I don't feel that comic characters need to be taken back to basics, but rather it's the comic books themselves that need to go back to basics in regards to telling a single story in a single issue, with subplots that carry over a larger arc, and with the occasional multi-issue story thrown into the mix.
I could back that. Especially since I don't think "decompression" works as a technique. It seems to revolve around making comics that look like movies, and the two mediums are too different to transfer. For example, watching a scene with nothing happening builds suspense or tension in a movie, because the artist controls the sense of time. In a comic with nothing happening, you just move from panel to panel wondering if anything's going to happen. That's a dismal failure, in my eyes.
I think a line of books focusing on Captain Marvel, Phantom Lady, Plastic Man, Blue Beetle and all those related characters, could be successful "as is", without "modernizing" the characters IF you had enough creators involved who cared about the characters, had enteraining stories to tell
I think this is where we part company. I don't have the confidence in today's DC (or writers and editors in general, actually) to just jump in and tell stories. Everybody wants to rewrite origins (even though that's supposed to be the boring part), "leave their mark on the characters," or "redefine the genre," it seems, and nobody just wants to rap out good stories. Everybody also seems mired in a set-piece mentality, where they don't necessarily know where the story's going to go, but it's just gotta have...
and could add some decent new villains to the mix, because a comic book hero is only as good as the villains he faces. Without a decent group of evil-doers to rotate through, any superhero book is going to run out of steam eventually. Jerry Ordway's run with Captain Marvel (Power of Shazam) was pretty good until he ran through all the old Fawcett villains, and then the series got boring for me because it seemed like he didn't know what to do and was just going through the motions.
I don't remember the series clearly, since it came right on the heels of the OTHER reboot and overlapped the Justice League appearances, but yeah, that sounds about right. Ordway managed to establish an interesting status quo, but didn't really do anything with it...though I seem to recall reading an interview where he blamed that on hectic times in his life, rather than a lack of inspiration, in fairness to him.
The way I see it, DC doesn't care about these characters because they're too focused on making sure Superman, Batman and the rest of the JLA are the "Top Dogs" in terms of popularity & sales.
I'd go further, actually. They care about Superman, Batman, and Wonder Woman, and are willing to accept the other (founding) JLAers if a big-name writer is particularly passionate about the project.
Seperating the characters out into their own imprint, handing the reigns over to someone who actually cares about the characters and telling them "have fun with it & we'll leave you alone" may be the only way DC can get any decent amount of life out them. Otherwise, they'll just linger around as guest-stars & team players, getting a short-lived series every now and then but never really amounting to much of anything.
Well, the way I see it, it can also just happen editorially. For example, I do think Grant Morrison had the right idea by including Plastic Man in his JLA run, but the problem was in not reading any Jack Cole stories and instead using the bland "class clown" personality for the character.
Likewise, I do think (despite its critical reception today) that Giffen's JLI did a lot to cement Captain Marvel, Blue Beetle, and Captain Atom into the Post-Crisis world by making them peers with Batman and a Green Lantern. Sure, they were (as I think I mentioned) explicitly characters that DC didn't care about, but they were in a high profile position, and what esteem they have today can largely be traced to that run, comedy or no.
I'd go a step further and try to do the same thing in backstory. I mean, I think there's a serious flaw in trying to preserve history EXCEPT for all the parts they want to change. So as long as Wonder Woman needs replacing (and all the next-generation JSAers need ironing out), why not also overwrite Hawkman with Bulletman? Or Dr. Mid-Nite with Phantom Lady? Sure, there's a part of it that would bug me, too (especially Hawkman), but it would show the "imports" as being relatively important at the expense of characters that don't have a huge following to begin with.
Likewise, if Superman can't be in the JLA, then let Captain Marvel join, and just be done with it. Superman's status isn't in any danger, because he was still the first choice, but just the same, it doesn't leave the Marvels (or whoever replaces other characters) out in the cold.
Oh, and Merry Christmas, everyone!
Same from here. And if you celebrate(d) anything else...well, tough. I'm still only wishin' ya a Merry Christmas, but feel free to interpret it in a more general sense.