Are you back-pedalling or something? Yes, TT it was a lone best-seller against Marvel, for a time, but does it really mean it was because they did it the "Marvel way"? I also got you to admit I was right about something, LOL! I savor the admission because I know you don't do it often. TT was doing something similar to Firestorm, written by Jerry Conway, in the Spider-Man vein: a lonely super hero, (not a team), with teen angst. Conway put a twist on it-one that fit better with the DC Universe and was a rejection of the Marvel way. You think DC cared it wasn't a block-buster? They kept publishing it because if it comes down to sales, as you keep saying, it was still making money. Firestorm had originally been published when the DC implosion occurred. Conway got a second chance and ran with it.
You sweep them aside in this debate but DC did not cancel them because Wolfman & Perez were coming in with this epic Crisis storyline to change the DC Universe, (if that is what your meaning is-because what you're typing reads that way). Yes, Omega Men, was eventually cancelled due to poor sales but it lasted 38 issues. It started Pre-Crisis, (1983) and ended post Crisis, (1986), and I wouldn't call a 3 year run a failure.
I think your perception of "reboot" is colored by today's industry. We are disagreeing on what Crisis was, why it was done and what was it supposed to accomplish. Crisis was not a "reboot", I think, in the true sense of the word. Crisis was seen as a way to streamline the DC universe and to clear away the cobwebs of continuity. It was intended to do away with barriers that prevented good stories from being told and integrate as many characters as possible into continuity. Any obstacle which would prevent the writers from doing a good job, the complicated explanations, was to be removed. Previously writers had to keep track of which Earth they were on and they simply couldn't deal with the road-blocks. I don't see that as a reboot. Reboots are done today because writers run out of ideas, have little talent but big reputations and #1 issues sell better. DC decided, rather than just fix it, wouldn't it be a great way to tell an epic story? Think of it more like a Corporate Merger between numerous incompatible continuities.
Wolfman and Perez were the best team to do it, probably, but I don't think they were steering the DC ship. They provided an out, cut the red tape and continued on. Then they went back to TT and faded away. They didn't seem to have input on the numerous titles in the post-Crisis DC Universe. I don't see it as a reboot. The clock was set back a bit and Byrne took advantage of this on Superman but he often retold the FF's origin when he worked on that book too. That's not reboot; that's Byrne trying to re-tell the origin every issue, LOL! Superman remained the same tho some updates occured. Kryptonian's costumes were modernized. They didn't look like Buster Crabbe as Flash Gordon or Buck Rogers circa the 1930's. When Kryptonians spoke in a hologram they had an alien language that had to be translated. The rocket that carried Supes to Earth was a compact starship now. That's the sort of sophistication people appreciated in modern comics.
I don't see your arguments having real bearing on DC's post-Crisis sales either in regards to Dark Knight Returns. DKR is not a reboot nor does it connect to Crisis. Its sales do not owe anything to Crisis. It's a separate story that Miller would have told anyway. I think Year One has been considered an untold tale by the public at large. It appeared in the regular title; #405 to #407-not as a separate book. The numbering didn't re-set for it to be published. No one even refers to it as a reboot. It don't think it directly connect to Crisis either.
I think it unlikely Byrne & Miller were part of a "reboot" plan by Wolfman & Perez or DC. I don't think Crisis was set up to woo them over or set the stage for them. DC got lucky. Miller bolted from Marvel when Marvel couldn't clear a spot for Ronnin in the Epic line. DC couldn't have counted on this. They made him an offer. It was fortuitous that he accepted.
Byrne defected to DC because of Jim Shooter. Byrne was doing phenomenally well on FF and Shooter thumbed him in the eye repeatedly. Byrne went to The Incredible HULK, probably stewing over Shooter being an a-holl when Dick Giordiano asked Byrne if he would like to take a shot at Superman. Perhaps Giordiano even knew Byrne was disgruntled over his mistreatment by Shooter. That made it easier to get Byrne but still Byrne was such a Marvel man at the time they couldn't have depended on him crossing over. Then DC thumbed Byrne in the eye and he left DC too. I would guess his leaving Superman had an extremely negative effect on the post-Crisis Superman sales.
My argument is not a defense of the old guard. Before Byrne left Superman & Action the shiny newness of his tenure wore off real fast. He adopted the 1 story per issue format he so criticized Shooter for imposing at Marvel and I think it hurt his run on Superman. Fans expected more. Other titles which were not being scrutinized kept chugging along despite not out-selling Marvel. I recall the Flash had Carmine Infantino and was doing well pre-Crisis as well with the murder of Prof. Zoom and Flash on trial storyline. It didn't beat Marvel's sales but it was popular and there was a lot of buzz about the book.
