A Rambling Post About Comic Books With Several Footnotes

by Jeff on February 23, 2010 · 1 comment

in Stuff I Like

It’s not a book that’s going to launch you to superstardom or put you at the top of the sales chart but I was really proud of what I was able to do on that book and hopefully it will hold up for Ghost Rider fans. I also was happy because I think we brought some new fans to the character.

-Jason Aaron, on his Ghost Rider run.

I’m a fan of Jason Aaron. I have been since The Other Side, and I have followed basically all of his work at Marvel Comics and am reading Scalped – his Indian reservation-set crime saga – in trade format.  Of all the writers to touch the character in the past decade, I think that he’s come closest to providing a ‘definitive’ Wolverine, and well, any reason to not be embarrassed about having a soft spot for Wolverine is good news in my book.

It got me thinking, though: I’ve read Aaron’s work on Ghost Rider. I liked it. I thought it was a pretty great Ghost Rider story, but it didn’t make me a Ghost Rider fan, just cemented that I’m a Jason Aaron fan.   It’s interesting I’ve shifted from being character-loyal to creator-loyal, specifically writer-loyal.  There are exceptions – I’ve always read Uncanny X-Men even during some of the bleaker creative periods in the book’s history; I’ve always been loyal to Legion of Super Heroes in the same way.  However, The Thing is one of my favorite comic book characters of all time – maybe even my absolute favorite (if Batman didn’t count) – and yet I don’t read Fantastic Four on a regular basis and haven’t for a few years.  Yet, at the same time, if you told me that Brian Wood was writing a book starring NFL SuperPro, I’d pay my 2.99 per issue to read it.

There’s a certain simplicity to the ‘comics are like soap operas’ viewpoint, with the insinuation that you’re expected to not really care about the quality of what you’re consuming, but rather bask in the comfort of the familiarity.  But I’ve watched soap operas, and my general opinion of them is that they are absolutely fucking terrible and nonsensical (Colby’s in college? She was three years old two weeks ago!) a vast majority of the time. Their saving grace is that they’re free, not three bucks every thirty days.  I’d rather have a good story, dammit.  The truth of the matter is that open-ended serial storytelling is not often concerned with telling a good story, but rather on being consistently entertaining from issue to issue.  Telling a good story, sometimes, yes, but not the good story.

I was reading Kevin Rubio’s Tag and Bink Star Wars comics last night, and at the end of the first issue, the titular protagonists are killed in the explosion of the Death Star.  The meta-joke becomes that there’s one issue left in the series and the main characters were just killed off.*  Rubio starts off the next issue by spending a few pages explaining why the characters didn’t actually die (Vader selected the troopers standing behind Tag and Bink in the background to fly his wing while they slipped away on a stolen Imperial shuttle).

There’s definitely value – both from the POV of the writer and the reader – in the occasional “Cyclops is dead!”/”Cyclops is still alive!” fake-out**, but relying on that kind of cliffhanger as a crutch (and I’m not saying that that’s what Kevin Rubio is doing, since Tag and Bink Are Dead is a two-issue miniseries, after all; I’m just using it as an example because it’s fresh in my mind) seems a bit like spinning the wheels without actually going anywhere.  I have a profound attraction to the shared universe of Marvel and DC, but an equally strong attachment to contained stories with a beginning, middle and end.  Batman doesn’t have that. Batman persists instead because he is a myth and not just a story, just like every other superhero icon we’ve created in the modern age***.

*This is not, mind you, an indictment of a comic whose main character dies at the end of each issue.  Fabio Moon and Gabriel Ba’s Daytripper – a comic where that exact thing happens – is aggressively excellent in basically every way.

**This is a real thing that happens during Uncanny X-Men’s “Dark Phoenix Saga” – Scott is ‘killed’ on the last page of one issue and proclaimed to be not actually dead on the first page of the following one.

***Or, as Grant Morrison puts it during his “Batman, RIP” story, “Batman and Robin can never die!”

{ 1 comment… read it below or add one }

Sarah February 24, 2010 at 7:50 pm

Hey, you should cross-post this on AN, if you’re into that kind of thing.

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