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Selachian posted:the Steve Gerber-written Foolkiller (not MAX), This is shockingly dark for a Marvel title from 1990. I remember picking it up as a 13 year old kid and finding it a bit off-putting.
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# ? May 6, 2018 04:51 |
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# ? May 26, 2024 22:01 |
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Random Stranger posted:Okay, this is kind of an interesting topic. So Hank McCoy debuted as a gruff, street tough kid as a member of the X-Men. If you listen to Stan Lee about this (and you often shouldn't), he realized that they had plenty of characters like that already so he changed Hank to be the smart, loquacious member of the team. And that's all he was until the book was canceled. Well, with these spare x-characters floating around people decided to do something with them and Beast got his own series of adventure stories where he drank a potion to become furry and hide his identity as he fought crime. Eventually the potion sticks and he joins Englehart's Avengers and that's where his persona changes again. Englehart decided that the Beast was the happy-go-lucky member of the team (and he heavily implied Hank was into "counterculture" if you know what I mean) and the Beast became one of the most popular members of the team. He sticks to the Avengers for several years and for a couple of decades that persona sticks. And then comes the X-Men X-Plosion where the writers forget the jovial aspects of his character. This particularly sticks because it's the version used in the cartoon. And so now we've got serious, studious Hank. I feel like he was plenty jovial in the cartoon-- throughout the 90s the blue-fur/blue-trunks Beast is generally, I think, characterized by upbeat wit (well, as much wit as Scott Lobdell could muster). Which was if anything a step back from the emotional and psychological ringer that he went through in X-Factor. I think the contemporary dour, despairing Beast is a byproduct of two things. First of all, so many of his subplots in the 90s revolved around solving the Legacy Virus, a beat that kept spinning its wheels for the better part of a decade and resolved itself suddenly and anticlimactically with Colossus' suicide-- so despite the plot being nominally wrapped up, poor Hank is left in the position of being linked with a narrative of frustration and failure. Then Morrisson's New X-Men pushed him through some more dynamic emotional hoops than years of writers content to have him hang around in the background, acknowledged his insecurity about his new feline form, which is fine, but then saddled him with the pretty dire "Here Comes Tomorrow," which made ominous villain-hood the endgame of his dedication and zeal. Since the entire franchise is infatuated with callbacks and recursive foreshadowing that means that every writer to touch him since has tried to show him scrabbling along a slipper slope in his desire to fix mutant problems. But none of them are willing or able to commit to morally compromising him, so he's perpetually simmering at the lowest stages of moral decline, in effect, just surliness. The X-Men line needs a lot of things but it urgently needs a writer who actually has a story in mind for Hank McCoy because he's been going through the motions more or less since 1991.
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# ? May 6, 2018 05:39 |
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I have a story. It involves a shotgun and someone getting a pretty nice new carpet.
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# ? May 6, 2018 05:59 |
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Thanks for the thorough and thoughtful answers! I've read a couple of those minis but added a bunch of these to the list. Spider-Man/Human Torch is a favorite of mine. It gave us this wonderful moment. https://twitter.com/mrmattjay/status/907687503854952448?s=21
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# ? May 6, 2018 06:57 |
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Unmature posted:And while we're at it, let me know your favorite Marvel mini-series. Especially if they're on Unlimited. Nextwave which Ewing made canon. https://youtu.be/Xuosmf1_mKs
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# ? May 6, 2018 08:19 |
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Archyduke posted:I feel like he was plenty jovial in the cartoon-- throughout the 90s the blue-fur/blue-trunks Beast is generally, I think, characterized by upbeat wit (well, as much wit as Scott Lobdell could muster). Which was if anything a step back from the emotional and psychological ringer that he went through in X-Factor. Hickman's Avengers also made him complicit in a genocide, so, you know, that might bring you down.
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# ? May 6, 2018 08:21 |
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Skwirl posted:Hickman's Avengers also made him complicit in a genocide, so, you know, that might bring you down. I believe he also dabbles in mass murder in Warren Ellis' dire stint on Secret Avengers so you know, baby steps.
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# ? May 6, 2018 08:26 |
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Unmature posted:Thanks for the thorough and thoughtful answers! "Uncles Ben"
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# ? May 6, 2018 12:56 |
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Also let's recall that right after Age of Apocalypse Hank was locked in a cell while the evil alternate world Hank ran around with the X-Men, and this continued at least until Onslaught. So for a while all the Beast you got was one guy saying "I sure wish I could escape!" and another guy saying "I sure hope I don't get caught!"
