Legacy_Lolcow_Hunter
kiwifarms.net
- Joined
- May 11, 2024
Ah Grant Morrison, the guy who claimed Superman was a socialist.That means nothing, Morrison and his ilk were the prototypes for the retards running the show now.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Ah Grant Morrison, the guy who claimed Superman was a socialist.That means nothing, Morrison and his ilk were the prototypes for the retards running the show now.
i think they shoulda stopped at one.I looked at the Guide, saw it had 3 or 4 universes entirely of Marvel pastiches, and decided it was not for me
The Crisis getting rid of the multiverse was the right call, much like diversity characters it’s just unnecessary.i think they shoulda stopped at one.
yeah I think the whole hypertime thing was a good substitute, but again. Never used properly.The Crisis getting rid of the multiverse was the right call, much like diversity characters it’s just unnecessary.
Superboy Prime was hilarious because he was completely right about everything.yeah I think the whole hypertime thing was a good substitute, but again. Never used properly.
Besides, as I think I've stated before. The only real thing we missed from pre-crisis DCU that didn't get reintroduced in some form was Helena Wayne.
DC folded in the Earth-Shazam cast into Fawcett City, Earth-X got folded into the Golden Age. Earth 3 was turned into a Qward thing. We got hypertime introduced on the off chance that we wanted to toy with something way out there.
Wildstorm was folded in with the Superman-Majestic stuff and that Captain Atom series. What else did we really need here? I guess Superboy Prime and Alexander Luthor could have been entertaining if executed properly.
1. I don't think there was ever a Sinister story with tentacles. At least not in the 80s and 90s. In the X-Factor #39's flashback sequence, when he first revealed himself to Cyclops as a kid, there is a scene where a mechanical arm grabbing machine grabs a young Scott's arm to restrain him. Also, Sinister's shredded cape SOMETIMES might look like tentacles but it's not tentacles.1) to get this out of the way, I saw a person mention once that a 80s comic had a "scene with Sinister and tentacles", and I wanna see it for myself bc I doubt it actually was anything suggestive (they def did not mean 90s, as it was a discussion about some writer?artist?..being prone to not obeying the directives)
2) where does he use his shapechanging in a cool way?
Beside that one time in 90s comics where it, indeed, was something along the lines of tentacles (where he freshly aquired said shapechanging ability)
3) when did the black star on his head became a red diamond permanently? I am aware the diamond had like 3 canon justifications, it just was that his entire design direction shifted with it
4) did he ever get that super-baby he wanted Jean to spawn, I read that it was "Madeline" actually giving birth to said baby?
He didn't really care what the fans wanted, he just cared about what type of fans he thought would buy the books. Kind of like how modern Hollywood is trying to find that 'modern audience' of liberal, diverse people of color that doesn't exist. Didio set up the New 52 to be exclusively for middle aged men who have been buying comics for decades because he assumed since they have more money than kids, they'll be more likely to buy the comics.it's a great tool, but DC during the late 00s was kinda in some kinda clusterfuck. they seemed impatient and then you had the n52 era that kinda shat itself.
feels like Dan Didio kept trying to have his streamlined reboot, but not know what the fuck the fans want.
Highly informative, appreciated. This is the stuff i come back to this thread for, i read a ton of US comics but i know next to nothing about individual authors and the behind-the-scenes stuff, except for Ennis and (some) Image/McFarlane stuff.As for how Millar got into the comic industry, he started off as Grant Morrison and Warren Ellis's butt boy with Morrison literally ghost writing most of Millar's early work at DC and Ellis giving him work he felt beneath him, as seen with Ellis giving him Authority to write when Ellis came to believe Planetary not Authority was going to be the big comic industry changing hit of the two
They held it for him later, unfortunately. But no, they did a smattering of multiverse stuff over the period between the multiverses restoration in (2006) to (2014). Like allot of things, Dan fucked it up, badIts weird because now that I think about it, the only person that really tried to play with the multiverse was Morrison
Everything he did around that time was just for a movie pitch. Hell, the Kickass movie got green lit before the first issue even came out.The original Nemesis was a blatant movie pitch (Millar even promoted it as "Evil Batman by way of the Joker" long before The Batman Who Laughs even existed without actually explaining the plot, as though he was explicitly promoting the film to his Hollywood friends instead of comic readers) and had all of the worst elements of Millar's writing at the time.
I do enjoy Millar's current works. Starlight was quite goodEverything he did around that time was just for a movie pitch. Hell, the Kickass movie got green lit before the first issue even came out.
This caused a big problem in the indie scene if you were a writer wanting to work with an artist on a new project. Places like Digital Webbing and Pencil Jack were flooded with requests for artists to work for free on a mini-series, with a promise that there'd be big bucks when it got picked up for a movie deal. A lot of artists decided to just write their own books rather than work with someone who actually knew how to plot, and it led to a lot of shit getting made. One friend I had was a solid artist but got so discouraged by his pitches getting rejected because he was a shit writer that he quit comics and stuck to graphic design because he wouldn't get paid any other way, and there weren't many writers interested in paying him, they just wanted him to draw their movie pitches for free or pennies. Then things got worse as tumblr artists started entering the field.
It wasn't all Millar's fault, dude wanted to get paid and get into Hollywood like a lot of people did. But the fact that his books needed to be so heavily re-written to make it to the silver screen, to the point where I personally wouldn't have paid him for Wanted, it's barely recognizable, should have clued him in to his flaws he needed to work on. Instead he just got pissy that people liked his work better when he was co-writing with Morrison.
it was horrendous at the time too. I was in middle school? I think reading it and I thought that book was offensively bad at 12. I'm asian too and I did not appreciate the representation. Amadeus is a faggot and I hate him. WWH itself sucks too. the sentry? really? the fuck is wrong with you? was that an editorial decision?Read all of World War Hulk and it’s tie-ins.
Holy fuck the main Hulk book during that time with Amadeus is awful (he’s wasn’t a hulk yet) genuine fanfiction OC-tier, fuck Greg Pak. There’s a weird commie part where Cho steals money from Angel and when called out he says “you’re a trustie, you didn’t earn it”
“I’m Hulk’s friend, he’s not so bad.”
-Greg Pak’s self insert
Well the world shills Amadeus as a “genius” which is meaningless when humans like Charles Xavier, Tony Stark, Reed Richards, Bruce Banner and Victor Von Doom exist.it was horrendous at the time too. I was in middle school? I think reading it and I thought that book was offensively bad at 12. I'm asian too and I did not appreciate the representation. Amadeus is a faggot and I hate him. WWH itself sucks too. the sentry? really? the fuck is wrong with you? was that an editorial decision?