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Dynamite comics-project superpowers

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topic icon Author Topic: Dynamite comics-project superpowers  (Read 23799 times)

John C

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Re: Dynamite comics-project superpowers
« Reply #50 on: August 16, 2009, 04:04:34 PM »

I can definitely see that, Yoc.  If you're coming from the Marvel side to begin with, then the Titans were a breath of fresh air in the stodgy DCU.  From the DC side, though, it's sort of an intrusion or aberration, which has sort of taken the reins and stomped over everything else in twenty-five years, but that's another story.

As I said, there's nothing wrong with liking it.  It's a popular format that's kept many, many people safely employed for decades across many different forms of entertainment.  It just happens to be a format that turns me off as escapism.
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Yoc

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Re: Dynamite comics-project superpowers
« Reply #51 on: August 17, 2009, 12:37:02 AM »

The only two series (tree if you count Y-The Last Man) I still read without fail is 'Fables' and 'Jack of Fables.'
I got them at first because I've my long time following of Bill Willingham as an artist in the early 80s doing artwork for the old Villains & Vigilantes role playing game to Comico and his Elementals.  I love the theme of Fables though not every issue is a winner.  But then what series is right?
I quite enjoyed 1992's 10 issue 'Justice Society of America' series with Mike Parobeck artwork and was shocked to find he died not all that long after the series ended.

-Yoc
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rez

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Re: Dynamite comics-project superpowers
« Reply #52 on: August 17, 2009, 03:00:03 AM »

Is 'Catcher in the Rye' the book that was commonly found in the personal libraries of mass murderers?
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Yoc

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Re: Dynamite comics-project superpowers
« Reply #53 on: August 17, 2009, 04:21:48 AM »

Yep and being a Huge Beatles fan I stayed away from the book just because of it.
Then I thought that's just silly.  But the book stunk IMO and I don't regret dumping it.

-Yoc
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John C

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Re: Dynamite comics-project superpowers
« Reply #54 on: August 17, 2009, 01:05:19 PM »


Is 'Catcher in the Rye' the book that was commonly found in the personal libraries of mass murderers?


I could see it.  The very fact that a society--a species--would allow such a steaming pile of...words to be created...


The only two series (tree if you count Y-The Last Man) I still read without fail is 'Fables' and 'Jack of Fables.'


I started to take a look at Fables, and it seemed decent, but wasn't compelling enough to hold my interest.  Or it just hit me during a period when my attention was limited.


I got them at first because I've my long time following of Bill Willingham as an artist in the early 80s doing artwork for the old Villains & Vigilantes role playing game to Comico and his Elementals.  I love the theme of Fables though not every issue is a winner.  But then what series is right?


I've appreciated Willingham for a while, as someone who actually knows how to tell a dang story.  Better, I recently read an interview where he essentially apologized for Elementals (not that he created it, but that it became so influential that now all superheroes are dysfunctional) and basically turned into a screed about how superheroes are no fun anymore and have lost all their iconic and allegorical power (specifically citiing Superman's lack of "American Way") in favor of superficial trappings like physical power and continuity.


I quite enjoyed 1992's 10 issue 'Justice Society of America' series with Mike Parobeck artwork and was shocked to find he died not all that long after the series ended.


I didn't find the book until after Parobeck died, unfortunately, and was shocked that DC let it out of the gate at the time, given the climate of Knightfall et al; I was less surprised that they pulled the plug.  I admit that I wasn't thrilled with the "getting too old for this" undercurrent, but otherwise, it was a great little book that (I think) helped pave the way for the optimism that's at least been trying to fight its way back into the DCU, despite all the company's efforts to the contrary.
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DOC

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Re: Dynamite comics-project superpowers
« Reply #55 on: August 17, 2009, 04:04:37 PM »

I have a sketch from Parobeck the summer before he died. I told him he reminded me of Joe Staton, which he took as a honor.
Though I don't like what some of the writers are doing with older heroes, you have to remember there are always new fans coming in and our opinion means less and less, I am sure there were some GA fans that didn't like the "new" Flash (Barry) or the 'new" Green Lantern (Hal).
I dobn't really like what Dynamite is doing either but yiou can only do so many stories of GA characters in modern times unless you go retro like Big Bang or AC Comics.
I am going to try to some stuff with two minor GA characters thet did not last long, now some might not like it but hopefully you will.
Did anyone read Green Lama by James Ritchey III  that was published through AC, if so what did you think?
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Yoc

