Roquefort Raider
CCF Mod Squad
Modus omnibus in rebus
Posts: 17,413
Member is Online
|
Post by Roquefort Raider on Aug 1, 2018 5:57:34 GMT -5
I think all of this is silly. comic book characters are fictional - they can be anything any writer wants them to be. "Is it good or is it bad" is really the only question. That’s quite true, but it’s pretty difficult to radically change something that worked well for decades and make it better. It happens (Moore’s Swamp Thing come ro mind) but it’s difficult. Correct, although in the case of Bobby we have a lad who was as interested in girls as Archie Andrews is, so his turning out to prefer guys is very unexpected. Furthermore, just a few years ago and under Bendis’s own pen, a future Bobby Drake came back to the past and had some advice for his younger self... about how to be popular with women. Now we may not be sure about our future sexuality, but I’m pretty sure we should know about our past one! That retcon was nothing we could have seen coming. It was more a case of “gee, we should make one of these characters have a coming out to generate some buzz. Now which one should we choose?” True, true. The best changes are the ones that are part of an actual story, not the ones made on the spur of the moment either for strict shock value or because it sounds cool. Claremont’s X-Men during its first decade or so (until Secret Wars, or therabout) was full of progressive, organic changes. That was very well done. But things like turning James Rhodes into a cyborg is just a bad idea. What makes a character interesting? How can I use them to tell a good story? Those are the questions a writer should ask themselves. Revealing that Tarzan is actually a robot might make headlines, but it would be a pretty daft change to make.
|
|
|
Post by Icctrombone on Aug 1, 2018 7:58:24 GMT -5
I'm with Slam_Bradley on this. If you don't like it, don't buy it. You will read and buy what interests you. I really liked the Kyle Green Lantern. Hal was always a bore to me. Only Neal Adams art made him digestible.
|
|
Confessor
CCF Mod Squad
Not Bucky O'Hare!
Posts: 10,201
|
Post by Confessor on Aug 1, 2018 8:37:31 GMT -5
^^ Sure, that's a totally logical thing to do. But saying that misses the point. Stopping buying the book doesn't actually aswage the frustration and resentment that fans might feel about a sudden fundamental change to their favourite character. Especially if there's a suspicion that those changes were made simply to garner publicity or to be seen as being fashionable.
Fans are passionate people. And not just comic fans -- all fans. I really don't think it's unreasonable for some comic fans to be greatly upset by what they see as the corruption or spoiling of their favourite character/series.
To strike a classic comics analogy, it's like the resurrection of Jean Grey or the erasing of Peter Parker and Mary Jane's marriage. Sure, we can all stop buying the X-Men or Amazing Spider-Man -- and many of us did -- but that doesn't mean that we're not still pissed off about it, and won't continue to bitch about it years after the fact on a comic forum. But again, it's perfectly understandable for people to do that because, in their opinion, those events ruined cherished comic series. Comic book series that they had followed and enjoyed for years, and which they were probably invested in emotionally.
To resent a descision that ruins something you love is totally natural, I think. Of course, that doesn't justify attacking the creatives in charge or threatening people -- that's a step too far and definitely not a balanced reaction. But feeling aggrieved about Iceman suddenly being gay or Thor magically becoming a woman is understandable, if you've followed those characters for years and care about them.
|
|
Søren
Full Member
I trademarked my name two years ago. Swore I'd kill any turniphead that tried to use it
Posts: 321
|
Post by Søren on Aug 1, 2018 8:53:05 GMT -5
I would love to see more natural diversity in comics but think that needs creative people or those who claim to be creative to use more brain power and make something original and awesome. As nice it is that some effort is made now think overall changing establish characters to be something other then caucasian/hetro/or male just highlights how lacking in diversity comics are in the first instance. I don't read DC/Marvel stuff so someone who knows more can say but is/has there been a character that is originally gay for example? 2000ad has Devlin Waugh, he was made in 1992, think mention guy have as my avatar Thrax has been vaguely implied is not hetro either and his original strip was out in 1986. If a comic could do that in still homophobic times then I see no reason can't take a risk now.
|
|
Confessor
CCF Mod Squad
Not Bucky O'Hare!
