>exist alongside a big thick Shojo Manga style volume
I don't think there's really a THEMATIC reason it couldn't; but I think you'd get a LOT of resistance from the audience. The superhero crowd would HATE it 'cos it's too Japanese, and the Japanese comic fans would hate it 'cos it's too superhero. (Look at how much recalcitrance the comic fans HERE have when I suggest a Japanese comic for those tired of current superheroes.)
You can have the two Batman's 'cos the dark one appeals to the 14 year olds (and those who think like them) and the lighthearted one appeals to nostalgic dad, who'll prime the kiddies for it. Wonder Woman's been kinda out of the loop in that regard. Not a lot of nostalgic oldsters.
>do people even know DC tried to launch a line of girl-centric comics?
See, there's part of the problem too; mainstream comic fans tend to be male. Anything smacking of girliness is usually poo-poo'd out of hand; even theough it's probably NOT more soapy than a lot of male oriented comics. (Every superhero has a love interest, and the 80's X-Men and Legion were weepier than a week of "All My Children." Yes Scott, Jean's dead. AGAIN. Get over it....)
Ultimately it's all a matter of perception. People come with a LOT of bias.
'Course, I don't know if gong all Shojo is a good idea. It is if you're looking to expand your line, bring in new audience members and present something that has a chance of actually being new and inventive.... but seriously; mainstream comics have NEVER been about that.
You could probably comprimise though. There are a lot of artists (even just on my buddy Jeff's site) who could probably draw the character, keep the heroic action, add some expressiveness, and provide a novel comic:
-I've always liked Teri Wood's stuff:
SB Guest Artwork featuring SnowBuni and the Sylvalagi
-or Mike Sagara:
SB Guest Artwork featuring SnowBuni and the Sylvalagi
-if you want to go a bit more traditional there's Charles Ettinger:
SB Archive Artwork featuring SnowBuni and the Sylvalagi
-or someone like Doug Gracey for something more cartoony:
SB Guest Artwork featuring SnowBuni and the Sylvalagi
-or split the difference with a Dave Carleson:
SB Archive Artwork featuring SnowBuni and the Sylvalagi
Don C.
I don't think there's really a THEMATIC reason it couldn't; but I think you'd get a LOT of resistance from the audience. The superhero crowd would HATE it 'cos it's too Japanese, and the Japanese comic fans would hate it 'cos it's too superhero. (Look at how much recalcitrance the comic fans HERE have when I suggest a Japanese comic for those tired of current superheroes.)
You can have the two Batman's 'cos the dark one appeals to the 14 year olds (and those who think like them) and the lighthearted one appeals to nostalgic dad, who'll prime the kiddies for it. Wonder Woman's been kinda out of the loop in that regard. Not a lot of nostalgic oldsters.
>do people even know DC tried to launch a line of girl-centric comics?
See, there's part of the problem too; mainstream comic fans tend to be male. Anything smacking of girliness is usually poo-poo'd out of hand; even theough it's probably NOT more soapy than a lot of male oriented comics. (Every superhero has a love interest, and the 80's X-Men and Legion were weepier than a week of "All My Children." Yes Scott, Jean's dead. AGAIN. Get over it....)
Ultimately it's all a matter of perception. People come with a LOT of bias.
'Course, I don't know if gong all Shojo is a good idea. It is if you're looking to expand your line, bring in new audience members and present something that has a chance of actually being new and inventive.... but seriously; mainstream comics have NEVER been about that.
You could probably comprimise though. There are a lot of artists (even just on my buddy Jeff's site) who could probably draw the character, keep the heroic action, add some expressiveness, and provide a novel comic:
-I've always liked Teri Wood's stuff:
SB Guest Artwork featuring SnowBuni and the Sylvalagi
-or Mike Sagara:
SB Guest Artwork featuring SnowBuni and the Sylvalagi
-if you want to go a bit more traditional there's Charles Ettinger:
SB Archive Artwork featuring SnowBuni and the Sylvalagi
-or someone like Doug Gracey for something more cartoony:
SB Guest Artwork featuring SnowBuni and the Sylvalagi
-or split the difference with a Dave Carleson:
SB Archive Artwork featuring SnowBuni and the Sylvalagi
Don C.
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