NinjaCarm
Fantastic
- Joined
- Nov 28, 2003
- Messages
- 3,341
- Reaction score
- 0
- Points
- 31
I was reading an old issue of Wizard (#26 with Mark Bagley's Spider-Man on the cover no less) and there's an article regarding the recent storylines of the day (1993).
I came across a qoute from Mark Bagley (Met the man at Wizard World - class act), and I wanted to share with every true believer out there wanting the best out of the new reboot.
"I think we're doing quntessential Spider-Man stories (Mark Bagley and David Michelinie - great combo back in the day). The angst of being Peter Parker shouldn't overpower the superhero adventure", (Ahem - Raimi!), Bagley goes on. "If there's any fault I can point to in the other books, it's that the emphasis seems to be too heavy on how screwed up Peter Parker is. That was never the main focus of the book in the old days; it was the background."
How true it is, to come from one of Spider-Man's greatest artists over the years, to tell the tale of getting it right.
SONY - we understand the enduring true to life problems of Peter Parker but we do not want him sobbing in the woe is me routine the whole way. It's the background, like Bagley said. Incorporating the remorse and guilt over losing Uncle Ben and conveying it better than Raimi did? ALL FOR IT! Engrossing action scenes and real urgency and sinisterness from the villains? YES, Please! Realistic boy / girl / money problems / real acting from your new director Marc Webb? I HOPE SO!
BUT..... just remember this is Spider-Man, remember the message coming from one of the longest running Spider-Man artists ever.
'Nuff said!
I came across a qoute from Mark Bagley (Met the man at Wizard World - class act), and I wanted to share with every true believer out there wanting the best out of the new reboot.
"I think we're doing quntessential Spider-Man stories (Mark Bagley and David Michelinie - great combo back in the day). The angst of being Peter Parker shouldn't overpower the superhero adventure", (Ahem - Raimi!), Bagley goes on. "If there's any fault I can point to in the other books, it's that the emphasis seems to be too heavy on how screwed up Peter Parker is. That was never the main focus of the book in the old days; it was the background."
How true it is, to come from one of Spider-Man's greatest artists over the years, to tell the tale of getting it right.
SONY - we understand the enduring true to life problems of Peter Parker but we do not want him sobbing in the woe is me routine the whole way. It's the background, like Bagley said. Incorporating the remorse and guilt over losing Uncle Ben and conveying it better than Raimi did? ALL FOR IT! Engrossing action scenes and real urgency and sinisterness from the villains? YES, Please! Realistic boy / girl / money problems / real acting from your new director Marc Webb? I HOPE SO!
BUT..... just remember this is Spider-Man, remember the message coming from one of the longest running Spider-Man artists ever.
'Nuff said!
Last edited: