O6 wrote:Their numbers are about average for IDW's TF, though.
I read that as meaning we have elite tastes.
I was just talking about this with a friend of mine the other night, and the real problem is that there's a disconnect between the media portrayals (movies) and the comics themselves. If you see Iron Man and you absolutely love Tony Stark in those...well, good fucking luck finding an Iron Man comic where he's actually written like that guy. (Fraction's run is as close as you're gonna get, and even that goes off the rails.)
If Marvel had a "movieverse" series of books, I'm sure those might actually be through the roof.
I think they tried that, but forgot to get anybody who could write.
My favourite part of that setup is how a large portion of, well, everybody is so willing to be antagonistic to pretty much any group, because they just want to label someone "the enemy" and beat the tar out of them...a lot like America. (Look at all the racist crap that spewed forth after the Boston bombings.)
Quoted for truth.
Dom wrote:Those examples of Lee's writing are everything wrong with comics. After reading that, I really want to curb-stomp somebody.
You are a bigot, an intolerant fanboy in this matter. Aside from the abuse of exclamation points, and let's face it, that was just the STYLE! OF! THE! TIME!, there's nothing wrong with how The Hulk is written there
I agree that "New Nation" should have been a freebie, or at most a dollar book. But, the set-up in the "Secret Invasion" book was good. Bendis can set and write a scene. I am not sure why you think that the early issues of "Dark Avengers" make hash of the scenes with the Cabal.
Norman clearly shows he's not up to the task of backing up his claims, he can't be everywhere at once, he's not particularly good at managing his situations much less policing his threats, he personally vouches for Doom's safety only to immediately let the guy get his ass handed to him for 2 more issues. The Cabal isn't some street lowlifes meeting under a warlord, this is seriously world-shifting stuff and Normie's clearly not up to the task, yet they still act like he is for no apparent reason.
Would you rather have 20 odd pages of the characters punching each other? We have read that scene how many times over the years? It has been done. Nobody cares at this point.
It'd be nice to have them do SOMETHING, a common goal, a training exercise, flashbacks to what each member is capable of, even an outline of what they are going to be doing together and how they should be doing it. Instead it's "let's stand around and fill a whole page with word balloons before walking into the next panel to fill it up with word balloons from a slightly different angle."
"Dark Avengers" was the first ongoing Marvel book that I had read in *years*. I knew next to nothing about any of the characters save for Osborn (who, as far as I was concerned should have been dead). I had some familiarity with "Secret Invasion".....and not much else.
I had no trouble following "Dark Avengers" and could understand what was going on. I knew enough to assume that the important stuff would be covered before the end of the series.
Wait, you had some familiarity with Secret Invasion and don't count that as foundation?!?
You are way too forgiving to assume important stuff like what drives characters will be covered later, that is some twisted thinking via a lifetime of comic-book reading.
You also do not need all of the back-story. The real Avengers are irrelevant. Ditto for Tony Stark. Osborn is in charge, which is all you need to know and more than obvious from reading the comics.
I didn't know how much I needed though, some of it WAS needed for the foundation here, especially with so little character development in issues 1-4. So unless I already know what I need to know to cherry-pick exactly what I need to know to set this up, how else am I supposed to get most of that intel? Shit, I didn't even spend all that time reading their full listings, just the content that looked close to the timeline I was jumping into. How can you not see that's a problem???
There is a question of the "ewwww Transformers" stigma to deal with here.
I read that as meaning we have elite tastes.
O6 wrote:No there isn't! Because we are perpetually in the "middle" of Tony Stark's life right now. Literally everything that has happened up to this point is still in the "middle," and very little of it has been retconned out or jettisoned, so it's just this big bulky weight of bullshit. (Three words: Teenage Tony Stark.)
Not false, there isn't a "Dark Knight Returns" Iron Man story (nor a shitty sequel to that which undercuts the whole fucking first series). As for teenage Tony Stark, worst comic book ever, a smart kid goes to school and does nothing interesting, I bet that'd be a hard sell. Now if you gave him a super lab where he invents shit that requires adventures to deal with...
