Monday, January 30, 2012 

Billy Batson was once known as Fawcett/DC's Capt. Marvel...

But now, in a new rendition by Geoff Johns and Gary Frank, they're throwing out that very name and just calling him "Shazam" now, because of possible legal problems. I can guess what's happening on that front: Marvel, which kept DC from officially using the name Captain Marvel for many years because they used it on the books they published with Mar-Vell of the Kree, is clearly leading to this out of childish hostility (even though both companies alike are now run by some of the most awful people possible), which was also a reason why DC hardly ever used the word "mutants" to describe some of their own superpowered characters, instead substituting the word "metahuman". But DC is still demonstrating that they're very weak in standing firm on what names and words they can use if they're changing anything just to avoid legal issues.

That said, I don't think Johns understands the characters and how they work when he tells the following:
Nrama: Then answer the question this way. When you were putting a fresh, new take on Shazam, what's the core essence of the character that you couldn't change?

Johns: Well, the core of the character, obviously, is surrogate family. I mean, it's easy. That's what he's all about. The same with wish fulfillment. And tied into his wish fulfillment, even if he won't admit it, is a surrogate family.
The core of the Big Red Cheese is wish fulfillment, not surrogates, but in any case, with his past track record - particularly as a solo writer - it's an almost foregone conclusion Johns wouldn't be able to handle family relations anyway, assuming he even does at all. Another problem is that they're changing the costume, so I'm not sure if even that many long time readers will find much to look forward to.

The title of the story Johns is writing is "The Curse of Shazam" but the only real curse is that people like him are running the show.

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Saturday, January 28, 2012 

What if new Green Arrow TV series becomes a liberal propaganda vent?

After I heard of the plans for a new Green Arrow TV series, I was wondering if there was any chance the series planned for the CW network could end up spouting the kind of ultra-leftist propaganda that Smallville ended up doing in the latter half of its run. Now, the TV Addict website's offered a clue that any worries may not be far off, and in this case, it looks like Black Canary might end up being the tool exploited here (via Superhero Hype):
DINAH “LAUREL” LANCE
What They’re Looking For: 28 years old, smart sexy, Laurel is a legal aid attorney determined to use her life as a one-woman war against the 1% following the death of her younger sister Sara. A sister, who as luck would have it, just so happened to have died aboard Oliver’s yacht.
Who We’re Pitching: Tina Majorino (VERONICA MARS), Lindsey Shaw (10 THINGS I HATE ABOUT YOU), Allison Miller (TERRA NOVA), Jurnee Smollett (FRIDAY NIGHT LIGHTS)
That little line they used there, of course, derives from what the Occupy movement would use to describe not just the rich, but anyone whom they could despise, and raises some questions over whether the stories planned intend to depict her viewing only the rich as baddies. If they do that'll be odd, since back in the early days when Ollie would take on semi-political issues, Dinah was not as heavily into politics as he was, and she also ran a florist shop.

If this series ends up becoming as politicized as Smallville did, then it certainly won't be guaranteed a very long life on television.

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Friday, January 27, 2012 

Marvel and DC develop obsession with severed arms

Here's some pictorial examples of the gory madness that's been devouring both DC and Marvel of recent. For example, from Brightest Day 19, we had Black Manta slicing off Aquaman's right hand, as though it weren't enough that earlier, his left hand had been severed. And to make everything worse, Geoff Johns, who wrote the issue nearly 2 years ago, even has the gall to have Manta tell Aquaman, "you should be used to this by now", which is doubtlessly a subtle insult to the audience, to say nothing of Aquaman himself. Johns really loves Aquaman? Not if he's going to put him through such sensationalized misery he doesn't.

Then, more recently, in the relaunched Uncanny X-Men, in either issue 2 or 3, Emma Frost had her own left arm severed, even in her new diamond form:
I fail to see what the point is for this beyond more unremitting darkness for the X-world.

And then, in Justice League's 5th issue, even if it isn't cut off Green Lantern ends up with a crushed arm, courtesy of Darkseid:
So this is what they reintroduced the lead adversary of the New Gods for - just so that he can be depicted as sadistically violent towards the heroes.

And let's not forget Static Shock recently fell victim to this kind of violence too, in the first new issue:
On top of that, it's clear that they've lost themselves to an obsession with arm severing and bone breaking, and that's one of the leading reasons why their fortunes are dwindling.

