I hate that you'll be hard pressed to find a single issue being a full story anymore. Same goes for 2 or 3 parters. Seems like everything needs at least 6 issues to be written anymore.
I also hate back to back to back events.
One thing I hate about comic books is when a comic book character comes back from the dead
If thay are going to kill off a character I think thay should stay dead.
Which is why when a character dies they should stay dead. Even though I didn't like that they killed off Captain America and I liked it it even less that they brought him back. The dead should stay dead.Reason #1 to stop reading is that all the ingenuity and dramatic poise of a story go out the window when you have characters that cannot die.
I'm no Bendis hater (I like most of his work), but it does kind of annoy me that the main storylines and continuity of the Marvel universe (and maybe DC too, but I don't follow it as closely) is primarily determined by what a few writers want.Dr. Strange will eventually be the SS again. It's only a matter of time before he reclaims the mantle. Maybe Voodoo will not feel worthy, or he could die soon. I think it depends on how much Bendis likes him, but eventually Strange will be that guy again.
Which is why when a character dies they should stay dead. Even though I didn't like that they killed off Captain America and I liked it it even less that they brought him back. The dead should stay dead.
I'm no Bendis hater (I like most of his work), but it does kind of annoy me that the main storylines and continuity of the Marvel universe (and maybe DC too, but I don't follow it as closely) is primarily determined by what a few writers want.
Agreed. There needs to be more focus on just telling a good storyI hate gimmickry more than anything else. Nobody wants to tell a good story anymore. It's all about grabbing attention, grabbing headlines, the next stunt. The 90's were big on cover image gimmicks and costume revamps, killing people off. replacing the character with somebody else, bringing back long-dead characters. Now we've still got the killing and replacing, public unmasking, stupid retcons and on top of all of that, this Hollywood-inspired movement toward "realism".
Grant Morrison said:Of course I’m aware of a perpetual and chronic discontent from a particular jaded minority on the internet but I try to overlook their constant expressions of dissatisfaction on the grounds that it’s depressing and often personally abusive.
Surely part of the fun of comics includes following stories across titles? If you like comics, what’s so awful about buying another one to see what happens next? And if you don’t want to buy it, don’t bother. Do something else. Buy cigarettes or booze or bananas. I don’t know!
Every time I read about the agonizing pains of ‘event fatigue’ or how ‘3-D hurts my head...’ or how something’s ‘incomprehensible’ when most people are ‘comprehending’ it just fine, it’s like visiting a nursing home. ‘Events’ in superhero comic books FATIGUE you? I’m speechless. Admittedly they do tend to be a little more exciting than the instruction leaflets that come with angina pills but... ‘fatigue’?
Superhero comics should have an ‘event’ in every panel! We all know this instinctively. Who cares ‘how?’ as long as it feels right and looks brilliant?
Grant Morrison said:Surely part of the fun of comics includes following stories across titles?
It is, first I'm hearing of it
Eh, it doesn't matter how much creators and writers defend them, I've still kind of tired seeing these mega status quo altering events. I don't hate them, but one every 6 months to a year feels like overkill to me. And, yeah, that's why I don't buy them, but obviously I'm one amongst none
I remember after Disassembled, you couldn't walk into the Marvel boards without seeing death threats for Bendis over killing Hawkeye. But then every Wednesday they'd buy the next part. What? If you want to send a message then stop buying the book.Actually, you earn my kudos. You're not interested in the events, so you don't buy them.
THAT'S one of MY pet peeves. The fanboys who complain, "ARGH, another event with loads of tie-ins! Now I have to buy all these extra comics!" Umm... no you don't. No one is holding a gun to your head. With Blackest Night, I only bought the tie-ins I wanted to buy. With Siege, I only bought the main series #1-#4 (and Thor, but only because I buy it monthly anyway rather than because it was a Siege tie-in) yet I understood what was going on just fine.
People who buy every single comic with the title of the event on a banner along the top of it, then complain about how the comic was irrelevant to the main story and a waste of money, are suckers. It's not the comic publishers' fault that you're a sucker. If you don't approve of all the needless event tie-ins, speak with your wallet. Don't buy them.
I think the majority of issues fans have with comics would be solved if more people did this.I remember after Disassembled, you couldn't walk into the Marvel boards without seeing death threats for Bendis over killing Hawkeye. But then every Wednesday they'd buy the next part. What? If you want to send a message then stop buying the book.![]()