The next issue should have Eternity come back and say "Oh! Oh shit, I meant to talk to Scott Lang."
Also, archetypes are nice and all, but Reed isn't an explorer and Tony isn't an engineer. They're comic book scientists who know everything about everything all the time and break the rules of the universe to make tastier coffee.
Yeah, this is my problem with it too: while the idea of Scientist Supreme is interesting (especially given that The Oath tells us that magic cannot do what science does, which implies a potential future where the Scientist Supreme renders the Sorcerer Supreme obsolete) it was just awful to have Eternity (a) pick Pym, and (b) do it in such a childish, fanwanky way.
Hell, even Eternity's diction seemed immature and inappropriate.
I don't think this is true, as there will always be things that science cannot do.
Why do you say that?
In Marvel, it's established that magic cannot do what science can do (at least within some unclear range or distance in space or time), canonically. This implies that, should human-kind last long enough, it could reach a point where science has completely displaced magic. It's not like I'm reaching here...
Opening a portal is something magic and science can both currently do, for example. So I'm not sure what the restriction means, and whether it was even noticed by Marvel at large.
Which is almost too bad, because Ant-man sans the Pym-ness could be really cool.
Shame on you for not buying Irredeemable Ant-Man.
I did buy Irredeemable Ant-man for a while. I like the character, he's fun when he shows up. What turned me off the Irredeemable Ant-man was, I confess, a bit weird of me. It was during the WWH event, and Ant-man gets swallowed by the Hulk (btw, there should be a mandatory 20-issue waiting period before you re-use the gag of a shrunken person being swallowed). While inside Hulk, he sees a name-brand deoderant. I forget what it was (Red Zone?). But it was just inconsistent with the character (Hulk does not eat deoderant), and I felt that if I am forced to be subjected to advertising, they should be paying me to read the comic, not the other way around.
But I like the character. Hell, one of my favorite scenes from 'Avengers: The Initiative' was when Taskmaster and Ant-man tell MVP they don't want to fight him, and back away. Later on, when everyone is fighting but them, Ant-man asks Taskmaster if he wants to watch "Chuck" on his iPod. Granted, this was another pop-culture reference/advertisement, but at least it was funny enough to make me laugh.
I wonder who will eventually become the long-term Ant-man: Pym, Scott Lang (they never found the body!), or Irredeemable Ant-man.
The next issue should have Eternity come back and say "Oh! Oh shit, I meant to talk to Scott Lang."
Also, archetypes are nice and all, but Reed isn't an explorer and Tony isn't an engineer. They're comic book scientists who know everything about everything all the time and break the rules of the universe to make tastier coffee.
Yeah, this is my problem with it too: while the idea of Scientist Supreme is interesting (especially given that The Oath tells us that magic cannot do what science does, which implies a potential future where the Scientist Supreme renders the Sorcerer Supreme obsolete) it was just awful to have Eternity (a) pick Pym, and (b) do it in such a childish, fanwanky way.
Hell, even Eternity's diction seemed immature and inappropriate.
I don't think this is true, as there will always be things that science cannot do.
Why do you say that?
In Marvel, it's established that magic cannot do what science can do (at least within some unclear range or distance in space or time), canonically. This implies that, should human-kind last long enough, it could reach a point where science has completely displaced magic. It's not like I'm reaching here...
Opening a portal is something magic and science can both currently do, for example. So I'm not sure what the restriction means, and whether it was even noticed by Marvel at large.
I'm not saying they have it fully fleshed out, but The Oath's entire plot point hinged on the difficulties in using magic to cure cancer because science had the cure, didn't it?
As for "portals", that's not correct. Science might create a wormhole, for example, while magic might create a portal.
I'm not the writer, I'm not the editor, but the canon rule is that magic can't do what science can, in Marvel.
Just once I want to see a character get shot in the last page of a comic book, and actually be dead when the next issue comes out.
Comics don't work that way.
Fencingsax on
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TexiKenDammit!That fish really got me!Registered Userregular
edited October 2009
That reminds me of Batman being a super dickhead in Gotham Central, when cops bust in on him beating up Penguin, they tell Batman to freeze, he moves and the detective shoots him.
