hippie_hunter
The King is Back!
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It had Peter Parker miss his wedding because some fat man fell on him.
I could agree with that list...except One Moment In Time. I really liked those four issues; but, I also understand some people (JH..cough, cough) who would still have trouble reading it. That story did what it was suppose to accomplish, and for those who complain about some holes still being in the past...well, you can't fit everything into four issues.
No but you can fit everything into 20 years of issues... but apparently that's not good enough. These four issues are now the past 20 years
And I know exactly what it accomplished... it ruined 20 years of continuity and showed us fans that Marvel has no respect for the past of their characters and will ignore or erase anything written at anypoint on a whim.
Aka... they're willing to crap on anything and anyone without respect to the stories or creators that's come before them. Oh, and they'll overcharge you while doing it. People who buy into OMD/OMIT type of stories are, to me, the very definition of a "sucker."
It did not ruin 20 years of continuity at all. Everything that happened still happened; but, now we have some things that have changed in that history from the moment of OMD to today. Everything you read would have to happen in order for OMD to happen.
Heck, the events in the Clone Saga was more monumental than this when it was going on. Back then, everything you believed was Peter Parker after issues in the early 100's to today was all supposedly a clone! The only difference with OMD is that we have the internet, where people can make a bigger deal out of things than EVER before.
With OMIT, Marvel responded to what fans had been griping about: Letting them finally know how the old stories currently fit into everyone's current memories. It does not say "nothing you read before didn't happen," but, that "from this moment in Peter's life, these are the things that have changed in his life that you might be questioning now." (And, to me, this is WAY better than Brubaker's X-Men history change or Bendis' Beyonder change.)
JH, I know you hate this...but, face it. Spidey stories had been pretty stagnant for some time.
but, this took care of many things in one BOLD stroke. We not only got Peter's VERY boring marriage desolved, but his great cast of characters...and a few new ones...got to come back, too.
Momma told us all many years ago that things change. It's part of growing up. Sure, you'll have a grieving process; but, for those still stuck on OMD, I think it's time for a serious intervention. If need be, maybe we can get Dan Slott and a bunch of us Hypers to come to your house and help you through this process.
While you have to edit 22 years pf comics, I have to edit 25 years of comics when I see Spider-Man and/or Peter Parker interact with Mary Jane all the while pretending that she knows he's really Spider-Man... and there are LOTS of comics where IF she REALLY knew, then she was a much greater actress in her youth than in her "Secret Hospital" days...![]()
And like Phaedrus45 said, in life comes change... so when thepartyintervention happens, I'll bring some chips to your place...
All-Dressed? Dill Pickle?
Your choice.
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I was going to respond to all of this in detail but figured why bother? I'll just touch a few points.
Yes, and people will keep saying this and I will KEEP say it's crap. When I have to edit comics in my head (because living together versus Married changes a lot more than people want to say) then it's just stupid and yes, it's 20 years needlessly altered and tainted. It makes no difference if you liked how those 20 years played out or not.
Also in addition to the marraige, they changed the OTHER powers and last I heard, unless they're going back on what was said on this too, they did away with the pregnancy during the Clone Saga as well.
And I despised that as well at the time. Trust me, my love of the Clone Saga comes with the knowledge that it was fixed... same as my love of Spider-Man would likely come back if OMD were fixed but sadly it won't while Quesada and Slott are in charge of the book.
That's your opinion. I disagree 100%. From the time Straczynski came on until Back in Black was gold in my opinion. The only rough spot was the Gwen/Norman reveal and even Sins Past was good save that aspect of it. If they were Gwen and Peter's kids it'd have been a great story (as Straczynski originally intended).
And this reminds me that you've already drank the cool-aid Marvel pitches during their cultish "OMD is okay" meetings. You're using their lingo that most of us make fun of. I'm waiting for you to say "New and Innovative" and "Things will never be the same" in regular conversation![]()
And maybe they can get you to accept that the Beyonder is and always was an Inhuman and that it was a great idea and well executed and that you should just shut up about it and accept how fantastic it is!
