It's a double-edged sword, I think. You can either respect all of them or exclude one or some and end up disrespecting them in the process. As an example, I really doubt Nolan, Burton, or even most modern Batfans really "respect" Batman's turn in the Silver Age. In fact, I think most would rather forget it ever happened.
Well, when it comes to dividing the ages like that it gets difficult for me. I'd much rather look at them as separate movements. What is essentially 'Batman Silver Age'? The 'New Look' era that was counter-culture based and devolved into Adam West? If that is so, then no I have a fleeting respect for that. Even though it was 'fun', it missed the entire point that was Batman and regulated him as a generic superhero. That's my biggest problem with stories around that era.
However, the Silver Age in Comics should be lauded on its own. What readers do today is look back at it and equate it with frivolous story-telling, call it 'too cartoony' etc. The point that we had an entire industry struggling to create something original within the confines of the Comics-Code Authority should itself lend some credibility to the stories told at the time. The Silver Age is often mistaken for the Pre-Silver Age, and don't tell me it didn't exist. For Batman that's the era of Bat-Mite, Bat-Woman and the other zany adventures. And if Batman is someone who entered the Silver Age, he was also the first to get out. If we consider it as an 'era', that is, from the early 1950s to the late 1970s, what happens is that we miss a great deal of diversity inbetween. Heck, some of the best Batman stories were written in the 70s under Neal Adams and Denny o' Niel, yet if it's a timeline we want, these stories, very different from the other 'Silver Age' stories, stand on their own. I think that's the beginning of the Bronze Age. But again, I'd rather call these movements rather than eras.
But I get what you mean, not every movement goes with a story or adaptation you're making and in the end someone feels disrespected even if that wasn't the intention. If anything, I think Nolan and Burton are averse to the Adam West Batman in particular, though maybe averse is too harsh a word. I still look at Chris Nolan's Batman and see hints of the Silver Era appearing here and there. Sci-Fi gadgets, for example, were one of the things that Silver Era Batman was famous for, and some of that still appears in Nolan's films. He himself called it a nod to James Bond, and (while I'm no Bond expert), that neatly places it in the same era right?
JAK®;20037321 said:
The Silver Age deserves more respect. People need to realise that comic books really were written for 10-12 year olds back then. (In my opinion, mainstream comic books need to go back to that mentality)
I agree that the Silver Age deserves more respect, but I do not believe that mainstream comics should follow any strict policy. We don't need a specific "Modern Age Batman" or a "Neo-Silver Age Batman" or DC Universe that is defined so stringently. My opinion? Give freedom to the creative talents. Let them come up with their own movements, homages, ideas, target-audiences. And some would argue that most of the comics these days really are written for 10-12 year olds. Or at least teenagers. I mean look at some of the stories that are being released, it's still toned down. I'm not saying we need the 'REALLY DAYUM MATUREE' mentality (the difference between 'adult' and 'mature' is sadly lost in our culture), but if there's any criteria, stories should just be good. Just plain good. And entertaining.
johns and morrison are taking it back to that mentality, purposely, and it's incredibly refreshing
It was when Alan Moore was doing it, and yes, it still is to a certain extent, but the idea of yet another universally-defined 'age' is not appealing to me. I personally prefer Morrison's non-mainstream work to be honest. Don't kill me guys.
WHY U NO SHOOT BULLETS OUT OF RING?
"You musn't be afraid to dream a little bigger darling"
I've got respect for the Silver Age but now that I'm above the target demographic I don't want them going back. Screw the kids, I want my provocative literature.
That's a very selfish thing to say. Graphic Novels provide enough 'provocative literature' as it is. And are you saying that children literature is not provocative at all? By the Bard's Beard!
JAK®;20037819 said:
A good story is a good story. Realism, or a lack of, has nothing to do with it.
Realism only helped Batman Begins, because by explaining in detail why Batman dresses as he does and how his gadgets work, we found out more about the character. I'm not opposed to realism. But I am opposed to watering down superheroes in the name of realism. Not saying that Nolan does this.
In inter-web speak: Epic, Winning
