I don't think it's controversial to say that reboots have been unsuccessful and maybe weren't needed in the first place.
I don't think it's controversial to say that reboots have been unsuccessful and maybe weren't needed in the first place.
Hell yeah. Milestone was.....man, if you weren't reading comics back then you don't even know. When it first started it was a big damn deal. What was happening in the country, in the industry, all of it. Those social conversations.....Milestone *was* the time and place for those (as far as comics are concerned anyway). Milestone showed us that you could have PoC characters, entire books populated with nothing but PoC characters, and it could still be quality, it could still be entertaining, and it could be real and intelligent and find more than a niche audience too. Those books were socially way ahead of their time (which is part of why they eventually folded, I think), and the social commentary that many of them went into? Totally had to happen; those issues *needed* to be addressed by that imprint at that time.
I think so, anyway. YMMV.
I dont think it's the majority opinion, since so many fans (at least here) are often quick to say "just retcon/reboot the whole mess away" but I dont think its a controversial opinion. If so, screw 'em because I'm anti-reboot on principal.
"We all know the truth: more connects us than separates us. But in times of crisis the wise build bridges, while the foolish build barriers. We must find a way to look after one another, as if we were one single tribe."
~ Black Panther.
I think the reboots were an innovative way to shake up story but it's lost the novelty and is only diminishing returns at this point. My controversial take, they should go to a sliding-timeline but also starting aging heroes out of the main universe into "elseworld" multiverse stories. When a character dies or retires in the main universe they are no long usable in that universe and you can tell whatever era story you wanna tell in other earth with them. They'd have to make it like a hardcore official mandate to enforce it but i think that's the best way to balance the different sensibilities between generations of fans.
THE SIGNAL (Duke Thomas) is DC's secret shonen protagonist so I made him a fandom wiki
also, check out "The Signal Tape" a Duke Thomas fan project.
currently following:
- DC: Red Hood: The Hill
- Marvel: TBD
- Manga (Shonen/Seinen): One Piece, My Hero, Dandadan, Jujutsu Kaisen, Kaiju No. 8, Reincarnation of The Veteran Soldier, Oblivion Rouge, ORDEAL, The Breaker: Eternal Force
"power does not corrupt, power always reveals."
So apparently, I missed something. What's up with Tony Isabella and Black Lightning? I know he created the character, but why is he criticized so much? I'm currently rereading my old comics, and I just read his 1995 run of Black Lightning, which only lasted 8 issues before he was apparently fired. What was up with that?
As for my opinion on the comics, it's my only exposure to BL as a character. I agree that the "black guy tries to clean up the ghetto" stereotype was heavy handed. The first 4 issues were ok, but nothing special. Issue #5, on the other hand, was phenomenal. Then the final 3 part story arc was pretty good, so I'm a little sorry he didn't have the chance to continue the series past that.
Just re-reading my old collection, filling in the occasional gap with back issues, not buying anything new.
Currently working my way through 1990's Flash, Impulse, and JLA, and occasional other related stuff.
I'm going to disagree that Milestone HAD to do a story with a single black female teen pregnancy. I mean, it's nothing that offends me or anything, even if I can think of a many other things I'd rather see a black female hero involved with, but that didn't have to be done. They could have done a black female in a Final Fantasy-like setting (just throwing that out there). But they truthfully didn't seem to have the inclination for such things, even to the point where such a comic is difficult for me to imagine from Milestone. Rather, they were more comfortable and more at home writing a black teen female in a scenario you will see on Maury Povich, for better or worse.
I'm sure I'm not going to articulate this well, but sometimes I wonder and even worry about the black imagination in regards to fantasy. Of course that's a case by case thing with individual people, but there are some collective patterns that have caused some concern with me at times. I know there are people that really like Milestone, but I look at some of that work sometimes...and I wonder...I guess what I'm getting as is how come I see fantastic stuff like this from other people:
But when black people are putting themselves in fantasy, it's about hoods, gangs, teen pregnancies, prison, slaves, stickin' it to whitey like Django, and stuff like that? Like I said, I get it more when white people are behind some things like that, but it seems even black people perpetuate some images themselves.
Last edited by Vampire Savior; 08-20-2019 at 05:14 AM.
I only read Static and Icon, but certainly in those they were firmly in a "real-world" type setting. Which is, in truth, what I generally prefer from my comic books. I did notice that both future teen heroes were engaging in criminal behavior in their first issues. As did several of their friends (some immediately, like Rocket's boyfriend, others later, as with some of Static's pals). For both Static and Rocket, the events changed their paths in life. I guess the idea is that it's opportunity/escape and that good kids would have ended up in criminal lifestyles without the chance? Honestly, I have no idea what messaging was intended (haven't read letters pages, interviews, etc.). Or even if there was any intended messaging or just a "hey, this makes a good story." Just noticed those two worked that way. Haven't read the other titles, so can't say anything about them.I'm going to disagree that Milestone HAD to do a story with a single black female teen pregnancy. I mean, it's nothing that offends me or anything, even if I can think of a many other things I'd rather see a black female hero involved with, but that didn't have to be done. They could have done a black female in a Final Fantasy-like setting (just throwing that out there). But they truthfully didn't seem to have the inclination for such things, even to the point where such a comic is difficult for me to imagine from Milestone.
Last edited by Tzigone; 08-20-2019 at 05:30 AM.
