Showing posts with label X-Men. Show all posts
Showing posts with label X-Men. Show all posts

Thursday, 31 May 2012

The History of Comics Pt III: The Silver Age of Comics (But as Good as Gold!)

[If you haven't yet read my entry on The Golden Age of Comics - STOP!  Then follow up part two - Who Killed The Golden Age?]


In the third entry on the history of comics, we now enter The Silver Age of Comics.

At the closing of the Golden Age of Comics, soldiers returned from the war, superhero comics began to decline, and other genres such as war, westerns, crime, horror, science fiction, and romance began to hit the stands.  DC heroes (then National Comics) like Green Lantern (Alan Scott), Flash (Jay Garrick), and other members of the Justice Society of America were pulled, while Superman, Batman, and Wonder Woman continued to print, albeit modestly.  Horror and crime comics took things to new levels, and Fredric Wertham, psychiatrist and author of Seduction of the Innocent, coupled with the United States Senate Subcommittee on Juvenile Delinquency, led the charge against comic books.  And from the book burnings, the pressure from the government, and the avoidance of a government-sanctioned body overseeing comic book publications, comic book publishers formed the Comics Code Authority to monitor published content.

The short lived journey of crime and horror comics at the top was coming to an end, and it was time for superhero comics to strike again - and strike they did, with a bolt of lightning!

DC Comics

Barry Allen's first appearance as the Flash,
hastily ushering in the Silver Age

DC Comics sought to bring lighter-hearted, fun, adventurous comics back to the forefront.  While Superman, Batman, and Wonder Woman had continued to sell, editor Julius Schwartz decided to revamp the other heroes of the 30's and 40's.  Himself a fan of science fiction, Schwartz looked to reimagine DC's heroes with a scientific twist.  Thus, the following changes were made:

Hal Jordan's 1st Appearance
  • 1940's Flash, Jay Garrick, was replaced by police officer Barry Allen, who, while working in a crime lab, was struck by lightning and made a super speedster.  After reading a comic book about The Golden Age Flash, Barry decided to take the name for himself.  The new Flash's appearance in 1956's Showcase #4 (shown above) is generally regarded by historians as the first issue of The Silver Age.
  • 1940's Green Lantern, Alan Scott, whose ring was operated by a magic lantern, was replaced by test pilot Hal Jordan, who was given a ring and lantern after being inducted into an intergalactic police corps, the Green Lanterns, by an alien group known as the Guardians of the Universe.
  • DC updated other heroes, including The Atom (professor Ray Palmer, physicist) and Hawkman (Katar Hol, an alien from the planet Thanagar).
  • Aquaman was retconned and given a new origin and history.
  • DC introduced new characters, like J'onn J'onnz, the Martian Manhunter.
J'onn J'onnz, manhunter from Mars



The new changes by DC were a hit, and once again, superheroes began to flourish and thrive.  Crossovers began, with heroes appearing in each other's titles, until DC introduced their flagship mega-team, the Justice League of America.

Justice League's 1st Appearance: Brave and the Bold #28


And later, following the popularity of team-ups, DC had sidekicks join forces to create the Teen Titans:

Brave and the Bold #54

DC Comics, now a publishing giant in the 50s and 60s, paved the road for the new superhero era.  It was during this time that DC decided they would do something radical - bring back the original heroes.

The Flash #123 - a landmark issue.  It also recently sold for $83,000
Flash (Barry Allen) was able to vibrate his molecules so fast, he was able to escape our plane of existence - and land himself on Earth-Two, the home of the original Flash, Jay Garrick (confused?  Wait till we get into the multiverse).

Over time, Barry visited Jay and vice versa, and through creative ways eventually the whole Justice Society of America met with the Justice League of America, saving each other's bacon now and again.

DC was truly breaking new ground for the superhero genre - something comic writer Stan Lee took notice of.

Enter the Marvel Era


While mega stars like the current Flash and Green Lantern were created, and the Justice League became a sought after comic book for readers everywhere, the Silver Age of Comics cannot be spoken about without delving into the massive gains made by Marvel Comics and, notably, Stan Lee.