Posts: 10,201
|
Post by Confessor on Aug 1, 2018 9:09:13 GMT -5
I would love to see more natural diversity in comics but think that needs creative people or those who claim to be creative to use more brain power and make something original and awesome. As nice it is that some effort is made now think overall changing establish characters to be something other then caucasian/hetro/or male just highlights how lacking in diversity comics are in the first instance. Exactly! If the existing cast of superheroes isn't diverse enough, then create new superheroes.
|
|
|
Post by Slam_Bradley on Aug 1, 2018 9:31:04 GMT -5
I would love to see more natural diversity in comics but think that needs creative people or those who claim to be creative to use more brain power and make something original and awesome. As nice it is that some effort is made now think overall changing establish characters to be something other then caucasian/hetro/or male just highlights how lacking in diversity comics are in the first instance. Exactly! If the existing cast of superheroes isn't diverse enough, then create new superheroes. Who in their right mind is going to do that? At least not for the Big Two. What possible incentive does a creator have to give intellectual property to a multinational corporation to exploit when there's a chance (albeit a very slim chance) that it the creator can retain property and hope it will be the next Walking Dead.
|
|
Confessor
CCF Mod Squad
Not Bucky O'Hare!
Posts: 10,201
|
Post by Confessor on Aug 1, 2018 9:46:59 GMT -5
Exactly! If the existing cast of superheroes isn't diverse enough, then create new superheroes. Who in their right mind is going to do that? At least not for the Big Two. What possible incentive does a creator have to give intellectual property to a multinational corporation to exploit when there's a chance (albeit a very slim chance) that it the creator can retain property and hope it will be the next Walking Dead. Fair point.
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on Aug 1, 2018 12:28:14 GMT -5
If superheroes are truly a modern mythology, then they have to be strong enough to exist in multiple iterations, versions and interpretations. There is no one correct story of Robin Hood. There is no one interpretation of King Arthur. There is no correct version of Hercules. The characters grow and change with their audiences. That is what makes them archetypes, that is what makes them iconic, and that is what makes them enduring myths. If super-heroes are to be myths, if they are iconic, and if they are to endure, they will undergo the same process. There will be no one correct Spider-Man story. There will be multiple interpretations of Captain America. There will be no correct version of Batman. They will grow, change, evolve and survive with each new audience through multiple generations and beyond the life of any one single fan or generation of fans.
If they are forced to remain stagnant by a generation of fans who falsely believe they are "their" characters (you hear it all the time, that's not my Spider-Man, or that's not my Star Wars), they will stagnate, entropy will take effect, and they will die and be forgotten as a relic of that generation.
That's not even bringing up the fact that no two fans can agree on exactly what is the correct version of X hero or y heroine, or z villain, and you will never be able to please all of them, and in trying to do so you will please none of them. You can only tell the best story as true to the vision you have for the story and see whom it resonates with. If that means striking out in a different direction, so be it. Things like the new X-Men or Barry Allen/Hal Jordan would never have happened if creators weren't willing to move beyond what was the accepted version of characters within fandom. Comics like Spider-Man and the Fantastic Four would never have been done if the creatives were simply trying to please the fanbase as they fanbase expressed what it appreciated in the forms of correspondence available at the time (at that time letters o the editors). Books like Maus, Watchmen, Moore's Swamp Thing, Sandman etc. would never have come about if creators and publishers simply listened to what fans said they wanted and catered to it.
Meyer and his ilk are the worst type of reactionary fandom, but that streak of entitlement and false sense of ownership of the characters is prevalent in several levels of fandom, even some that aren't quite as toxic as Meyer and company, and these things are what keep comics from growing and finding new audiences, larger audiences, and healthier markets. A lot of it is a byproduct of the direct market and the 3-4 decades where comics catered exclusively to that hardcore fan base market and saw it's market continually plagued by speculator bubbles, gimmicks, new #1, variant covers, events and shrinking units moved because there was no influx of new readership to keep comics growing, so stagnation and entropy set in and publishers had to rely on ways to sell more copies to a shrinking customer base to remain profitable. Fans lament these things and say do something different, yet when publishers do something different to try to find new readers, new markets, and growth potential the same fans cry you are taking away my comics and that's not what I meant by do something different, you should keep things the same...
You can't please them either way, so the best bet is to just ignore them and just put out the best stories you can that will find the widest possible audience. Of course, pricing, format, and accessibility and availability of product in a non-returnable market model are factors that will limit that, but that is a different discussion.
-M
|
|
|
Post by brianf on Aug 1, 2018 13:12:37 GMT -5
As an adult the one thing I have learned to accept is the only thing that stays the same is change - the world always changes. Birth, death, decay, change. I live in Seattle Wa and we've been undergoing a building boom on a massive scale over the last 10-15 years to the extent that almost every one or two story building that use to exist near downtown has been torn down and been replaced with mixed use condos & offices. I only bring up this point to state it drives me nuts that Seattles powers that be seem to had no passion for their own history. Change. Also I HATED the Spidy One More Day story - the only time I threw a comic across the room was when I read that Parker devils deal. So stupid, so wrong. I have a good friend of mine who works at a comic store and that poor dude had to hear me rail on and on about my problems with One More Day. But you know what I don't do? I don't send death threats. I don't bully those I disagree with. There is zero wrong with being passionate. I enjoy a robust debate. But bullying is BS. Another thing that chaps my hide is these #ComicsGate dorks railing against "Social Justice Warriors" in comics, claiming adding politics to comics is a new thing that's ruining them. Other folks have pointed out how ridiculous this claim is. But just last night I was reading some old Spider-Man and came across this - Ladies and gentlemen, from ASM #91/#92 (1970) may I present Stan Lee / Gil Kane / John Romita - SJWs -
|
|
Confessor
CCF Mod Squad
Not Bucky O'Hare!
Posts: 10,201
|
Post by Confessor on Aug 1, 2018 13:56:55 GMT -5
If superheroes are truly a modern mythology, then they have to be strong enough to exist in multiple iterations, versions and interpretations. There is no one correct story of Robin Hood. There is no one interpretation of King Arthur. There is no correct version of Hercules. The characters grow and change with their audiences. That is what makes them archetypes, that is what makes them iconic, and that is what makes them enduring myths. If super-heroes are to be myths, if they are iconic, and if they are to endure, they will undergo the same process. There will be no one correct Spider-Man story. There will be multiple interpretations of Captain America. There will be no correct version of Batman. They will grow, change, evolve and survive with each new audience through multiple generations and beyond the life of any one single fan or generation of fans. Putting aside the question of whether comics actually are "modern mythology" or not for now, comparing the Fantastic Four or Amazing Spider-Man to the legends of Robin Hood or King Arthur isn't a like-for-like comparison. Those legends were handed down orally by hundreds and thousands and then tens of thousands of people over the centuries. In the case of Robin Hood, the earliest existent ballad tale about him was written in the late 15th century, some 300 years after the events it describes allegedly took place. Obviously the story of Robin Hood has changed and grown over the course of hundreds of years, because it was an orally transmitted tale first and foremost. Even once printed versions were commonplace, new changes, such as additions to the cast were slow to occur (the character of Will Scarlet is a Victorian addition, but the next major addition to the Merry Men didn't occur until UK TV show Robin of Sherwood introduced a Saracen to the gang). Spider-Man or the Fantastic Four, on the other hand, were only created 60 odd years ago, and are in no way oral folktales. Spider-Man's origin in Amazing Fantasy #15 reads the same now as it did in 1963. What's more, due to the relative youth of the character, people who were fans of the character back then might even still read the comics today. As a result, who and what Spider-Man is, is much more set in stone than a predominantly oral legend like Robin Hood was in its earliest days. So, for me, that analogy simply doesn't work, I'm afraid. If they are forced to remain stagnant by a generation of fans who falsely believe they are "their" characters (you hear it all the time, that's not my Spider-Man, or that's not my Star Wars), they will stagnate, entropy will take effect, and they will die and be forgotten as a relic of that generation. Oh come on, this is simply a turn of phase. People who say this aren't usually actually saying that they think Star Wars or whatever else is their possession. They mean that the current state of Star Wars isn't like the version that they loved in years gone by. Even the comic publishers themselves use this kind of exaggerated short-hand, by touting an event like Secret Invasion as "not your Daddy's Skrulls!" They don't literally mean that your Daddy owned Marvel's earlier Skrull stories, they mean that the Skrulls are different this time out. That's not even bringing up the