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Re: Dynamite comics-project superpowers
« Reply #56 on: August 17, 2009, 06:11:40 PM »

I didn't mind the 'getting old angle' of 1992s Justice Society of America at all.  Especially as I am getting older myself and am shocked at how easy it is to dwell on aches and pains (or operations, etc) with other 'old folks.'  I've played goal in hockey since I was 4 or 5 and have just spent six months trying to recover from a hernia and 3rd degree abdominal muscle tear.  It's part of getting old and I found it fun to read about it a bit in the series.  Some heroes for different reasons might never get old (Supes, Wolverine, Cap) but the majority should be aging and the idea of passing on the mantle bothers me a lot less than 'they are heroes so they never get old, all of them!) that Marvel likes to use.

Willingham was in the Eisner, Ploog, Golden style so it's no surprise I liked his artwork.  Elementals hardly influenced comics 'that' much at the time.  Punisher, Wolverine, Deadpool, Spawn/Image, Dark Knight perhaps Lobo - those characters were they the books that have taken modern comics down this dark alley I find so unpleasant.  Fables has had some very dark arcs but each book always has a fun, humours side to them.  John, give the first TPB a try or the "Fables: 1001 Nghts of Snowfall" collection.  Y-Last Man was a great, non-superhero limited series (60 issues) I can highly recommend if one gets tired of men in tights.  I look forward to seeing how Hollywood handles the story.

Doc, I saw the covers to that Lama story online but no, I haven't see them to read.  I commend AC for going down a different road from their usual T'n'A theme.

-Yoc
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Astaldo711

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Re: Dynamite comics-project superpowers
« Reply #57 on: August 17, 2009, 08:34:39 PM »

Aging in the comics has always been a sticky situation I think. If you want it to be realistic and have the characters age, you'd never see some of the classics. Spider-Man, Fantastic Four, Avengers, etc have all been around since the early sixties. We'd be reading stories of their kids and grand kids. Some explanation can be brought that while a month passes between the average book, in the story it may be just a moment passing. Wolverine is different in that his mutant ability greatly slows his aging. He's over a hundred I think.
I really liked the comic strip "For Better Or For Worse" because they showed people aging. The kids grew up, went to college, etc.
I guess in the end you can't really try and apply real life to comic books. I remember people debating whether or not Lightspeed from Power Pack actually flew at light speed and if she did, how she could see. No one debated that she could fly, however. When I find myself in this conundrum, I suspend reality for a moment, sit back and enjoy the story.
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John C

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Re: Dynamite comics-project superpowers
« Reply #58 on: August 17, 2009, 09:20:11 PM »

Heh.  I seem to remember that the '80s Atom series treated a similar issue.  Someone asked Ray how they could breathe and see when sitting on an electron watching photons.  His answer was something along the lines of "try not to think about it," which seemed to me as the perfect response from a scientist.  It works, there's a way to find out, but that's not the priority right now.

That's how I feel about most intrusions of reality into fiction:  Unless it's driving the story, we can worry about it later.

And Lightspeed should've been fine.  Maybe she can't see right behind her, but every other angle should be visible, and Relativity goes further, saying "shut up and just accept that it works."  I'm not sure that's an exact translation from the German, but it should be close.

As for the aging, I wasn't offended by it, but it didn't seem to be driving the story in the right direction.  It seemed more for the purpose of weaning us off the (newly-retrieved?  I forget) characters, rather than using them.  I suppose that may have been a condition of using them at all, and I certainly would have preferred those successors to the replacements we've gotten since.

On the other hand, a friend of mine once explained comic book cosmology:  At DC, it's always 1964.  At Marvel, it's always the present day, but Hitler invaded Poland twenty years ago.  That works well enough for me...
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John C

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Re: Dynamite comics-project superpowers
« Reply #59 on: August 17, 2009, 09:44:16 PM »


Though I don't like what some of the writers are doing with older heroes, you have to remember there are always new fans coming in and our opinion means less and less, I am sure there were some GA fans that didn't like the "new" Flash (Barry) or the 'new" Green Lantern (Hal).


My big concern is actually that our opinions are mattering to such an absurd degree that they jump on the superficial aspects and forget all about the substance.