Batman gets shot but the armor takes the bullet, then breaks the detective's nose and steals her gun, which is a big no-no for a cop to lose their gun.
They're just doing their job, jerkman the jerk crusader.
TexiKen on
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FencingsaxIt is difficult to get a man to understand, when his salary depends upon his not understandingGNU Terry PratchettRegistered Userregular
That reminds me of Batman being a super dickhead in Gotham Central, when cops bust in on him beating up Penguin, they tell Batman to freeze, he moves and the detective shoots him.
Batman gets shot but the armor takes the bullet, then breaks the detective's nose and steals her gun, which is a big no-no for a cop to lose their gun.
They're just doing their job, jerkman the jerk crusader.
On the other hand, what kind of stupid bitch shoots at Batman?
Fencingsax on
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RingoHe/Hima distinct lack of substanceRegistered Userregular
edited October 2009
So I sat down with the Secret Warriors trade last night. I liked it in singles, and I liked it even better all in one go but then I walked away from it for a few hours and decided I really didn't like the "Shield was Hydra all along" retcon. It's a great shocking twist, and it sure sets up some of the motivations for a number of players in the book as well as clears HAMMER from being controlled by anyone other than Osborn but its just a big ol' nasty retcon. You can get out of it by claiming that Hydra's influence was never a sure thing so that all those old stories still make sense, but why force your readers to perform such mental gymnastics? Bleargh.
Anyway, it had me thinking last night - has Bendis done anything in 616 Marvel that didn't include massive retcons to reposition the cast and status quo of the book he was writing? With Illuminati, Secert Warriors, Secret War, Secret Invasion it seems to be kind of his thing. Hell, Jessica Jones is an entire character made out of retcon. So was his Daredevil run immune to this? The only other thing I can think of is Dark Avengers has no backstory rewriting. At least until we finally find out what the deal is with the Sentry (but that doesn't count because he's also a retcon character - no wonder Bendis likes him :P )
That reminds me of Batman being a super dickhead in Gotham Central, when cops bust in on him beating up Penguin, they tell Batman to freeze, he moves and the detective shoots him.
Batman gets shot but the armor takes the bullet, then breaks the detective's nose and steals her gun, which is a big no-no for a cop to lose their gun.
They're just doing their job, jerkman the jerk crusader.
On the other hand, what kind of stupid bitch shoots at Batman?
She was new and doing her job, Batman's not above the law. He may have Gordon whipped but no one else is taking that shit.
It's one thing to knock her out or something to get away, it's another to be an asshole and take her gun when Bruce knows that can screw up a Cop's job.
TexiKen on
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TexiKenDammit!That fish really got me!Registered Userregular
Anyway, it had me thinking last night - has Bendis done anything in 616 Marvel that didn't include massive retcons to reposition the cast and status quo of the book he was writing? With Illuminati, Secert Warriors, Secret War, Secret Invasion it seems to be kind of his thing. Hell, Jessica Jones is an entire character made out of retcon. So was his Daredevil run immune to this? The only other thing I can think of is Dark Avengers has no backstory rewriting. At least until we finally find out what the deal is with the Sentry (but that doesn't count because he's also a retcon character - no wonder Bendis likes him :P )
He had Kingpin have a son in his DD run but it was always implied Fisk had a son in the past, starting with Miller's run. His DD run is actually the cleanest he's ever told a story in that regard. He changed things a lot but they were all a part of his current story, like DD becoming Kingpin and having his identity outed.
And Secret Warriors is 95% Hickman, as Bendis admits his name is on the book just to sell more copies.
I did buy Irredeemable Ant-man for a while. I like the character, he's fun when he shows up. What turned me off the Irredeemable Ant-man was, I confess, a bit weird of me. It was during the WWH event, and Ant-man gets swallowed by the Hulk (btw, there should be a mandatory 20-issue waiting period before you re-use the gag of a shrunken person being swallowed). While inside Hulk, he sees a name-brand deoderant. I forget what it was (Red Zone?). But it was just inconsistent with the character (Hulk does not eat deoderant), and I felt that if I am forced to be subjected to advertising, they should be paying me to read the comic, not the other way around.
