It feels like ever cupple of Months someone has to die but gets resurrected in time
the oney ones that stay dead uncle Ben George Stacy and Gwen,It was fine in the beginning but now its getting old
It feels like ever cupple of Months someone has to die but gets resurrected in time
the oney ones that stay dead uncle Ben George Stacy and Gwen,It was fine in the beginning but now its getting old
You're just figuring that out now?
But honestly, Wolverine was dead longer than I thought he'd be.
Thanos says that age is just a number and she's spry as ever.
Could just be a trend that'll wear out over time as authors find new favorite tropes. I do agree through that overusing removes whatever impact it could have.
Doctor Strange: "You are the right person to replace Logan."
X-23: "I know there are people who disapprove... Guys on the Internet mainly."
(All-New Wolverine #4)
Death is just another obstacle/opponent for a hero to succumb to before they inevitably overcome it. Hopefully the execution of it makes for an entertaining or rewarding story to some degree.
Continuity, even in a "shared" comics universe is often insignificant if not largely detrimental to the quality of a comic.
Immortal X-Men - Once & Future- X-Cellent - X-Men: Red
Nobody cares about what you don't like, they barely care about what you do like.
"Nothing dies!" to quote a passage from my favorite series. It's proof that the omniverse is still broken. It will get covered in the 2021 event, tentatively called "Death's Pendulum: How to Swing Back to the Grave & Love It."
“True peace is not merely the absence of tension; it is the presence of justice.”
~Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
“If I love you, I have to make you conscious of what you don’t see.”
~James Baldwin
Interesting question: who hasn’t managed to stay dead?
This was sort of addressed in Marvel: The End, when Thanos fixes it so dead means dead. That lasted until Colossus was resurrected the next year.
They do it because death and rebirth both temporarily increase sales. And it used to be by a lot, actually. To give the most stunning example of this: Death of Superman sold 3 million copies in one day back in 1992. His return also sold over 3 million copies.
The sales increase isn't as significant these days now that we've all become so desensitized to it (and the mainstream news no longer runs the story), but it still does increase sales a little bit. Enough that they keep doing it.