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# ? May 6, 2018 14:29 |
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prefect posted:"Uncles Ben" https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.theonion.com/william-safire-orders-two-whoppers-junior-1819565735/amp
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# ? May 6, 2018 19:31 |
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What's the anecdote someone had about Jeph Loeb wanting to do a Spider-man story but only if he could use all the villains?
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# ? May 7, 2018 14:42 |
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Doctor Spaceman posted:What's the anecdote someone had about Jeph Loeb wanting to do a Spider-man story but only if he could use all the villains? Spider-Man Hush e: if then I'm sorry. JordanKai fucked around with this message at 15:17 on May 7, 2018 |
# ? May 7, 2018 15:14 |
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Creators going apeshit with their favorite characters is always gonna come down to 3 names for me. Geoff Johns. Barry Allen. Hal Jordan.
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# ? May 9, 2018 02:04 |
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Kyle Rayner is the authoriest insert possible. It's one evil for another.
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# ? May 9, 2018 02:16 |
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Doctor Spaceman posted:What's the anecdote someone had about Jeph Loeb wanting to do a Spider-man story but only if he could use all the villains? A: Batman has to solve a murder mystery where the suspects are Venom, Green Goblin, Doctor Octopus, Sandman, Vulture, Kingpin, Kraven, etc. etc. etc. B) Batman has to solve a murder mystery where the suspects are Joker, Penguin, Two-Face, Bane, Scarecrow, Ra's al Ghul, Catwoman, etc. etc. etc. He talked about it as a sad lost opportunity in one of his WordBalloon interviews, possibly in the same one where he made fun of Bendis for wasting his talents on C-list characters like Daredevil and Luke Cage and Jessica Jones, and how the only way he'd do a book like that is if he could do a Power Man & Iron Fist series where they're framed for murder and have to fight Wolverine, Hulk, Iron Man, Spider-Man, Punisher, Captain America, Doctor Doom, Magneto, etc. while trying to prove their innocence, that would be a book worthy of his talents. Edge & Christian fucked around with this message at 03:09 on May 9, 2018 |
# ? May 9, 2018 03:07 |
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Edge & Christian posted:It was his pitch for Batman Long Halloween III and IV essentially, which were going to be twelve issue mini-series where I genuinely can’t tell if you’re serious or not. loving Loeb
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# ? May 9, 2018 03:34 |
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Retro Futurist posted:I genuinely can’t tell if you’re serious or not. loving Loeb It's as if Jeph Loeb is Poe's Law personified.
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# ? May 9, 2018 05:48 |
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Could anyone explain to me Vision's all-white phase? He was stuck in that form for that Avengers beat-em-up arcade game that Japan made. Was it a good era for him?
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# ? May 9, 2018 07:31 |
Schneider Heim posted:Could anyone explain to me Vision's all-white phase? He was stuck in that form for that Avengers beat-em-up arcade game that Japan made. Was it a good era for him? John Byrne is stupid, and no. Basically the government tore Vision up into little itty bitty pieces and put him back together, which somehow turned him white. It also made him completely unemotional, because the entire point of that was for Byrne to show that he definitely was just a robot and didn't have feelings, which was obviously the Creators' Intent even though the very first story Vision was in featured him turning on Ultron because he has feelings.
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# ? May 9, 2018 07:39 |
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It was also a way of erasing the Wanda/Vision relationship, which Byrne very much disliked. That story lead directly into the story where Wanda and Vision's children are erased from existence. The issue with the debut of white Vision was one of my very first comics as a little kid, and of course I loved it because I assumed all would be made right, Vision would get his feelings back, and Wanda's vanished babies would be found, because really, what kind of maniac would break up a married couple and kill their babies in a comic for kids?
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# ? May 9, 2018 08:35 |
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Man that's hosed up.
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# ? May 9, 2018 11:22 |
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Lurdiak posted:John Byrne is stupid, and no.
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# ? May 9, 2018 11:26 |
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I had forgotten that Byrne had Mockingbird helping with the abduction of the Vision.
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# ? May 9, 2018 11:33 |
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I like how Busiek undid a lot Byrne's nonsense in Avengers Forever.
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# ? May 9, 2018 13:07 |
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How many times has Vision died and the Avengers didn't really care? No wonder they're afraid of what he'd do if he snaps.
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# ? May 9, 2018 14:21 |
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Halloween Jack posted:How many times has Vision died and the Avengers didn't really care? No wonder they're afraid of what he'd do if he snaps.
