
I will make this short and sweet. (but would appreciate good replies.)
1:
I read a lot of contemporary comics (only because they are my soap opera). It gets preposterous after awhile with like nine X-men titles and at this time eight or so Avenger titles. Does Marvel really need to have all these titles now for these books?
It is a pain in the butt to pursue all of these books. If Wolverine was a real life individual and all of these things essentially took place per month. He could not physically achieve all of these chronicles. He is like roaming the globe at least once or twice and then back at Avenger's center of operations, over with quite a lot of X-men groups. You would think they would at least try and make it a little credible. I know the guy has a super healing factor but he does not have the Flash's powers.
2:
The second part about my grievance is the secret identities. Do any of you retain information of the days when Ironman, Thor and Captain America had their own individual lives on the side? Reading back in my old Avenger comic books alongside with Thor, Captain American and Ironman.
It was kind of grand bearing in mind Steve Rogers (Captain America) at one time being a cop. Then he became an artist and not a soul assumed he was Captain America.
Tony Stark was a relaxed high and mighty playboy gazillionaire in charge of Stark Industries (or whatsoever his corporation was. They changed the name a small number of times). Ironman was said to be Tony Stark's body guard and everybody lived with it.
Thor who could reassign himself into moderately crippled Dr. Donald Blake who walked around with a walking stick/cane that when tapped hard on the floor he could become Thor (which started out as a curse by Odin to teach Thor humbleness). Dr. Blake was Thor's kryptonite and made it easy for Thor to have a private life and not have to always go back to Asgard and hang around his Daddy's throne all the time.
I believe Spider-man was in the middle of all of this identity revealing but the fans complained so much that Marvel mysteriously established a sneaky way to overturn the Peter Parker is Spider-man being worldly recognized and Spidey is back to being a secret to who he is.
I guess in contemporary comics I am actually annoyed that Marvel has determined to out these characters and have them disclose their secret identities to the world.
Now with these Marvel movies that have hit the theaters they have tried to follow the current comic storylines and have Ironman's Tony Stark identity publicly known. The actor who plays Captain America leaves his mask off 60 percent of the movie so he might as well not even have a mask and Thor does not no longer have the crippled Don Blake to change into but this post is not about movies.
Now this is about my thoughts on why classic characters have to have public identities. If someone wanted to kill Ironman (if he was a real person) all they'd have to do is employ someone like Slade Wilson the Terminator. He waits on top of an edifice or something in the area and when Tony comes out of another adjacent building, he takes a nice sniper shot and blows Tony's head off his shoulders. Ironman career finished. Hey Roadie where you at? Got a new job for you.
Current comic storylines (some are fine) but some just don't even measure up to the classic days of the secret identity of the hero. They have taken away that clandestine ingredient of the nature of some of the super heroes.
Is it just me?
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