No, those 20 years are NOT tainted. It's only in your mind that they are. Peter Parker does NOT get to OMD without everything that happened before, plain and simple. And, this is the main concept that I think keeps tripping up people. Everything that happened before happened. OMIT creates a different reality...YES...in the minds of everyone else to what then happened in the past. But, in the true past, it's what you'll read.
Good point...and, one of the BEST reasons for embracing OMD!!! For me, The Other was one of the worst Spidey stories of all time (I still remember that thing just dragging on and on and on), and they did not need to change Spidey's powers to make him more interesting. (It wasn't the powers that many of us wanted changed. We wanted the comic to be good...like it used to be in the 80's.)
It's not accepting something as whether it's fantastic or not. It's the point that 1) those 20 years STILL happened
and 2) this crap happens all the time; but, since it's the much beloved Spider-Man, people get more up-in-arms about it. Spidey is very much a person from our childhood...and, depending on your age, as you admit, your love for it is different than others who remember what I consider the "good old days" before MJ got married to Peter.
Obviously it's your choice to ever read Spidey again, or anything that is linked to him (cough, Spider-Girl, cough) ... but, all I'm saying is the argument is still being blown out of preportion.
Reading comics is all about having to deal with the changes that come along to try and reinvigorate sales. (And, this is what the comic industry REALLY is about..the ALL-MIGHTY DOLLAR!) With everything nowadays, you have to introduce something new, or the casual reader will go away. But, it also has to include some touches of the past for the loyal people, too.
MJ isn't gone...the past still had to happen the way it did...but, change came "in one fell swoop!" (Maybe that's the problem with it all...you never had time to grieve properly. With our intervention, we can hold a mock funeral.)
See, this is where I don't understand your mindset. You apparently think of Spider-Man's history as a story in your mind whereas I love to read the actual comics that physically have Spider-Man stating things like "My wife is at home" and "I love my wife... did I mention I love my wife?" and "I think it was in the vows" and that kind of stuff. When I go back and pick up issues of Amazing Spider-Man and read a line like that suddenly I have to edit it out in my mind to "My live-in girlfriend is at home" and "I love my live-in girlfriend" and you can't even edit the last line as there were no vows. OMD HAS tainted 20 years of printed Spider-Man history. He DIDN'T say those things now. If you want to ignore the paper then sure, everything's dandy, but I'm not a fan of that.
And the alternate reality did happen. It's no different from Age of Apocalypse. Legion went back and changed one thing (killing Xavier) and then an alternate reality came to be. It is now a separate universe from the 616. In theory it was the same that was broken and was fixed, but they are separate since they are both still running separately. Spider-Man went through the exact same type of thing and yet, he still molds in with the rest of the Marvel 616.
It's basic Marvel science. When you alter the past you create a divergent alternate future. It's how it's always been and how it should be. To ignore that is poor writing and planning on Marvel's part. By Marvel science the entire Marvel Universe shifted with OMD to go along with it and we SHOULD now be reading the adventures of the 617 or whatever... and the 616 should still be going without OMD. That's how the comics work. Marvel just ignored that though.
And for the record, I really enjoyed The Other. It showed Spider-Man in a light of respect that's been missing during OMD (until the past couple of issues where it's almost unnaturally thrown at us - poorly written in my opinion), particularly with the respect of his passing. And his powers weren't changed, he just gained new ones... and most of which I actually liked. I liked the night vision and the sticking to his back and other parts of his body. The webbing vibrations were great. All that fits him very well. The rebirth thing was a one trick pony so it's over and done and doesn't matter anyway. The stingers were the oddest but I was under the impression they were also a one trick pony until I think it was Peter David used them again.
And the organic webbing wasn't even from The Other, though people loop it in there. That came from Disassembled. I like the webshooters myself but it made sense for him to have organic webbing so I didn't mind. That was another thing OMD changed with no explanation. And if you complain about organtics I can just throw the accept change speach you gave me.
When they alter an entire generation's reading experiences... yeah, I say that's a good reason for people to get up-in-arms about it. It's like the people who got up-in-arms over the Gwen Stacy/Norman Osborn thing. Were they justified in disliking that story or should they have just accepted that things change and now Gwen slept around? Did you accept that with a shrug and read the story for how good it really was hidden beneath that new information? If memory serves I don't think you did, but I could be wrong.
