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Post by Icctrombone on Aug 23, 2020 8:10:34 GMT -5
I’m gathering a Hank Pym army. I totally agree that he hasn’t recovered since Avengers 213. But he was sacrificed for a compelling story that stands out among the 100 thousand written since superhero’s have been around.
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Post by wildfire2099 on Aug 23, 2020 21:25:13 GMT -5
I’m gathering a Hank Pym army. I totally agree that he hasn’t recovered since Avengers 213. But he was sacrificed for a compelling story that stands out among the 100 thousand written since superhero’s have been around. I disagree about that... I really enjoyed him as 'Hank Pym-science adventurer' with West Coast Avengers, and it was pretty good in the Avengers:Initiative and Academy books... back when they were making him the 'scientist supreme' of the MU.
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Post by Roquefort Raider on Aug 24, 2020 5:34:55 GMT -5
Hey, no fair! I click on the link just for a sneak peak before going to work, and you guys hook me immediately! How is a guy supposed to make a living? Icctrombone , you have a great radio voice!!! And your enthusiasm is very uplifting! Scott, your podcasts continue to be brilliant... and I have no idea how you manage to lead so many excellent projects at once. You must never sleep!
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Post by Icctrombone on Aug 24, 2020 6:28:20 GMT -5
Hey, no fair! I click on the link just for a sneak peak before going to work, and you guys hook me immediately! How is a guy supposed to make a living? Icctrombone , you have a great radio voice!!! And your enthusiasm is very uplifting! Scott, your podcasts continue to be brilliant... and I have no idea how you manage to lead so many excellent projects at once. You must never sleep! Thanks RR, I had a blast doing the podcast. CB is the man.
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Crimebuster
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Post by Crimebuster on Sept 17, 2020 13:12:05 GMT -5
This just hit 100 downloads!
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Post by Icctrombone on Oct 2, 2020 5:50:15 GMT -5
The subject of this podcast was discussed a bit on a FB group and Bob Hall commented.
"Bob Hall In defense. I was willing to draw whatever they handed me at that point. Page rates were so low then you couldn't get on your high horse. Also I think my art for this run was pretty awful. After this series I signed up with a studio in NY and drew human figures for the next eight years or so. I know some fans like what I did and I'm grateful. But while the storytelling (as opposed to the story line) wasn't bad, my drawing got better after I took some classes."
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Post by Roquefort Raider on Oct 6, 2020 16:04:11 GMT -5
The subject of this podcast was discussed a bit on a FB group and Bob Hall commented. "Bob Hall In defense. I was willing to draw whatever they handed me at that point. Page rates were so low then you couldn't get on your high horse. Also I think my art for this run was pretty awful. After this series I signed up with a studio in NY and drew human figures for the next eight years or so. I know some fans like what I did and I'm grateful. But while the storytelling (as opposed to the story line) wasn't bad, my drawing got better after I took some classes."I really liked Hall's artwork on Shadowman. He did get better with time.
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on Oct 14, 2020 5:46:14 GMT -5
Well I'm finally caught up to issue #213, so I checked out this episode tonight. You guys did a hell of a job. I had no idea that Shooter blamed Hall for the backhand. I can believe that Shooter intended for a moment of lighter intensiveness that was still a physical expression of what was already an emotionally abusive relationship, driving Jan to leave and Hank to change without going this far off the rails.
Perhaps more significantly, I agree with Scott's comment that Hank's descent happens too quickly, as well as spoon's assertion that the whole thing felt forced. The new lineup in #211 felt rushed and out of nowhere, Hank's behavior in #212 felt forced/rushed, Cap's reaction in #213 felt forced, and Jan's transformation from blubbering, apologizing victim to resolved survivor in the span of a few panels felt very very rushed.
I do respect what Shooter was trying to do. I read the first ten issues of Avengers, and then #80 up thru #213 over the past few years, and I have almost no impression of Hank from any of it. #211 was a slap in the face to me because THOSE were the Avengers I'd been following for over a hundred issues; they were the folks I was invested in, and there were still stories left to tell with them. To brush them aside without significant explanation and then immediately turn one of their replacements into a piece of trash who got drummed out two issues later felt like a slap in the face. And yet, what Shooter did to Hank didn't bother me at all because he'd been such a non-entity in these pages for such a long time. I can see how, if I'd read more of the early run, and if I'd read the solo stories in Tales to Astonish, I would care, but as someone reading The Avengers for a full decade leading up to this issue, Hank just wasn't on my radar in the slightest.
