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Neal Adams returns to Batman (with Frank Miller)

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  • BlackKnight
    replied
    I don't think I have ever really liked Miller,.. when I actually think about it.
    I was never just Blown away by his Aledgid Awesomeness... , I have read a few things here or there, & just always kinda walked away thinking it was all right. I did like the Movie 300 . To Me, it was really, really well Done, & was his best peice He was ever involved with imo.

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  • palitoy
    replied
    Originally posted by ctc
    >
    I think it's weird how once upon a time Miller could do no wrong, and now he can do no right. (At least as far as the fans are concerned.)

    I don't find that weird at all, although I never cared for his work in general, it used to have a certain quality to it. Now you read it and you wonder if he's gone mad or having fun p*ssing off fans.

    Either way, this is more about a real decline in quality than fans of comics being fickle sheep.

    As for his direction skills, thanks to Sin City (where he shouldn't have gotten a director credit IMO) Miller has become a "comicbook go to guy" for studios. Too bad it's at a time, where he seems to be at a creative lowpoint. The 1966 Batman series was more credible than the Spirit.

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  • The Toyroom
    replied
    Originally posted by Earth 2 Chris
    Now THAT takes talent, and leaving your ego at the door.
    At this point I think it's safe to say all Miller has left is ego.....it seems his talent has left him and he's been resting on his laurels as they say for years now. Or to paraphrase Miller's own scripting : "I'm Frank Miller Dammit!"

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  • Earth 2 Chris
    replied
    Miller was one of the first comic creators recognized by mainstream media, so he became the buzz name for the "mature" comic book trend. Due to sloppy journalism, most mainstream reporters thought Batman comics were still campy 60s throwbacks prior to DK, and thus painted Miller as the be-all-end-all that not only saved Batman but returned comics to their pulpy roots, and then some. Miller did take things up several notches, and added an epic scope to things, but clearly any comic fan knows Batman had been grim and gritty since 1970. Thanks in large part to Denny O'Neil and, Neal Adams!

    But the result was even those who didn't know comics from their butt knew the name Frank Miller, and before too long Miller was hype onto himself. The problem with Miller now is he's "Sin City's Frank Miller" all the time. He couldn't turn it off for DK2, All-Star Bats or the Spirit. He should take a page from his directing pal Robert Rodgriguez who can film a hardcore, over-the-top gritty movie like Sin City, but then go make another Spy Kids movie. Now THAT takes talent, and leaving your ego at the door.

    Chris

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  • The Bat
    replied
    Yup! I think Miller's ego, has over taken his common sense.

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  • jds1911a1
    replied
    Originally posted by ctc

    I think it's weird how once upon a time Miller could do no wrong, and now he can do no right. (At least as far as the fans are concerned.)

    Don C.
    not weird when you are that sucessfull that early in your career and everyone tells you how brilliant you are you will believe it. Now he has become part of his own hype. when anyone criticises him he can say who are you I wrote Sin city I wrote Darkknight" Same is true for Todd Mcfarlane

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  • ctc
    replied
    >no one ever sets out to purposely make a bad movie (well, maybe LLoyd Kaufman).

    ...Uwe Boll?



    I think it's weird how once upon a time Miller could do no wrong, and now he can do no right. (At least as far as the fans are concerned.)

    Don C.

    Leave a comment:


  • The Toyroom
    replied
    Originally posted by samurainoir
    Just to be fair, by all accounts, given the close relationship between Miller and Eisner, I don't think "slap in the face" is quite right term.
    Trust me...."slap in the face" IS the correct term...Miller has always fancied himself the heir to Eisner's throne...and maybe at one time he was...but The Spirit movie was a thinly guised Sin City knock-off...there was nothing Eisner about it....cripes, Samuel L. Jackson as The Octopus alone was a travesty. Thanks to Miller it's highly-unlikely we'll ever see another big-budget Spirit flick again.

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  • samurainoir
    replied
    Originally posted by kingdom warrior
    I'm not sure if the comic world loves him....but the comic buying world can always get back at him by boycotting any stupid movie he comes out with now......The Spirit was a big slap in the face to hardcore fans and to Will Eisner.

    I'm so Glad that movie bombed on him.....
    Just to be fair, by all accounts, given the close relationship between Miller and Eisner, I don't think "slap in the face" is quite right term. As anyone in a creative field knows, no one ever sets out to purposely make a bad movie (well, maybe LLoyd Kaufman).

    It's readily apparent how much Miller does admire Eisner, and I think it's safe to say in many ways Eisner himself saw a kind of protoge and heir in Miller given the type of storytelling they both did as writer/artists. Were he alive at the time of the production, I don't doubt that Miller would have sought out Eisner's input in the process of making the movie.


    Eisner/Miller TPB :: Profile :: Dark Horse Comics

    The Spirit as a movie isn't really worth watching for many, but I would highly recommend the Miller Eisner book for anyone who's interested in comics and visual storytelling. Even if you disagree with their individual styles and approaches, it is fascinating insight and perspective you can only get when you have a conversation between two different generations. I wish there was more of this kind of thing out there... Mark Millar in converstaion with Stan Lee, or Brian Bendis talking to Steranko!
    Last edited by samurainoir; Sep 22, '09, 4:39 PM.

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  • kingdom warrior
    replied
    Originally posted by johnnystorm
    I don't get the Miller thing anyway, he made a career off of comics, shows up now and again to ridicule the medium & tear down what he can, and the comics world loves him for it.
    I'm not sure if the comic world loves him....but the comic buying world can always get back at him by boycotting any stupid movie he comes out with now......The Spirit was a big slap in the face to hardcore fans and to Will Eisner.

    I'm so Glad that movie bombed on him.....

    Leave a comment:


  • johnnystorm
    replied
    I remember Miller going on NPR to promote that Batman vs. Bin Laden book he was so keen for. Got a little attention in the press, but then he never followed up on it (surprise!). I don't get the Miller thing anyway, he made a career off of comics, shows up now and again to ridicule the medium & tear down what he can, and the comics world loves him for it.

    Leave a comment:


  • The Toyroom
    replied
    My error....the title Miller was working on was "Holy Terror, Batman!".....not to be confused with "Batman: Holy Terror", which was published in 1991 and was by Alan Brennert and Norm Breyfogle.

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  • madmarva
    replied
    I thought Holy Terror is what Adams is working on. Maybe I just assumed.

    Leave a comment:


  • The Toyroom
    replied
    ^ Good news! I thought the project was stupid to begin with and the delays have already made it seem dated...

    Leave a comment:


  • thunderbolt
    replied
    Originally posted by The Toyroom
    And doesn't Miller still have that Batman:Holy Terror story to finish also?
    That got killed by DC editorial. Finally a bit of sense from Didio.

    Leave a comment:

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