ShadowBoxing
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Then of course there is Michael Lark (DareDevil)
J.H.Williams

J.H.Williams

The 90s big missteps were as follows
*The Clone Saga (2): A follow up to the original clone saga in Amazing Spider-Man 140(s). Basically the clone Parker had survived and dawned a new identity, the Scarlet Spider. As the story progressed we learned that the clone Parker we thought had died was in fact the real Parker and the one who had been kicking around for the past 250 issues or so was in fact the clone.
*Batman Broken: Bane breaks Batman's back and he is replaced with an uber violent, Punisher-esque version of himself in lethal bodyarmor. Batman X-Treme![]()
*Superman Blue/Red: Superman was put in a blue/red costume and given electricity related powers...'nuff said.
*Onslaught: Essentially the physic resonance of Magneto and Xavier battling manifested into a monster who killed off the Fantastic Four, Avengers and Hulk. They were put into a God awful 'Heroes Reborn' Universe and the Marvel Universe essentially became 6 Spider-Man titles and like 10 X-Men titles...because if it ain't X-Men and Spider-Man I guess we can't sell it.
*Wolverine de-evolved: Wolverine is basically turned into a walking man-ape for n extended period of time...so, uh, yeah.
*Also just introducing a bunch of extreme characters with big guns ad giving everyone mullets.
The 90s also featured the "Death/Return of Superman". But, in general, this was a storyline that was critically and financially a complete success...so it's hard to write it off.
Other things include:
Amalgam
Kingdom Come
X-Men (Adjectiveless)
The Return of Spider-Man's parents
NooooWait....so you think Kingdom Come and Jim Lee's X-men were missteps?
Ummm...ooooookkkkkaaaayyyyy.................
Most of the people that post in here, I never run into in any of the various comic forums, or really, any other forums for that matter. Makes me wonder, if a lot of the people who frequent the Community Forum actually read comics.
I don't read comics, I read Graphic Novels.
wow, that joke went over your head.No you read trade papaerbacks of comic books.
I really hate how now everyone says "graphic novels" in a cheap way to sound all sophisticated and belittle comics.
"Graphic Novels" is a term for self-contained stories within a collected trade. For example Watchmen, DKR, God Loves Man Kills, Spider-Man:Blue, DareDevil:Man Without Fear, Batman:Year One, Kingdom Come and Marvels would all be graphic novels once collected. This is because each story has a logical start, middle and end with little carryover similar to that of a novel, or single body of text.
"Tradepaperbacks" or TPBs are anthologies of collected ongoing series. For example Ultimate Spider-Man "Venom", Ultimates vol. 1 "Super-Human", X-Men "the Draco", X-Men "Phoenix:Endsong", New X-Men "Here Comes Tomorrow" and "Days of the Future Past" would all be TPBs.
At least that's always the distinction I've drawn.
Don't knock the mangas man!I do. I stopped for a while when I went through my anime/manga phase when I was a youngin', but I quit that **** cold turkey and I'm back where I belong.
They all were original series, out of continuity that told a complete story without treading on the original source material.Now I know you are wrong about this, especially on the examples you've given. You see, a graphic novel is actually an original story not available anywhere else. Arkham Asylum, JLA earth 2, Detective 27, God loves man kills, those are in actuality LEGITIMATE graphic novels.
The problem with many of your examples are that they contradict your definition. I'll give you 2 examples.
You list DKR, Watchmen, Marvels, Spider-man blue, Daredevil :mwof, and KC as graphic novels yet you say Phoniex endsong is a tpb. Now what do ALL these titles have in common?
Because Phoenix:Endsong is a storyline that is not self contained, and works off of the mainstream Universe tying directly into the Morrison run. Furthermore it's not a complex storyline written like a Novel.They were all limited series (and one a maxi...still counts) so I ask, why do you regard all those 'great' books as graphic novels yet phoniex, which was a limited series like the rest, is a tpb?
Batman:Year One is entirely out of step with the comic series while your other examples are not.Example the second....
You list Batman Year one as a graphic novel yet ultimate spider-man and new x-men are all listed as trades. So lets say, lets pick days of future past. Ok now what do days and YO have in common? Both were told in the original title, days in uncanny...YO in batman. So whats the difference?
