JJJ's Ulcer
Avenger
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Shocker almost died in one of those recently. Too soon, man, too soon!t:
See, runaway? Will gets it.

Shocker almost died in one of those recently. Too soon, man, too soon!t:
Oh great. The stupid and way too overused "women in refrigerator" analogy rears its ugly head again. Yes, there are occasionally pointlessly gratuitous or borderline misogynistic deaths of supporting characters in comics. But I hate every time a love interest dies in a comic series it's painted with this ridiculously wide brush. What were Ned Leeds' and Harry Osborn's (well, when he was still dead) deaths then? "Dudes in car-trunks" then?
Not to start this whole debate, but the fact is that this sort of "victimization" happens a LOT more often to women (often the male leads love interest) than it does to men- and when it does happen to men, they are usually given a heroic death (Harry) or are an active part of the story(Ned). It's just another symptom of a largely male dominated industry.
It might be "victimization" in some rare cases, but nowhere near as widespread as it's made to sound. I think it's more a case of giving a modern impetus to a hero through loss, which is a time-honored tradition in comics going back to their roots, like Peter losing Uncle Ben or Bruce Wayne losing his parents. When Spider-Man or another hero has been running a couple hundred issues and that original loss starts to pale or lose some of its power, a new one might be written in order to reintroduce that vengeful or driven element of the character. Now, is it more likely the typically male superhero is going to be closer to his usually female love-interest or another male supporting character? So I think that's the psychology behind it, rather than victimizing women. I'm sure it happens, but the mindset that the average writer approaches a female character as a plot-device meant to be slaughtered or even worse, derives glee from killing her off, is not based in reality.
To be fair, I never said anything about the "average writer", I only observed that it happens to female characters far more often than it happens to male characters. Justifying it by saying most comic book leads are male, so therefore their girlfriends/wives must be killed off as a reminder (of whatever) is, to me, kind of weak, not very creative or orignal.
Attempting to justify it by saying that the "initial power" of the impetus of the heroes motivation "fades away" after a time, so that it needs to be "reintroduced" feels like, what is essentially shock value (Kyle Rayner's girlfriend's death, etc...). It's happened to tons of male characters, from Green Lantern, to Spider-Man, to Batman, to Superboy, to Hulk, etc... There are male deaths to be sure (Capt Stacy), but not nearly as often or as "plot devicey".
I am sure you have seen this. I mean, it's a trope for a reason:
http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/StuffedIntoTheFridge?from=Main.StuffedInTheFridge
Fair enough. I think critiques of it being weak or not very creative are more valid than critiques of it being aimed at women or subtly misogynistic, which I think was at the core of the original criticism.
Here's a controversial position; aren't most monthly comics featuring colorful superheroes taking on equally colorful and powerful sociopaths in a fantasy world that usually ends its episodic and highly sales-dependent installments with an enticing cliff-hanger, at least somewhat rooted in shock-value? It's what keeps readers coming back month after month.
To keep this on topic.... Lance Bannon, Nick Katzenberg, Nathan Lubensky, Ben Reilly, Fredrick Foswell, Captain Stacy like you said, Ezekiel, Harry and Ned like I said earlier, that seems like a heckuva lot of dead male bodies in Spider-Man alone. Even if you took out the supposed villains (Foswell, Harry and Ned at the time) it's still a good chunk.
What's the deal with this Peter Parker: Spider-Man .1 series coming out on December 4th??
I knew that name was familiar!Just a series of flashback stories featuring Peter Parker as Spidey. There's some really exciting sounding ones in there in terms of creative teams. The 1st thing is a 2 part story by David Morrell and Klaus Janson, should be interesting to see David Morrell's take on Spidey (he's a novel writer famous for creating Rambo).
Am I missing something?"It's over Parker......it's over!"
"NOTHING IS OVER! YOU JUST DON'T TURN IT OFF!"
Am I missing something?
Loved the latest issue. I am really keen to see Aunt May's reaction to Peter dating Anna Maria, especially after her observation of her working in the new Parker Industries.
I wonder what Jonah is going to do about his blackmail situation. A little light bulb went off over his head when he was thinking about Octo-Spidey's spider spy robots.
Say what you will about Otto, but he's doing things Peter probably would never have accomplished. Opening his own company, curing Aunt May's hip condition etc.
The Annual was pretty decent considering it was an Annual...
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The only problem I had with it was that it just seemed like another issue. It wasn't the typical annual that had more than one story in it. I feel kind of short changed only getting one story...
I miss the late 80's/early 90's annuals, which would have a grab-bag of goodies ranging from four page back-up stories or moving character vignettes to in-depth breakdowns about how Pete's spider-sense works or profiling all the employees of the Daily Bugle. Man, those were the days.![]()
The Annual was pretty decent considering it was an Annual...
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now THEM'S beez the days......they just don't make 'em like they used to...
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Yep...![]()
got THAT right... back then when an annual came out, it was SOMETHING special... nowadays if there IS an annual that comes out, it's usually just a meh happening and no big shakes and nothing to really look forward to...