Active Topics | Member List | Search | Help | Register | Login
Fan Fic
Byrne Robotics > Fan Fic << Prev Page of 53 Next >>
Topic: X-MEN.ELSEWHEN.21--Comments Post ReplyPost New Topic
Author
Message
John Byrne
Avatar
Grumpy Old Guy

Joined: 11 May 2005
Posts: 133279
Posted: 24 April 2021 at 6:38am | IP Logged | 1 post reply

Speaking of XHY, HERE’S a page of “reviews” that pretty much underscores what’s wrong with unedited forums. Nobody likes bad reviews, but when the reviews are negative, one at least hopes for some substance to them. Some fleshing out of WHY the work is deemed lacking. Instead, here we get those vacuous one-liners that pass for “clever” in too much of what we see on the Internet.

sigh

Back to Top profile | search
 
Wallace Sellars
Byrne Robotics Member
Avatar

Joined: 01 May 2004
Location: United States
Posts: 17698
Posted: 24 April 2021 at 7:04am | IP Logged | 2 post reply

I recently reread XMHY, and enjoyed it just as much the third (fourth?) time. I think JB is his own best inker, but really appreciated the look Tom Palmer's brush brought to our host's pencils.

That said, ELSEWHEN is on an entirely different level!
Back to Top profile | search | www
 
Andrew Bitner
Byrne Robotics Member
Avatar

Joined: 01 June 2004
Location: United States
Posts: 7526
Posted: 24 April 2021 at 9:16am | IP Logged | 3 post reply

It's amazing to me that this labor of love project is now close to completing its 21st issue. So glad that we've gotten to see JB's vision for the X-Men post-Dark Phoenix--it's been a terrific read.
Back to Top profile | search
 
Rebecca Jansen
Byrne Robotics Member
Avatar

Joined: 12 February 2018
Location: Canada
Posts: 4635
Posted: 24 April 2021 at 11:07am | IP Logged | 4 post reply


 QUOTE:
Speaking of XHY, HERE’S a page of “reviews”
I like how you were stale and hadn't changed with the times because you needed someone other than Tim Palmer to bounce ideas off of. :^D

Also how you just didn't "get" the characters and got "overly wordy". I think maybe some of these people are coming from not really being fans of the original X-Men run circa #50-onward, sort of like somebody heavily into Star Trek: TNG reviewing a story about Dr. McCoy or Captain Pike. Going by some of these reviews they were reading something other than what I was, a continuation of the original team post #66 and I think it did "get" who those characters were... then. Havok and Polaris in particular have been handled terribly in other hands in my opinion.

Plus providing links to the new with Phoenix and Ororo was bad how? This comic was my gateway drug back into wanting to read Marvel comics again at all, yet for someone who had never stopped they were probably happy with a lot of the trendy or extreme comics with loads of static poses in place of storytelling which I had given up on.

Elsewhen is better than Hidden Years because it isn't constrained at all in effecting other non-X characters. I looked into most of the other X titles from when Hidden years was new and I found X-Man (Nathan Grey), Cable (another future Grey), and Bishop, all titles about future mutants come back in time, as well as X-Factor at the end of it's life which had multiple future mutants but in bodies from the past, to be the poorest and most tangled-up in continuity versus having stories. The real deciding factor though ought to have been sales! Duh. I might personally find a title awful or dull but if it's profitable that's what should count.

Edited by Rebecca Jansen on 24 April 2021 at 11:11am
Back to Top profile | search | www
 
Philippe Negrin
Byrne Robotics Member
Avatar

Joined: 01 August 2007
Location: France
Posts: 2644
Posted: 25 April 2021 at 5:01am | IP Logged | 5 post reply

Sorry to ask a possibly already answered or possibly boring question, JB. What proportion of the Elsewhen material dates back to ideas you had back then and what is "new" ?
Back to Top profile | search
 
John Byrne
Avatar
Grumpy Old Guy

Joined: 11 May 2005
Posts: 133279
Posted: 25 April 2021 at 7:38am | IP Logged | 6 post reply

At this point, none of it dates to the before time.
Back to Top profile | search
 
Philippe Negrin
Byrne Robotics Member
Avatar

Joined: 01 August 2007
Location: France
Posts: 2644
Posted: 25 April 2021 at 9:02am | IP Logged | 7 post reply

Thanks for your answer !  Great !
Back to Top profile | search
 
L Hunt
Byrne Robotics Member
Avatar

Joined: 20 November 2020
Location: United Kingdom
Posts: 159
Posted: 25 April 2021 at 10:31am | IP Logged | 8 post reply

JB, do you tend to think of stories in terms of arcs? A lot of your storylines here seem to intermingle so I wonder how you compartmentalise it all in your mind?
Back to Top profile | search
 
Darren Ashmore
Byrne Robotics Member
Avatar

Joined: 30 April 2004
Location: United Kingdom
Posts: 960
Posted: 25 April 2021 at 10:33am | IP Logged | 9 post reply

Not posted in a while, but I have to comment that this
series just keeps on getting better and better. The new
pages are usually posted during my lunch break (UK/US time
differences dontchakno)so it's always a treat.We really are
being spoilt with these pages,I never thought all those
years back when I got my copy of The Art of John Byrne that
I would ever see elements of that What If.. story come to
fruition but here we are and I love every bit of it. Thanks
JB

Edited by Darren Ashmore on 25 April 2021 at 10:35am
Back to Top profile | search
 
John Byrne
Avatar
Grumpy Old Guy

Joined: 11 May 2005
Posts: 133279
Posted: 25 April 2021 at 12:17pm | IP Logged | 10 post reply

JB, do you tend to think of stories in terms of arcs? A lot of your storylines here seem to intermingle so I wonder how you compartmentalise it all in your mind?

•••

Arc fragments, overlapping. Since I started writing comics I’ve had a “rule”, that a new sub plot should begin in the first part of the main story, and grow until it takes over when the main story ends—with it’s own growing subplots, of course!

Something roughly like this:

AAAAB AAABB AABBB ABBBC BBBBC, etc

Back to Top profile | search
 
John Northey
Byrne Robotics Member
Avatar

Joined: 09 June 2020
Location: Canada
Posts: 199
Posted: 25 April 2021 at 5:20pm | IP Logged | 11 post reply

I like that - subplots slowly growing until they take over, the odd one dies stillborn, but normally they keep growing so kind of ...

AAAAABC
AAAABBC
AABBBCC
ABBBBBC (C dies here, such as Colossus' leg, B has taken over as main story)
ABBBBBD (A ends here)
BBBBBDD (B major story, D growing)
...

Makes sense.  Trick is not to get...
AABCDEFGHI and lose track of a few and have A get pushed out of the title before the story is done.  I'd be a lousy writer as I'd probably get too caught up in the minutia of the subplots and the story would meander like my posts often do... uh oh.  There is a reason I'm a math person :)

Back to Top profile | search | www
 
John Byrne
Avatar
Grumpy Old Guy

Joined: 11 May 2005
Posts: 133279
Posted: 25 April 2021 at 6:26pm | IP Logged | 12 post reply

Y’know, I’m probably second only to Shakespeare when it comes to being misquoted, but I think this is the first time it’s taken only the span between two neighboring posts to do it!
Back to Top profile | search
 

<< Prev Page of 53 Next >>
  Post ReplyPost New Topic
Printable version Printable version

Forum Jump
You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot create polls in this forum
You cannot vote in polls in this forum

 Active Topics | Member List | Search | Help | Register | Login