Marvel vs. DC: MUA and JLH article help

Johnny DC

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Note: You may have seen this tread in other forums. Don’t panic, I have permission from Dew. It’s in the Community, Misc. and Multiplatform Games, DC Comic and Marvel Comic forums.

Here’s the deal: I’m a journalism major taking a feature writing class. A story idea I submitted to my teacher involved getting fan reactions to the rivalry between Marvel and DC Comics, extending into their publications, films and most recently video games (with Justice League Heroes and Marvel Ultimate Alliance being released within a week of each other). I would like to get some angles and quotes from Hype members since I don't personally know too many comic fans. All intelligent comments are welcome, though I won’t use all of them in my story.

Here’s the catch: I need to know you’re real name. And I need to know your phone number. It’s my school’s journalism department’s policy that each story turned in for a journalism class needs an addendum listing the names and numbers of all sources used so the teacher can call them and make sure that 1) they exist :rolleyes: and 2) that they actually said what I quoted them as saying in the story.

I'm aware that many would be uncomfortable with this, but I can assure you, I'm a professional; I’m an intern/general assignment writer for a major daily Colorado newspaper (though, remember this is for a class, so the article I write won’t be published.). While it's difficult to prove credentials over the Web, I'll try. If you’re someone I want to use in the story, I’ll PM you my work e-mail address. If you need further proof, I have ways to prove I am who I am.

Here’s the topic: DC Comics vs. Marvel Comics and the mediums they compete in. Remember, the timeliness of the story will focus on the release of the rival video games, so if you’ve played Justice League Heroes, make sure to comment on it. I realize that Marvel: Ultimate Alliance won’t be in stores until Wednesday, the same day my story is due. Still make sure to comment on your impressions. My lead will be something like: “Marvel: Ultimate Alliance hits shelves today…rival comic company DC Comics released their version last week,” blah, blah, blah.

Help me Hypesters. You’re my only hope.
 
I'll get the ball rolling:
Which publisher has better comics right now? What about in the past?
Which has better movies?
Which has better games?
 
I forgot to mention television shows.
 
bump.

Is there anyone who currently thinks Marvel's comic books are better than DC's and why? So far I'm only getting responses as to why DC comics are better and I need some balance.
 
theres more marvel characters today than DC. thats why most people like marvel comicbooks more.
 
juggster-rules said:
theres more marvel characters today than DC. thats why most people like marvel comicbooks more.

I'd say that it's about even between the people who like DC more than Marvel and people who like Marvel more than DC.

It's not the amount of characters that is important. It's who the characters are, the stories they are in, and how good they are. If a character sucks and the stories they are in suck, people are just not going to like that character. Supergirl is the perfect example of this.

Here's a more in depth description of what I have said in the Community version of this thread:

My name is Jesse White from western New York. I'm an eighteen year old college student. If you need any more information, PM me.

Current Comics
At the moment, I think that DC has the quality lead over Marvel with their current comics.

Batman by Grant Morrison, Superman and Aquaman: Sword of Atlantis by Kurt Busiek, Wonder Woman by Allen Heinberg, Green Lantern and Teen Titans by Geoff Johns, Birds of Prey and the All-New Atom by Gail Simone, Justice League of America by Brad Meltzer, Firestorm: The Nuclear Man by Stuart Moore, and Green Lantern Corps by Dave Gibbons are really great ongoing books to read and enjoy. The miniseries Ion by Ron Marz, 52 a weekly comic by DC's top writers, and the soon to be completed Seven Soldiers by Grant Morrison are also must haves.

Marvel has some great books too such as Cable & Deadpool by Fabian Nicieza, the Astonishing X-Men by Joss Whedon of Buffy and Firefly fame, the Uncanny X-Men, Captian America, and Daredevil by Ed Brubaker, the Amazing Spider-Man and the Fantastic Four by J. Michael Strazynski, Iron Man by the Knauf Brothers, and the Incredible Hulk by Greg Pak. The miniseries Civil War is a good read though it feels very gimmicky. My problem with Marvel however is that their events feel too much like gimmicks such as the death of Goliath and Spider-Man revealing his secret identity in Civil War, Scarlet Witch proclaiming "No more mutants!" in House of M/Decimation, and the deathfest known as Avengers: Dissassembled. Books such as New Avengers, Black Panther, the way that Mr. Fantastic and Iron Man are being treated in Civil War, and the entire Ultimate Marvel line make me want to roll my eyes.

DC feels like they are treating their characters with more respect at the moment. However this can change at anytime. Maybe a couple of years down the road, Marvel will be the leader in this category. Maybe they won't. We really can't say that.

