shaxper
CCF Site Custodian
Posts: 22,864
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Post by shaxper on Nov 8, 2015 20:02:35 GMT -5
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Post by Pharozonk on Nov 8, 2015 20:05:58 GMT -5
1980's is my pick. My evidence: Claremont on Uncanny X-Men Simonson on X-Factor Michelinie on Amazing Spider-man Grunewald on Captain America
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Post by thwhtguardian on Nov 8, 2015 20:11:48 GMT -5
I find my favorites are the Stan, Jack, Ditko stories from the 60's and nearly everything else to be either too dry or too interconnected.
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Post by Ish Kabbible on Nov 8, 2015 20:22:07 GMT -5
I find my favorites are the Stan, Jack, Ditko stories from the 60's and nearly everything else to be either too dry or too interconnected. Steranko's SHIELD would be a highlight of any decade as well
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Post by Reptisaurus! on Nov 8, 2015 20:25:13 GMT -5
Ok, let's think through this...
'40s: I'm really poorly read in the non superhero stuff, but there's more cool ideas and stylistic variety in the early 40s than any of the later decades - Basil Wolverton! Fletcher Hanks! And the Bill Everett Sub-Mariner stuff was as good as anything Marvel ever did. I haven't read much post-War superhero stuff, but the quality seems to have nosedived around 1947. I probably don't know enough to judge.
'50s: Everett and Maneely! A huge variety of genres and an amazing core of artists... And then Marvel collapsed, fired everyone, and only ran inventory stories for a while. I don't think I can pick the '50s.
'60s: I like even the stuff that everybody hates like Human Torch, Kid Colt, and Patsy Walker - And I got no problem calling the Ditko Spider-Man or the Kirby Fantastic Four the greatest superhero comics ever. But it all felt a little bit... samey, given the lack of writers. I've always slightly preferred DC's output from the same period because of the multitude of voices and genres.
'70s: An ALMOST '40s like explosion of creativity and a corporate structure that allowed for writes to do extremely personal works.
'80s: All props to Goodwin's Epic line, but the main superhero title stated to feel like assembly line fan-fiction to me. Sometimes VERY GOOD assembly line fan-fiction, like Roger Stern's Spider-Man or John Byrne's Fantastic Four - but very little that wasn't retreading the '60s. Some interesting failed New-Univese type experiments on the side, though.
'90s: Street Poet Ray? Man, I don't understand the '90s.
'00s: Another '50s, where the decade started really strong and collapsed towards the end. The early '00s offered the most creative freedom (and the best and most interesting mainstream books!) since the '70s, but it all ended up in Civil War Crossover editorially mandated nonsense.
'10s: I'm REALLY happy with Marvel right now ... Lots of creator led and female friendly titles. But still to early to tell.
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Post by Deleted on Nov 8, 2015 20:30:23 GMT -5
I'm going with the 70s...the 15c-40c cover price for regular 36 page books are still my favourites.
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Post by Deleted on Nov 8, 2015 20:34:35 GMT -5
I cannot vote. I am so in love with Stan's silver age stuff and the art then, that I'm KICKING MYSELF for promising my friend I'd only read DC this year. I'm seriously dying inside. But, man, the 70s with those stories (and still some AMAZING art), and then things from the 80s and even into the early 90s feel straight from my life. No, I cannot vote.