The clearest example is probably Supergirl.  The editors kill the original(ish) Supergirl.  Because people complained, she was replaced by a succession of characters bearing the Supergirl trademark who simply weren't interesting (I apologize the the Peter David fans--I already know you love the guy and trust everything he does).  The old fans complained that none of these Supergirls was as charming as the original.

So what does DC do?  They create a new Kara Zor-El from Krypton, who's clearly derivative of the original, but has none of the charm or storytelling potential at all.

Likewise, Hal is back, so form is satisfied, but the character is so altered that it goes no further than that.

I would have been fine with, for example, Kyle Rayner as Green Lantern, except that he was the designated "guy to explain things to" in group scenes, obnoxious, and arrogant enough to think that killing villains was fine, just because he had the power to do it.

Personally, I wish that DC could create successful successors capable of passing as heroes.  But everything's so tied up in mythos, these days, that the only characters that make sense to the fans are the Silver Age versions.  All Green Lanterns must have a ring and battery and work for the Corps...why?  Flashes need to be related to Barry and have the same "power source"...why?
« Last Edit: August 17, 2009, 09:52:38 PM by John C »
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narfstar

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Re: Dynamite comics-project superpowers
« Reply #60 on: August 17, 2009, 11:15:00 PM »

Hey we accept the concept of superheroes in the first place. As long as there is a consistency within the comic universes own parameters it is OK with me. If for no apparent reason Batman can fly simply because he has bat in his name or superman's weakness becomes aluminum that would be hard to swallow. I HATE time travels stories that can change the past so there is absolutely no continuity and nothing anyone does matters.
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Rajah

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Re: Dynamite comics-project superpowers
« Reply #61 on: August 18, 2009, 12:20:16 AM »


I would have been fine with, for example, Kyle Rayner as Green Lantern, except that he was the designated "guy to explain things to" in group scenes, obnoxious, and arrogant enough to think that killing villains was fine, just because he had the power to do it.


Bit of a tangent here but as a fan of the character, I feel I should address this. I don't recall Kyle being okay with killing villains because he had the power to do so. He nearly killed Major Force while blind with grief after the murder of his girlfriend Alex but he quickly realized this is not what heroes do. In fact, when the Guardians recently okayed lethal force, Kyle was one of the Green Lanterns most uncomfortable with the new rule.

As to your other point, I do agree that DC is too focused on mythos at times and keeping all heroes derivative of the Silver Age version. This is a symptom of a greater problem with the industry, I think. The fanbase for comics is mostly older readers who prefer a certain version of the characters. And many of today's creators are former fans who are also clinging to those versions. Hence, the Silver Age seems to have a stranglehold on the DCU.

Getting back to the subject of the thread, I have mixed feelings on Project Superpowers. While I love the Golden Age characters and am interested to see what Dynamite does with them, I feel like a bit of a turncoat when reading it. I've written for AC Comics, who have also used many of these public domain heroes in their universe (to less success than Dynamite, sadly). So I feel a bit like I'm aiding the competition.
« Last Edit: August 18, 2009, 12:36:50 AM by Rajah »
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boox909

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Re: Dynamite comics-project superpowers
« Reply #62 on: August 18, 2009, 12:43:12 AM »



Personally, I wish that DC could create successful successors capable of passing as heroes.  But everything's so tied up in mythos, these days, that the only characters that make sense to the fans are the Silver Age versions.  All Green Lanterns must have a ring and battery and work for the Corps...why?  Flashes need to be related to Barry and have the same "power source"...why?



What about the new "Blackest Night" crapola currently out? Now lanterns have to be of various colors and have issues with the corps. I hear that Earth-2 Superman is a Black Lantern.

As usual with most cro$$over$, I am avoiding this storyline like swine flu.

B.
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narfstar

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Re: Dynamite comics-project superpowers
« Reply #63 on: August 18, 2009, 12:56:06 AM »

Cool Rajah,
I have been reading AC since they were Paragon. Femforce since issue 1 and hope sells after issue 150 are enough to sustain.
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Astaldo711

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Re: Dynamite comics-project superpowers
« Reply #64 on: August 18, 2009, 03:41:45 AM »

Captain Paragon! Dragonfly! I loved those stories!
One of the reasons I like reading the older comics - even up to the 70's is because of the lack of crossovers. Once in a while is fine but it seemed for a while you had to buy every book by DC or Marvel in order to figure out what was going on. Then there are the spin off series, alternate universes, etc. Big reason why I don't bother collecting anymore. How many "Earth's" are there between DC and Marvel anyway? Crazy.
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JVJ

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Re: Dynamite comics-project superpowers
« Reply #65 on: August 18, 2009, 03:48:19 AM »


How many "Earth's" are there between DC and Marvel anyway? Crazy.