It's interesting how Icctrombone praised Alan Moore early in this episode because what Shooter does to Hank feels prototypical of what Moore did to the Charlton characters with Watchmen, as well as the general trend he set for writers that came after him: find a seed of truth in a character's backstory and exaggerate it to create a darker, more fallable character to which an adult reader can better relate. Shooter takes such pains to show how all the costume/name changes and frequent shifting from member, to reserve member, to non-member could be an expression of insecurity, and I can see it. It's no more true to the original character than Frank Miller was to Batman, but there's a satisfactory logic at work. You can accept it and even find it clever if you're willing to let go of the classic interpretation.
One final thought about Shooter: His interest in an abused woman here closely resembles #200's concern with a woman in a somewhat different abusive situation. Proof that was can blame #200 on Shooter after all?
But yeah, once a "hero" backhands his wife, there is no convincing redemption to be found. I haven't read beyond #213 yet, but I have absolutely zero problem with the fact that fans have never let this moment go.
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Post by Icctrombone on Oct 14, 2020 7:01:21 GMT -5
Well I'm finally caught up to issue #213, so I checked out this episode tonight. You guys did a hell of a job. I had no idea that Shooter blamed Hall for the backhand. I can believe that Shooter intended for a moment of lighter intensiveness that was still a physical expression of what was already an emotionally abusive relationship, driving Jan to leave and Hank to change without going this far off the rails. (Hall himself takes the blame for the backhand, but I don't know how you get to a divorce unless the physical abuse happens.)
Perhaps more significantly, I agree with Scott's comment that Hank's descent happens too quickly, as well as spoon's assertion that the whole thing felt forced. The new lineup in #211 felt rushed and out of nowhere, Hank's behavior in #212 felt forced/rushed, Cap's reaction in #213 felt forced, and Jan's transformation from blubbering, apologizing victim to resolved survivor in the span of a few panels felt very very rushed. (The in story explanation for this sudden changes is weak, but the real world reason is that Shooter had a story to tell in order to save a book that was lousy for almost a year. In the podcast, I don't agree with the changes to hank who was a solid character in Avengers lore, but the writer will have his way especially if he's the EIC. )
I do respect what Shooter was trying to do. I read the first ten issues of Avengers, and then #80 up thru #213 over the past few years, and I have almost no impression of Hank from any of it. ( If you only read from 1-10 and skipped from 11-79, then you missed many events with Hank Pym that cement the fans love for him. He returned in issue # 27 , after the Kooky quartet era, to be a top flight and key member of the Assemblers. )
#211 was a slap in the face to me because THOSE were the Avengers I'd been following for over a hundred issues; they were the folks I was invested in, and there were still stories left to tell with them. To brush them aside without significant explanation and then immediately turn one of their replacements into a piece of trash who got drummed out two issues later felt like a slap in the face. ( for the sake of the story, this saga had to involve people who were the closest to Hank in the team. That's the original members that bonded in the first 16 issues of their history. )
It's interesting how Icctrombone praised Alan Moore early in this episode because what Shooter does to Hank feels prototypical of what Moore did to the Charlton characters with Watchmen, as well as the general trend he set for writers that came after him: find a seed of truth in a character's backstory and exaggerate it to create a darker, more fallable character to which an adult reader can better relate. Shooter takes such pains to show how all the costume/name changes and frequent shifting from member, to reserve member, to non-member could be an expression of insecurity, and I can see it. It's no more true to the original character than Frank Miller was to Batman, but there's a satisfactory logic at work. You can accept it and even find it clever if you're willing to let go of the classic interpretation. ( To my knowledge Moore never destroyed a top character who had fans from early in the silver age. The Charlton characters remained intact after Watchmen. Maybe it would have been better if he used them as they are mostly irrelevant .)
One final thought about Shooter: His interest in an abused woman here closely resembles #200's concern with a woman in a somewhat different abusive situation. Proof that was can blame #200 on Shooter after all? But yeah, once a "hero" backhands his wife, there is no convincing redemption to be found. I haven't read beyond #213 yet, but I have absolutely zero problem with the fact that fans have never let this moment go. ( Agreed)
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on Oct 14, 2020 7:35:23 GMT -5
(Hall himself takes the blame for the backhand, but I don't know how you get to a divorce unless the physical abuse happens.) Plenty of people get divorces without physical abuse. Even without the backhand, #213 shows that Hank has grown totally distant and emotionally abusive towards Jan. A slight nudge that accidentally knocks her over and Hank refusing to turn to see if she is okay could have been just enough to be a final straw. Well yeah, I mean it's clear his reason for doing this was that he had a story to tell, regardless of the many stories that were left to tell with the current team. And the reason the book had been lousy for a year was that, after the issue #200 debacle, Shooter hadn't left a regular team in charge of the book. I suspect he was Gene Coloning each writer who took a stab and wasn't delivering what he wanted. Several of the pre-#211 issues show promise, but none were allowed to develop beyond an issue or two. Sure. If that's the story Shooter was going to tell, that's how he needed to tell it. But much as you hate what he did to Hank for the sake of the story he felt he needed to tell, I hate what he did to the title. Shooter's a bit of an idea bulldozer, isn't he? He wants that story built and doesn't care what he has to knock down to get it built. I suspect Shooter's very reason for doing this was that Hank Pym was not a top character. Despite being a founding Avenger, he'd fallen into relative obscurity and had precious few fans demanding his return. Thus, Shooter planned to knock him down and then build him back up better than ever. As for the Charlton characters, Moore's original plan was to use and effectively destroy the original characters until DC editorial changed their minds and told him he had to change the names. Should have been the end of Captain Atom, Blue Beetle, The Question, and everyone else. I think we both agree Shooter knocked down things we loved in order to tell a story that (at least you and Scott assure me) ends up being pretty worth while. We're just passionate about different things that got knocked down. I probably should go back and read those early Hank Pym stories.