I shouldn't have to reiterate the awesomeness that is Stan Lee, because you've already gone ahead and read my introduction to Stan Lee in my blog Comic Names You Should Know: Stan Lee!  Besides, you already knew who he was prior to that anyhow, right?  Right?

But to showcase the work Lee accomplished during the Silver Age, let's again recall that Stan Lee co-created:


Spider-Man's first appearance, Amazing Fantasy #15.
Recently sold for $1.1 Million.  I want one... make it two.

  • Spider-Man
  • Iron Man
  • Hulk
  • Thor
  • Hawkeye
  • Nick Fury
  • The Avengers
  • The Fantastic Four
  • The Silver Surfer
  • The X-Men
  • Daredevil
  • Doctor Strange
Stan Lee looked at comics in the 40s and 50s, and saw what worked, and what didn't work.  Together, with Steve Ditko, Jack Kirby, John Romita, Sr., and many other incredible artists and writers, Stan began the Marvel Comics explosion.  Lee, like DC's Julius Schwartz, was a big fan of science fiction, and based most of his superhero's powers on scientific reasoning (Iron Man's suit ran on Stark-powered transistors, Peter Parker's radioactive spider, Bruce Banner's gamma bomb radiation, cosmic radiation in the Fantastic Four, and so on).

And, playing off the popularity of super teams, Lee saw to the creation of the Fantastic Four, the X-Men, and a comic book that took singular heroes and paired them together, The Avengers.

The Avengers Versus Loki?
Hmm... they should make a movie about that.....

Stan Lee, as editor of Marvel Comics, also introduced a new aspect to superhero comics - the reluctant, self-loathing superhero.  Peter Parker, aka Spider-Man, would battle a villain, but as a result frequently miss a high school test, lose his job, or end up not getting the girl.  Bruce Banner constantly avoided becoming the Hulk, as he was powerless when the rage took over.  The Fantastic Four acted as a super team, but while Reed Richards could control his stretching, Susan Storm wasn't always invisible, and Johnny Storm could toggle his Human Torch guise,  Ben Grimm was permanently disfigured and viewed as a monster when he was cosmically altered into the Thing.

At a time when DC Comics's heroes were becoming over-the-top (Superman's powers escalated to the point that he could now move planets with his hands), Marvel Comics's humanizing traits, historians argue, are what drew in teenage crowds and jetted Marvel Comics into the spotlight.

Another key point for Marvel was that Stan Lee like to place his heroes in familiar settings - like New York City (Peter Parker grew up in Queens, the Fantastic Four's headquarters, the Baxter Building, was located in Manhattan, etc), as opposed to DC's imaginary locations of Gotham City, Metropolis, and Smallville.  In fact, Lee placed almost all of his characters in New York City, giving more justification as to why the heroes would cross paths regularly.  Placing the heroes in locations that Lee was familiar with helped with the writing process, as well as made fans more easily identify with the characters.

With all these comics in the market, it was only a matter of time until superheroes took over other mediums - notably television.

Comics-to-Television


The 60s & 70s saw a lot of superheroes on TV, some incarnations good, some mediocre (but never bad - I mean, hey, they're comics!).  Perhaps I'll do a more thorough review of this later, but for now, he's some of the major ones to recall, and likely the ones you're most familiar with.


Batman

In 1966, Batman made his TV debut, starring Adam West as the titular hero.  I don't believe there's a lot of explanation required here - the theme song alone should refresh your memory.  If you don't remember the show at all, here's a quick explanation:

  • Burt Ward, as Robin, consistently said, "Holy ___, Batman!" ( ___ not meant to represent a curse word).  See here for examples.
  • Mickey from the Rocky movies (Burgess Meredith) was the Penguin - though chronologically that means the Penguin was Rocky's coach.
  • The Joker, played by Caesar Romero, had a moustache whited-out with makeup because the actor wouldn't shave it for the role.
  • There were three actresses to portray Catwoman: Eartha Kitt, Lee Meriweather, and Julie Newmar.
  • Frank Gorshin expertly portrayed The Riddler.
Because the Comics Code Authority had neutered comics, this campy representation of Batman made it to the air.  Respectfully, it did extremely well at first, which even prompted the 1966 Batman movie.  By the third season, the TV show pressured DC Comics to introduce (Batwoman and Batgirl had already come and been dismissed) reintroduce a female character so one can be featured in the show, and so Barbara Gordon made her debut as Batgirl.  The character was then portrayed on the small screen by Yvonne Craig.