Around that time, Marvel was running in-story advertisements, hoping they wouldn't be too intrusive. When Kirkman and Hester were told that they needed to put an Old Spice reference in the story, they decided to go all out and put one on every page.
That issie was hilarious, and the series as a whole was alright apart from a few signature wall of text moments. There was a page in the second to last issue where Eric explains his cover story that just about killed me.
TexiKenDammit!That fish really got me!Registered Userregular
edited October 2009
Yeah, it was predominently Old Spice, some Nike shoes, and Go Army ads a lot back then (and people got all pissy about the Army ads; seriously, go fuck off if it's so bad).
There was that X-Factor issue where Peter David wouldn't have the characters shut up about an iPhone or iPod, that was more annoying than background billboards with real life ads.
Yeah, it was predominently Old Spice, some Nike shoes, and Go Army ads a lot back then (and people got all pissy about the Army ads; seriously, go fuck off if it's so bad).
There was that X-Factor issue where Peter David wouldn't have the characters shut up about an iPhone or iPod, that was more annoying than background billboards with real life ads.
They mentioned the iPhone like, twice! And it was woven in pretty well, I'd say, with Monet crushing Rahne's for leaving.
Yeah, it was predominently Old Spice, some Nike shoes, and Go Army ads a lot back then (and people got all pissy about the Army ads; seriously, go fuck off if it's so bad).
There was that X-Factor issue where Peter David wouldn't have the characters shut up about an iPhone or iPod, that was more annoying than background billboards with real life ads.
They mentioned the iPhone like, twice! And it was woven in pretty well, I'd say, with Monet crushing Rahne's for leaving.
It was like 4 or 5 times, and it also had close ups of the iPhone nicely drawn showing how stylish it is in a person's hands.
Although who would want to buy an iPhone if those mutie freaks are using them, mirite? The apple doesn't fall far from the X-gene.
The Fred Van Lente one was the best story in the book, and it'll keep me on Deadpool Teamup. The Joe Kelly/Rob Liefield one was fun just to see those two back with the character. Duane Swierczynski's was good as just being what a standard shortform deadpool story should be.
All of the others were just terrible. Especially the one that Kyle Baker illustrated, which had a neat ending but was entirely crap otherwise, and the final story, which was overly long and involved and almost humorless despite the confusing (yet somewhat funny) Secret Wars II tie in at the start, and its best attempts to parody the average Wolverine solo story.
HadjiQuest on
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TexiKenDammit!That fish really got me!Registered Userregular
edited October 2009
The last part was actually a reprint from a 1998 one-shot.
I didn't like the Baker one at all, which makes me sad because Plastic Man was a great series no one read.
Anyway, it had me thinking last night - has Bendis done anything in 616 Marvel that didn't include massive retcons to reposition the cast and status quo of the book he was writing? With Illuminati, Secert Warriors, Secret War, Secret Invasion it seems to be kind of his thing. Hell, Jessica Jones is an entire character made out of retcon. So was his Daredevil run immune to this? The only other thing I can think of is Dark Avengers has no backstory rewriting. At least until we finally find out what the deal is with the Sentry (but that doesn't count because he's also a retcon character - no wonder Bendis likes him :P )
He had Kingpin have a son in his DD run but it was always implied Fisk had a son in the past, starting with Miller's run. His DD run is actually the cleanest he's ever told a story in that regard. He changed things a lot but they were all a part of his current story, like DD becoming Kingpin and having his identity outed.
And Secret Warriors is 95% Hickman, as Bendis admits his name is on the book just to sell more copies.
TexiKenDammit!That fish really got me!Registered Userregular
edited October 2009
Baker's art was revealed a few months ago (on Bleeding Cool I think) to be just taking images from google, doing some photoshopping, and drawing Deadpool onto it, almost like something out of a generic Adult Swim show.
Baker's old style was a lot better. Skottie Young quirky.
Nope. He's most famous for doing some really cartoony stuff reminiscent of Looney Toons or old magazine illustration, both in the independent realm, and for Marvel and DC. He also has a more serious, less exaggerated style, which he's used on Truth, and Nat Turner. You can check out some of his stuff here.
It kills me that he's doing this lame, CGI-tracing crap now, as the dude's way too talented for that. That Deadpool story would have been exponentially more entertaining if he'd done the whole thing in one of his old styles.