fact that no two fans can agree on exactly what is the correct version of X hero or y heroine, or z villain, and you will never be able to please all of them, and in trying to do so you will please none of them. You can only tell the best story as true to the vision you have for the story and see whom it resonates with. If that means striking out in a different direction, so be it. But it's not really about agreeing, is it? It's about fans saying, "I hate this new direction", for whatever reason. That's a perfectly acceptable sentiment for fans to express, surely? It's also an entirely obvious response to fundamental changes to a beloved character, I would've said. Things like the new X-Men or Barry Allen/Hal Jordan would never have happened if creators weren't willing to move beyond what was the accepted version of characters within fandom. Comics like Spider-Man and the Fantastic Four would never have been done if the creatives were simply trying to please the fanbase as they fanbase expressed what it appreciated in the forms of correspondence available at the time (at that time letters o the editors). Books like Maus, Watchmen, Moore's Swamp Thing, Sandman etc. would never have come about if creators and publishers simply listened to what fans said they wanted and catered to it. This is a bit of a straw man argument: nobody is saying that things can't or shouldn't change. It's that not all change is necessarily good, and chnage for change's sake, almost never is. Spider-Man losing Gwen Stacy, the love of his life, because of his arch-enemy is an organic, creatively-driven change that acts as grist to the dramatic mill. Even if you hated Gwen dying, it was a dramatic change that ramped up the angst in the story, but it didn't fundamentally alter who Spider-Man was. Suddenly having Spider-Man come out as gay, on the other hand (let's just say, as a wild example ), just to satisfy some vague diversity quota, when there was never any evidence of him being sexually oriented that way before, is probably gonna annoy a lot of people. That really shouldn't come as a surprise to anybody. You can't please them either way, so the best bet is to just ignore them and just put out the best stories you can that will find the widest possible audience. But that's part of the gripe of a lot of these disgruntled fans though, isn't it? That these diversity changes haven't been working out too great for sales either, at least according to Marvel's vice president of sales... www.theguardian.com/books/2017/apr/03/marvel-executive-says-emphasis-on-diversity-may-have-alienated-readers
|
|
Confessor
CCF Mod Squad
Not Bucky O'Hare!
Posts: 10,201
|
Post by Confessor on Aug 1, 2018 13:59:01 GMT -5
But you know what I don't do? I don't send death threats. I don't bully those I disagree with. There is zero wrong with being passionate. I enjoy a robust debate. But bullying is BS. Absolutely. Bullying or intimidating people connected with the comics is immature rubbish. But someone loudly complaining about changes to a comic character (or any other fictional character) is fair game, I think. You know, if you feel so inclined.
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on Aug 1, 2018 14:25:47 GMT -5
ConfessorStorytelling is storytelling. Oral tradition is storytelling. It allows for adaptability and growth so the story changes with the audience. Check out Albert Lord's book on the oral storytelling tradition... Many times those stories have been recorded in written form. Mallory's Morte d'artur is one form of the story written down. Geoggrey of Monmouth's is another. White's Sword inthe Sotne another. They are all echoes of the first time a stroy is told. Somehow when mass produced print entered the picture, stories became calcified into the form they first appeared. That is an inherent weakness in the format, not a strength, and an obstacle to good storytelling. It trades ease of recording and transmission for adaptability of the story, and adaptability is the true key for a stories survival, not permanence of format. Permanence locks a story into a single time and place making relevant for a limited range of audiences, and storytellers get trapped by the format of the storytelling, beng unable to continue to evolve and alter the tellings allowing the story itself to endure and transcend the teller and the initial telling. We see this in music too-a song that is recorded becomes calcified in the eyes of many artists and audiences and any variation from the recorded version is considered inferior, even when done by the artist's who recorded it initially. To the point where audiences want to hear the studio version of the song when tey see an act perform and are disappointed in variations in the live version. Some think permanence is a benefit. It is not. It is a calcification of the art form. It makes it a commodity for sale not an art form. It is the corpse that remains behind after an act of creativity that is sold to multiple audiences again and again, no longer a living breathing evolving art form. Amazing Fantasy #15 is one act of telling the Spider-Man story that has been recorded. If it is a living breathing art form, there will be other tellings