Newflash, Astaldo!
There's only ONE Earth. All the rest are make believe.
;)
Peace, Jim (|:{>
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John C

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Re: Dynamite comics-project superpowers
« Reply #66 on: August 18, 2009, 03:00:27 PM »


There's only ONE Earth. All the rest are make believe.
;)


To be fair, that's what some character always says during the first crossover story, Jim.  You might want to check the backyard for Cosmic Treadmills...

But I'm also very much in favor of multiple Earths (fictional, at least--it makes the quantum physics folks sound like a bunch of idiots).  It allows exploration of completely different environments wiithout "polluting" continuity.  Pre-Crisis DC handled this extremely well for many years, and only messed it up when they started listening to fans (by which I mean acknowledging concepts like Earth-B and Earth-E, which were "places where things happen that don't make sense anywhere else" retroactive and cosmetic creations).


What about the new "Blackest Night" crapola currently out? Now lanterns have to be of various colors and have issues with the corps. I hear that Earth-2 Superman is a Black Lantern.
As usual with most cro$$over$, I am avoiding this storyline like swine flu.


I admit that I don't mind the concept in general.  I won't by the books, because it sounds like the same-old-same-old (but with ZOMBIES!), but the concept of different factions works well enough with the Green Lantern mythos that my biggest objection is that it's an "event" rather than an organic evolution.

I have other objections, but they're minor.  The Sinestro Corps is a stupid name, about as smart as, say, the Carl League of America.  Englehart already outlined what most colors would represent, but Johns has a "better" idea.  And to get back to my original point, every Corps, for some reason, needs a ring, a battery, and a GL-like insignia, where they could be expanding the franchise in visually-interesting ways.


Bit of a tangent here but as a fan of the character, I feel I should address this. I don't recall Kyle being okay with killing villains because he had the power to do so. He nearly killed Major Force while blind with grief after the murder of his girlfriend Alex but he quickly realized this is not what heroes do. In fact, when the Guardians recently okayed lethal force, Kyle was one of the Green Lanterns most uncomfortable with the new rule.


The specific instance I'm thinking of (though I feel like there were others) was Nero.  Kyle calls in the entire JLA to give them an impassioned speech about how nobody should be allowed to weild that kind of power without proving himself, so use lethal force where possiblle.  The fact that he was given his own powers without any sort of vetting process never came up.


As to your other point, I do agree that DC is too focused on mythos at times and keeping all heroes derivative of the Silver Age version. This is a symptom of a greater problem with the industry, I think. The fanbase for comics is mostly older readers who prefer a certain version of the characters. And many of today's creators are former fans who are also clinging to those versions. Hence, the Silver Age seems to have a stranglehold on the DCU.


I agree that this is a big part of the problem, and why I mentioned that our opinions seem to matter too much.  But regardless, it makes the world less fun to read about.  If every Green Lantern comes from the same cookie cutter except for face and maybe a personality quirk or two, then who cares if a few thousand of them die?  They're not distinct enough to become attached to them.  For a medium with infinite possibilities, it makes the universe seem tiny and a bit inbred.


Getting back to the subject of the thread, I have mixed feelings on Project Superpowers. While I love the Golden Age characters and am interested to see what Dynamite does with them, I feel like a bit of a turncoat when reading it. I've written for AC Comics, who have also used many of these public domain heroes in their universe (to less success than Dynamite, sadly). So I feel a bit like I'm aiding the competition.


Heh.  It's OK.  I feel like spending money on it would be aiding people who don't know how to craft a story or "update" a character.

It is a shame, though, that Dynamite gets all the press for doing what many companies have been doing well for decades.  All the worse that the other companies can't seem to get any "runoff" publicity from Dynamite's popularity.
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JVJ

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Re: Dynamite comics-project superpowers
« Reply #67 on: August 18, 2009, 05:43:21 PM »



There's only ONE Earth. All the rest are make believe.
;)


To be fair, that's what some character always says during the first crossover story, Jim.  You might want to check the backyard for Cosmic Treadmills...


