The original targets of comics were closer to breast feeding, than their first date.
Stimulating their sex drives, will just push those 10 year old boys towards 10 year old girls and away from comics.
Sexualizing women in comics was an unprofitable decision.
If you get a boner from an American comic, there's something wrong with you, not something right about the comic.
European comics are a horse of another filthy colour.
The original targets of comics were closer to breast feeding, than their first date.
Stimulating their sex drives, will just push those 10 year old boys towards 10 year old girls and away from comics.
Sexualizing women in comics was an unprofitable decision.
If you get a boner from an American comic, there's something wrong with you, not something right about the comic.
European comics are a horse of another filthy colour.
I'm not sure I follow this line of thought at all.
Are you saying women are not sexualized in comics?![]()
There's a great scene in the series Lois and Clark where Clark's mother sews costume after costume for Clark to try on for his parent approval, including one which is basically Elektra's outfit.I always wonder where these various superheroes get these costumes.
I know some of the origins for some of the old heroes, but the middle and modern age ones, did they make them themselves, hire a tailor, go to a shop?
It seems clear (to me, anyway) that the very concept of a superhero 'costume' would never exist in what could be called "real life".
It seems clear (to me, anyway) that the very concept of a superhero 'costume' would never exist in what could be called "real life".
Which is why most superhero costumes in movies and TV these days are crap. The designers all think they should fix something that isn't broken in the first place so they can sell the idea of superheroes to a demographic that includes people who wouldn't normally suspend-disbelief for live-action superheroes.
Try convincing children to continue buying weekly 10 to 20 units, at 3 to 4 dollars per unit every week.
$300 a month, every month, from every child in America until the end of time.
That's what a healthy Comics industry would look like, so that's why the industry is not healthy.
Almost a religion with shades of chronic addiction is necessary.
Meanwhile for a movie to make 2 billion dollars, like Avengers did, all that needs to happen is that everyone in the first world chooses to view it 4 times over the course of the flicks opening weekend.
Try convincing children to continue buying weekly 10 to 20 units, at 3 to 4 dollars per unit every week.
$300 a month, every month, from every child in America until the end of time.
That's what a healthy Comics industry would look like, so that's why the industry is not healthy.
Almost a religion with shades of chronic addiction is necessary.
Meanwhile for a movie to make 2 billion dollars, like Avengers did, all that needs to happen is that everyone in the first world chooses to view it 4 times over the course of the flicks opening weekend.
Try convincing children to continue buying weekly 10 to 20 units, at 3 to 4 dollars per unit every week.
$300 a month, every month, from every child in America until the end of time.
That's what a healthy Comics industry would look like, so that's why the industry is not healthy.
Almost a religion with shades of chronic addiction is necessary.
Meanwhile for a movie to make 2 billion dollars, like Avengers did, all that needs to happen is that everyone in the first world chooses to view it 4 times over the course of the flicks opening weekend.
Wait wait wait wait wait!!!
Are you saying that comic books are $3-4 a pop, now???
Many, many decads ago, when the plans for Utopia Planitia (Mars, Mars Station) were just a gleam in Tenix's (Williamstown, Victoria) eyes, comic books were 10¢ or 12¢.
3-4 bones a piece???
I am all for Shades of Addiction, but, Holy Drachmas, Batman!
Digital Comics look better on a 43 inch TV.![]()
Series: Wonder Woman (Graphic Novels)
Paperback: 64 pages
Publisher: DC Comics; Gph edition (November 1, 2001)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1563898616
ISBN-13: 978-1563898617
Product Dimensions: 10 x 0.2 x 13.5 inches
It seems clear (to me, anyway) that the very concept of a superhero 'costume' would never exist in what could be called "real life".
Which is why most superhero costumes in movies and TV these days are crap. The designers all think they should fix something that isn't broken in the first place so they can sell the idea of superheroes to a demographic that includes people who wouldn't normally suspend-disbelief for live-action superheroes.
Given that the movies and TV these days are the bulk of the market for superheroes, I'd be inclined to give the designers credit for having better instincts on how to grow an audience than the comics companies showed over the last, say, twenty years.
Try convincing children to continue buying weekly 10 to 20 units, at 3 to 4 dollars per unit every week.
$300 a month, every month, from every child in America until the end of time.
That's what a healthy Comics industry would look like, so that's why the industry is not healthy.
Almost a religion with shades of chronic addiction is necessary.
Meanwhile for a movie to make 2 billion dollars, like Avengers did, all that needs to happen is that everyone in the first world chooses to view it 4 times over the course of the flicks opening weekend.
Wait wait wait wait wait!!!
Are you saying that comic books are $3-4 a pop, now???
Many, many decads ago, when the plans for Utopia Planitia (Mars, Mars Station) were just a gleam in Tenix's (Williamstown, Victoria) eyes, comic books were 10¢ or 12¢.
3-4 bones a piece???
I am all for Shades of Addiction, but, Holy Drachmas, Batman!
Here are the industry sales figures for this January.
http://www.comichron.com/monthlycomicssales/2015/2015-01.html
Marvel sold almost a million issues of Star Wars #1 at $5 per unit.
A million of anything is unusual, and only happened, because lookiloos came in out of the wood work to appreciate Star Wars for Star Wars sake.
A month later, and a dollar cheaper, they'd lost 838,000 readers.![]()
Comic books are for adults, or fantastically spoiled rotten children.
Given that the movies and TV these days are the bulk of the market for superheroes, I'd be inclined to give the designers credit for having better instincts on how to grow an audience than the comics companies showed over the last, say, twenty years.
If they convert all outfits into darkened sneaker-like catsuits then it reflects a lack of faith in the source material.
Which is why most superhero costumes in movies and TV these days are crap. The designers all think they should fix something that isn't broken in the first place so they can sell the idea of superheroes to a demographic that includes people who wouldn't normally suspend-disbelief for live-action superheroes.
Given that the movies and TV these days are the bulk of the market for superheroes, I'd be inclined to give the designers credit for having better instincts on how to grow an audience than the comics companies showed over the last, say, twenty years.
And, in movies and TV these costumes have to be worn by real human beings; without changes most of them wouldn't be suitable for children to watch.
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