of the story, each adapted to the time and audience it is told to. That is what the storytelling tradition has done for all of the history of humanity until technology created permanent formats which calcified the stories leaving them dead husks and a shadow of what storytelling was before. Stories and characters that do not continue to evolve with each telling of the story have no future. And just because it has only been x number of years since the first telling of the story doesn't mean it cannot evolve and grow. 1962 was three generations ago, and the story should have evolved through three generations of telling. That's how stories remain relevant and vibrant and continue to connect with audiences through time. Amazing Fantasy 15 itself is a relic of one telling of the story. It is not the only way the story can be told nor should it be. It works for some who heard it that way first and may work for some who encounter it that way in the future, but that is hardly iconic or universal. You can certainly argue the concept of super-heroes as modern myths. They could just be products of their time. But if that is so, there time will come to an end when they no longer resonate with audiences. More stories and character shave been forgotten over time (even those in permanent mediums like print) than are remembered. Very few have the adaptability to endure beyond the circumstances which made them relevant and entertaining for audiences of their time. Super-heroes seem to be transcending the time of their creation and the medium in which their stories were first told. New tellings growing and adapting to new audiences with characters changing details but remaining true to the thematic core of the story. That pretty much is the essence of a mythic/archetypical character. Once that transcends its initial telling (in form and in potential audiences) to become something more. But to each their own. -M
|
|
|
Post by beccabear67 on Aug 1, 2018 14:59:54 GMT -5
Steve Ditko had a lot of politics you could say in his comics. You could enjoy them without necessarily buying into any of it.
I guess the Iceman I knew was the one who said "a girl, big deal" in X-Men #1 (1963), and had the whole Cloud is she isn't he storyline in The New Defenders so him turning out to be gay would fit. His late '60s era over-the-top outbursts about Lorna Dane liking Alex Summers more didn't even seem to really be much about Lorna but about Bobby Drake needing to prove something. Others read other comics which I can see I haven't, and I can respect that the change doesn't fit for them. Likewise I reserve the right to think Doctor Who is male and that they have those on Gallifrey, as a long time fan of the series which has certainly seen changes before that did work which I thought wouldn't (Peter Davison Doctor), and which didn't that I thought would (Colin Baker Doctor)... I will give it an honest try.
It's become a cliche really though to say let's make (fin in the blank) a (fill in the blank)... a lack of other ideas or even desperation I think.
I'm pretty sure Northstar of Alpha Flight was the first gay superhero, it was fairly subtle at first though.
|
|
|
Post by adamwarlock2099 on Aug 1, 2018 15:05:33 GMT -5
I don't have paragraphs to write, after I have read everyone else's. But I think another, if not the, determining factor in who is on what side, is not necessarily who likes change and who doesn't, as much as who self inserts into fiction and who doesn't.
That's how the skinny, bullied nerd, Peter might have more common with me, than Luke Cage. But he's more interesting of a character to me. This is why race, gender and sexuality are immaterial to me. But I'm not everyone. And I think that is the dividing line more than anything when it comes to changes. Especially in well established characters that have been in print for decades.
|
|
Roquefort Raider
CCF Mod Squad
Modus omnibus in rebus
Posts: 17,413
Member is Online
|
Post by Roquefort Raider on Aug 1, 2018 16:39:46 GMT -5
Bless you, Confessor ! I couldn’t possibly disagree less! I, for one, (even being an old crotchety fan and all that) always favoured change over statism in my comics. I loved Peter Parker losing Gwen (despite the heartache I felt), moving to a new flat, making new friends, going to college, getting married. I loved the massive changes in the X-Men, a book in which characters came and went and evolved over time. I loved the fact that Conan was getting older. I loved seeing Shang-Chi change and evolve, even to the point where he simply retired. (I also loved the 5YL period of the Legion, which completely changed the nature of the book). Even when change was more cosmetic than actual, as under Byrne’s excellent run on the Fantastic Four, I loved it... as long as it was part of a coherent story. Change for change’s sake, change because there is some quota to fill, change because we reaaaaally need to sell comics to a certain demographics, changes because we want to appear cool to the people on Facebook or reddit or whatever, are not examples of comics not remaining static. They’re mere pandering, mere marketing, mere laziness, and they more often than not make for lousy stories to boot.
|
|