I suppose if I READ crossovers, John, I might have known I was quoting a trite phrase. When they upped the ante to $50+ to follow ONE storyline across so many titles (half of which I didn't buy before and wouldn't buy afterwards), I simply ignored them since the first Crisis (I think - I can't really recall any memorable ones). Even Marvels paled after the first couple of issues - back when Alex Ross was "new and different".

My backyard is too small for a cosmic treadmill - unless it's warped into an alternate dimension most of the time.

The point of my comment was to poke gentle fun at the seriousness with which this thread has addressed superheroes. In all honesty, it's a trifle frightening. I mean, I LOVE comic books, but not at the level you guys apparently do. You actually REMEMBER all this stuff about the STORIES -- whereas I remember all this stuff about who drew them and when and where. Granted, there is extended discussion of the creators, too, but the focus is on these fictional, malleable, constantly reinvented characters - none of whom is the one you first encountered in your youth and NEVER will be again.

You can't go home again. Honestly, it's better to RECALL those good times than to expect to be able to relive them. That's the common fault of the fans turned pro who are running the industry. And that's what eventually got me to quit buying comics after 40 solid years of "every Wednesday." I've got great memories of Marvel in the '60s and they can't take them away from me, even if I don't have the comics anymore. I don't WANT to have them. If I did, I'd re-read them and realize just how naive they were - but they were a product of their times and those times no longer exist. Nor does the man I was. In memory, I can recall the emotions and the joy of reading those comics, but I have NO expectations of EVER experiencing the same feelings again engendered by a comic book.

Consequently, what modern fan/pro writers do the puppets/clones/atomotans/progeny with the same names is of ZERO concern and even less interest to me. I have the memories. All that exposure to "modern" interpretations can do is to diminish those memories. I think I'd be a fool to allow it to happen.

My 2
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Astaldo711

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Re: Dynamite comics-project superpowers
« Reply #68 on: August 18, 2009, 05:55:00 PM »

You hit the nail on the head JVJ. I remember the feeling I got when I read my first comic book, the first time I went to a comic book convention and I know I'd never get that feeling back. When I find myself getting worked up over something in a book, I have to remind myself to relax and just enjoy the story. I'm really hesitant to give my money to the big comic companies anymore. All the crossover stories drove me crazy. Whether the multiple title stories was justified or not, it all gave me a bad taste in my mouth. It felt like it was all for the money. That's just not jake.
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Rajah

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Re: Dynamite comics-project superpowers
« Reply #69 on: August 18, 2009, 06:34:39 PM »

The point of my comment was to poke gentle fun at the seriousness with which this thread has addressed superheroes. In all honesty, it's a trifle frightening. I mean, I LOVE comic books, but not at the level you guys apparently do. You actually REMEMBER all this stuff about the STORIES -- whereas I remember all this stuff about who drew them and when and where. Granted, there is extended discussion of the creators, too, but the focus is on these fictional, malleable, constantly reinvented characters - none of whom is the one you first encountered in your youth and NEVER will be again.


Agree to disagree. As a writer, I am very focused on stories and characters. Part of the fun of comics for me is remembering all the minutia and trivia, all the characters, storylines, and concepts that make up these fictional worlds. These heroes are like old friends in a way, even when writers reinvent or alter them. I appreciate the storytelling and the techniques of the art of course but what really gets me excited about comics is the characters and the crazy, imaginative ideas that don't exist in any other medium. I don't think there's anything wrong with remembering these things or discussing them with other fans. It's my hobby, I expect to be knowledgeable about it.

It may be because I am younger than many on this board (I am 28, FYI) but I haven't reached the point where I'm done with modern comics and only want to relive memories of what I used to love about them. I hope I never do. No offense, JVJ. Honestly, if you are indeed done with the big companies and their endless retreads of the same concepts and "events," maybe look for other comics. Don't give up on the medium entirely. There are lots of great series from smaller companies that are trying different things and not falling into the same old cliches of the Big Two.
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John C

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Re: Dynamite comics-project superpowers
« Reply #70 on: August 18, 2009, 06:45:00 PM »


I suppose if I READ crossovers, John, I might have known I was quoting a trite phrase.


I actually meant in the "Flash of Two Worlds" vein.  I don't recall the exact phrasing, or if it was repeated across titles, but there was the idea of a correlation between Earths and comic book fiction.


