shaxper
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Post by shaxper on Jan 10, 2023 15:04:04 GMT -5
But I am sure that Denny O'Neil "assumed" Collins would write Batman like his Ms.Tree series or his hardboiled novels. In the first two issues of his run, that were published before Year One, I think the tone is different from his later run. Broken necks, implied rape, ... After that he returned to write the whole series oddly wholesome (Sound of Silence?) and probably that was not like the readers or Denny O'Neil wanted. You may be giving O'Neil too much credit. As I recall, he indicated in a letter column that they hired Collins for the one filler story with Tommy Karma, and O'Neil liked it so much that he invited Collins to become the regular writer on the title. It really does seem that O'Neil had that little of a plan going into the Post-Crisis. Yes, and you see similar inconsistency in Mike W. Barr's run (Batman and Robin go from happy-go-lucky to suddenly full of rage) and especially Jim Starlin's too (Bruce and Jason both change so many times that it's dizzying). Could be unsure writers second-guessing themselves when they aren't being given enough direction, could be O'Neil offering impulsive edicts and reactions without much concern for consistency, could be attempts to align with what other writers are doing with the character (Collins' later stuff definitely aligns better with Mike W. Barr's), or maybe none of the above. Your observations are quite astute, though. I'd love to see this, myself.
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on Jan 10, 2023 15:20:55 GMT -5
When you look at Year Two, it does not seem that Alfred raised Bruce, instead they rebooted Leslie Thomkins into some sort of surrogate mother (previously she had been just an old lady from Park Row). Okay, that's more of an indication for a reboot, but again, I think this was just Barr doing his own ideas and no one stopping him. Again, "Year Two" is just Barr's old "Batman 1980" proposal he did years before and now he took the chance. Yes, Barr has outright admitted he never wrote that story to be "Year Two" and wasn't giving any thought to Frank Miller nor to any defined Post-Crisis continuity when he wrote it. This is the first I've heard of this. I guess, if Babs was a baby in Year One, she would end up being younger than Dick. I'd always assumed that James Jr. was a deliberate effort to remove Babs from continuity, but there may be something to this. Thanks for sharing. I have an easy time dismissing LoTDK because it was edited by Andy Helfer and not O'Neil. If O'Neil wasn't supervising continuity enough in his own office, you can be sure he wasn't aligning it with anyone else's. Undoubtedly. I can't help but wonder how much of this is indirectly due to Jim Shooter. His efforts to more tightly align Marvel in the mid-1980s and create major crossover events certainly got DC's attention and seemed to be the future of comic publishing, but by the time the Post Crisis reboot was beginning to happen, Shooter had already made a lot of enemies with his tight control and editorial vision. Top writers were coming to DC because of Shooter and complaining loudly about him while doing so. So here's DC, on the cusp of executing their plans to be more like Marvel and then suddenly realizing that, if they follow through with being more like Marvel, they might end up with a rebellion on their hands.
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Post by Prince Hal on Jan 10, 2023 15:52:51 GMT -5
Any idea why didn't they go for a "hard reboot" like Wonder Woman or Superman? Considering that the crisis was supposed to streamline the DCU this is very, very messy and I think keeping pre-crisis would have been better. If a streamlining was indeed deemed necessary (I still say it wasn't), all DC had to do was create yet another Earth in the multiverse, but that would have been way too hard for experienced fans of comics, sf and fantasy to be able to follow. (He said ironically.) As it was, they invented Earth-Charlton and Lady Lark and Earth-6 (I think it was Lady Lark's Earth, wasn't it?) just so that they could be destroyed in COIE. Luckily for the readers, COIE straightened everything out perfectly. No need for multiple earths, different versions of the same character, and confusing retcons anymore!
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Post by wildfire2099 on Jan 10, 2023 16:05:13 GMT -5
I do think that, while clearly there were quite a few bumps in the road, DC continuity was pretty reasonable by the time I cared about in 1992-1993.. just in time for them to 'fix' it again with Zero Hour.. that was the beginning of the end, I think.
