- Joined
- Feb 4, 2018
Amazons Attack is so bad its good. I'm not joking. Picture one of the most divisive events to the point readers were actually mailing their copies back.
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Secret Six showed they were put into rape camps.Amazons Attack is so bad its good. I'm not joking. Picture one of the most divisive events to the point readers were actually mailing their copies back.
Which is funny because it was written by Gail "Women in Refrigerators" Simone.Secret Six showed they were put into rape camps.
totally deserved, honestly
I'm not sure if that was an agency thing or a violence against women thing. Either way, it was a pretty stupid complaint. And it's funny that she wrote something people would contribute to chuds: a strong all female warrior race/society getting broken into sex slaves to be sold at auctionWhich is funny because it was written by Gail "Women in Refrigerators" Simone.
I mean, when it comes to creators handling pre-established characters, I guess I'll echo some of what @Arthur Morgan is saying and say that a bad comic is when a creator puts his/her own creative impulses before the integrity of the characters. I.e., when they put whatever hacky or headline-grabbing premise ahead the traditional traits of the characters, or how they're normally supposed to interact.
Tom King is quite possibly the most apt embodiment of this phenomenon. It doesn't matter what he's writing...be it Batman, Supergirl, or Wonder Woman as he's doing currently...he will happily snap character history, internal consistency and traditional in-universe continuity clean in half to accommodate whatever pretentious, edgy, post-modernist point he's trying to make, no matter how much of a poor fit it is with the character he's shamelessly wiping his balls with.
He's like Zack Snyder if he huffed comic paint instead of his own farts.
a comic can have good art and still be horrible. i feel like there's plenty of examples in the last decade of DC/Marvel picking artists that don't stylistically work with the genre at times.
or it can have shit art and great writing. i can't think of examples off the top of my head right now.
Tom King and Tom Taylor both kinda piss me off as writers. King seems capable, but keeps trying to be the guy to make things darker in the stories without it having any real weight in the long run because it's serialized fiction. I honestly don't remember much about his lauded vision run and people seem to love it.
I understand it when a Marvel or DC comic has another character cameo to help fix XYZ or something to show the connected world. I don't like it when they just have an A-lister for the sake of getting sales up.I'll tell you something which makes for a bad comic. Cross-overs! You're merrily reading along and suddenly bam - your story arc is gone, the characters are sometimes even wildly changed into some other version of themselves and you don't know what is going on. It's especially destructive if you're reading much later on in some collected work which I typically am.
But on the other end of things, I'll tell you what makes a comic good. The Brown Bomber! Today I learned this is a DC character and had to share.
View attachment 5929940
That's Vixen in the panel with him, btw. So it turns out The Brown Bomber is a call back to a character called The Black Bomber, who was proposed and rejected by DC editorial. The Black Bomber, I kid you not, was a KKK member who would get turned into a Black superhero and have to do "Black things" in order to be turned White again. He never came to be but lived on in the form of the character above.
(Admittedly very short lived).
Sure, why not. Sentry's never been quite handled right and the idea of this is super funny. . . and fits in with the idea that Sentry's power doesn't fix the brain.View attachment 5930833
View attachment 5930832
This is the new version of Sentry from Marvel. I wonder if the wheelchair flies when she does.
Link to tweet.
Bendis the character.I'll tell you something which makes for a bad comic. Cross-overs! You're merrily reading along and suddenly bam - your story arc is gone, the characters are sometimes even wildly changed into some other version of themselves and you don't know what is going on. It's especially destructive if you're reading much later on in some collected work which I typically am.
But on the other end of things, I'll tell you what makes a comic good. The Brown Bomber! Today I learned this is a DC character and had to share.
View attachment 5929940
That's Vixen in the panel with him, btw. So it turns out The Brown Bomber is a call back to a character called The Black Bomber, who was proposed and rejected by DC editorial. The Black Bomber, I kid you not, was a KKK member who would get turned into a Black superhero and have to do "Black things" in order to be turned White again. He never came to be but lived on in the form of the character above.
(Admittedly very short lived).
Jesus fucking christ, it feels like a parody of the 90s PC cultureView attachment 5930833
View attachment 5930832
This is the new version of Sentry from Marvel. I wonder if the wheelchair flies when she does.
Link to tweet.
They do. American writers are very inefficient with their writing on average when compared to Japanese or Europeans. This got especially bad after the 80s, and even more so in late 90s and early 2000s when decompressed storytelling became all the rage. There is a whole group of writers who think that their primary job is filling up word balloons, and things like plotting and characterization are secondary.Anyways, is it just me or does american comics seem to have the issue with the fucking dialogue being too heavy or awkward more often than the european/japanese comics? I remember lengthy expositions being a thing throughout the ages, but this bullshit seems to have been popularized with Claremont's soap opera X-Men and then ramped up into goyslop with Bendis and Whedon.
Bad writing (plotting, dialogue, characterization), bad art, bad sequential storytelling. One of these is enough to ruin a comic.This talk about bad comics... What makes a comic bad for you? There is one example that I would like to use that is Trouble by millar, I think the book is alright and the art is good, but then people say it is bad only because it deals with a specific cast of characters in their youth.
I Believe that for something to be truly bad, it must be in their own strucure rather than the characterization, shit like shit illustration, bad coloring, wrong fonts and text not centralized and so on.
there is one famously bad comic that I love qnd that is Marville, it is so entertaining, I cant hate it and love it. It is so unpredictable in each issue that makes it a wild ride.
What makes it better is that his white likeness looks a lot like Bendis. I would not be surprised if that was intentional especially with the last three panels that have reused art - one of Bendis' hallmarks.I'll tell you something which makes for a bad comic. Cross-overs! You're merrily reading along and suddenly bam - your story arc is gone, the characters are sometimes even wildly changed into some other version of themselves and you don't know what is going on. It's especially destructive if you're reading much later on in some collected work which I typically am.
But on the other end of things, I'll tell you what makes a comic good. The Brown Bomber! Today I learned this is a DC character and had to share.
View attachment 5929940
That's Vixen in the panel with him, btw. So it turns out The Brown Bomber is a call back to a character called The Black Bomber, who was proposed and rejected by DC editorial. The Black Bomber, I kid you not, was a KKK member who would get turned into a Black superhero and have to do "Black things" in order to be turned White again. He never came to be but lived on in the form of the character above.
(Admittedly very short lived).
I understand it when a Marvel or DC comic has another character cameo to help fix XYZ or something to show the connected world. I don't like it when they just have an A-lister for the sake of getting sales up.
Sure, why not. Sentry's never been quite handled right and the idea of this is super funny. . . and fits in with the idea that Sentry's power doesn't fix the brain.
I forget what Universe by X is.Looking over some of my Universe by.... stuff it strikes me just how much John Byrne crap is collected.
Honest question is there anyone here that wants a Universe by X collection?
Me personally. I'd like George Perez for either of the Big Two, Mignola got the DC treatment but it's a horrible collection omitting large pieces. Maybe Walt Simonson?
I miss Jae Lee's old style pre Marvel knights. That original miniseries is good and self-contained. It would have been better for Bob Reynolds to never have returned.
They retconned that as Black Manta trolling Aquaman.You forgot the villian Black Manthra, who had autism.
oh wait I forgot, Aquaman cured him!
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There are some hints. But they all hinge on you remembering Jean Loring is a cheating whore and someone who, like Sue, was a slightly less active hanger on with the JLA in the early years.I have not read ID crisis but isn’t a major fault with the story, that as a murder mystery story, it is basically impossible to forsee who did the deed?
That there is basically no hints whatsoever?
Seeing a mention of "Cry for Justice", one of the worst storylines ever. What was a real kicker for me was that I had finally gotten around to finishing up back issues and such of Robinson's Starman run just before I checked out CfJ and all I could think was that it was a real difference. Robinson's run on Starman had its weak points but holy balls CfJ was just awful. Stilted dialogue, ("But I still have to ask -- are you here now as a hero... or a villain?"), panels that often felt out of sequence, dialogue that seems to float in out of nowhere, and characters that often felt like they were barely there. All of the blustering about crying for justice or seeking justice or whatever reminded me of the Totally Nineties DC title "Extreme Justice" I'd encountered in bargain bins, but much, much weaker.
Should note that the opening chapter of Xcutioner's Song got shitted on and got a TON of hate mail, because Chuck's speech wasn't inclusive enough (IIRC in particular, because he didn't say anything about the gays).Reading the 1992-93 xmen crossover
x cutioner's Song...never let someone say comics have only recently started to push an agenda. The only thing that separates 1992 from 2020+ is instead of taking up the whole story, the relentless preaching is one page so scott lobdell can say " there I wrote on a message on accepting the weirdos now can I show Nathan summer's snipe Charles Xavier with a giant over-sized gun?"