I don't think it's as blown out of preportion as people are choosing not to see it for the problem it is (because they got their way for lack of better reasonings). Glass half full, glass half empty.
Honestly, I agree with you here. They are going to change and do whatever they can to make it "fresh and new" or "good" or "funny" despite fans's feelings (as Slott's said before) and due to this I can no longer feel invested in the books like I was prior to OMD. Any comic book really. I look negatively on the entire industry following OMD because it made me stop loving the characters. Each character and title is just a name on a paper for money hungry businessmen to screw with for dollars. It's ruined the entire industry for me.
I think this is why I've gone more toward reading novels over the past couple of years. It's a set story and the writer shows a lot of care for what they do and have done. In comics different creaters and bigwigs come in not caring a lick about what's come before them and do what THEY want to see. I may like what's going on in... say... Green Lantern right now, but it might all be undone in a few years for the sake of the next writer... so why get invested and excited for what's going on now? I read it all out of habit and hope that I'm wrong but to be honest, I know I'm not and I dont see me reading comics into my old or even middle age like I used to. I mean, really, what is there to keep me when what I'm reading won't matter in a few years?
I'd rather her be gone and dead than what we have now. That way Peter could remember his time with her how it was while moving forward. Not grieving over a past that never happened.
Whereas you "don't understand [my] mindset," I completely understand yours. I can only say it so many times...but, I'll repeat it again. Everything that happened before OMD still happened. Unlike Peter, MJ, and everyone in the 616, we are in on the "big secret." Everything that we saw in OMIT happened because of OMD, and you don't get to OMD unless you go through those 20 years of Spidey history. It does not negate a dang thing. (To me, I see the complete logic in this.)
I think there is an alternate factor in your not liking this new (well, not really new any more, huh?) direction for Spidey...and, it shows in the above response. JH, you are a man who takes pride in his marriage and relationship with your wife; and, for whatever reason, you are taking Peter's nullification of his marriage as a complete slap in the face. You are bringing YOUR history and YOUR feelings into your reaction to OMD.
That's a great point you make. The X-Men today would not be the same if they didn't go through Age Of Apocalypse...even though that will never happen. Spidey could not be going through what he went through is the past 20 years didn't happen. (In this way, Age Of Apocalypse is 616. Without Age, you have no Nate...or Sugar Man. It's an alternate reality AND 616 history.) For me, that point only proves what I've been saying.
Look at all the times we've had alternate realities and going back in time, with the heroes of the 616 returning to what we see now: Age Of Apocalypse, Heroes Reborn, Avengers Forever. The list could go on and on and on. The F4 have time traveled more than enough times! Every time Kang comes to fight the Avengers, it should be considered an alternate timeline.
I didn't like that storyline...it had an "icky" feel to it. It made you want to severely scrub all the taint of it off your body after reading it. BUT, it didn't change my reaction to past or future stories.
This is not why the current fans of Spidey are enjoying the book. Many who like the current direction STILL complained about OMD. There are numerous factors for people to like or dislike it. As I've pointed out, I think there are a few factors beyond just OMD why you do not like Spidey's current direction. To repeat myself:
*HUGE FACTOR..in my mind..is where YOU are in your life, and how you associate Spidey to it. You're a devoted husband who finds marriage sacred. You made a promise before GOD, and nobody would ever destroy that...least of all a demon, like Mephisto. Your marriage...your religion...and, your reaction to all that might be the biggest factor I see.
*Another HUGE FACTOR is the internet. When we get online and start typing out our responses to something that upsets us...two things either happen. A) It lets us speak our mind, get something off our chest, and we can then go on with our lives (which I believe is the healthiest of reactions), or B) it gets even MORE intensified, we'll keep badgering on and on and on about it, and we let it dictate our lives more than heal the wound. Spidey's OMD is not the first time this has happened. I remember when I first got on The Hype, there was someone who CONSTANTLY complained about Bendis killing off Ant-Man, his favorite character. (Of course, many on here loved to egg the guy on with any mention of that...which would ALWAYS get a reaction.)
I really, really believe that if not for the internet, a LOT of the complainers would have stopped complaining about OMD by now. Sure, it would come up in conversations...just as The Clone Saga still comes up today. But, the intensity isn't there.