The point of my comment was to poke gentle fun at the seriousness with which this thread has addressed superheroes. In all honesty, it's a trifle frightening. I mean, I LOVE comic books, but not at the level you guys apparently do. You actually REMEMBER all this stuff about the STORIES -- whereas I remember all this stuff about who drew them and when and where.


Don't worry.  I immerse myself in the worlds as I discuss them, but I pop right back out.  I'm probably more extreme than most, because software (and teaching) is often mostly a matter of getting inside an environment and making yourself at home there without getting lost.  So I look at furniture and mentally sketch out better designs, listen to music and try to get an image of the person who wrote and/or played it, and watch movies with an eye toward where the set designers grew up--you can tell a lot by how Manhattan is represented.

I'm just as amazed that a lot of you can keep track of creators, something I've often found only peripherally interesting.  Again, it's interesting enough that if something catches my eye, I enjoy pursuing iit, but unlike a lot of other things, if there's a dead end, I don't sweat it.


Granted, there is extended discussion of the creators, too, but the focus is on these fictional, malleable, constantly reinvented characters - none of whom is the one you first encountered in your youth and NEVER will be again.


It's true, but you could say the same thing about movies, restaurants, cities, or even friends.  Different things (and different viewers) require a different mix of instances and transitions to be "interesting."

To explain what I mean, I can (barely) remember a handful of issues of comics I can point to where I can say "that's what the Flash should always be like;" they're instances that work for me.  By contrast, I don't have that for Captain America; I know what he "should" be like, but nobody's ever pulled it off.  And then there's Blue Beetle, where I don't find any particular character interesting so much as the never-ending reinventions themselves.


You can't go home again. Honestly, it's better to RECALL those good times than to expect to be able to relive them. That's the common fault of the fans turned pro who are running the industry. And that's what eventually got me to quit buying comics after 40 solid years of "every Wednesday."


Exactly.  Every once in a while I've been suckered back in, but yes, I've been turned off by the drive to enforce some sort of single-minded ideal across an entire fictional universe.

I was too young to realize the significance at the time, but I recently revisited an issue of Green Lantern from the early '80s.  In the letter column, somebody asks why GL didn't recognize a walk-on character in a recent issue, when they worked together in the big Showcase blowout issue.

The editor's response was that the Showcase issue not only didn't happen, but couldn't have happened, because it included characters like Space Cabbie and Binky, and there's no way such characters could exist in the same universe as the Green Lantern Corps.  And further, said editor was busily working out a plan that would forevermore redefine the very nature of the canonical DC Universe so that only "serious" stories could possibly have happened.

The editor was Marv Wolfman, and that editorial response is essentially the pre-pitch version of "Crisis on Infinite Earths."

I point this out because it's (I think) exactly what you're talking about, in its way.  The entire 1985-1986 output from DC is basically a result of Marv stomping his feet because he didn't think Binky was as real as a talking chipmunk with a power ring.   The mind truly boggles.


I've got great memories of Marvel in the '60s and they can't take them away from me, even if I don't have the comics anymore. I don't WANT to have them. If I did, I'd re-read them and realize just how naive they were - but they were a product of their times and those times no longer exist. Nor does the man I was. In memory, I can recall the emotions and the joy of reading those comics, but I have NO expectations of EVER experiencing the same feelings again engendered by a comic book.


I've actually had pretty good luck going "back to the stacks."  Books I enjoyed when I could still show my age by holding up my fingers actually seem to hold up pretty well, even with nostalgia taken out of the picture.  Sometimes, I'll even pick up a book I hated when it was new, and I'll find that there were complexities to the story I didn't notice the first time through.


Consequently, what modern fan/pro writers do the puppets/clones/atomotans/progeny with the same names is of ZERO concern and even less interest to me. I have the memories. All that exposure to "modern" interpretations can do is to diminish those memories. I think I'd be a fool to allow it to happen.


I definitely agree.  I never understand why someone would say "they've damaged my childhood by changing the direction of this character."  You can't diminish a well-written story by merely contradicting it.

The only exception I can make to that are the stories that basically tell us "nothing matters."  Narf mentioned time travel problems, but I can remember when DC introduced the idea of "Hypertime," which was basically that different worlds overlap, so sometimes you'll see something wrong in the comics which is really right.  In other words, "all you droning fanboys should stop criticising us."  Put into a context where details and history probably don't matter, it's hard to care about any individual story published in conjunction with the statement.
« Last Edit: August 18, 2009, 06:53:08 PM by John C »
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Rajah

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Re: Dynamite comics-project superpowers
« Reply #71 on: August 18, 2009, 07:16:44 PM »

Time for another tangent (sorry, JVJ ;)).