I think you provide a good list; a series of events in the right order. I don't think they connect so neatly or completely. I don't think they prove there was a Grand Plan for post-Crisis DC. DC cleaned up a big mess and told everyone get back to work-make good comics.
Beyond theorizing Titans was a best seller vs. Marvel's domination of the Market, Wolfman & Perez doing it the Marvel way, and Crisis being a reboot which was designed as a springboard for Miller and Byrne to reboot Bats and Supes to Marvels detriment - which I partially disagree with-what else man? Lets cut to the chase.
The comic blockbusters of the eighties were blips on the radar. They were spread out a bit more. I think you are compressing some events a little bit into a tighter time frame the way you refer to them and claiming they dominated the whole decade. That isn't really the case. Byrne only lasted less than 2 years on Superman & Action. I would hardly call that "dominating" the`80's. Did Ordway's tenure as artist keep sales up to Byrne levels? I doubt it. Miller did not stay on a Batman title like he stayed on Daredevil and wasn't signed to do a monthly DC title like Byrne was on Superman. Byrne and Miller did not jump aboard DC at the same time and restart all the titles simultaneously. Ronin was `83, Dark Knight `86, Year One `87. When there wasn't a Miller Batman "event" occuring were the Bat titles dominating the market? I bet not. You had the Killing Joke-a one shot, the death of Robin, Batman getting is back broken, Superman dying and coming back-all cheap gimmicks which indeed set the stage for even worse cheap gimmicks to come. You also had Watchmen which was a 12 issue maxi-series. When it was over-1 year-it was over.
Sure the talent jumped back and forth. By the Mid-`80's Marvel has a great loss of talent: writers and artists. Then there was the McFarlane exodus and the Image fiasco in the `90's. DC was still publishing much it's regular stuff pre and post crisis. Sales must have been good enough if they kept printing them. DC tried adapting V-The Visitors and failed at that. They said what can we do next? Well Marvel f'd-up Star Trek. Great! Lets get Star Trek. The book was a good seller for many years. Did it overthrow Marvel? No but it sure must've embarrassed them greatly when they couldn't make it work. Swamp Thing's comeback wore down under Pasko and Yeates. DC said what else can we do? Let's hire this guy Moore. He's unknown but lets try him out. Swamp Thing soared through the`80's after that. You could probably make a better case that the tone of Swamp Thing set the stage for things to come. DC's Vertigo line, it's unconventional and Horror titles were what picked up steam in the late`80's.
You sweep them aside in this debate but DC did not cancel them because Wolfman & Perez were coming in with this epic Crisis storyline to change the DC Universe, (if that is what your meaning is-because what you're typing reads that way). Yes, Omega Men, was eventually cancelled due to poor sales but it lasted 38 issues. It started Pre-Crisis, (1983) and ended post Crisis, (1986), and I wouldn't call a 3 year run a failure.
I think your perception of "reboot" is colored by today's industry. We are disagreeing on what Crisis was, why it was done and what was it supposed to accomplish. Crisis was not a "reboot", I think, in the true sense of the word. Crisis was seen as a way to streamline the DC universe and to clear away the cobwebs of continuity. It was intended to do away with barriers that prevented good stories from being told and integrate as many characters as possible into continuity. Any obstacle which would prevent the writers from doing a good job, the complicated explanations, was to be removed. Previously writers had to keep track of which Earth they were on and they simply couldn't deal with the road-blocks. I don't see that as a reboot. Reboots are done today because writers run out of ideas, have little talent but big reputations and #1 issues sell better. DC decided, rather than just fix it, wouldn't it be a great way to tell an epic story? Think of it more like a Corporate Merger between numerous incompatible continuities.
Wolfman and Perez were the best team to do it, probably, but I don't think they were steering the DC ship. They provided an out, cut the red tape and continued on. Then they went back to TT and faded away. They didn't seem to have input on the numerous titles in the post-Crisis DC Universe. I don't see it as a reboot. The clock was set back a bit and Byrne took advantage of this on Superman but he often retold the FF's origin when he worked on that book too. That's not reboot; that's Byrne trying to re-tell the origin every issue, LOL! Superman remained the same tho some updates occured. Kryptonian's costumes were modernized. They didn't look like Buster Crabbe as Flash Gordon or Buck Rogers circa the 1930's. When Kryptonians spoke in a hologram they had an alien language that had to be translated. The rocket that carried Supes to Earth was a compact starship now. That's the sort of sophistication people appreciated in modern comics.