It's not about the story...for if it was, how could you say "due to this I can no longer feel invested in the books like I was prior to OMD. Any comic book really." I think I've shown that these type of changes have been happening frequently enough in the 20 years prior to OMD...so, there is something profound in you that made OMD the breaking point. JH, seriously, I don't think it's about OMD.
When I went to marriage counceling, I learned sooo much about myself. One point is that "Said Situation doesn't make you feel a certain way...YOU make yourself feel a certain way." OMD doesn't make you dislike the comic industry to feel this way, but there is something you are bringing into it that is causing this reaction from you. OMD is just a comic. It's just a very short moment in a LONG history of Spidey comics..and, even though you feel like it's changed 20 years of Spidey history, it's all in the perception. For some reason, this effects you a great deal. If you really search yourself, you could get some true enlightenment. From there will come healing.
I joke about much of what I talk about, and I don't take anything too seriously. (The whole Intervention was that aspect.) But, maybe there is something in truth about that. At one time, I gave up comics. I was in a new relationship...I was in love...and, in truth, it wasn't comics that had changed, but it was me. Eventually, after the shine of the new relationship wears off, those comics started calling me back; and, then comics became a hardship on my relationship. Again, it isn't the comics that really cause it, but the feelings involved in how my ex and I looked at those comics. (It's a lot of "if you care about me, you wouldn't waste your money on something so childish." And, for me, it was "I want to reclaim some of my past...and, because of that past, comics provided an escape.")
It's not the comics...it's not the storylines...that effect our attitudes. It's us.
OK, I REALLY went into a different direction with this, and I hope you don't mind that I kind of got real personal with things. It's how I feel about it, and figure you respect my opinion.
See this could potentially be accurate if not for OMIT. OMIT showed us the history as it now exists. You can't have both because they are two entirely different histories. By Marvel logic the past 20 years cannot possibly have existed... it's been rewritten (which breaks from Marvel science where an alternate reality should have been created).
But Age of Apocalypse didn't happen in the 616. We were transfered to Earth-295 which showed the ramifications of their actions along with Bishop. There were echos of that world back to the 616 through Bishop's dreams but the death of Xavier did usher a new reality. Blink, Sabretooth, Nate Grey, Dark Beast, Holocaust, and Sugar Man simply jumped realities through various means as many from the 616 have. Earth-295 (the Age of Apocalypse) was never 616 history. It was a divergent of the Legion Quest but never the same reality.
But how many mentions of Gwens infidelity have there been since Sins Past? Two stories with the kids? Would the story get worse for you if it was rubbed in your face every issue for the next 100 issues of the title and all the creators and fans do nothing but tell you how fantastic the affair was and how it brings a new level of greatness to the title? If the current writer mocked about it? Peter and MJ having a talk about how loving Gwen was and then they "have a good laugh about it"?
And yeah, I can see your point on this one. The unfortunate thing about this is even at times when I'd like to try to move on from it, one panel of how they portray Peter and MJ now infuriates me again, so no, I don't think the internet is my problem.
That's because the Clone Saga problems were fixed. When are they fixing OMD? The intensity will vanish when that happens as well.
While I do respect your opinions (and you know that) I don't feel the same thing is happening with me during this story. There's nothing pulling me from comics, simply that I've come to the realization that the creators aren't in it for story or character or history but money... and that at any point they can undo whatever htey want just to pull in new readers, old readers be you know what (darn my non-cursing ways). That makes me think less of the industry as a whole and takes away from my enjoyment of it knowing it can all be erased at any given time. It really is as simple as that.
All OMIT does is shows us how some major moments from past comics are now seen in the 616 Universe. It's what a large group of people constantly questioned...and, Marvel answered that question. That does not change the fact that for all this to happen, the past 20 years STILL has to happen. IF the past 20 years didn't happen, OMIT doesn't happen. If OMD didn't happen, OMIT doesn't happen. It's as plain as the nose on your face. (Oh, gosh...I sure hope you have a nose on your face!)
JH, even if you had a chance to go back in time and change something in your past, that decision is marked by EVERYTHING that has happened up to the point you are changing. You don't get one without the other.