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# ? May 9, 2018 14:24 |
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Android Blues posted:The issue with the debut of white Vision was one of my very first comics as a little kid, and of course I loved it because I assumed all would be made right, Vision would get his feelings back, and Wanda's vanished babies would be found, because really, what kind of maniac would break up a married couple and kill their babies in a comic for kids? My very first comic was an extremely violent What If where Earth dies, and it made me the man I am today.
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# ? May 9, 2018 14:38 |
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Android Blues posted:It was also a way of erasing the Wanda/Vision relationship, which Byrne very much disliked. That story lead directly into the story where Wanda and Vision's children are erased from existence. A maniac that has kids for hands!!
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# ? May 9, 2018 14:39 |
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Android Blues posted:It was also a way of erasing the Wanda/Vision relationship, which Byrne very much disliked. That story lead directly into the story where Wanda and Vision's children are erased from existence. He was actually a yellowish off-white color. One of my friends referred to him as "stickofbutter Vision".
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# ? May 9, 2018 15:04 |
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prefect posted:I had forgotten that Byrne had Mockingbird helping with the abduction of the Vision. First time I've ever seen a cape wedgie.
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# ? May 9, 2018 15:44 |
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Halloween Jack posted:The kind of guy who goes on a tirade about people calling it a speech bubble instead of a speech balloon. That's not the "best" part, which was that he compared calling it a "speech bubble" to using a slur to refer to black people
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# ? May 9, 2018 15:52 |
Hey, what's that one eastern european BD-style comic about Thor, Loki and Balder going on wacky Asterix adventures?
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# ? May 9, 2018 17:08 |
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I think the colorless Vision was a good visual, but then again, so is the red and green Vision. Colorless Vision was a mess, though, writing-wise, and nobody seemed to have a consistent read on how to delineate between emotionless and just callous and awful. In Operation: Galactic Storm in particular he's put in the position of clamoring for genocide as the "logical" solution in a way that doesn't make much sense and mostly just functions as a means to getting him into arguments with Wonder Man.
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# ? May 9, 2018 17:10 |
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Visually I think colourless Vision maybe looks better, I've always thought his green/red/yellow design was kind of jumbled. As a character he's a mess though, yeah.
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# ? May 9, 2018 17:12 |
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When did he get that recoloured design where he had a green cape, green leggings and a yellow torso?
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# ? May 9, 2018 17:23 |
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Lurdiak posted:Hey, what's that one eastern european BD-style comic about Thor, Loki and Balder going on wacky Asterix adventures? You might be thinking about Valhalla by Peter Madsen. Danish, not eastern european. Edit: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Valhalla_(comics)
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# ? May 9, 2018 17:32 |
IYKK posted:You might be thinking about Valhalla by Peter Madsen. Danish, not eastern european. Yeah that's the one. I'm so bad at geography you'd think I'm from where Rhyno lives (Southern Alaska?).
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# ? May 9, 2018 18:13 |
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Edge & Christian posted:That was basically Byrne's justification, the Roger Stern Avengers run had (I think the first time they did this bit) a story where the Vision's body was all messed up in a fight and the team basically plugged his brain into their computer and went "okay buddy could you be our answering service and keep an eye on the monitors, we'll fix you uhhhhhhhh well, later!" and he went a little crazy and joined the 1985 version of the Internet and decided if he just took over all of the computer and missile defense systems he could ensure world peace. The first thing he did was hook up with Isaac, the computer of the Eternals of Titan, which proved to unbalance the poo poo out of him. So really, it's all Mentor's fault. As is Thanos.
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# ? May 9, 2018 18:21 |
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How much of Captain America #701 did Adam Hughes draw? At first I was under the impression he did it all, but it sounds like he was one of three artists. Was it a one-and-done story, or will there be more chapters and more Hughes artwork? It's so rare when he draws any interiors now.
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# ? May 9, 2018 20:00 |
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# ? May 26, 2024 22:01 |
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Big Bad Voodoo Lou posted:How much of Captain America #701 did Adam Hughes draw? At first I was under the impression he did it all, but it sounds like he was one of three artists. Was it a one-and-done story, or will there be more chapters and more Hughes artwork? It's so rare when he draws any interiors now. Just four pages. Romero is the main artist and the other two do flashbacks. Next issue has two other guest artists alongside Romeo, so I guess that's it for Hughes.
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# ? May 9, 2018 20:07 |