Comic-Watch Reviewer
Titles:
/Doctor Strange/Captain Marvel\Scarlet Witch\
/Iron Man/Captain Britain/Wasp\X-Men\
/JSA\/X-Treme X-Men\/WILDCATS\
https://comic-watch.com/author/baradtzgmail-com
Can't lie, I get a little nostalgic when I think about the variety of genres and titles that Marvel churned out during the 1970s. These days if Marvel pushes 15 books, you can best believe 3 of them will be X-men related, 3 will be Avengers related, 3 will be Spider-Man related, 1 will be for the FF franchise and the remainder will be characters that typically appear in one of the aforementioned titles. Ok, I'm exaggerating a little, but not by much.
They will on occasion put out different genres. Or attempt new things. Even if they were limited series the MAX line was super diverse. Like I said before Mystery men, various other things. The Twelve. Supreme Power. I kind of have to dig but those are the ones I enjoy the most because the regular marvel characters are in a non stop loop. Also just easier for me to wrap my brain around.
True, but like someone said, before you've had a chance to even get your ankles wet with a series, they pull the plug. Everyone binge watches TV shows these days, but we used to binge read comic runs back in the day. My friends would stop by with a stack of a complete run 70-100+ issues deep and we'd just read all damn day, stopping only to go to McDonald's, or grab some junk food from the corner store. Ahhh, the good ol' days.
All true but I have accepted the good old days are not coming back. If Marvel thinks this is how they need to do things now I guess thats what they will do. My wish would be for readers like me have at least a few diverse books that run a little off kilter to what is going on in the latest event. Do your events thats cool but run a book on more obscure characters even if its just 12 issues or whatever. Marvel has a ton of talent. I know they probably don't make money on the type of books I suggested but I think it would keep things fresh. If that means anything. Its not like Marvel doesnt enjoy tapping into its history but it just seem in most cases it always gets convoluted in some massive event that I just can't follow even if its really good which I know some of them are.
I mean this masked raider convo is a typical example. To me he sounds like an interesting character. But for me or you to actually get his story we have to read 8 books across 5 lines and 3 one shots to even get an idea what is going on with him. Why not actually run a series on him?
Last edited by inisideguy; 02-15-2021 at 11:05 PM.
I'll be checking this out, should be good.
I think the contraction of the comic-book genres was more or less due to the loss of newsstands and the rise of the Direct Market. The madness of the '90s accelerated the process.
Interestingly, the gradual shift to bookstores & digital seem to have opened things up a bit more, although with new genres. Creators like Raina Telgemeier or Jerry Kraft are making a living well outside the superhero genre.
But I digress. This thread is about the New Defenders book, which looks to be urban fantasy more than anything else.
Doctor Strange #55:
http://thegreatcomicbookheroes.blogs...-by-roger.html
Thanks for going to the trouble! I was reading Dr. Strange around that time; I may have read this but don't really remember it.
Marvel and the trippy.
~ Oberon ~
Comic-book reading Witch and Pagan since 1970
I came for Kate, I stayed for Bette Love Fantastic Four, Namor, Batwoman, Dr.Strange.... i love them all
Literally the first Marvel comic that has excited me in a long time.
Really like the cast.
Red She-Hulk/Harpy looks to be a replacement for Gargoyle.
Whatever happened to him?
"There's magic in the sound of analog audio." - CNET.
Bringing back the old, killing the young: that's the Marvel way