What was it about those hip people in the '60s?  They sure knew how to write a catchy jingle back then.  To get the neurons firing in an effort to recollect this show, here's the Spider-Man theme song.

And for no reason except that I like it, here's the song sung by Michael Buble.

As for the show, which debuted in 1967, the key highlights are:

  • Decent acting talent
  • A lot of shots of Spider-Man web-swinging and sticking to walls (to save money, shots were reused over and over again, like the background scenes of any episode of The Flintsones)
  • A decline in using villains from the comic book after season one
  • Footage from the show Rocket Robin Hood was reused in this show (no joke, check it out yourself)
Nevertheless, Spider-Man proved to be a big hit, and helped forever popularize the character.

All that Glitters isn't-- Silver?

Once again, superheroes took the lead in comic books, and made further mainstream leaps into television, radio, and film.  They had survived being the scapegoat of allegations by a mad doctor, and the onslaught that then ensued from the United States government.

The publishers themselves, however, may have become their own worst enemies, as the creation (however necessary) of the Comics Code Authority implemented stringent rules dictating the do's and don'ts of publishing a comic book.  The revitalization of superheroes sprang from this initial change, but ultimately altered the course of many heroes, forcing superhero comic books to become campy, silly versions of their prior incarnations.  Previously seen characters like Batman no longer tackled crooks and crime but now fought intergalactic beings, and carried shark repellent bat spray.  "And how come Batman doesn't dance anymore?  Remember the Batusi?"  Other heroes, like Superman, now had Krypto the Superdog, Streaky the Supercat, Comet the Super-Horse, and Beppo the Supermonkey.  Together, they formed the [*sigh*] Legion of Super-Pets.

While superheroes embarked on lighter antics than in the past, what was it that took the polish off the Silver, and ushered in the Bronze Age of Comics?  Like all other periods throughout history, no one person dictated the timeline of each era, so opinions vary depending on historians.

One historian and comics scholar, however, argues that the Bronze Age of Comics didn't get ushered in with a boom of lightning like the Silver Age, but instead appeared by a subtle, quiet "snap"...

[Stay tuned for my entry on The Bronze Age of Comics!]

Tuesday, 8 May 2012

My Proposal...Or, What DC Can Learn from Marvel and "The Avengers"

I have always been a fan of DC Comics.


In the realm of movies, however, it can readily be argued that Marvel is doing a superior job marketing their properties.

Why?  Why is there such an issue in DC pumping out movies based upon their comic book properties?  Let's have a look....

Marvel Comics, initially, outsourced their movies.  Basically, they created Marvel Entertainment, and rented/sold their product to the highest bidder:

New Line Cinema - Blade, Blade II, Blade: Trinity

Fox - X-Men, X2: X-Men United, X-Men: The Last Stand, Daredevil, Elektra, Fantastic Four, Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer

Universal - Hulk

Lionsgate - The Punisher

Sony - Spider-Man, Spider-Man 2, Spider-Man 3

Surely I'm missing some movies in there, but you get the point.  Marvel Entertainment, however, tried to maintain a say in the movies produced.  To further this point, Marvel Studios became more bold and confident, and started to produce their own movies, giving companies distribution rights instead.  This started with the more-modern era of Marvel comic movies:

Iron Man, Iron Man 2, The Incredible Hulk, Thor, Captain America: The First Avenger

and ultimately culminated in Disney taking notice, buying Marvel Entertainment, and releasing this year's box office smash, The Avengers.  For a more in-depth explanation and history of Marvel Studios, follow this link.

So, what started with Marvel "selling out" its properties resulted in a unification under one corporate head (for the most part, Sony still has rights to Spider-Man, hence Sony's reboot of The Amazing Spider-Man).

What about DC?  Where's their gusto, their go-get attitude?

