Let me just say in general that valuing a comic series mostly on its allegorical meaning is the wrong way to view comics. Yes, it's great when people can send pro-social messages (subtle or not) through fantasy fiction, but the stories themselves are what's important. The characters behaving in the fashion they were meant to, with their specific attributes, are valuable (unless the writing or basis is crap) for what they are. Why do people choose one storytelling franchise over another? Because of the
specific things they like about it, that's why.
Like I said before, when you strip characters of their specific attributes, you end up with an archetype, and that isn't nearly as interesting. This is a major problem with film adaptations that people don't seem to get. They talk about the "essence" of the characters, and they're really talking about the bare necessities to qualify for the superhero archetype, or the specific
category of superhero. The characters written in the comics years ago are what made enough money and grabbed enough attention to warrant films and TV series, etc. That's why it's a betrayal of artistic integrity and false advertising when Spider-Man doesn't crack more than a couple of jokes. When Wolverine doesn't walk and talk like Wolverine and stands 6'1" (his shortness has always been a defining physical attribute, and it's as important for him to be very short as it is for Colossus to be very big), it's not Wolverine. When Cyclops doesn't actually lead his team and come across as impressive while doing it, it isn't Cyclops.
DC Comics has a little more leeway with the character/archetype problem, since their major players have undergone at least one major overhaul that is valid (as opposed to Spider-Man turning into what he is, etc., which is just writers satisfying his own ego and editors planning cheap stunts. Like Is said, I don't know nearly as much about DC Comics as I'd like, but I do believe that the Crisis overhaul was actually useful artistically for the fictional universe (it simplified things when there were too many versions of Earth at once), which makes it more respectable than an exploitative stunt which only serves to make the publisher richer and does nothing for the storytelling. Anyway, the point is, it's harder to argue about the core, essential aspects of Batman and Superman and nail it down, because there are several versions. Marvel never did a real "Crisis" type thing, nor did it
need it, until possibly recently (and no, they certainly didn't do it in the last few years, since all these changes just complicate things instead of simplifying them).
"Ultimate Marvel" certainly doesn't count. You can't make Colossus a gay ex-Mafioso and have it still be Colossus, since it is written in
Goddamn stone that Colossus was just a country farmboy in Siberia before he met Professor X and it is fact that his early sexual experiences were with women (in the Savage Land and wherever the hell they were during the Secret Wars). You can't make Jean Grey a punk chick who sleeps with Wolverine (who would never legitimately be 6' tall, since shortness is a defining attribute of his character) before she even dated Cyclops and have that be real. You can't make Nightcrawler a homophobic assassin for Weapon X. None of it can be seen as a replacement for the real Marvel Universe. Are these "edgy" and "modern" changes more interesting than what was in the real Marvel Universe? I don't give a flying feck. That's up to the individual, but nothing changes the fact that one universe is real and was written with talent and thoughtfulness, and one is spear-headed by Brian Michael Bendis, who symbolizes all that is wrong with comics today. Ah, I said he's a symbol, but in order not to undermine my own thesis, let me point out that he himself is an @sshole and, at least as far as
most of his Marvel titles are concerned (I know nothing of 'Powers', so I'm not commenting on it), a ****ty, lazy, pompous, immature writer. His personal attributes are important to consider when discussing his sorry, Quesada-coddled ass.
Marvel didn't have Earths 1, 2, A, B, whatever.. that needed consolodating or downsizing. I'm not knocking DC when I say this; I'm saying there was a real issue at hand, for whatever reasons, and they tried to clean it up. Again, I'm no DC expert, and I've heard a lot has reverted since then, so maybe it wasn't completely successful. In any case, I consider the Crisis on Infinite Earths, from what I know of it, to be a valid Universe-wide move.
"Ultimate Marvel" is just a way to cross-promote with the movies and squeeze more dollars from MTV-gen kiddies who actually pay attention when publishers use the buzzword "Ultimate".
"Disassembled," another big Marvel deal,
didn't fix a Goddamn thing. Help, the Marvel Universe is in danger of becoming a jumbled mess! I know, let's kill off Vision and Hawkeye and remove the Scarlet Witch from active duty! All better. What? That's not enough universe-shaking drama? I know, let's actually create more alternate universes and leave extensive changes when everyone goes back home. What's that? Too many mutants in the Marvel Universe?? Heavens, no! Let's take powers away from not only the generic mass of mutants in the background (who huff a power-enhancing drug called "Kick"... thank you very much, Grant Morrison, you selfish, arrogant @sshole), but also from heavy hitters like Mystique and the Blob! God knows, the X-Men had too many of those classic,
decent villains running around.
Yeah, anyway, I don't know who's the more exploitative publisher and who's the more "progressive" publisher (or what that's even supposed to mean), but... what was my original point? Right! Allegories should be secondary to what's going on in the actual story. You want allegories and archetypes? Try Greek myths or the Bible or something with far less "relatability" than DC or Marvel characters.
