Posted: 03 June 2011 at 7:11pm | IP Logged | 2
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My current take on all of this: Some posters to this forum have said in the past that they hoped that Disney would step in and force Marvel clean up their act. Better books might result from a more kid-oriented, Disney-esque approach. Others feared such a mandate would be handed down, destroying all that the House of Ideas had built since the days it decided eight-year-old readers were purely mythical constructs. If this reboot is, in fact, an edict from on high at Time/ Warner that DC retool its product line to make its books attractive and accessible as downloadable content, then I begin to feel some hesitant stirrings of optimism. Relaunching the books at the same time Time/ Warner pushes them as on-line content suggests, and I'll admit this is a leap, that the books, while not restarting from zero, will begin at a baseline point every potential customer can understand: Issue One. If someone is standing in line at the supermarket or waiting for a bus and decides to bring up the latest issue of Superman on their iPhone (Unlikely as that is, yes, I know) and enjoys what they read, how far back do they have to go to get the "whole story?" Only as far back as this reboot, theoretically. It would be wise for editors, writers, everyone to treat this as blank slate. The Rainbow Corps are apparently still around (Johns is spearheading this, so of course the Rainbow Corps is still around...) but the comics featuring them should start from here, provide enough exposition to explain who they are, why they're in the space patrol business, and go no further than that. If they fall into the trap of referencing the Sinestro Wars and Blackest Night, predicating future stories on those specific events, "new" readers, the ones this relaunch is designed to attract, will be hopelessly lost. Unless DC includes special "Sinestro War" download packs for them to access, they will have no way of navigating these weirdo "comicbook" thingies they're looking at. If DC keeps in mind that each book must be readable and open to newcomers, there's a chance, however slim, that Time/ Warner's efforts to turn the comics industry into a downloadable app might succeed. The price point is still too high. You can get major novels for your Kindle and Nook for what these comics cost. I have no idea how Time/Warner plans to promote this idea. They may initially rely upon web chatter and good wishes, but that will not go far, I suspect. Actually promoting their comics line as something old/ something new to fans of the movies & adult readers in places like Yahoo.com and USA Today Online might draw some awareness. Will kids think comics are cool if they can access them via their phones? Who knows? Probably not... but there is some hope that it could occur. With the driving focus behind this relaunch being the web applications rather than the comic stores, I don't know that DC cares very much that the fans want their Damian Wayne/ Batman Inc. fix to keep coming. It would seem that their sights are elsewhere. And here's where my cautious optimism goes off the rails: These same writers and editors haven't had the ability to produce comprehensible, stand-alone works for decades now. Writing for the App will likely prove an entirely different science than Writing for the Trade, and DC is being told to learn that science overnight. The current crop of cranky, bottle-fed superstars, with their hothouse flower temperments and "Do you want it fast or do you want it good?" sneers towards the customer base are not DC's best bet for success in this endeavor. Still, if what's expected of them is as I posit above, and those expectations are made clear, the professional ones might rise to the occasion. As has become a popular saying around my house since the "Angels In the Outfield" remake, "It could happen." If the stories that result from this are good, and readers get onboard, then everything works out. If not, well... Time/Warner gets to say they tried, as they padlock and chain the DC offices shut a final time...
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