for someone right now.) Of course, the TF Movie comics had their own fair share of weird continuity problems too, but anybody reading those understood what they were getting into.
That sort of thing, that ‘sense of history’ can be conveyed in a story without the story needing to physically have decades of previous material told about it. Watchmen is a fantastic example of this, one of the main concepts of that book was that there were decades of stories with full ‘Golden Age’ and ‘Silver Age’ eras passing as the characters lived in them, and we were just now coming in at the end of the story.
Prowl exemplifies how any huge reboot should be done by bringing up the best example of in-media-res in comics history. (Sandman is the second best, and Atomic Robo is the third.)
Yeah, this is just a foreign viewpoint to me. Maybe I just enjoy endings and resolution too much, but I would never want to see something continue on that long, indefinitely. Hell, a large part of why I just dropped DC during Brightest Day was because I was fed up with Geoff Johns’s complete inability to Finish The Fucking Story (seriously, the guy writes all this setup for big huge events that never actually resolve, they just dovetail into the setup for the NEXT big huge event). I guess your attention span is just stronger than mine, because I could never bring myself to keep following something to that degree. I need an arc, and I need it to complete itself eventually.
I have the entire Rurouni Kenshin manga. I started reading it because I loved the anime, and the third arc for the anime is all filler, and then it got cancelled before they adapted the third arc of the manga. The part nobody ever tells you, though, is that the third arc of the manga isn't any fucking better. Both the manga and the anime should have ended after the second arc--you can do so and lose pretty much nothing. (The third arc in the manga is full of weird-looking Western-style guys who are unashamedly ripped off from X-Men character designs, all to give Kenshin some guy to fight so we can explore his backstory from Before The Manga Started.)
Stories that end before you get sick of them are the ones that leave the best impression.
I am convinced that the only reason Firefly has such a large fanbase is only because it was cancelled after like thirteen episodes. Other shows from that time period, like the Battlestar Galactica reboot, got like five or six seasons, and had enough time to stop being good and start being shitty. (By others' accounts, not mine. The hour-long TV drama format doesn't work for me.)
COMPLETELY DIFFERENT THING THAT I THOUGHT WAS MILDLY INTERESTING AND WORTH MENTIONING/TALKING ABOUT: So I didn't mention it before, but the latest issue of Scarlet Spider has a cover homaging the #1 cover of 'Superior Spider-Man', which I think is probably the fastest turnaround time for an 'homage' cover. Furthermore, it's actually drawn by Stegman, the guy who drew the original cover, and he's signed it crediting *himself* for the original. Seriously, there's his 'Stegman' signature, with 'after Stegman' written below it. I find this more amusing than I probably should.
That's...hilarious, why would he even need to credit himself! It'd be like if Devin Townsend acknowledged every time he ripped one of his own lyrics off. (Which is all the time.)
ShockTrek wrote:New issues of a single title comes out once a month. If I only eat my favorite ice cream once a month I'm probably not going to get burnt out on it (unless I get stuck in a rut but that's another issue entirely).
Actually, that makes it easier to hate things. I dropped Animal Man because, for like the fifth month in a row, they were looking for Swamp Thing. This was the book's not-so-subtle way of telling me that I also should be reading Swamp Thing if I wanted to "get the full story." So I bought that month's issue of Swamp Thing, was completely fucking confused, and dropped both. (John Constantine also showed up at the end of that month's issue of Animal Man, cluing me in that I should also be reading Justice League Dark. Fuck you, DC.)
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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