It was at least until Power Man and Iron Fist. I haven't read beyond there.Yeah, I recently read an article that had some page excerpts from old Iron Fist comics and I was puzzled by that second-person narration, as if the narrator were addressing Danny Rand directly. Was that standard for that book?
It was at least until Power Man and Iron Fist. I haven't read beyond there.
One of my favorite podcasts is Jay and Miles Xplain the X-Men. One of the common tropes they have is the "angry Claremont-ian narrator." While it happened to a degree in the X-Men (and Claremont was definitely a hostile narrator), it's Iron Fist where Claremont is always speaking in second person basically accusing Danny Rand of being a failure the entire time.
I suppose that, between Messrs. Luna and Gregg's respective Twitter replies, the question of the elder Rider's identity has been settled.
Now about that bullet hole. Should we be ready to blame the Bauers for that?
Yeah, Satan could not get his soul because of Roxanne's love and Johnny's own basic decency-- that was the tension, up till issue 17 or so, that Johnny's soul was "hanging in the balance." But he was definitely not an undead sort of character, like Dracula or Simon Garth. He was more like Jack Russell, struggling with a curse and hoping to be free of it.Oh sure, when it comes to motivations yes, no question. It's just that in these kinds of stories when the devil comes to collect, it's usually to take either a life or a soul (or both.) I get the impression that Johnny still has his soul (hence: anguish) so I think it'd work better in a mythological sense if he took his life too.
That's a good idea, but he doesn't have to be dead to be free of aging. It could be part of the curse. "Die of old age? You don't get off that easy." Or there could be another reason. One idea I've played around with a couple of times is a character who ages normally in human form, but not in their supernatural form. As they get older, they feel compelled to spend more and more time in their supernatural form to avoid old(er) age and death, until it becomes an obsession.I'm not saying it *has* to be this way and if they're sticking to the comics then he won't be. I guess in my head I *really* like the idea that he's been the Ghost Rider for over 40 years and a 60 or 70 year old Johnny Blaze still riding around in his chopper (though not impossible) would just seem a bit odd. Him being essentially undead and thus un-ageing just feels right somehow.
Oh, inner turmoil, definitely. That was what made Marvel great. I thought we were talking about killing and harsh vengeance and so on.I definitely recall a whole page of anguished monologing in that first issue.
*googles*
OK, photobucket is down, so I can't show you the scan, so I'll have to transcribe it: -
I'd say that qualifies as melodramatic inner turmoil.![]()
Third-person narration is dated? How? Why? When? It's the most common form of narration, and always has been. I can see how second-person narration could be seen as dated, because it's kind of artsy, and we live in artless times, but third-person is pretty much the default.While third person narrator is definitely dated, second person narrator is even more so.
I've always associated it most with Gerber's Tales of the Zombie. It can be a bit artsy, but the 70s were an experimental time, and I think it's a useful device to help the reader really get the experience of a character that he might not otherwise relate to. Gerber also used it briefly in one of the last issues of Man-Thing. Now that I think on it, I believe it was the normal narration mode for DeFalco's Spider-Girl.It's something I associated with Iron Fist (Roy Thomas and Chris Claremont) more than silver age books.
Yes, that's about the size of it. Like any form of narration, it can be used in various ways, but it's mostly used as an inner monologue that bypasses the filters-- that's why it often comes across as accusatory, because it's the character talking to themself without excuses or justifications. In comics, it can very often be seen in thought balloons, too-- "Nice going, Peter, you've really screwed up this time." It also works really well in Interactive Fiction, for obvious reasons.It is a little odd to read, but I've always seen this sort of second person narration to be a subconscious inner monologue rather than a conscious one. As if the subconscious is a separate awareness. The inner critic one might say. Not sure I'm explaining it very well.
That's a good idea, but he doesn't have to be dead to be free of aging. It could be part of the curse. "Die of old age? You don't get off that easy." Or there could be another reason. One idea I've played around with a couple of times is a character who ages normally in human form, but not in their supernatural form. As they get older, they feel compelled to spend more and more time in their supernatural form to avoid old(er) age and death, until it becomes an obsession.
Most comics these days use first person narration when they use narration at all. It goes hand-in-hand with the elimination of thought bubbles. Now, if you want to know what the character is thinking, you have the character narrate things in first person.Third-person narration is dated? How? Why? When? It's the most common form of narration, and always has been. I can see how second-person narration could be seen as dated, because it's kind of artsy, and we live in artless times, but third-person is pretty much the default.
Moore's affectionate lampooning of Silver Age storytelling in the 1963 comics still makes me smile.He attributed this trend to the success of Frank Miller - particularly with The Dark Knight Returns, as well as Alan Moore's Watchmen.
What? Thought bubbles are largely gone? Why?Most comics these days use first person narration when they use narration at all. It goes hand-in-hand with the elimination of thought bubbles. Now, if you want to know what the character is thinking, you have the character narrate things in first person.
What? Thought bubbles are largely gone? Why?
Johnny thinks he's free, but gets shot in the head by a dying priest (whom he had blasted with hellfire earlier) with a holy bullet and is sent back to Hell."
Also keep in mind that the flashback we saw isn't really Robbie's origin story, it's only part of it. The other part is taming the monster within and that's still ongoing.
Didn't DC do something similar with Captain Marvel in one of the end times books? It may have been either 'Kingdom Come' or DKSB, but I think the gist of is was that Billy had actually died of cancer or a heart attack some years prior, so he was forced to hold his Captain Marvel form indefinitely.
Yeah, he doesn't exactly seem to convey any sense of being cursed if that's what they're going for, he seems quite content with the actions of the Rider.Well hopefully he starts actually trying to tame the monster within, becuase so far it seems like he lets it do whatever the fuck it wants in the hope it goes away while occasionally making excuses for it roasting people. Though the last two episodes basically shouting "get it under control" at him will hopefully help.
Yeah, I get that, though the idea that someone that vicious is an embodiment of the wrath of God is pretty, err, Old-Testament. The suggestion that that's actually how the DC Universe works on a cosmic/supernatural level is rather disturbing. If God is okay with such brutality, doesn't that imply that characters like Superman and (comics-version) Batman, who favor a strict policy against killing, are objectively wrong? How can a mortal be more morally evolved than God? And what about the New Testament and its insistence that God was a being of love and forgiveness? Was that all just fake, then? How can the Spectre and Christ both exist in the same cosmology? It just raises so many questions.
While at the same time denying any personal responsibility for what it actually does to the people he aims it at. Clearly he still hasn't come to grips yet with the full implications of what he's doing.Yeah, he doesn't exactly seem to convey any sense of being cursed if that's what they're going for, he seems quite content with the actions of the Rider.
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