"Cleaning up the act" is quite common once a character becomes popular. Look at Superman, Micky Mouse and... Batman.
Ahuh.
Batman was and is much nicer so he is far away from being one of the "darkest characters".
Of course he is.
Of course. The Spawn shows everything what was wrong with comics in the 90s. The success came because of the specular boom.
I was saying 'yeah,' because you seemed to have just followed up on what I'd already typed. Plus, it's a given.
TruetotheCore needs to watch more movies.
The "current incarnation" took a big step towards the pre-crisis version. And yes, he was better back then, but you have never read a comic book with him. You just believe the guys that say "yeah, Luthor was just a one-dimensional mad scientist". This is far from the truth. BTW: I do NOT really "Like" Batman Forever but I think it's better than "Batman RETURNS... awfully"
I've already responded to this in the other thread, and that you think that Forever is anywhere near better than Returns proves me point.
Yes I do. I am quite intellectual and academic.
facepalm.jpg
They should just stop to make it so... pretentious. Comics may be more "sophisticated" these days, but too often they are also much dumber.
...Yeah?
Political satirists are usually into politics. Comic book writers - most of them - use "pop-psychology". They are into funny characters in tights.
I know you said most of them, but this would indicate that comic writers can't have researched certain topics in order to bring them into their character's world. The creator of Wonder Woman was a psychologist, and he acknowledged this influence on his work.
I LOVE Alan Moore's stuff. He has even admitted that he went to far with his deconstruction so he wrote the brilliant SUPREME and TOM STRONG. And he loves the Pre-Crisis Superman.
He also loves Post-Crisis Batman, having praised TDKR and Year One numerous times, as well as having wrote a forward for the former.
ONE out of 100. ONE! Got something? And it was stil about guys in tights. Why not write a great comic WITHOUT superheroes and violence and ass-shots? Why not try to write some SERIOUS stories that have some kind of significance to reality?!
You don't read enough comics, then. "Maus?"
"Cerberus?"
"Berlin?"
Phoebe Gloekner's "A Child's Life?" (Well, any of Gloekner's stuff, actually)
"Stray Bullets?"
"Hate?"
"Love and Rockets?" (Anything by the Hernandez brothers, actually)
I mean, should I go on?
No it did not change the "public perception". Most people will not even know what "Watchmen" or "The Dark KNight Returns" IS! When people think "comics" they sill think either Disney or funny man in tights.
How many people do you actually talk to?
That's the sad truth ("Seduction of the Innocent" is to blame, kinda, because before there were horror stories, western, "real" science fiction, crime comics...
There are still horror stories, crime comics ("Criminal Minds" by Brubaker is great), and 'real' science fiction.
But after that the comic industries became "superhero industries". They never tried to fight this.)
I love how you're showing your complete ignorance of the history of the industry.
But instead they tried to make superheroes, which are nothing more than young boy's wishfulfillment
Actually, much like The Shadow and Doc Savage, as well as most science fiction in fact, they sprung not up as tools of wish fulfillment, but as pulp heroes - the only era they were truly wish fulfillment tools was during the fifties-sixties. That's about it.
SERIOUS, MATURE and SOPHISTICATED by taking it away from its core audience.
"The only reason genre conventions exists is that we may break them."
Also, comics were never truly just for kids - in the sixties, Marvel's biggest fans were largely college kids (Stan Lee recounts this in "An Evening With Kevin Smith") and so on - younger children were a larger part of the fanbase back then, sure - but, they've moved on to other things, for the most part. It isn't because 'we taken them away from their audience,' it's because they've found more attractive interests.
That is to laugh. "changed that public perception" is just what they put into their advertising and You quote it!
What advertising?
Frank MIller is not even close to a grea writer.
Now? No. In the eighties? When he wrote TDKR, "Year One," "Ronin," and all of those? totally.
Gaiman and Moore are, yes, but those are the only(!) TWO.
Wow. You really have a confined view of the comics industry. The ones I mentioned above, especially the writer of Maus, are critically acclaimed writers, who've also wrote books that met with warm reception as well.
Ed Brubaker's working on one as we speak, and I'd love to pick that up.
Of course most aren't. But simply ALL good writers (with the two exceptions) write Movies or Novels!
I wish I had a gif from Scanners of that guy's head exploding.
THey are not attracted because "comic books" mean "Man in tights" and pretentious "depth" around those unrealistic guys.
You know that quite a few novelists have started to branch out into comic writing relatively recently, right?
Orson Scott Card being one of them (writing Ultimate Iron Man), Tad Williams being another, as well as Warren Ellis (writing various series' in the Ultimate line as well as a few others that I haven't picked up). Stephen King, and on and on.
I'm not saying its the best ever, but for such a serious matter... it was actually well-written.
It was 'okay.'
don't care what you think, but I'm right.
If by 'right' you mean 'wrong,' then I agree.