Continuing. Which of these Bronze Age titles would you bring back and what would you do with them? Pick as many as you like.
SANDMAN
OMAC
1st ISSUE SPECIAL
BATMAN FAMILY
BEOWULF
CHARLTON BULLSEYE
JOKER
JUSTICE, INC.
SECRETS OF HAUNTED HOUSE
SHERLOCK HOLMES
STALKER
SUPER-TEAM FAMILY
TALES OF GHOST CASTLE
TOR
CLAW THE UNCONQUERED
Continuing. Which of these Bronze Age titles would you bring back and what would you do with them? Pick as many as you like.
I choose OMAC because while I love Sandman more than everything else on that list, Sandman was already in a dreaming way, already resurrected by The Dreaming, so I choose OMAC.
I'd like to see that SHERLOCK HOLMES as I never got the one issue that did come out--I saw it advertised but never found it at the drugstore--I did get the issue with Holmes in THE JOKER.
But what I'd really like is the King Arthur comic that was supposed to come out--was advertised--with art by Nestor Redondo. Now that would have been something.
Maybe you need a category for all those comics that were announced but never appeared on the newsstand at all. Some comics got one or two issues, but others (like VIXEN) were cancelled before they could get that far. The pain of being a D.C. fan.
I voted Joker, which seems like a tiresome choice given his overexposure, but I'd specify that the title be a continuation/expansion of Azzarello/Bermejo's "Joker" and not the character from the main continuity.
Claw because he was a good Sword & Sorcery character and he still hasn’t had a lengthy run
"There's magic in the sound of analog audio." - CNET.
Super-Team Family... But reimagined to focus on Metropolis heroes every issue.
A Batfamily book is always popping up somewhere, or de-facto produced by crossovers or guest star appearances.
The Superman family and Metropolis itself could use a boost of freestyle writing of characters side-by-side with others.
Like action, adventure, rogues, and outlaws? Like anti-heroes, femme fatales, mysteries and thrillers?
I wrote a book with them. Outlaw’s Shadow: A Sherwood Noir. Robin Hood’s evil counterpart, Guy of Gisbourne, is the main character. Feel free to give it a look: https://read.amazon.com/kp/embed?asi...E2PKBNJFH76GQP