Past Comics
You can't say that the past comics of DC or Marvel are better than one another. You have Mark Waid's run on Fantastic Four and Kingdom Come (with Alex Ross), Frank Miller's the Dark Knight Returns, Marv Wolfman's run on the New Teen Titans and his epic Crisis of Infinite Earths, Bendis' run on Daredevil. Alan Moore's the Watchmen and V for Vendetta, Jim Shooters Secret Wars, everything that Stan Lee and Jack Kirby created for Marvel (Spider-Man, the X-Men, Iron Man, Hulk, the Avengers, the Fantastic Four, Thor, Daredevil and others), and Geoff Johns' Infinite Crisis. Those are some of the greatest comics in history.

However they have both published complete rubbish. Most of the stuff from the 90's is either decent or garbage in my opinion. Bruce Jones' run on Nightwing, Frank Miller's run on All-Star Batman and Robin: The Boy Wonder (still going on by the way), Sins Past which turned Gwen Stacy into a ****e and the Other were horrible.

Movies
Marvel has made some great movies such as Spider-Man and Spider-Man 2, X-Men and X-2: X-Men United, Daredevil (the Director's Cut, not the original theatrical version), the Punisher, Blade and Blade II. Hulk was good, but it got a bit boring at some parts. Fantastic Four was a fun movie, but it wasn't great like it should be. And we have been getting some real stinkers lately, Elektra, Ultimate Avengers the Movie, Ultimate Avengers 2: Rise of the Panther, and Blade: Trinity have been rather lacking and languishing.

Another problem that Marvel is facing is overstaturating the superhero movie market. At this very moment Sony's Columbia Studios is producing Ghost Rider (due in February 2007), Spider-Man 3 (due May 2007), Luke Cage, and the Gargoyle. 20th Century Fox is producing Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer (due June 2007), Wolverine, Magneto, and Silver Surfer. Universal Studios is producing Namor the Sub-Mariner, Lion's Gate Films is producing the Punisher 2, Paramount Pictures is producing Deathlok, and Iron Man (due May 2008), the Incredible Hulk, Captain America, Thor, Ant-Man, Nick Fury, Hawkeye, Black Panther, Dr. Strange, Cloak and Dagger, Shang-Chi, the Power Pack, and the Avengers are being made by Marvel themselves. Black Widow and Iron Fist are bound to be picked up by some studio that is not owned by Time Warner. With Lion's Gate Films, Marvel is producing ten direct-to-video movies which includes Iron Man (due January 2007), Dr. Strange, Teen Avengers, Hulk, and others. If you ask me it's over doing it a bit.

Warner Brothers (which owns DC Comics), has made some real stinkers such as Steel, Catwoman (aka CINO, Catwoman in Name Only), Batman Forever, Batman & Robin, Superman III, Superman IV: The Quest for Peace, Supergirl, Superman: Brainiac Attacks, Teen Titans: Trouble in Tokyo, and Batman: Mystery of the Batwoman, but their film library includes some of the best comic book movies ever such as Superman the Movie, Superman II, Superman Returns, Batman Begins, and the cult-favorite, Batman: Mask of the Phantasm. Batman, Batman Returns, Batman/Mr. Freeze: Sub-Zero, Batman Beyond: Return of the Joker, and the Batman vs. Dracula were pretty good.

While there are numerous DC projects in development between Warner Brothers and New Line Cinema, the only ones that are really going to get made concern the Big Seven (Batman, Superman, Wonder Woman, the Flash, Green Lantern, Aquaman, and the Martian Manhunter) and some Vertigo properties such as Watchmen. I am really excited for the direct-to-video movies that Warner Home Video is making with DC Comics, Justice League: The New Frontier, Teen Titans: The Judas Contract, and Superman/Doomsday. Hopefully, they learned a thing or two from Marvel on what not to do.

Television
It isn't even up for debate. DC has crushed Marvel in the television department. While there are incredibly cheesy and horrible shows such as the Superfriends, the Batman, Teen Titans, Smallville, and the Legion of Superheroes, there are some instant classics such as Bruce Timm's Batman: The Animated Series (A.K.A. The Adventures of Batman and Robin), Superman: The Animated Series, the New Batman Adventures, Batman Beyond, Justice League, and Justice League Unlimited. There are also numerous other shows such as George Reeves' Adventures of Superman, Adam West's Batman, Linda Carter's Wonder Woman, Gerard Christopher's Superboy, Dean Cain's Lois and Clark: The New Adventures of Superman, and John Wesley Shipp's the Flash.

Marvel really hasn't done much in the television department. There are several old shows based on Spider-Man and the Fantastic Four. And in the 90's we had Spider-Man, X-Men, the Avengers: United They Stand, Iron Man, Fantastic Four, Spider-Man Unlimited, and the Incredible Hulk. Only Spider-Man and X-Men were any good and they couldn't even hold a candle to DC's cartoons. Marvel's more recent entries such as MTV's Spider-Man: The New Animated Series, Blade the Series, and Fantastic Four have met with mixed results.


