I basically gave on comic books as a serial medium about a year and a half ago, roughly when Warren Ellis and Darick Robertson's Transmetropolitan ended, though not as a result of it. Since then I have followed things only through the news that filters through to the discussion fora I inhabit.
A couple days ago I heard about a recent series called Avengers: Celestial Quest, which I'd never heard of. The title sounded really old school, but I was sure it must not be, because my nerddom is such that I'd at least have a passing familiarity with it if it was actually that old. So I Googled it and discovered that it came out sometime in the last couple years, after I'd pretty much stopped paying attention. Where I got this information was at the home page of the writer, Steve Englehart.
Englehart's been around for a long time -- his first work appeared in the early 1970's -- and he's written a ton of stuff for both Marvel and DC, though Batman is the only major franchise he ever wrote much for. His style is, shall we say, very much of an era gone by. Lots of high concept stuff, lots of exclamation points, lots of shocking twists and high drama. So, you know, okay -- but the amazing thing is that Englehart all but uniformly describes his work as mind-blowingly brilliant and innovative and if it weren't for those damn editors, blah blah blah. The only reasons that comics don't sell as well as they used to are apparently, that Steve Englehart isn't writing them and that editors won't let Steve Englehart do what he wants when he is writing them. Observe this description of Celestial Quest:
That was an interesting challenge because I had eight issues, no more, and the original Mantis epic had run more than twice that. In addition, that first epic had run long because new avenues kept opening up and I followed them wherever their stories led; this time, eight issues, no more, so I had to consciously cover over new openings in a way that, hopefully, no one would notice.
But the reader response showed a real pent-up hunger for a story that would stretch the current limits, even with constrictions. People want a "House of Ideas."
That's really just the tip, though. Not only have Englehart's stories directly or indirectly contributed to eight Hollywood productions (as he reminds you at every possible opportunity), they are also frequently cited as legendary influences on the rest of the industry. For instance, Coyote:
Of course, one can only produce legendary work if one is able to get it published. Unfortunately, one such surefire legend is still waiting on some editor's desk:
All I can do is write 'em.
Ultimately, it appears that Marvel's hardline stance against quality is what has doomed the industry to low sales:
I've been having all kinds of fun reading these things. They're pretty much all this self-aggrandizing. Here's one more, just for fun.
On the one hand, he was the new, more magickal guy seen in Volume 2, issues 1-4...in what really wasn't a bad story under the circumstances...
...and at the same time, he was the original guy, now lost in the Marvel Universe, where he fought Wolverine. And both were real.
As a writer, I love the idea that this guy was now living two separate lives in two separate universes. He had developed as one being until Black September, but now that one being was facing two separate sets of circumstance, and each would develop differently thereafter. I proposed to Marvel that there be two ongoing series about The Night Man, one a Malibu book and one a Marvel book; it would have been so cool and, well, innovative (they said no).
Damn you, innovation-haters! You've got some nerve! Why, I oughta!
Posted by Aaron S. Veenstra ::: 2004:05:24:11:10