They.aren't.written.like.novels. They are written like episodes. They are episodic. The other storylines are not, they are self contained. Episodic means that it's akin to a chapter in a book, and while the plot of the episode is resolved (Doc Ock goes off to jail), the over arching story remains. I.e. the chapter may end in a cliffhanger, may start a relationship, may introduce a character who will have an upcoming storyline. For example, Phoenix:Endsong ends with Jean going off to find her pieces in the white hot room....leaving a huge portion of the story unresolved.Now the other problem with it is that ALL tpb's have a beggining, middle and end so that argument goes out the window.
Not really, certain work is better than other work. Anyone with a High School english course can tell you why trash novels are inherently worse than Charles Dickens no matter how they feel about his writing.And here where the idea of the GN becomes blurred. The idea still is out there that comcis are "for kids" so to sell movies like 300, BB and sin city the studios push to say "graphic novel" rather then comic book series just to sound more pretntious and "adult". Now this couples into the whole ignorance perpetuates ignorance so we get everyone calling DKR. watchmen etc graphic novels which is sad because instead of standing up and saying "no this is COMICS. They ARENT just 'kids stuff' and the medium has grown..see?" , which is what we should be doing, we get pretntious a holes putting down comics like batman yet praising books like YO which is just ******ed.
With a printing press. You also fail to understand that for a while people wouldn't print anthology comics. But some series, like Squadron Supreme, were obviously written for Graphic Novel format. And even God Loves, Man Kills, which you mention was originally intended for the mainstream title...but was removed due to disputes about whether it should be included. So, no, not every comic published outside of bound format is printed that way on purpose. Frank Miller calls both "Year One" and DKR graphic novels in his forewards. So that means his intention was to publish them in graphic novel format...no matter how they originally came out. The E-I-C of Marvel Comics refers to Squadron Supreme, a maxi, as a graphic novel.Here is something to think about when you hear everyone go on about the sin city and 300 graphic novles and how they are so much more intelligent then comic books....
How were these books originally published?
CGC said:A graphic novel is a set of collected comic books or a stand alone story that is squarebound. Graphic novels are usually cheaper than the collected comic books and are often found in book stores.
wikipedia said:A graphic novel is a type of comic book, usually with a lengthy and complex storyline similar to those of novels, and often aimed at mature audiences. The term also encompasses comic short story anthologies, and in some cases bound collections of previously published comic-book series.
wikipedia said:Examples:Sandman - Endless Nights (Gaiman), Batman: Hush (Jeph Loeb and Jim Lee), Batman: Arkham Asylum (Grant Morrison and Dave McKean), Marvel 1602 (Gaiman, Kubert, and Isanove), Superman: Red Son (Millar, Johnson, Plunkett, Robinson, Wong), Batman: Dark Knight Returns (Frank Miller)
Meaning, yes there is a problem defining them distinctly. But the fact is Graphic Novels can be previously printed in comic formate.Tradepaperback said:In comics, a trade paperback (TPB or simply trade) specifically refers to a collection of stories originally published in comic books reprinted in book format, usually capturing one story arc from a single title or a series of stories with a connected story arc or common theme from one or more titles. Traditionally, a trade paperback will reproduce the stories at the same size as they were originally presented in comic book format; recently, however, certain trades have been published in a smaller, "digest"-sized format, similar in size to a paperback novel. This smaller size is intended to appeal to newer generations of American readers whose first exposure to a comic book format was the English-translated reprints of digest-sized Japanese comics, also known as manga. The term graphic novel is sometimes used interchangeably, but many people maintain that the terms are distinct.
They all were original series, out of continuity that told a complete story without treading on the original source material.
Because Phoenix:Endsong is a storyline that is not self contained, and works off of the mainstream Universe tying directly into the Morrison run. Furthermore it's not a complex storyline written like a Novel.
Batman:Year One is entirely out of step with the comic series while your other examples are not.
They.aren't.written.like.novels. They are written like episodes. They are episodic. The other storylines are not, they are self contained.
Not really, certain work is better than other work. Anyone with a High School english course can tell you why trash novels are inherently worse than Charles Dickens no matter how they feel about his writing.
With a printing press. You also fail to understand that for a while people wouldn't print anthology comics. But some series, like Squadron Supreme, were obviously written for Graphic Novel format. And even God Loves, Man Kills, which you mention was originally intended for the mainstream title...but was removed due to disputes about whether it should be included. So, no, not every comic published outside of bound format is printed that way on purpose.
Wrong, wrong, all wrong. All you've given is Alan Moore's complaint about Graphic Novels, who insists they should just be 'comic books'...he also insists that anyone else who uses a character he writes is a hack, but he likes to complain