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Post by Deleted on Nov 8, 2015 21:14:00 GMT -5
No contest for me:The 1980's
Amazing Spiderman had Stern, DeFalco then Michelinie Avengers had Stern Incredible Hulk had Mantle and the start of PAD's long run Uncanny X-men had Claremont Alpha Flight had Brine Daredevil had Miller Excalibur had Claremont F.F. had Bryne Captain America had Gruenwald Iron Man Michelinie New Mutants had Claremont Thor had Simonson X-Factor had Simonson Peter Parker Spectacular Spiderman had Mantlo, PAD then Conway
And that's just off the top of my head
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Post by Deleted on Nov 8, 2015 22:09:01 GMT -5
The tail end of the Silver Age zeitgest carried through in Lee on Spidey and FF, Thomas/Buscema on Avengers etc. a new wave of exploration in content and format (the birth of the Marvel mags, the horror books, Conan), a new wave of talent that came to become giants in the industry-Englehart, Gerber, Starlin, Perez, Miller, Byrne, Claremont, etc.) while the first wave of giants were still in their peak and makingh theirs MArvel (Kirby, Buscema, Colan, Steranko, Ditko, etc.), Kirby's second coming to Marvel, the rebirth of the X-Men, the beginning of the Caremont/Byrne X-Men, Miller on DD, Simonson's first stint on Thor, a wave of new characters, it was the epitome of the House of Ideas that they defined themselves as, the Bullpen Bullentin's Page and Stan's Soapbox creating a community around the Marvel brand, letters pages worth reading, editors worth their salt looking to ferment creativity not micro-manage it, the first Marvel live action series hitting television, reprint sof the classics readily available cheaply in books like Marvel Tales, Marvel Triple Action, etc. a shared universe when the line was small enough and affordable enough to read in it's entirety, variety of concepts being introduced (everything from blacksploitation with Cage, martial arts with Shang Chi and Iron Fist, sci-fi with Star Wars, Star-Lord, sword and sorcery, female leads like Spider-Woman and Ms. Marvel, strong women in the X-Men, etc. etc.
-M
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Post by Deleted on Nov 8, 2015 22:18:28 GMT -5
The 1960's were legendary!
The Start-Up of these great characters ...
Black Widow - My Favorite Black Panther Mar-Vell Fantastic Four The Incredible Hulk Spider-Man Scarlet Witch X-Men The Avengers Doctor Strange
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Post by Deleted on Nov 8, 2015 23:03:32 GMT -5
The 70's for me. I loved both Marvel & DC in the 70's. Both publishers expanded & had stuff beyond the traditional superhero titles. Marvel tried stuff like Ghost Rider & Dracula & the Punisher. Even their superhero titles had stuff like Capt America fighting the government & quitting (I think for the first time!).
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Post by Deleted on Nov 8, 2015 23:34:58 GMT -5
I went with the 70s due to the x-men rising to prominence and the avengers stories from that era. Also the debuts of hellcat, spider woman, tigra, and ms. Marvel! And the debuts of the champions and the defenders are fond memories.
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Confessor
CCF Mod Squad
Not Bucky O'Hare!
Posts: 10,199
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Post by Confessor on Nov 9, 2015 1:52:28 GMT -5
Really difficult question. The '60s were full of incredible invention. The '70s arguably produced better stories overall across most titles though, with the exception of perhaps Amazing Spider-Man, which has never really surpassed what Stan Lee/Steve Ditko/John Romita did with the series in the '60s IMHO. Still, I do love '70s Spider-Man too. And then there's Marvel's Star Wars comic from the late '70s, although the '80s issues of that series were the best. The '80s were pretty awesome as well really. Man, this is tough...
On balance, looking at all the titles that I most enjoy, I think I'm gonna vote for the 1970s.
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Post by Cei-U! on Nov 9, 2015 1:52:43 GMT -5
As much as I love the way cool '70s stuff, I had to pick the '60s. Lee, Kirby, Ditko, Heck, Ayers, Everett, Romita, Colan, Thomas, the Buscemas, Wood, the Severins, Trimpe, Steranko, Adams, Lieber, Friedrich, even lesser lights such as Roth, Reinman and Stan G: these were the guys (and gal) who made me fall in love with comics and want to devote my life to making them (and, decades later, studying them).
Cei-U! I choke on the nostalgia!
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Post by berkley on Nov 9, 2015 2:44:32 GMT -5
Tough one. I'd like to cheat and say somewhere from around 1967 to 1976 but even doing that you have to leave out a lot of the best stuff. So, sticking with the decades in the poll, I'll go with the 70s right now, as those are the ones I've read the most and remember best, being old enough to appreciate them better. I was so young in the 60s that my comics reading was more sporadic and I don't remember it as well, though what I do remember has left some of the deepest impressions.
If we have this poll again in 5 to 10 years, by which time I expect or hope I will have gone back to read more of the 60s Marvel, it'll be interesting to see if my vote changes, since it's pretty much too close to call even now.
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