Well, DC Comics has been under Warner Bros for an insanely long time.  Superman from 1978, for a leading example, was a Warner Bros production.

So, what's the deal?  Sure, not all of the Marvel films have been particularly spectacular - even Marvel has acknowledged this - but they took a swing at the ball.  And for every Marvel bomb, like Ang Lee's Hulk, most fans can still quip, "At least it's not Catwoman" - a DC property.  I know the obvious intent is to not lose money, but with "hero" comic movies at an all-time high, you'd think they would quit dragging their feet.  Maybe they feel they don't have to jump into the game, I mean, look at The Dark Knight.  Well, even for uber-successful DC films like The Dark Knight, you have films like Marvel's The Avengers.


"If You're So Smart, Why Aren't You Rich?"

Go ahead, call me on it.  I may not have all the answers, but I do recall reading something about how Warner Bros was so wrapped up in the Harry Potter franchise, that now that they've exhausted a good eight movies, they will be putting their attention into their comic book properties.  Let's see if that comes to fruition.

But until then, here's my proposal...

Christian Bale is done with the Batman franchise.  While the final movie of this trilogy hasn't been released yet, even if it's unlikable, this trilogy has garnered enough buzz that it will likely do well in the box office.  Spider-Man 3 did well in the box office, though it's well-accepted it's the worst of the three.

So now what?  Reboot Batman?  No.  It's done.  I know it sounds like blasphemy, especially from a dear fan of the protector of Gotham City.  But it's unnecessary to reboot.  Just move on, and pump up your other franchises.  Release next year's Superman film, Man of Steel.  Make Green Lantern 2.  Flash.  Wonder Woman.  Green Arrow.  Aquaman (with or without Vincent Chase).

You want to bridge these movies?  Find yourself a new actor to play Batman if Bale is definitely out, and have him fulfill the role of Samuel L. Jackson's Nick Fury, recruiting the heroes for a global threat under the title of the Justice League.

Wow.  Seems pretty simple, right?  Once more:
  1. Get some actors willing to sign 5 to 9 movie contracts (sounds extensive, yet Marvel is able to do it with high profile actors).
  2. Introduce the characters with modern retellings of their origin stories.
  3. Have Batman, a now properly established character with an origin story already firmly in place, bring the characters together to stop some sort of intergalactic force Wayne Industries detected - Darkseid, or perhaps Batman has already received a tip from J'onn J'onzz that the White Martians are ready to invade, whatever).
Warner Bros should have the chops to pull this off - they just seem to continuously shoot themselves in the foot with their own legal mumbo jumbo.  "We can't do this because Warner TV is doing that."  "We can't do this because the comics are doing that."  It's this short-sightedness that's leaving DC Comics any chance at franchising their properties always a few steps behind their competitor.  And now with Marvel having Disney's big bucks behind them, well, only Thanos himself could stop them now....

Oh, and kudos to anyone who noticed If You're So Smart, Why Aren't You Rich is the title of an episode of BTAS - the first appearance of The Riddler, to be exact.

Why Comics?

Perhaps the first way to begin this blog is to explain the very nature of how this came to be.  And the best way I can explain this, I suppose, is to explain how I came to be the person I am.

*Sigh* Reader, let me first explain, I am not a man of few words.  My friends know this dearly, and I am accused of it often.  But in fairness, this is not a question that can be answered in few words.

I will attempt such a feat, though.

I grew up a fan of all-things comics and heroes.  The quicker I could get my hands on a comic book, the better.

But it was television that changed things.  Television would one day offer daytime children's cartoons that would steer my attention.  As a child of the 80's, ThunderCatsHe-Man and the Masters of the Universeand, of course, Hasbro toys-turned-cartoon-franchises G.I. Joe and Transformers all had heroes defending good against evil.  Television in the 1990s changed everything, however - and in particular, television can be be narrowed down to Fox Kids.

Fox Kids, for those unaware or did not grow up in the 90's, ran a plethora of comic book cartoons: X-Men, Spider-man, The Tick, and the Cadillac of them all, Batman: The Animated Series (affectionately known by fans as Batman: TAS or BTAS).