Age Of Apocalypse happened because of events in the 616. And, that event/universe effected what has happened afterwards. You cannot have one without the other.
Now, I greatly disagree with this point for one good reason. YOU (and a few others) see any mention or appearance from MJ as being "rubbed in your face." I don't see the Marvel writers as being so malicious as to be thinking, "I know how to really peeve off all the readers." Even when Dan Slott said that the scene that got a few people in an uproar wasn't done for this reason, people pretty much flat out called him a liar. This is you bringing your feeling into a situation. A writer should not have to walk on tippy-toes when it comes to MJ.
And, that's the thing. Dan did one page disrespectfully showing new readers his current relationship with MJ.
This whole issue was Peter revisiting all those supporting characters, letting us know in such a fantastic style those interpersonal relationships.
Dan did not act maliciously;
and, to say otherwise is basically calling the man a liar.
OK...let's say that someone comes along tomorrow...kicks Dan out of the writing seat (like JMS kicking Simone off of Wonder Woman)...and, writes a story that says, "Everything from OMD to today has all been a crazy dream." Now what do you have?? You have a new set of people peeved and complaining about what just happened...and, even people who hated OMD would probably get on that boat, too. You'll now be happy, but a whole new group picks up the fight that you'll be leaving. You just can't make everyone happy...so, you might as well work with what you have. (And, I think Dan has been doing that marvelously.)
I don't know. You had some telling words in that past argument that persuaded me in the opposite direction. I think a lot of factors make up your staunch decision to dislike all things Spidey...and, even when got into comics, it was always about cold hard cash. (The fact you got in around the late 80's and early 90's speaks quite a bit about that. When I think of that time, I think "quantity over quality.") To say you are no disenchanted with comics because it's all about the money means you just ignored that fact for the last 20 years....or it just wasn't as important to you.
Funny thing talking about "What If's?" Marvel shows us What If's where one little thing makes huge changes in the Marvel Universe. With OMD/OMIT they try to tell us almost NOTHING changes because Pete & MJ never married.![]()
They put themselves in that situation... make the bed, lie in it. Walk on tippy-toes or get ragged at about it, but don't get mad at the fans you knew would be upset about it for being upset, and don't offer deadlines of grieving as you (they) aren't grieving one iota because they got what they want despite the people they ticked off. Honestly, if they cared a lick about the MJ fans they'd have went about it a different way, so being they they didn't care about that generation of reader why should that generation of reader care about them?
And besides what Slott says his intentions were regarding his scene, and I still call crap on what he said, the fact that more people on this site than not recognized it for what it was and agree with me is saying something. I only saw maybe three or four people who saw nothing wrong with it, including you and Slott himself. Besides, really, what was Slott going to say? "Yeah, I did that to mock you guys. TAKE THAT SUCKERS!" And I don't call fowl on every MJ scene as I don't care enough to read it anymore to even see the scenes. The only MJ stuff I called fowl on were in OMIT and Slott's first issue because OMIT was a joke and Slott's was so blatantly obvious it was insulting. But Slott got his laugh out, it's done now, move on... or in my case... don't bother trying to.
I knew nothing about the behind the scenes of comic books until I found this website back in 2003. I didn't even bother looking into it much until I started reading Dread's posts, so that's been a few years ago. It was OMD that made me realize how little the behind the scenes people care about the characters or histories of the company, and that was 2 years ago. From 1991 or so when I first started collected up until somewhere around 2000 I didn't even know who wrote what book or even what an editor did. Around 2000 I read more Wizard and got to know some stuff but not much. All in all it was a lack of caring about behind the scenes and more the progression of the characters within the pages. I didn't know when writers changed and didn't care. It was an ongoing soap opera that I loved. OMD undid all those years of anticipating the characters because they erased 20 years of my loving Peter and MJ and still think it's an amazing idea. If they'll do it to Peter and MJ they'll do it wherever they want, so why get invested? There really isn't anything else to it.
I'd rather invest my emotions in a set story within a novel where one writer cares about every character and puts his or her heart into them beginning to end, showing them and the history of the story the respect it deserves. There's not going to be someone else coming in to just erase it on their whims because they want to do it a different way in a few years.
wrong thread