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Wednesday, January 25, 2012 

Stan Lee on his 70 years in comics

IGN's Comics section did an interview with Stan Lee about his career spanning back 70s years, including a recent documentary about his life.

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Monday, January 23, 2012 

The past works of Joe Simon

TG Daily has an article about the late Joe Simon and Jack Kirby's past works in history, including a hero called Blue Bolt, some of which Titan Books is going to be publishing in archives.

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Saturday, January 21, 2012 

Fox affiliate doesn't handle DC's degeneration the right way

A writer for MyFoxDC spoke about how DC is using vulgar violence and sex to sell their comics. But here's the sad part: they do it almost entirely from a "comics-are-only-for-kids" perception, and that even includes their clumsy take on Starfire:
The female characters are more sexualized. One of the most noticeable transformations is Starfire. The character goes from a kids Cartoon Network superhero in a full-length jumpsuit to a scantily clad, voluptuous version in the comic Red Hood and the Outlaws. This Starfire is shown in a barely there bikini or the equivalent of pasties over her breasts and a thong.

"Do you want to have sex?" she says propositioning her boyfriend's pal, and later says, "Love has nothing to do with it."

It is these kind of images and suggestive language that concern Bernstein.

"It's a misrepresentation of reality. It sends the wrong message," he said.

Relationships are portrayed as one night stands with rampant promiscuity. The treatment of women is more misogynistic.
While this can certainly make for a legitimate concern, and already has, it's not whether this is literally aimed at children that's the problem. It's that the writing is alarmingly juvenile and insulting to the characters' origins, which the people involved display a most astonishing ignorance of: Starfire already wore scanty outfits like those when she debuted in 1980 in the New Teen Titans. The difference then is that it was far from being depicted as gratuitously as it could be today, and back at that time, she had a personality, which is more than can be said of today's characterizations.

It doesn't get much better with the following:
The changes to DC comics appear to mirror the changes on the big screen. Remember the original Batman TV series? The superhero defeated the villains without a drop of blood shed. Fake punches came with a "Kapow" across the screen. Compare that to 2008’s Batman: The Dark Knight. In the comic world, that sells.
I don't get it, are they basing their perceptions on the old live action TV series from the late 1960s? The comics may not have been the bloodiest when they first debuted in the Golden Age, but to make it sound confusingly as though any and all of these products rose out of TV shows and not the other way around is really screwing up, to say nothing of insulting.

The following is better though, at telling just how short-lived any success they're having with the relaunch is:
"I think they're definitely trying to push the envelope, get people's attention with it," said Jared Smith, President of Big Planet Comics.

He sells hundred of titles at his Vienna, Va. comic book store, some for adults, some for kids. The re-launch of DC Comics he says drew a lot of attention. Sales surged for the new editions. A lot was driven by the hype, but sales he says have since leveled off. Many liked what they saw, but some turned off fans stopped buying.

"It made a lot of people unhappy with it or it was something they just didn't want to read," Smith said.

These types of changes seem to be cyclical with comics to drive up sales. Smith says DC Comics had fallen behind its main rival Marvel and wanted to make a big change. In the last five years, he said DC Comics has gone from a more "lighthearted" comic that is "fun adventure for everyone" to one that is "much more violent, and in some cases, much more graphic in the violence."

DC Comics was contacted for the story, but would not discuss its reasons for the re-launch or the content of its books. In a presentation, Smith says DC Comics "described what they were trying to do was to boost their sales, but they also wanted to bring back some old readers who may not read comics anymore, but also attract new people who have never read comics."

Based on his sales, Smith says the company was successful at getting lapsed readers to come back, but not necessarily bring in new comic fans.
Well they got that part right, and so long as people like Dan DiDio are in charge, and maybe even Bob Harras, who'll surely be remembered for the damage he helped bring to Spider-Man and many other Marvel series in the 1990s, not many old fans will return, and not many new readers aware of their reputations will be encouraged either. Nor will anybody be encouraged to try their books as long as "continuity" among other things is held hostage by the kind of editorial mandates they're resorting to now. As the above suggests, they're not even willing to cooperate with an interviewer; clearly, their insularity got the better of them.