Bit of a tangent here but as a fan of the character, I feel I should address this. I don't recall Kyle being okay with killing villains because he had the power to do so. He nearly killed Major Force while blind with grief after the murder of his girlfriend Alex but he quickly realized this is not what heroes do. In fact, when the Guardians recently okayed lethal force, Kyle was one of the Green Lanterns most uncomfortable with the new rule.


The specific instance I'm thinking of (though I feel like there were others) was Nero.  Kyle calls in the entire JLA to give them an impassioned speech about how nobody should be allowed to weild that kind of power without proving himself, so use lethal force where possiblle.  The fact that he was given his own powers without any sort of vetting process never came up.


I haven't read that story in a while so I don't remember the speech. In Kyle's defense, Nero was an extremely dangerous schizophrenic with a power ring. It was like giving Green Lantern powers to the Joker. I don't think Kyle wanted the League to go in and slaughter the guy needlessly but he wanted them to be aware of the danger and that they might have to use lethal force if it came down to it.

Personally, I'm okay with heroes that will kill an opponent if there's no other option. But it has to be a difficult decision for them, something they question and only do sparingly. Not something they do as a matter of course, like the Punisher. I see Kyle being in the former category, not the latter.
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crimsoncrusader

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Re: Dynamite comics-project superpowers
« Reply #72 on: August 18, 2009, 07:59:13 PM »

Seems like we need to start a Green Lantern thread with all this Blackest Night talk and such. Anyways as far as crossovers are concerned I just go to the library and pick up the TPBs. I have to be patient, but its a virtue that pays off in the end.

Getting back on topic of PS and Dynamite, I'm excited for the new series Meet the Bad Guys which will introduce new villains for the heroes to combat and will be released tomorrow. So far there is Green Lama vs. Bloodlust, Fighting Yank vs. Revolutionary, and Samson vs. Dagon. There is a forth book in the series but the characters have not been announced yet, but I'm guessing it will be Daredevil from the looks of the last issue of chapter two. Also, the Black Terror's series will continue with issue #5 in 2010 so that is something to look forward to. As the story progresses the PS universe is getting more interesting for me though I know not everyone shares that sentiment and its alright.
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darkmark

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Re: Dynamite comics-project superpowers
« Reply #73 on: August 18, 2009, 08:08:43 PM »

We've got a different approach to things, Jon.  Sure, I love the creators, but not to the extent that you do...to me, it's the stories and characters that matter.  That's why, when Marvel or DC do things that terribly violate or degrade a character, I simply ignore it and say, "That couldn't have happened in MY universe."  I don't give a damn about Avengers Disassembled, One More Day, or Identity Crisis, and thus I retcon them in my mind.  If the Big Two don't like that, it's a drag.  Marvel has admitted in one FANTASTIC FOUR issue that the current Marvel Earth isn't the one that started back in 1961...how could it be?  And DC has rebooted several times since 1985, so we're free to pick and choose as we wish. 

But when I was a kid (and that phase lasted well into college), the characters, particularly the ones I loved like the Avengers, were my friends...don't laugh...and that sense of revisiting friends every month got me through some tough times.  I don't get the same feeling from mainstream comics from the mid-80s on.  That's my fault, but it's also my story, and I'm sticking to it.
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narfstar

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Re: Dynamite comics-project superpowers
« Reply #74 on: August 18, 2009, 08:49:56 PM »



And why would we laugh when that pretty much describes all of us. I do not think it was the type of comics in the 80's that made the difference so much as your age. It is that 6-10 year old that must be captured to make an impression. A person explained his Star Wars obsession that way. It was the age he was when Star Wars came out that endeared it to him more than I.


But when I was a kid (and that phase lasted well into college), the characters, particularly the ones I loved like the Avengers, were my friends...don't laugh...and that sense of revisiting friends every month got me through some tough times.  I don't get the same feeling from mainstream comics from the mid-80s on.  That's my fault, but it's also my story, and I'm sticking to it.
« Last Edit: August 19, 2009, 12:31:59 AM by Yoc »
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