Video Games
The vast majority of video games based on comic book, television, and movie properties tend to really suck. There hasn't been a single good video game based on a DC property and I have no faith in Superman Returns: The Video Game. You play Superman 64 and Aquaman: Battle for Atlantis and see what I mean.

While a majority of Marvel's games suck, there are a few good ones such as X-Men Legends. And Marvel: Ultimate Alliance looks like it is going to be good. A friend and I can't wait to play online in it (I especially can't wait to play as my favorite Marvel character, Deadpool).

As for Justice League Heroes, it looks like a poor man's Marvel: Ultimate Alliance. Way fewer characters, fewer gameplay options, and DC's track record with video games, just hasn't made me excited for this game
 
One thing that was different between DC and Marvel that I think is intersting is that DC was a more grown up company,
Artists and writers would come in to work and they would wear suits and ties.

Marvel started getting established after and was a more relaxed and younger environment.

Even before I found that out I always thought DC was like the mature adult with a breif case and everything going to work, while Marvel seemed like the young teenagers. Thats what I thought before I found out how DC and Marvel used to be like.

Now I think artists and writers at both DC and Marvel work from home, and its dress casual. I think they are now both as professional as the other.
 
More questions:

When do you think the rivalry between Marvel and DC began?
Why do you think it began?
Did it ever die off?
 
Here's what my comic-book reading friend, Matt, wrote to me in an e-mail. Maybe it'll spark some feedback:

my friend Matt said:
I've always been skeptical of the rivalry. I think it's something perpetuated by the real fan boys and no one else. Personally, I think the idea of a rivalry came at an end in the mid-90's with the DC vs. Marvel series and since then it's been more about making money.

Both companies, creatively and financially, have come to similar parallels. Ideas are stolen and re-furbished in both universes without shame and it's no one's fault as writers shift from company to company on a yearly basis.

The money isn't made from the comics anymore. Obviously it is still a big part of the industry, but the merchandising, movies, and cartoons dwarf anything the comics might do. You can have 11 year old children who proudly don a Batman Halloween mask and backpack and have no idea that Batman is actually a comic book character. So, that said, I guess the real rivalry lies in how you can market the actual comic book characters to a real world audience.

As for the summertime blockbuster arcs, there is still a level of competition there. Often times the summer arcs are so full of malarkey and they even lack creativity. The are ideas recycled in order to re-create characters to either make them more reader-friendly (or, in other words, capital-friendly). The Infinite Crisis storyline was fantastic in it's crossover title build, but in the end failed to deliver some sort of finite "impact" development. In my opinion, that's not such a bad thing: you can't totally shift a universe in a seven-issue blockbuster arc. So DC developed 52 so that they could flesh out characters. They avoided the pratfalls of some sci-fi catastrophe infecting a "world" that has become far more secular and easy-to-relate to the readers. With 52, the writers have put the impact of such an event into a human form so as not to scare away the casual reader.

I don't know the numbers off of the top of my head, but assuredly, Civil War has received less acclaim and publicity. It's an idea toyed with the X-Men in it's hay day and the unmasking of such high-profile cash cow characters seems a bit like ruining a good thing. Marvel has always failed to deliver in most of their blockbusters, especially in the last few years, and I feel they rely a bit too much on the re-boot aspect to benefit their numbers.

That said, DC has the upper hand with their comics. They have iconic figures and for years have seemed to dominate the marketing world. Marvel pioneered the "blur the line" heroes with Chris Claremont and Jim Steranko. DC, in my opinion, failed to replicate such a thing until two years ago with the Identity Crisis line.

The real rivalry is in the movies, the merchandising, and the marketing to outside audiences. As long as DC has Superman leading the charge, it will have a sort of mythical edge over the rest of the comic book industry. But honestly, as long as each company is making money and seems to bandy around the same ideas, I struggle to see if the rivalry is what shapes the business and gives either company a competitive edge. I think the creativity has been shutdown, while complacency and playing it safe are coddled. No company gains a fiscal edge unless a movie is released in a certain business quarter. Other than that, the comic book industry remains stagnant.

But hey, it's a necessary evil to keep the medium around.
 