I don't see your arguments having real bearing on DC's post-Crisis sales either in regards to Dark Knight Returns. DKR is not a reboot nor does it connect to Crisis. Its sales do not owe anything to Crisis. It's a separate story that Miller would have told anyway. I think Year One has been considered an untold tale by the public at large. It appeared in the regular title; #405 to #407-not as a separate book. The numbering didn't re-set for it to be published. No one even refers to it as a reboot. It don't think it directly connect to Crisis either.
I think it unlikely Byrne & Miller were part of a "reboot" plan by Wolfman & Perez or DC. I don't think Crisis was set up to woo them over or set the stage for them. DC got lucky. Miller bolted from Marvel when Marvel couldn't clear a spot for Ronnin in the Epic line. DC couldn't have counted on this. They made him an offer. It was fortuitous that he accepted.
Byrne defected to DC because of Jim Shooter. Byrne was doing phenomenally well on FF and Shooter thumbed him in the eye repeatedly. Byrne went to The Incredible HULK, probably stewing over Shooter being an a-holl when Dick Giordiano asked Byrne if he would like to take a shot at Superman. Perhaps Giordiano even knew Byrne was disgruntled over his mistreatment by Shooter. That made it easier to get Byrne but still Byrne was such a Marvel man at the time they couldn't have depended on him crossing over. Then DC thumbed Byrne in the eye and he left DC too. I would guess his leaving Superman had an extremely negative effect on the post-Crisis Superman sales.
My argument is not a defense of the old guard. Before Byrne left Superman & Action the shiny newness of his tenure wore off real fast. He adopted the 1 story per issue format he so criticized Shooter for imposing at Marvel and I think it hurt his run on Superman. Fans expected more. Other titles which were not being scrutinized kept chugging along despite not out-selling Marvel. I recall the Flash had Carmine Infantino and was doing well pre-Crisis as well with the murder of Prof. Zoom and Flash on trial storyline. It didn't beat Marvel's sales but it was popular and there was a lot of buzz about the book.
I think you provide a good list; a series of events in the right order. I don't think they connect so neatly or completely. I don't think they prove there was a Grand Plan for post-Crisis DC. DC cleaned up a big mess and told everyone get back to work-make good comics.
Beyond theorizing Titans was a best seller vs. Marvel's domination of the Market, Wolfman & Perez doing it the Marvel way, and Crisis being a reboot which was designed as a springboard for Miller and Byrne to reboot Bats and Supes to Marvels detriment - which I partially disagree with-what else man? Lets cut to the chase.
The comic blockbusters of the eighties were blips on the radar. They were spread out a bit more. I think you are compressing some events a little bit into a tighter time frame the way you refer to them and claiming they dominated the whole decade. That isn't really the case. Byrne only lasted less than 2 years on Superman & Action. I would hardly call that "dominating" the`80's. Did Ordway's tenure as artist keep sales up to Byrne levels? I doubt it. Miller did not stay on a Batman title like he stayed on Daredevil and wasn't signed to do a monthly DC title like Byrne was on Superman. Byrne and Miller did not jump aboard DC at the same time and restart all the titles simultaneously. Ronin was `83, Dark Knight `86, Year One `87. When there wasn't a Miller Batman "event" occuring were the Bat titles dominating the market? I bet not. You had the Killing Joke-a one shot, the death of Robin, Batman getting is back broken, Superman dying and coming back-all cheap gimmicks which indeed set the stage for even worse cheap gimmicks to come. You also had Watchmen which was a 12 issue maxi-series. When it was over-1 year-it was over.
Sure the talent jumped back and forth. By the Mid-`80's Marvel has a great loss of talent: writers and artists. Then there was the McFarlane exodus and the Image fiasco in the `90's. DC was still publishing much it's regular stuff pre and post crisis. Sales must have been good enough if they kept printing them. DC tried adapting V-The Visitors and failed at that. They said what can we do next? Well Marvel f'd-up Star Trek. Great! Lets get Star Trek. The book was a good seller for many years. Did it overthrow Marvel? No but it sure must've embarrassed them greatly when they couldn't make it work. Swamp Thing's comeback wore down under Pasko and Yeates. DC said what else can we do? Let's hire this guy Moore. He's unknown but lets try him out. Swamp Thing soared through the`80's after that. You could probably make a better case that the tone of Swamp Thing set the stage for things to come. DC's Vertigo line, it's unconventional and Horror titles were what picked up steam in the late`80's.
Comment