If you're interested in checking out some of his best work, I'd recommend reading the first two volumes of his Plastic Man, Why I Hate Saturn, The Cowboy Wally Show, and Birth of a Nation.
His Hawkman had it (the bad style) too, and I can't tell if it looked better because it was on print or because it was more subdued that time around.
HadjiQuest on
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AJRSome guy who wrestlesNorwichRegistered Userregular
edited October 2009
I had a hard time reading Hawkman. Characters were always positioned in weird ways. The whole idea of tracing CG stuff like that just seems strange to me.
Goddamn, No Hero's last issue was poop from a butt. I guess it makes sense in the 90% posthumans are probably going to be terrifying beings who will not be interested in helping, but damn, what a waste.
I had a hard time reading Hawkman. Characters were always positioned in weird ways. The whole idea of tracing CG stuff like that just seems strange to me.
It really turned off to Hawkman. Will wait some months and give it another chance.
I had a hard time reading Hawkman. Characters were always positioned in weird ways. The whole idea of tracing CG stuff like that just seems strange to me.
It really turned me off to Hawkman. Will wait some months and give it another chance.
Nope. He's most famous for doing some really cartoony stuff reminiscent of Looney Toons or old magazine illustration, both in the independent realm, and for Marvel and DC. He also has a more serious, less exaggerated style, which he's used on Truth, and Nat Turner. You can check out some of his stuff here.
It kills me that he's doing this lame, CGI-tracing crap now, as the dude's way too talented for that. That Deadpool story would have been exponentially more entertaining if he'd done the whole thing in one of his old styles.
If you're interested in checking out some of his best work, I'd recommend reading the first two volumes of his Plastic Man, Why I Hate Saturn, The Cowboy Wally Show, and Birth of a Nation.
He's also really good at doing Frank Miller's style
That's right, I remember really liking the first few issues of that Frankenstein book, but it just kind of fell of the radar. I'm sure it's still on my pull list, if a new one ever does come out. I remember his Big Guy and Rusty was fun a trade, too.
Hensler on
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CorporateLogoThe toilet knowshow I feelRegistered Userregular
Why are there so many delays on the Captain America: Rebirth story? It has the same creative team that the normal Cap monthly has: Brubaker and Guice. I don't see why they are having such trouble getting this book out on a regular monthly schedule. Are they trying to synchronize the story with Dark Reign or something? Or what's the deal?
Lucascraft on
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TexiKenDammit!That fish really got me!Registered Userregular
Has the regular Cap book come out in time lately? It seems like that's also been delayed, though I guess that could just be to make sure the books sync up.
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Opening a portal is something magic and science can both currently do, for example. So I'm not sure what the restriction means, and whether it was even noticed by Marvel at large.
I did buy Irredeemable Ant-man for a while. I like the character, he's fun when he shows up. What turned me off the Irredeemable Ant-man was, I confess, a bit weird of me. It was during the WWH event, and Ant-man gets swallowed by the Hulk (btw, there should be a mandatory 20-issue waiting period before you re-use the gag of a shrunken person being swallowed). While inside Hulk, he sees a name-brand deoderant. I forget what it was (Red Zone?). But it was just inconsistent with the character (Hulk does not eat deoderant), and I felt that if I am forced to be subjected to advertising, they should be paying me to read the comic, not the other way around.
But I like the character. Hell, one of my favorite scenes from 'Avengers: The Initiative' was when Taskmaster and Ant-man tell MVP they don't want to fight him, and back away. Later on, when everyone is fighting but them, Ant-man asks Taskmaster if he wants to watch "Chuck" on his iPod. Granted, this was another pop-culture reference/advertisement, but at least it was funny enough to make me laugh.
I wonder who will eventually become the long-term Ant-man: Pym, Scott Lang (they never found the body!), or Irredeemable Ant-man.
Diablo 3 - ArtfulDodger#1572
Minecraft - ArtfulDodger42
I'm not saying they have it fully fleshed out, but The Oath's entire plot point hinged on the difficulties in using magic to cure cancer because science had the cure, didn't it?