Well, I just turned the article into my teacher. Only one person sent me their info (thanks BrianWilly :up:), so I had to change the viewpoint of my story from a news feature to a participatory feature, of sorts. Basically, I put myself into it. I was up until 4:15 a.m. writing it.
Thanks to everyone who commented, especially to BrianWilly (again), Dew k. Mosi, hippie_hunter, Ben Urich, XwolverineX, Axid, Souless, Ravensford, and everyone elso who commented. If I could have used something from everyone, I would have.
Here’s the story I turned in, sans BrianWilly’s real name and location. You’ll notice the ending is a little abrupt—it couldn’t exceed three pages double spaced. Be gentle if you find errors; remember I had a late night:

Being a twin, I know a little something about rivalry. My brother Joseph and I will take opposite sides on almost anything just to be different. But of all our petty squabbles, we’re renown among our friends and family for our blind devotion to two separate comic book publishers: Marvel and DC comics.

They have a rivalry too.

Marvel Comics consists of Spider-Man, the X-Men and the Hulk among other characters; its universe of heroes and villains considered more realistic and angst-ridden by critics and fans. DC Comics has the iconic superheroes: Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman, etc., who live in a world of imaginary cities such as Metropolis and Gotham. I prefer the latter company, my twin brother Joseph, the former, and our debates can sometimes become as heated as the competition between the two publishers.

Both have vied to be No. 1 in comic book sales since before World War II. Nowadays, the rivalry goes beyond comics, stretching into the film and television industry.

And today, with the release of “Marvel: Ultimate Alliance”, that rivalry branches into a new medium: video games.

“‘Marvel: Ultimate Alliance’ is going to rule all,” my brother teased as he pre-ordered it on-line. He’s basing this off of news and footage from video game Web sites such as ign.com and gamespot.com; also, this happens to be a sequel of sorts to two other video games: “X-Men Legends” and “X-Men Legends II: Rise of Apocalypse.” The X-Men titles were four-player role-playing games featuring everyone’s favorite mutants. “Marvel: Ultimate Alliance” extends into the entire Marvel universe—over 140 characters will appear in the game.

DC Comics came out with their version last Wednesday: “Justice League Heroes,” which has over 10 playable characters, many of which are DC’s most iconic, including the three mentioned earlier and the Flash, Green Lantern and Aquaman.

I managed to pick up my store’s final copy. While I enjoyed it along with other fans, the game’s mediocre response won’t be able to compete with the giant that “Marvel: Ultimate Alliance” is.

BrianWilly, 23, of The Church of Joss has also played “Justice League Heroes.”

“It's not nearly as versatile as the X-Men Legends series and also unfortunately much shorter, but it's about three degrees more enjoyable,” BrianWilly said in an Internet message board discussing the rivalry. “However, I suspect that (“Marvel: Ultimate Alliance”) will probably blow it out of the water. The graphics look really good, the game play looks smoother.”

But as far as comic books go, BrianWilly sides with DC Comics.

“In terms of comics quality, DC has been ahead of the game for quite some years now. In my opinion they focus substantially more on storytelling and characterization, as opposed to Marvel which is focusing purely on shock and glitz.”

In regards to the rivalry, BrianWilly admits it’s essentially a fight over nothing.

“I say that right now DC's got better books, but that could change at any point. The companies swap artists, writers, and editors all the time; as much as the characters may be a draw, those are the people who truly make or break the companies.”

My friend Matt Southard, 23, of Northglenn, Colo., agrees. He’s been reading comics for about 15 years.

“Both companies, creatively and financially, have come to similar parallels. Ideas are stolen and re-furbished in both universes without shame and it's no one's fault as writers shift from company to company on a yearly basis,” Southard said, who also believes that the rivalry is mainly in making profit.

“The money isn't made from the comics anymore,” Southard said. “Obviously it is still a big part of the industry, but the merchandising, movies, and cartoons dwarf anything the comics might do.”

Marvel’s “X-Men: The Last Stand” hit theaters earlier this year and has grossed over $400 million worldwide, according to boxofficemojo.com. Its competition, DC’s summer blockbuster “Superman Returns,” has been trailing, having made just under $400 million so far.

Last year was a different story; “Batman Begins” has made roughly $40 million more than Marvel’s “Fantastic Four.” I’ll usually tend to fall back on that fact in debates with Joseph, along with the fact that DC has a firm grasp on the television market with hit shows like “Smallville” and the former “Justice League Unlimited.”

But argue as much as we like, Southard remains skeptical on the very notion of a rivalry.

“I think it's something perpetuated by the real fan boys and no one else,” Southard said. “But hey, it's a necessary evil to keep the medium around.”

So until “The Dark Knight,” “Batman Begins’” sequel, comes out in the summer of 2008 (to compete with whatever summer blockbuster Marvel shells out on a yearly basis), I imagine I’ll be coming up with plenty of reasons as to why “Justice League Heroes” is better than “Marvel: Ultimate Alliance.”

Oh yeah, and remember: plagiarizing is the devil :cmad:
 

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