ShadowBoxing
Avenger
- Joined
- Sep 10, 2004
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Comics will never have proper continuity because they can't. Actually it's people like you that make comics bad because you demand a certain interpretation be carried on indefinitely not realizing that the comics you consider classic and canon only represent a minute fraction of the many and varied interpretations to have been done over the course of a continuing comic. The only comics that can allow for such strict adherence to internal logic are creator driven books, which is why you have people like Bendis and Kirkman writing Powers and Walking Dead. In those books the writers are only responsible for their works, not the works of other authors. In regular comics though you cannot expect nor require writers to focus on years and years of history. If someone wants to write a particular Norman Osborn story you kind of have to let them since for the time their on the book it's their character, not Stan Lee's, not Roy Thomas' and not anyone else's.Again you're using 30 year old stories as if today's writing shouldn't be any better! Your debating skills are obviously in deep need of help considering you just keep repeating the same crap that we've already refuted just using new examples for the same destroyed arguments.
You're arguing with nothing but hot air now. The Question obviously has more patience than I do.
People like you are why comics never will have proper continuity, cuz you'll settle for hack writing to excuse cheap thrills, which means the writers will never have to step up their work.
Comic book fanboys have a very narrow minded view of continuity. They assume it can be "fixed", and that somehow "fixing" it will create better stories and better characters when the reality is breaking from established continuity is more often than not what makes characters iconic and classic. For example, X-Men, my favorite title started out little more than a Fantastic Four/Avengers rehash. A team of angsty teenagers whose villain's goals and aspirations could be summed up as "trying to take over the world", this even included the Sentinels, who simply felt themselves superior to their creators.
Then some writers, Claremont, Wein and Adams came along and decided the book worked much better as an allegory for racial injustice. They aged the characters, ended the "student" aspect pretty abruptly, and created a world that despised mutants despite the fact that the X-Men had been celebrities before this point. Their story even violates internal logic: how come the X-Men are hated and feared when super-powers are not? Despite this, the drastic change they made created an iconic cast, and a book that stood out from the crowd, whereas the original had been cancelled for being...well...the opposite.
Norman Osborn isn't much different. He's a character with potential that's never really been utilized. As of now his most dastardly deeds included fighting Spider-Man and...umm...fighting Spider-Man. In fact, until five years ago he had ONLY fought Spider-Man. He didn't even trade off in AoV.
However people seem to have a problem that so much continuity gets swept under the rug. This always happens though. Most comic fanboys don't appreciate their medium or it's fluidity. What do you think the average lifespan of a reader is? Sure there are guys like me that have collections chronicling decades, then there are most people who collect one or two books for the course of five, maybe ten years tops. That's the bulk of your market. Guys who will never, ever read Spider-Man versus the Wendigo, despite the fact that it's a pretty slick read. Obviously that story has impact, but because it's going on twenty some odd years old, it simply can't be considered relevant anymore in storywriting. "Hey remember that old Spider-Man...."....no.
Unfortunately Marvel fans have to detach themselves, sit back, and realize it's not a real Universe and doesn't follow real rules. It's a comic book and the stories, even though they build upon themselves, are each distinct and stand on their own merits. The Dark Phoenix Saga is good, yet I also like X-Factor which overwrites it. They bring Jean back as simply a telekenetic and say that Maddy is a clone and the Phoenix, well she was also a clone, and ya'know what...f*** it, the book was still fun and had good character dynamics. The Archangel arc was excellent, doesn't matter if it violated "internal logic" (had their been any to begin with).
Marvel writes for two people 1) new readers and 2) readers who have been reading for five years or so. They can bank on diehards sticking around because you guys are so attached to these characters they could make the whole lot of them transexuals and you'd probably still buy the books. Unfortunately if every book requires you to have an extensive knowledge of all things Marvel then new readers and even many long time subscribers will be alienated. This has always been the case though. Even Stan Lee would reintroduce his characters and villains as if they were new, often well into their third, forth and fifth appearances.
Continuity is an illusion. It does not mean the Universe works in a normative fashion, it simply means that characters have an origin and that issues are not stand alones, but rather featuring recurring characters, plotlines and reference each other when necessary. It does not infer that a character will remain static or will be free from abrupt changes, no matter how drastic. It's how DareDevil went from a merry swashbuckler who made jokes like Spider-Man, to the grim and gritty, internal monologue Miller-esque character he is now...and that change was abrupt, and needed, considering the book was slated for cancellation.
Wow, you got me there. Every book with perfect continuity is brilliant, and the MU would be awesome if every story had perfect continuity. Let's just ignore the fact God Loves, Man Kills doesn't fit into the continuity of the mainstream book. Let's go ahead and ignore Kingdom Come and The Dark Knight Returns as they completely rewrite continuity for the purposes of the story without explanation...oh, right, sorry alternate universe don't count. It only counts as crap if it violates the oh-so-precious regular continuity. You realize most people who read comics don't know the difference, right?