Comic books in cartoons was not a thing specific to the 90's.  Spider-Man and His Amazing Friends, Superman, Super Friends, 1960's Spider-Man (the one with the theme song we all know & love)etc had all come and gone before.  But there was a noticeable change in the 90's cartoons - kids, perhaps, were finally perceived as brighter and more mature than in the past.

"If I could only...get...the strength...to get my...___..." To me, this was very typical of cartoons of the past. I can close my eyes and picture, in my mind, any of the Super Friends, He-Man, Lion-O, Spider-Man (1960) etc uttering a line like this.  "Holy Shark Repellent, Batman," sit down and watch Adam West's Batman, and my point will be well made about people calling out their actions.

Understand, reader, these lines were necessary in comics back in the day.  A character had to make statements like these because there was no narrative - if the character was knocked down and reaching for something, it may have to be off-panel, and so such a statement was required.  In fact, a little-known fact, the character Robin (Dick Grayson) was created so Batman could say these things to someone instead of thinking them aloud all the time in the form of a Shakespearean soliloquy.

The problem is, once cartoons were created, it seems as though the same speech model was used, and so conversations like this were static instead of dynamic like the visuals you were watching at the time.
I think this is the major reason why people my age today have a problem going back and watching their favourite childhood cartoons again - the previous feelings of nostalgia are overshadowed by the current feelings of boredom.

When the 90's cartoons arrived, however, they seemed to drop a lot of these troubling lines - or, at the very least, hide them into dialogue (again, Batman explaining to Robin how he deduced a criminal's identity, etc).

Again, is this the product of better writers?  Or were writers finally giving kids the benefit of the doubt ("Gee, Batman's down, and he's reaching for his belt.... I bet he wants it...") of recognizing what was playing out on the screen in front of them?  Perhaps the children of the previous 60's cartoons grew up and were now themselves writing the cartoons of the 90's.

Cartoons of this time also dealt with heavier themes, like death.  In X-Men, the created character Morph died in the opening two-part episodes (only to be revived later, but still...); Mary-Jane Watson was killed in Spider-Man (or thrown through a dimensional portal, unbeknownst to Spider-Man); and in Batman: TAS, Batman made it clear, unlike many previous cartoon and/or Adam West appearances, why he was out pounding the pavement, night after night: so no kid would ever lose his/her parents to criminal scum the way he had.

Fox Kids had me hooked.  Outside of Fox Kids, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles on CBS quickly took over my childhood, and most of my then toy collection.

And so it was, that cartoons drew me in ever-deeper into the realm of comic books and heroes.  How, then, does a now 30-year old man, married and working full-time, continue to keep such an interest in this genre?

Because in many cases, the writing continues to evolve and get better.  As I grew and evolved, so did my favourite cartoon of all-time, Batman: TAS.  The same creative team eventually paved the way for Superman: TAS, Static Shock, The New Batman Adventures (TNBA), Batman Beyond, and ultimately, Justice League and Justice League Unlimited.  Creators of these series had characters cameo and assist heroes in each other's shows (ie Batman helping Static in Static Shock, Superman protecting Gotham City while Batman was away in TNBA, etc), and as I continued to grow, so did the shows and their histories.  By the time I had ventured into university and moved out on my own for the first time, Batman, the exact same Batman from my childhood and not some brand-new incarnation, had grown and decided that protecting Gotham City was no longer enough, and joined Superman and the Justice League to help people on a global scale.

And, to honour the long-time fans of their shows, the producers and writers of these shows knew that their once-upon-a-time target audience had grown up, and was still following these adventures.  So, once again, the stories got darker and more mature as the real world around me did too.

Fast-forward down the road even further, and it's not hard to see how most of the world is starting to embrace comic books in the media, especially the movies.  While DC and Warner Bros are seemingly dragging their feet getting their heroes to the silver screen,  The Dark Knight was the highest-grossing superhero movie of all-time (posthumously earning Heath Ledger an Oscar).  Marvel has been pumping out superhero movies as of late, and The Avengers, currently in theatres, has been breaking box office records in its first week out the gate.

So, as a fan of comics and comic-book related material, well, it's a good time to be me.

"And now you know the rest of the story."