I thought I'd start a thread for all things LSH-related.
Now, pardon me while I post the middle of a conversation from somewhere else...
from the KLORDNY 2020 yahoo group:
Rob Rundle wrote:
"I disagree (with janarrah, not with Henry) as strongly as it's possible to disagree."
That sounds like something from a Monty Python sketch, for some reason... : )
"The decline in popularity coincided with the decline in quality of the book. Superboy's presence or absence was irrelevant."
I see it this way. The longer Paul Levitz was on the book, the less "teen" and the more "adult" the LEGION became. So, EVENTUALLY, we should have seen SUPERMAN show up. Preferably drawn by Curt Swan (heehee).
Paul Levitz said he felt burnt out. Was it "having" to toe the line with the Post-CRISIS/New DCU Superman continuity? Did he really "HAVE" to kill Superboy? Yes or no, he said that it was only Keith Giffen's return that recharged him. No doubt, Levitz & Giffen were plotting the book TOGETHER, just as Claremont & Byrne on X-MEN, and Michelinie & Layton on IRON MAN (a rare case where the INKER was writing, not the penciller).
I loved Keith's 1st return issue (#50). It was such a mind-blower, both visually and story-wise. I was rather shocked when, in a later interview, Keith Giffen revealed that the entire issue was the victim of multiple technical problems up the wazoo.
What I didn't "get" was how, starting with Keith's 2ND new issue, all the figure-drawing began to distort. Especially, people's faces all got "FAT". Mike DeCarlo had done a sub-average job on just about every penciller on LEGION up to then (and absolutely MURDERED Jim Aparo on BATMAN). But Giffen-DeCarlo, at least at first, looked like Kirby-Stone. So after all his "ugly" experiments, Keith had finally decided to go back to "doing" Jack Kirby again. I just STILL don't understand those FAT faces.
When Al Gordon took over inks, there was a noticeable drop in quality. Many disagree with this view, but it's how I feel. But then you had the last 4 issues (Giffen-DeCarlo again, I think), where, it's clear, Keith was no longer doing pencils, but the roughest of rough layouts, and DeCarlo was not up to snuff. It's like the example of Kirby-Royer I once saw where Royer did full pencils over a very rough Kirby layout. Not the same as sharp inks over finished pencils. (This happened once with John & Sal Buscema, TOO!! See CAPTAIN AMERICA #115.) Only, not one-tenth as good.
However, the moment "Five Years Later" started, Giffen-Gordon began to look like Kirby-Bell (Roussos). I'M NOT KIDDING. CRAP. Crap layouts, crap pencils, crap inks. The colors were nothing to brag about either... until after that 3-month shake-down (around issues #9-11) when they switched over to COMPUTER coloring. Suddenly, the coloring was the ONLY competent work in the entire book. It's no wonder Tom McCraw got later promoted to writer (not that that REALLY makes much sense, but, you know what I mean.)
Kevin Hawkins (who joined KLORDNY the same time I did) was the one who told me at length about Mike Carlin's behind-the-scenes B.S. It's strange, as editor, he did such an (apparently) WONDERFUL and consistent job on the SUPERMAN titles. Jerry Ordway, George Perez, Dan Jurgens, Dennis Janke, Roger Stern, etc. etc... But it seems everything else he touched, directly or otherwise, turned to crap. And the moment he left SUPERMAN (replaced by Joey "Spider-Clone Saga" Cavalieri), SUPERMAN went COMPLETELY TO HELL. (Not all at once... but it was definitely a prolonged downward spiral.)
Kevin also is one of those people who LOVED "Five Years Later", particularly for the Ayla-Vi relationship. Maybe I could have liked that, too, if both the writing AND art hadn't been CRAP.
I feel some series should be what they are, concept-wise. LEGION, like STAR TREK, is about a "utopian" future. You can tell endless stories where ytou threaten that utopia. You SHOULD NOT, EVER tell one where it's gone TO HELL. Even if you plan (ALLGEDLY) to "bring it back" at the end of a 3-YEAR storyline. (Blowing up the Earth is not what I'd consider a "proper" ending to such a story. It's more like giving your fans the finger.)
HOWEVER, and I think Kevin will confirm this... I've been open enough to admit that, IF-- and this is a very big if-- IF the book had been written and drawn properly, up to the standards of the VERY BEST issues-- such a story could have been interesting. You'd just have needed someone like Dave Gibbons on art (or Stuart Immonen). You'd need TIGHT editing from an experienced editor, and you'd need CONSISTENT creative teams on every single issue, all working toward the same end.
The last thing you need is to try to introduce your audience to a whole new playing field-- and then, before they even have the slightest grasp of what's going on-- COMPLETELY CHANGE the field AGAIN, 6 issues in.
It's also a very bad sign when you have FILL-INS that are much better-written & drawn than the "regular" ongoing storyline. (Matter-Eater Lad, Khund War, etc.)
"However, I agree with Henry that his presence in history and continuity should have been maintained, as Paul Levitz tried to do, and that Mike Carlin's ego can be blamed for a lot of the Legion's problems (as a lot of other crap at DC, come to that)."
Apart from Superboy not being a member anymore, Superboy was actually DEAD by the time Carlin pulled his S***. So what was the point? I've heard Keith (or was it Tom & Mary? Both?) wanted to do "flashback" stories featuring Superboy, Carlin got wind of it, and put a stop to it. WHY?
SOME series need and deserve to exist in their own corner of the universe, or even in their own universe, separate from anything else a company publishes. I feel LEGION is one of those. Even the most die-hard fans I've seen online have been critical of the recent Paul Levitz work, because his latest run, while SIMILAR to Earth-1, was never QUITE Earth-1. I think we DESERVE Earth-1... or NOTHING ELSE.
After all, they don't have to work it in to fit the "Post-Crisis" New DCU anymore... DO they? (Now that they've STOPPED doing that universe... haven't they?)