We've yet to establish that Batman and Superman will actually fight in Justice League #2 yet.
Looks like it to me...
We've yet to establish that Batman and Superman will actually fight in Justice League #2 yet.
He's not warm and cuddly the way he used to be.
SUPERMAN #1- Yeah, its a bit old fashion but I liked it. I hope we don't see Clarks news articles used as a narrative device again though. For the most part it was a pilot: we get the skinny on who's who and what's what in Superman's modern world.
So far we've seen him terrorizing small businessmen in Action #1...
*sigh* I miss the old Superman. I really don't like him as a dick.
He's not warm and cuddly the way he used to be. He's more hard edged now. So far we've seen him terrorizing small businessmen in Action #1...
attacking Batman without provocation in Justice League #1...
and he did something all meanie in Superman #1 I forget what it was...
I like the coloring better in the newer ones.Interesting side-by-side on art and dialogue changes in the last couple of pages of Superman.
I like it. It and the glasses suit this version of the character; he's really an unmade bed, isn't he?
The editors apparently liked the Morales take on the character.
I hope we never see him in a properly knotted tie or a well-fitting jacket again.
CB: That was on Tuesday, September 11. It was the afternoon, less than three hours after [the attacks]. I went into her office and Andy [Coulson, the deputy editor] was on the sofa and Rebekah was on the phone. Andy asked me where was my Harry Potter suit and I made some excuse, saying: it's not here, it's in the photo studio. [Actually], it was in the office, but it was hardly appropriate for a journalist to be prancing about as Harry Potter. Andy told me I should always have my Harry Potter gear around, in case of a Harry Potter emergency, and told me that the morning after, I was to dress up for conference as Harry Potter. So, at that time, [when] we were working on the assumption that up to 50,000 people had been killed, I was required to parade myself around morning conference, dressed as Harry Potter.
Well Rags Morales is still drawing it but he needed to get help on the second one from I think it was Brent Anderson and he'll probably need help on the third one and honestly it's because DC decided that they want the comics to come out monthly because people were complaining that the comics were taking too long. And it's a really hard one to negotiate because the reason comics take too long is because they cost more, so the artists put more time into making the work worthwhile and also because they're collected, the artists want to make sure that the work is good enough to withstand the test of time, which takes longer.
And it's totally at odds with the old production values of comics which is you put them out in a month, but back then they cost ten cents, fifteen cents and guys would do them overnight quite crudely, a lot of energy but they were done crudely, like punk rock singles. Now people are judging you against the best of everything you know, you can just go and download Watchmen, you can get The Dark Knight, and if it's not as good as these things, or at least aspiring to be as good as these things then you're kind of up against it.
So it was a weird problem because things were getting late, like my Batman Incorporated has been super late because, partly because of me but also because the artist just couldn't keep up and do their best work and suddenly came this dictat that now everything had to be monthly and they want to keep to that so it's just the case that if your artist can't meet that then somebody else will finish up the pages. So it's kinda, for me it hits the long term collections of it to have things done like that but at the same time it brings back a lot of the freshness and improvisation of doing comics again and just responding to that and also sometimes you know they'll be like we need a two part filler here – okay I'll just come up with something, and it might not necessarily fit it in to the middle of this but okay, you need a filler.
And it's gonna change the way things are done, it's a kind of different production ethic and you know the fans I'm sure who complained when the comics weren't coming out monthly will probably now still complain that they're coming out with two artists rather than one but there's just no way of getting around that, you get monthly comics and you get faster artwork or you get artwork done by two people or you get an artist taking his time on it and that's just the way it is. So from now on they're at least doing the experiment to see if they can bring these things out monthly whatever it takes.
Yeah it stopped being mainstream. Even when I started picking them up it was because you'd get off the bus from school and there'd be a little kiosk and they had comics. And every month they'd have different ones, and they didn't always connect but it didn't matter, it was just the excitement of getting new ones every month. If they'd only been in comics shops I don't know if I'd have been as interested. I'd maybe have gone there later when I became a bit more of a fanboy but getting into comics is because you just find them, or because your parents pick them up or you get them on a train going on your holidays, and that kind of way of reaching them has gone. So yeah, the direct market was disastrous for comic sales but it was good for the research and development, you know it allowed comics to retreat from the mainstream and do stuff that actually wasn't mainstream, it was quite advanced and poetic and philosophical and we kind of needed that as well. It's left us creatively better but not necessarily financially better, and not as widespread as art form as it should be.
Oh the artists are working harder today is such nonsense Morrison who are trying to lie to?
But then you have someone like Mark Bagley who is perfectly capable of producing great art on a monthly schedule. I don't think the guy is some kind of freak who can do things no one else can do...
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