« Home | Tom Hanks talks about where comic movies are going » | Belgium's Spirou undergoes censorship » | If Neil Gaiman's Anansi Boys TV show isn't release... » | Disney's hypocritical approach to Jessica Rabbit » | Tom King goes to campaign for leftist causes on US... » | Hollywood Reporter gushes over James Tynion's over... » | Part four of the study of troubling and offensive ... » | Part three of the look at troubling and offensive ... » | Part two of a look at troubling and offensive pane... » | Part one of a look at some troubling and offensive... » 

Saturday, November 09, 2024 

Suddenly, Marvel no longer so interested in company wide crossovers?

According to ComicBook, the pretentious editor Tom Brevoort now claims Marvel's less interested in doing crossovers - either universe-wide or with different publishers - in contrast to DC, whom he claims does:
“Marvel isn’t all that interested in doing a lot of crossovers,” Marvel Comics VP and Executive Editor Tom Brevoort explained in his Substack newsletter. “DC for the last several years has seemed much more open to doing them. But whenever Marvel does participate in one, there tends to be some reason for this internally, some objective that making a crossover helps us to achieve.”

The X-Men editor continued, “But each circumstance is different, so I can’t tell you why we do each and every one, nor which instances came from Marvel reaching out to others and which ones were the result of others reaching out to us.”

While DC has consistently published at least one intercompany crossover every year since 2015 — everything from Conan the Barbarian (Dark Horse) to Power Rangers (Boom!) and The Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (IDW) — Marvel has participated in significantly fewer crossovers with outside companies. Especially when compared to the output of the ’90s and 2000s, when the Marvel Universe crossed over with the likes of X-O Manowar (Valiant) Backlash and Deathblow (Image), Witchblade (Top Cow), Invincible (Skybound), and Red Sonja (Dynamite).
If it's within their own universes, then assuming this is true, it would put DC in a bad light, compounding their own artistic bankruptcy. On which note, even if Crisis on Infinite Earths isn't the worst of the crossovers from a historical viewpoint, it did most unfortunately set a very troubling tone going forward, since only so many of the crossovers DC did turn out the following decade emphasized death, and in the case of 1993's Bloodlines, you could easily argue it emphasized sadism, what with the way the Aliens rejects were willing to murder people. Whenever DC goes that far to be so excessive, and Marvel less so, it only has the effect of making the latter look better by contrast, even if their subsequent crossovers proved to be very bad in their own way (Avengers: Disassembled, House of M and Civil War, anyone?) Not to mention that Marvel's just as guilty of turning out insufferably violent stories that rival the worst of DC's stories written for cheap sensationalism. And despite what Brevoort's telling his correspondent, Marvel just recently developed an Aliens crossover with Avengers.

If Marvel really has suddenly reevalutated universe-spanning crossovers, it's probably because the sales really are in freefall, and if it's crossovers with different publishers we're talking about here, something to consider is that their woke approach of the past decade or so may have turned off some other publishers who don't want their products subjected to the same kind of PC Marvel's going by. But DC's proven they too can be very woke, and if it discourages some fellow publishers from working with them on a crossover, concerns would be justified. One crossover they did do many years ago was with the Kuwaiti publisher of the Islamic propaganda comic The 99, and that was a major humiliation. It would be foolish to think Marvel under their current leadership couldn't still do the same. So it's only if sales really are tanking that further crossovers would be considered less worth the effort. And if more consumers are avoiding Marvel/DC's worthless modern products, that's a good thing.

Labels: , , , , , , ,

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 don't expect to be perfect at the job, but I do my best.
My profile

Archives

Links

  • avigreen2002@yahoo.com
  • Fansites I Created

  • Hawkfan
  • The Greatest Thing on Earth!
  • The Outer Observatory
  • Earth's Mightiest Heroines
  • The Co-Stars Primer
  • Realtime Website Traffic

    Comic book websites (open menu)

    Comic book weblogs (open menu)

    Writers and Artists (open menu)

    Video commentators (open menu)

    Miscellanous links (open menu)

  • W3 Counter stats
  • Bio Link page
  • blog directory Bloggeries Blog Directory View My Stats Blog Directory & Search engine eXTReMe Tracker Locations of visitors to this page   Flag Counter Free Hit Counters
    Free Web Counter

    This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?

    make money online blogger templates

Older Posts Newer Posts

The Four Color Media Monitor is powered by Blogspot and Gecko & Fly.
No part of the content or the blog may be reproduced without prior written permission.
Join the Google Adsense program and learn how to make money online.