Sparky wrote:Which is why DC has done the occasional "Crisis" story to refresh their universe so they can keep going with it. And Marvel has their own way of doing that.
Up until the bronze age, there wasn't a solid continuity in which to break, and a "universe of characters" didn't exist, so power-reboots were easy. The radio show gave him a ton of powers, many of which we see as foundational to the character, yet some were dumped easily enough well before Crisis on Infinite Earths came about. Continuity is both a blessing and a burden in that way.
Shock wrote:Then mabye they should take the Star Trek route. Captain Kirk died definitively in Generations. They didn't feel the need to bring him back in any sort of context that counted (Shatner's novels are not canon). And the franchise moved on without him.
I loved "The Return", I don't care what Generations says, there's a black Defiant-class starship named "Enterprise" in my interpretation of the Trek canon, Shatner knows better than almost any author how to put together framework that is exciting Trek content.
Dom wrote: People get attached to characters and don't want to see them killed off.
Yeah, those fans need to grow the fuck up.
And if they're not grown-ups?
Besides, as decompressed as comic books are, your lifetime will only have you read about 4 years of those comics characters' lives anyway. You will live to a ripe old age and die in your 90s before Iron Man has to get an iron prostate exam, at best you'll see Tony talk to his doctor about thinking about getting one in "another 10 years or so, when you're at that age".
Yeah, we all make mistakes.
Awwww dammmmn! Dom with the degree snap!
No, the real reason they let Kirk (and later Data) die was because the damned actors were getting too old to play the characters correctly.
They didn't "let" Kirk die, the forced the issue. Shatner was deeply hurt when they didn't ask him to be part of the handoff to the new crew in the '09 Trek movie, and he's NOT too old to play the character, he's still very lively and quick-witted and able-bodied.
And, in both cases, fans howled and raged.
In the Kirk thing, it was shittily done and even the writers acknowledge that on the DVD commentary. In the Data thing, not many howled and raged, especially with B9 to just retcon it out of happening altogether anyway.
G wrote:S'why we all need to write our own dang stories.
I write my story every day, only I do it on the fabric of the universe, the ink is the blood I spill in the streets, the quill is every bone in my body.
Dom wrote:But, a peeve of mine is "people living down to stereotypes". And, a stereotype about comic fans is that they just blindly follow a character because they luv there faverit chawuctah. "I hate Wolverine because he is a big meanie!" And, uh, they are not wondering what the writer is doing when they write Wolverine to be a big meanie? "Why is Spider-Man such a tool?" Because that is how he is fucking written. "I read comics with Spider-Man in them because Spider-Man is a good unto himself even when the comics are bad!" This shit really makes me crazy.
"Dom doesn't realize he's behaving ironically as he's speaking with the voice of a thousand stereotyped comic-book-guys." - 5th wall broken bitches, right through the 4th wall into the 5th!!! Suck it, 5th wall! (The fifth wall is the wall within each of us, ooooooo.)
Seriously, you are regurgitating arguments I've been hearing in comic shops for as long as I can remember, at least 35 years (my mom's been a comic book fan since before I was born). You are just as bad as those who follow blindly their characters, you allow your perception of others' beliefs color your own world, and you react vehemently and even - on the page - violently from that.
Shock wrote:Anderson and I would prefer to have "good" Dr. Who. (or Superman, Star Trek, whathaveyou). Barring that, there's enough in those franchises to keep us entertained even through the bad parts. I would rather have a bad TF comic than any Pokemon comic. Because at least with the TF comic I'm getting something that will at least entertain me with characters I like, while the Pokemon comic loses me on sight alone.
I am one foot out the door on Doctor Who, Moffat has burned me for 3 series now. Star Trek lost me with that last movie where there was no chance of that happening with Star Trek V: The Final Frontier because they were different kinds of mistakes and decisions that led to each's problems. There
are limits.