The thing that's both funny and sad about this subject is seeing some leftist-dominated sites like Comics Alliance, Comics Beat and CBR attacking a Fox-based site over this report out of what seems more like an anti-conservative grudge than true concern for the medium. Anyone who did some careful research would see that Fox is anything but a conservative outfit (Their head honcho Rupert Murdoch has been chummy with Saudi prince Al-Walid bin Talal, who's hardly a symbol of democracy, and Diana West is one of the most outspoken conservative critics of Fox's), and for all we know, CNN, ABC, CBS, NBC, NPR, and other networks with a seriously liberal bent could have published the same story, and it's possible that the comics sites wouldn't have said anything negative about their coverage, if at all. Or would they? It probably depends on if they were even concerned about just how unappealing today's output really is. And for all we know, they probably aren't any more than most of the major comics sites themselves, whose own concerns about violence, overt sexuality and even politics can be very iffy at best. Plus, if we know where to look, there's plenty of liberals out there who couldn't care less about comics, so the comics sites' outburst stemming from anti-conservative bias seems trivial at best.

There's plenty of valid arguments to be made about DC and Marvel's resorting to gratuitous elements and how it's alienating for anybody and everybody with common sense, but it shouldn't be done solely from a comics-are-only-for-kids perspective. That doesn't mean concerns about the bad influence these stories can have on children aren't valid, but once again, a writer for a major news source has only insulted everybody's intellect by taking a narrow view of the medium and suggesting they don't have a high opinion of its true potential. And the major comics news sites that panned this only seem to be doing it out of anti-conservative sentiment, not genuine concern for the medium's image.

It's also very odd that the MyFoxDC writer had some of these maturely themed comics taken to a school where some children got to look at the content. Was that a good idea?

At least this part does have something to think about:
The content of the teen and teen plus rated comics seem contradictory to the audience targeted by the advertising inside. The images of bloodied bodies and sex scenes are accompanied by ads for Legos and milk.

"Why are we advertising for little kids in a comic book that's rated for mature teens? What's wrong with this?" asked Dr. Bernstein.
There's a legitimate point to made there. If they want to gear the story for adults, why don't they do the same with the advertising?

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More on how liberalism is ruining comics

Hube of Colossus of Rhodey has written a special post on Newsbusters about more of the recent history of extreme liberalism that's been wrecking today's mainstream comics, including some of Mark Millar's worst examples of ultra-leftism.

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Friday, January 20, 2012 

Making Kaine into a hero doesn't sound like it'll be done right

USA Today wrote about a new series Marvel is planning for Kaine, one of the villains who'd appeared in the dreaded Clone Saga. But I don't think they're going to get very far with this kind of promotion:
"Kaine is a guy who was a murderer and did horrible things many times he couldn't control himself from doing, and how he wants to be a better person. There is just something universal in that story," Wacker says.
Now according to the Kaine profile on SpiderFan, Kaine's victims appear to include villains like Dr. Octopus, Grim Hunter and at least a few Scriers. But none of this is clear in the USA Today article, and if they're going to stay so ambiguous about it, no wonder Steven Wacker's whole statement could serve to backfire on the book they're conjuring up.

And the biggest problem besides that is that they're dredging up material from one of the worst eras in Spidey history - the Clone Saga, which has come to be despised by many for a lot of good reasons. Why, if there was anything that ever needed to be purged from continuity, it's almost everything related to the Clone Saga, not the Spider-Marriage! All Wacker and company are doing is showing how committed they are to poor storytelling if they're going to build a book centered around a a kind of villain who'd been conjured up as an adversary in one of the worst storylines from 1995.

At the end of the article, Wacker says:
"There's a lot of skepticism but I think people will show up just to see the car wreck, if nothing else," Wacker says. "And our job is to make sure it's not a car wreck and to keep them there."
It's more than just a car wreck; it's a combined train-and-plane wreck, and I doubt many will show up to read it if they're already skeptical this could ever work. So, there won't be many people for Wacker to convince to remain.

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About me

  • I'm Avi Green
  • From Jerusalem, Israel
  • I was born in Pennsylvania in 1974, and moved to Israel in 1983. I also enjoyed reading a lot of comics when I was young, the first being Fantastic Four. I maintain a strong belief in the public's right to knowledge and accuracy in facts. I like to think of myself as a conservative-style version of Clark Kent. I do not know if I'll ever be as good as him, but I do my best.
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