But Arrow, Atom and the Hawks all joined the JL pretty early after it's creation and and have established relations with the core members.OK Atom might be also not the best choice. But Green Arrow and the Hawks are also classic characters who are around since the 40s and the rivalry between Olli and cater is also kind of iconic as is Ollis friendship with Hal Jordan.
They are not as big as the Big 6 but much closer than Vixen, Black Lightning and Cyborg.
And Red Tornado was created in the pages of the Justice League comic and is therefore pretty closely tied to that franchise.
Aquaman is iirc quite often not present in JL-Storylines, in the current run he has iirc pretty much disappeared after drowned earth.
I am specifically speaking about the current big 6 line up. Gnort was iirc a member of the Justice League Antarctica, which was basically created by Max Lord to get rid of him and a few other Guys (and even that didn't went that well ...).
Rather than shoe-horning in a bunch of characters and pushing out others, I would keep the Justice League of AMERICA origin as it was, but establish that other teams around the world had their origins at relatively the same time. Maybe all in response to an alien invasion, that included the Appelaxians but other invaders, as well.
And maybe some of these groups had much more diverse representation. We just don't have that much of their story, because the comics mainly focused on the Justice League of America. The memberships in the teams didn't stay the same--and there was some interchange between them. Some of these groups also took the Justice League name (or translations of that) but they were of something else--while other teams had completely original names.
Tell that bigger story--and it's more inclusive without negating the original Justice League of America. I prefer this, because it's true to the reality of our experience. We do get more stories about the big name heroes who are mostly white Americans--but that doesn't mean there aren't just as many stories about other people. In the real world, the Justice League of America would get all the press--and the other groups of people would be ignored. That's a more honest approach to the comic book reality, rather than trying to pretend that the super-hero world is and always has been inclusive and fair.
It also gives writers new places to go, rather than simply recycling the same version of history now with slighty more colour added. They can tell entirely new stories about all these other heroes we didn't know about, because we were too busy with the JLA and the JSA.
But we should give up on this idea that there is a main universe. There are many universes and they all matter. And the universe we're in now isn't supposed to be the main universe. It's just one of many possibilities.
I said this a couple years ago--I want one universe that has a master timeline. It's a universe where everything has already happened and most of the big storylines that we know have been played out. And that Earth has reached a stasis where nothing much is happening anymore. On this Earth are some big name heroes, who now watch the rest of the multiverse.
They know how the timeline should play out on most Earths--but they're interested in the anomalies in the different realities. I don't imagine that they would play a significant role--their prime directive prevents them from interfering. Yet, from time to time, the comics would pull back to show how one timeline is being observed by this group in the master timeline. It would be a way to indicate that we know how this story is supposed to play out, but on a given Earth it might go another way.
A writer could use the master timeline in a way akin to how Jim Shooter used the Adult Legion to indicate the direction that the Legion should be heading. Or how Chris Claremont did the same thing with "Days of Future Past" for the X-Men. So you have a cool story telling device that gives the reader a road map, but then the writer can have some fun by subverting those expectations.
That sounds like a recipe for "continuity doesn't matter" - they just switch universes whenever they want to change anything up. It's a nice setup if you want to do lots of self-contained mini or maxi series or the like. Not good for long-running titles.
I think it's the opposite. Changing continuity on the fly, without giving people a heads up that the story is now taking place in another universe, that's the "continuity doesn't matter" recipe. But when it's clearly indicated that this whole continuity is consistent to a specific Earth, then the reader can get their bearings and isn't trying to work out whether this is still part of another continuity.
It's the solution that should have been used instead of COIE. If they had just told readers that the comics were now taking place in a new continuity--it would have been simple enough and everyone wouldn't expect it to fit with the previous comics. But they tried to have their cake and eat it, too. So the post-COIE DCU was a mish mash of continuites jammed together, leaving readers to figure out what's in and what's out.
Not every reader is going to like the new universe continuity. But I think most readers want to believe that the continuity they love still exists and isn't being overtaken by another continuity. So, as long as the publihser acknowledges that this beloved reality is its own thing and isn't subverted by another reality--then readers will allow the new continuity to have its own integrity--and won't feel so slighted. Plus it gives the publisher a free hand to return to that older continuity universe whenever they want, without having to explode universes to do so.
Different flavors of the same thing to me. Either way, I won't get one long-running continuity with events building on each other.I think it's the opposite. Changing continuity on the fly, without giving people a heads up that the story is now taking place in another universe, that's the "continuity doesn't matter" recipe.
Sure. But if I don't get to read new stories set in the continuity I love, I just re-read old ones. Might pick up a tpb if a particular new story looks good, but certainly couldn't get invested in any new character or series when it's only going to be flash-in-the-pan, then disregarded and forgotten.But I think most readers want to believe that the continuity they love still exists and isn't being overtaken by another continuity
But maybe it'd get the casual reader market. If anyone could make comics appeal to casual readers again, that would be big money. It's just not what I'm interested in reading. What's best for DC and best for me aren't the same, though, and I do know that.
If you give up on the idea that there has to be one main universe, then it's more likely that your favourite universe gets to live and exist alongside the other universes. Whereas, if there can only be one and it's not the one you like, then you're stuck. So I prefer to believe that my favourite universes still exist and can be returned to at any time, without the need for continuity breaking crisis events. I would much rather that DC published comics that were each set in different continuities, so I'd have a chance of getting the one I like.