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Post by Icctrombone on Oct 14, 2020 7:56:46 GMT -5
Idea bulldozer is quite overstated. Storytelling by destroying the status quo has been a standard technique since the 60's-70's. It happened to Superman in the Krytonite nevermore story , Green Lantern in the Neal Adams run and countless other tales. It works but maybe it went too far with Hank and later on, Hal Jordans nutty phase.
Of course I understand that divorces happen for many reasons, but as Crimebuster pointed out, it came out of left field in the readers experience. Many things occur off panel that are referenced in stories, but maybe their marriage difficulties should not have been one of them. A quick bit of research indicates that Hank and Jan were a regular part of the Avengers book from 1-16, 26-75 with little cameos in a handful of issues until 137. They were mostly regulars from 137-181. I'm guessing that from 181-211 is when Shooter claims the marriage began to sour. Again , as I've stated in the podcast, I don't agree with those turn of events, but I'm just a reader and not the writer.
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on Oct 14, 2020 8:02:57 GMT -5
A quick bit of research indicates that Hank and Jan were a regular part of the Avengers book from 1-16, 26-75 with little cameos in a handful of issues until 137. They were mostly regulars from 137-181. I'm guessing that from 181-211 is when Shooter claims the marriage began to sour. Again , as I've stated in the podcast, I don't agree with those turn of events, but I'm just a reader and not the writer. It's been about three years since I read #137-181, but my vague memory has Hank more in the background while Jan took a more prominent role. I think writers were trying to make up for her previous depictions as a shallow airhead in the age of gender equality but, unintentionally, this tipped the balance in their relationship. Jan was in the forefront and Hank was not. I truly and honestly have no real memories of Hank from this time period except for one vague memory of him clashing with Hawkeye over the Goliath identity.
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Post by Icctrombone on Oct 14, 2020 8:09:33 GMT -5
A quick bit of research indicates that Hank and Jan were a regular part of the Avengers book from 1-16, 26-75 with little cameos in a handful of issues until 137. They were mostly regulars from 137-181. I'm guessing that from 181-211 is when Shooter claims the marriage began to sour. Again , as I've stated in the podcast, I don't agree with those turn of events, but I'm just a reader and not the writer. It's been about three years since I read #137-181, but my vague memory has Hank more in the background while Jan took a more prominent role. I think writers were trying to make up for her previous depictions as a shallow airhead in the age of gender equality but, unintentionally, this tipped the balance in their relationship. Jan was in the forefront and Hank was not. I truly and honestly have no real memories of Hank from this time period except for one vague memory of him clashing with Hawkeye over the Goliath identity. I get that. He was certainly overshadowed by the Vision and the other regulars. He was in the forefront during the 26-75 run and He was more Giantman/Goliath in most of the stories and they took pains to feature him in many of the covers. The explanation I heard was Marvel felt that a giant on the cover would sell more copies. When he became YJ in issue # 59, I lost a bit of interest in him.
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on Oct 14, 2020 8:35:56 GMT -5
He was certainly overshadowed by the Vision and the other regulars. You know, that's got me thinking. Wanda and Vision effectively replaced Jan and Hank as the resident married couple on the team. In a way, Shooter just re-inserted Hank and Jan into their roles on the team -- Vision constantly tormented with doubt and insecurity, and Wanda perpetually being supportive and understanding. Maybe Hank's "long history" of insecurity was really just an extension and exaggeration of Vision's.
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Post by Icctrombone on Oct 14, 2020 8:56:11 GMT -5
He was certainly overshadowed by the Vision and the other regulars. You know, that's got me thinking. Wanda and Vision effectively replaced Jan and Hank as the resident married couple on the team. In a way, Shooter just re-inserted Hank and Jan into their roles on the team -- Vision constantly tormented with doubt and insecurity, and Wanda perpetually being supportive and understanding. Maybe Hank's "long history" of insecurity was really just an extension and exaggeration of Vision's. That’s a good point. That’s why they pay you the big bucks.
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