Re: Comics are awesome.
Posted: Mon Jun 21, 2010 3:32 pm
The question is who has a right, at a given time, to make the call about what is official.
TF has a good, and recently brought up, example of this. Remember that "Mosaic" story, "Hail and Farewell"? The basic premise is that a bonded Sunstreaker and Hunter visit/raid Hunter's childhood home. This of course wholly contradicts AHM, where the two are split in AHM shortly before being killed. Hunter makes reference to events that simply could not have happened in IDW's timeline.
When the story was published, Furman said it was, in fact, canonical. Furman is a writer, not an editor. As such, it was not his call to make, regardless of what he would have liked or intended. Ryall said, "nope, not in canon". Ryall, as publisher, has that right. Even if the story was cleared as canonical to IDW, (rather than simply official, which is a different standard), a later fiat could change that. It could be a capricious decision. It could be a business decision. In any case, when a property effectively outlasts its creators and stewards, allowances have to be made.
The net effect is the same, an old story is changed or over-written in some meaningful way. (Does it really make sense for Captain America to be musing about those wild beehive hair styles on the women after he wakes up in those early "Avengers" comics?) But, an editorial fiat solves the problem much more easily than a story.
Would anybody really want to have read an in-depth "this is what really happened" story post "Crisis on Infinite Earths"? Would any writer or editor really want to bother with such a project? Or would it not be better for the editors to simply issue a directive? (This is not a defense of sloppy/indecisive directives, such as those associated with Superman or Hawkman.)
Dom
-thinks a hard reboot every 10 years or so is a good thing.
TF has a good, and recently brought up, example of this. Remember that "Mosaic" story, "Hail and Farewell"? The basic premise is that a bonded Sunstreaker and Hunter visit/raid Hunter's childhood home. This of course wholly contradicts AHM, where the two are split in AHM shortly before being killed. Hunter makes reference to events that simply could not have happened in IDW's timeline.
When the story was published, Furman said it was, in fact, canonical. Furman is a writer, not an editor. As such, it was not his call to make, regardless of what he would have liked or intended. Ryall said, "nope, not in canon". Ryall, as publisher, has that right. Even if the story was cleared as canonical to IDW, (rather than simply official, which is a different standard), a later fiat could change that. It could be a capricious decision. It could be a business decision. In any case, when a property effectively outlasts its creators and stewards, allowances have to be made.
The net effect is the same, an old story is changed or over-written in some meaningful way. (Does it really make sense for Captain America to be musing about those wild beehive hair styles on the women after he wakes up in those early "Avengers" comics?) But, an editorial fiat solves the problem much more easily than a story.
Would anybody really want to have read an in-depth "this is what really happened" story post "Crisis on Infinite Earths"? Would any writer or editor really want to bother with such a project? Or would it not be better for the editors to simply issue a directive? (This is not a defense of sloppy/indecisive directives, such as those associated with Superman or Hawkman.)
Dom
-thinks a hard reboot every 10 years or so is a good thing.