You know, Alex Ross isn't the guy that got "Project Superpowers" going, it was Nick Barrucci,, and yet Ross seems to be the one that everyone here wants to blast.
Ross is the only one out there talking about it incessantly, and the story is exactly like every other story he's been involved in, so...I'm going to say it's an easy mistake to make. If you'd rather I say that "Barrucci's idea is stupid" instead of "Ross's idea is stupid," I'll see what I can do.
jcolag: what kind of idiot builds a story around uninteresting characters and expects success?
Is it safe to assume that you are interpreting the line from Lanfeust ("were all Golden Age characters that interesting in themselves?") as him quoting Alex Ross? Because he isn't. Ross never said that. In fact, based on the fact that he seems to be continuing his involvement in the Superpowers line, that he likes the Golden Age characters, Black Terror in particular.
Yes and no. I didn't assume the words came from Ross's mouth, pen, or keyboard as is, but they're certainly representative of what he and every other modern writer have said about the Golden Age books. The phrase "blank slate" never fails to appear, and "archetype" always seems to be code for "we wrote this story with generic characters ten years ago and are substituting whoever it is we licensed."
And he likes the Black Terror's LOOK, not the character. Otherwise he might have used the character as he appeared instead of turning him into a pirate.
Outline: Heroes all "died" in 1945 because they were betrayed by a patriotic hero. Remaining heroes are fascists. Now the old heroes are back and they fight each other more than the presumed villains.
That's an interesting summary. Here's another:
I stand by my version as more evocative, if slightly less precise. Because what you've described is twelve issues of a guided tour, not story...which is what I see the book quickly becoming. "Over on your right, you'll see the Scarab, who looks a little like the Blue Beetle, sort of, but certainly isn't, because we at Dynamite don't know trademarks from copyrights."
It puzzles me how quickly so many people (not just here but on other boards as well) are so quick to dismiss this series (without even checking it out in most cases) simply because the characters are "updated".
Eh. It puzzles me how you're able to have obviously read what I said, and yet have your attack completely misinterpret me based on some "other boards." I read it. I thought it was garbage. It's overwritten with trying-to-be-hip dialogue, a lack of understanding of the characters it claims to be returning (not reinventing) in addition to the Golden Age itself, and a trite, uninteresting "collect'em all" excuse for a plot.
In fact, as I originally said, if you like stuff published in the '90s, this will resonate. It pulls exactly the same strings that "Reign of the Supermen" and "Knightfall" did at DC, and pulls those strings relatively well. I thought those stories were decent at the time, so I still see the good points, but I don't like them now for the overall message.
I can't think of one character still published today that was around in the Golden Age of Comics that hasn't been updated over the years, and yet that's not a problem but what Dynamite is doing with these characters is? I don't get it and I hope I never start thinking like that.
This isn't, to me at least, a matter of "updating." It's a matter of, first, telling a good story if you're going to engage an audience over the course of a year, and respecting the people whose work your building on. Talking "archetypes" and "blank slates" (and blatantly not doing research) is lazy, and laziness shows through to the lack of story.
"Let's look at what's happening in...oh, how about Argentina? OK, so in Argentina...we have two superheroes! Ack! Crusaders! Run, heroes!!" I'm not going to tell anybody they're wrong for disliking it--it has a bit to recommend it--but I'm certainly not going to pretend it's any better than it is when people ask for opinions on it.
(Edit: I didn't touch any of the text, but the quoting came out all weird, so I fixed it. Hopefully, this doesn't bump the thread, which I'm happy to let die. Because what we learned is that some people like the story and some people don't. Shock.)