Well, that's me not buying any Superman comics, then.
I don't need Grant Morrison telling me how Superboy grew up anyway. I've already read that, it was called All-Star Superman #6. He's probably not topping that.
And if I want to read about Superman brutally assaulting people for exercising their freedoms, I can read Jerry Siegel's Action #1.
Then again, I'm still curious. It was easy to forget about Spider-Man forever, because Spider-Man actually kind of sucks. But I really do like Superman, and of course anything Morrison does is at least worth looking at (even if it's a failure, it's usually an interesting failure). You guys will spoil me on the run, right? I don't want to buy it and reward bad behavior, and I don't want to steal it because obviously, but I do want to know what happens.
Still, what a bunch of fucking assholes.
JohnnyQuest037 said:
...So when are we going to start seeing the quality from these modern artists again?
The bad thing is, I can think of a dozen modern age artists who are shockingly great, but are either slow--like Frank Quitely, for the sake of argument (the kids seem to dig him, and I do love his layouts and blocking) or Kevin Maguire--or don't need to be fast because they graduated to "cover duty."
Most egregious is of course John Cassaday, who always had his flaws (there is no such thing as an on-model Jakita Wagner), but generally turned in exceptional work, who now tends toward the World's Laziest Cover Art. Adam Hughes suffers from this a bit too, since the former virtuoso pared down his facial repertoire down to two: Computerized Audrey Hepburn and Modified Computerized Audrey Hepburn. At least J.G. Jones covers clearly involve some work.
How fast is J.H. Williams III? I can't imagine he's anything but terribly slow, but I can't remember if
Promethea had a lot of delays. I think Batwoman has a back-up artist for when Williams hits a wall? If he actually could stick to a monthly schedule for over a year the man would be superhuman.