Tron Bonne
All Ass, No Sass
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- May 24, 2007
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JMS isn't exclusive to DC. His exclusive to Marvel ended, making him a freelancer.
Oh, ok. So it's not impossible for him to finish The Twelve. He just won't
JMS isn't exclusive to DC. His exclusive to Marvel ended, making him a freelancer.
I'm gonna go ahead and guess Thor is the problem. JMS doesn't seem like he's too well-equipped to deal with one series, since we know now that the delays have been as much his fault as Coipel's, let alone two. Thor seems to be his priority now, and look how infrequently that comes out. Not surprising that The Twelve has just fallen off the radar completely.I really don't know what the problem is.
Whatever suits the material best, as far as I'm concerned. Honestly, if we got more of these hit-or-miss series in OGN format, I think more people would enjoy them. A writer can afford a weak patch or two when the readers have got one contiguous narrative laid out in front of them, but a weak issue or two in a periodical comic series, especially with the cost of today's comics, means a lot of people are probably dropping that series in favor of something they enjoy more or just to save money.
Yeah, that I can agree with. I still like my monthly ongoings though.More minis need to come out in the OGN format IMO, especially in this $3.99 a comic era.
Naturally. Which, given the comic industry's strength at the moment, might actually be fair. They need all the money they can get.
Also, to clarify, I'm not talking about stories that are just s*** when I say "weak patches." I'm talking about stories where the writer needs to have X, Y, and Z happen but can't necessarily find a way to insert enough action or character beats or whatever to make a segment of the story that would correspond to a full issue feel like a satisfying, complete issue without ruining their pacing. If you've just got weak sections because you're a weak writer, format ain't gonna help you.
Yeah, that I can agree with. I still like my monthly ongoings though.
You must have forgot to carry the one or something. The equation you were looking for is, Millar + McNiven = Awesome ****ing creative team, so we let them do whatever they want because it will be awesome.I like it when monthly ongoings are actually serialized, personally. There are stories that some ongoings could stand to lose to OGNs. "Old Man Logan" in Wolverine's comic, for one. Why would anyone think it's a good idea to hijack the monthly series and turn it into a dystopic alterna-future escapade for six or twelve or however many months?
(That's rhetorical, of course. I know the answer to that "why" is "because Millar + McNiven = $$$, so we let them do whatever they want.")
Thankfully, there seems to be a push back from that mentality now. Dini, Slott, and various other writers are bringing the 2- or 3-issue arcs back in their comics, whereas Brubaker has essentially been writing one ultra-arc with two mega-phases (so far) and various smaller arcs within them that are satisfying on their own but fit firmly into the larger framework on Captain America. There's a bit of variety, at least.Yeah, we have too many writers "writing for the trade". A lot of these mini's get extended to six issues from 4 issues just to fit in a nicer package.
For example X-Men Noir, no reason why these can't be OGN's instead of minis.
What does OGN stand for?Yeah, no, I didn't mean that at all. Millar + anyone = me not reading the comic, so I can't comment on how awesome or not "Old Man Logan" is. I just think that an alterna-future story would make more sense in mini or OGN format than inserted awkwardly into the ongoing series, which should ostensibly take place in the shared universe and, to at least some extent, in the present.
Wow, he basically is just doing Unforgiven with Logan in the future, isn't he? I hadn't noticed.(though anything clint eastwood western esque is always gonna have a special place in my heart)