As for "portals", that's not correct. Science might create a wormhole, for example, while magic might create a portal.
I'm not the writer, I'm not the editor, but the canon rule is that magic can't do what science can, in Marvel.
Comics don't work that way.
Batman gets shot but the armor takes the bullet, then breaks the detective's nose and steals her gun, which is a big no-no for a cop to lose their gun.
They're just doing their job, jerkman the jerk crusader.
On the other hand, what kind of stupid bitch shoots at Batman?
Anyway, it had me thinking last night - has Bendis done anything in 616 Marvel that didn't include massive retcons to reposition the cast and status quo of the book he was writing? With Illuminati, Secert Warriors, Secret War, Secret Invasion it seems to be kind of his thing. Hell, Jessica Jones is an entire character made out of retcon. So was his Daredevil run immune to this? The only other thing I can think of is Dark Avengers has no backstory rewriting. At least until we finally find out what the deal is with the Sentry (but that doesn't count because he's also a retcon character - no wonder Bendis likes him :P )
She was new and doing her job, Batman's not above the law. He may have Gordon whipped but no one else is taking that shit.
It's one thing to knock her out or something to get away, it's another to be an asshole and take her gun when Bruce knows that can screw up a Cop's job.
He had Kingpin have a son in his DD run but it was always implied Fisk had a son in the past, starting with Miller's run. His DD run is actually the cleanest he's ever told a story in that regard. He changed things a lot but they were all a part of his current story, like DD becoming Kingpin and having his identity outed.
And Secret Warriors is 95% Hickman, as Bendis admits his name is on the book just to sell more copies.
Around that time, Marvel was running in-story advertisements, hoping they wouldn't be too intrusive. When Kirkman and Hester were told that they needed to put an Old Spice reference in the story, they decided to go all out and put one on every page.
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There was that X-Factor issue where Peter David wouldn't have the characters shut up about an iPhone or iPod, that was more annoying than background billboards with real life ads.
They mentioned the iPhone like, twice! And it was woven in pretty well, I'd say, with Monet crushing Rahne's for leaving.
Tumblr Twitter
It was like 4 or 5 times, and it also had close ups of the iPhone nicely drawn showing how stylish it is in a person's hands.
Although who would want to buy an iPhone if those mutie freaks are using them, mirite? The apple doesn't fall far from the X-gene.
And it was pretty awful
The Fred Van Lente one was the best story in the book, and it'll keep me on Deadpool Teamup. The Joe Kelly/Rob Liefield one was fun just to see those two back with the character. Duane Swierczynski's was good as just being what a standard shortform deadpool story should be.
All of the others were just terrible. Especially the one that Kyle Baker illustrated, which had a neat ending but was entirely crap otherwise, and the final story, which was overly long and involved and almost humorless despite the confusing (yet somewhat funny) Secret Wars II tie in at the start, and its best attempts to parody the average Wolverine solo story.
I didn't like the Baker one at all, which makes me sad because Plastic Man was a great series no one read.
That explains a great deal.
Also, was this always Baker's style of.... art?
Because it looked awful, in addition to the terrible writing behind it.
Baker's old style was a lot better. Skottie Young quirky.
no it is not a can't thing munch
it is a won't thing
Nope. He's most famous for doing some really cartoony stuff reminiscent of Looney Toons or old magazine illustration, both in the independent realm, and for Marvel and DC. He also has a more serious, less exaggerated style, which he's used on Truth, and Nat Turner. You can check out some of his stuff here.
It kills me that he's doing this lame, CGI-tracing crap now, as the dude's way too talented for that. That Deadpool story would have been exponentially more entertaining if he'd done the whole thing in one of his old styles.
If you're interested in checking out some of his best work, I'd recommend reading the first two volumes of his Plastic Man, Why I Hate Saturn, The Cowboy Wally Show, and Birth of a Nation.
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It really turned off to Hawkman. Will wait some months and give it another chance.
To bump the thread and get responses.
Quoting yourself to bump the thread is kind of along the same lines, and Geebs already said not to dooooooooooo that.
I was trying to edit my post , but I guess I hit quote by mistake. :?
Anyways ... I gave ASM another chance and it was decent this month.
He's also really good at doing Frank Miller's style