Posted: 11 June 2011 at 12:28pm | IP Logged | 1
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Chad: "Did the Shadow's most trusted agents know his identity?" I think a handful of them might have, but then it's not like he ever used it. :-) Chad, "What I mean is, get rid of continuity. I mean all of it" You say that, but if you think about it, that hasn't really been an approach that has historically worked for 99% of the characters. Books were pretty continuity free in the 40s, and only a small percentage of super-hero characters managed to survive into the 50s, most of which were gone halfway into the decade. Heck, two characters (Green Arrow and Aquaman) only survived because DC still had a desire for back-up features back then. DC in the Silver Age tried a more continuity neutral approach at first in the Silver Age, but by the end of the 60s (1972 tops) most of those series had been cancelled as well. Aside from the Big Three, the Flash is the only who made it. (I feel weird counting the Justice League.) Marvel was built on continuity and continuing plotlines so a "countinuity free Marvel" would be something never seen before. So really, you have Superman, Wonder Woman and Batman. By the 60s, Superman had built up a pretty complex world around himself, Batman is rumored to have been marked for cancellation, and supposedly Wonder Woman mainly thrived because of her licensing potential. Hard to call it a defendable approach. But if you're going to do it, you also have to be prepared to have the characters you like tossed as soon as sales dipped and revived in unrecognizable forms if they do decide to trot them out again (see what happened with Jay Garrick and the original X-Men).
Edited by Dave Phelps on 11 June 2011 at 12:37pm
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