- Joined
- Apr 16, 2013
I used to be a big Marvel fan. I watched the movies, bought the comics. IMO, there was a big drop in consistency from around 2010, and right now I'd say that DC's comics are probably more worth reading if only because they seem hesitant to make any major changes to their primary characters (after all, that hasn't gone well for them in the past.) It's funny, because people used to say that Marvel heroes were more realistic because of their inclusion of topics such as alcoholism and homosexuality, but now it's gone so far that some characters have become cariacatures.
The last straw for me was Saldin Ahmed's doomed 'Quicksilver' run, which was so laughably bad in all respects (especially the 'white europeans bad' gypsy sperging, out of nowhere) that it seems to have killed the character altogether. To my knowledge Quicksilver's not been featured in any major lineups and is barely mentioned, which is honestly a shame. I still pick up Punisher if it looks good (or Ennis is writing), but I've pretty much jumped ship at this point.
I'm not opposed to political comics (Hard Travelin' Heroes is still a masterpiece) but no one needs to be smacked over the head with it. There are better ways to show your support for Gays or Immigrants or Trannies than by just saying 'This character is gay now' or replacing them with a new, unfamiliar character to prove a point. I particularly don't like how the writers leave nothing up to the reader. You're told what side you should be on, and if you don't agree straight off the bat you're aligned with the bad guy. Frankly, I think that introducing minority characters out of the blue is just a lazy way to make the bad guys seem more evil - 'Not only is Doom trying to destroy the world, he's also racist!' Worse still, that ghastly trope wherin a bad guy says something like 'I might be evil but i'm not sexist!' or 'I shall institute the new world order, and also Trans rights!' implying that people who don't agree with them (the writer) politically are worse than the comic's standin for Hitler.
At this point I buy a comic based on the writer (and artist), rather than the character. It's ridiculous because in the past you could usually count on a character being the same regardless of writer, but now it's entirely dependant on the personal politics of whichever balding hack snagged the contract.
The last straw for me was Saldin Ahmed's doomed 'Quicksilver' run, which was so laughably bad in all respects (especially the 'white europeans bad' gypsy sperging, out of nowhere) that it seems to have killed the character altogether. To my knowledge Quicksilver's not been featured in any major lineups and is barely mentioned, which is honestly a shame. I still pick up Punisher if it looks good (or Ennis is writing), but I've pretty much jumped ship at this point.
I'm not opposed to political comics (Hard Travelin' Heroes is still a masterpiece) but no one needs to be smacked over the head with it. There are better ways to show your support for Gays or Immigrants or Trannies than by just saying 'This character is gay now' or replacing them with a new, unfamiliar character to prove a point. I particularly don't like how the writers leave nothing up to the reader. You're told what side you should be on, and if you don't agree straight off the bat you're aligned with the bad guy. Frankly, I think that introducing minority characters out of the blue is just a lazy way to make the bad guys seem more evil - 'Not only is Doom trying to destroy the world, he's also racist!' Worse still, that ghastly trope wherin a bad guy says something like 'I might be evil but i'm not sexist!' or 'I shall institute the new world order, and also Trans rights!' implying that people who don't agree with them (the writer) politically are worse than the comic's standin for Hitler.
At this point I buy a comic based on the writer (and artist), rather than the character. It's ridiculous because in the past you could usually count on a character being the same regardless of writer, but now it's entirely dependant on the personal politics of whichever balding hack snagged the contract.