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Post by Deleted on Jan 10, 2023 16:08:13 GMT -5
Considering that the crisis was supposed to streamline the DCU this is very, very messy and I think keeping pre-crisis would have been better. If a streamlining was indeed deemed necessary (I still say it wasn't), all DC had to do was create yet another Earth in the multiverse, but that would have been way too hard for experienced fans of comics, sf and fantasy to be able to follow. (He said ironically.) As it was, they invented Earth-Charlton and Lady Lark and Earth-6 (I think it was Lady Lark's Earth, wasn't it?) just so that they could be destroyed in COIE. Luckily for the readers, COIE straightened everything out perfectly. No need for multiple earths, different versions of the same character, and confusing retcons anymore! No genie has ever been more thoroughly out of the bottle.
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on Jan 10, 2023 16:26:40 GMT -5
I do think that, while clearly there were quite a few bumps in the road, DC continuity was pretty reasonable by the time I cared about in 1992-1993.. I agree, but I think this had less to do with editorial oversight and more to do with editors hiring and empowering creative teams that really cared about ironing out the details themselves: Wolfman on Batman, Ordway, Stern, and Jurgens on Superman, Perez on Wonder Woman, Giffen and DeMatteis on Justice League, Wolfman on New Titans, Giffen and Grant on L.E.G.I.O.N., Truman on Hawkworld, Owsley and Giffen on Green Lantern, and Morrison on Animal Man. It really seems like DC's mentality in a post-Jim Shooter comic book world was to hire good people and just let them do their thing. For all that was wrong with comics in the early '90s, it really seems like each of these creative teams was doing something right.
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Post by franzwesten on Jan 10, 2023 16:54:05 GMT -5
I found something, sadly they don't provide sources for the claims: www.cbr.com/comic-book-urban-legends-revealed-31/But now I remember reading on Byrne's forum; original idea was Gordon thinking it's a boy and then in some mini-twist it is a girl. Byrne also said that he was fully prepared to work from continuity when taking over Superman. Apparently, in the Bat-Office everyone was just doing as they pleased. I also remember Max Collins complaining that there was no "bible" for Batman, e.g. how far is Wayne Manor removed from Gotham City, and couldn't believe that. So the way it looks, there was nothing prepared for a "reboot". Byrne complained that he got flak for rebooting Superman, but no one complained about Batman's continuity getting changed because it was no "official" reboot. (I am not a Byrne fan, BTW, I just read his forum regularly 15 years ago)
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Post by zaku on Jan 10, 2023 17:03:49 GMT -5
Byrne complained that he got flak for rebooting Superman, but no one complained about Batman's continuity getting changed because it was no "official" reboot. While I totally agree with the full reboot of Superman (as I've written elsewhere on this forum I'm convinced that Man of Iron Pre-Crisis was unsalvageable) I don't see why pick on Byrne. He was hired to do a job, it was at the top that decided the reboot. I understand that obviously readers have by now associated his name with the Post-Crisis Superman but it was, well, a team effort, wasn't it?
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Post by tarkintino on Jan 10, 2023 18:28:53 GMT -5
Considering that the crisis was supposed to streamline the DCU this is very, very messy and I think keeping pre-crisis would have been better. If a streamlining was indeed deemed necessary (I still say it wasn't), all DC had to do was create yet another Earth in the multiverse, but that would have been way too hard for experienced fans of comics, sf and fantasy to be able to follow. (He said ironically.) As it was, they invented Earth-Charlton and Lady Lark and Earth-6 (I think it was Lady Lark's Earth, wasn't it?) just so that they could be destroyed in COIE. Luckily for the readers, COIE straightened everything out perfectly. No need for multiple earths, different versions of the same character, and confusing retcons anymore! PH, where COIE is concerned, I will always disagree with your position; creating yet another earth would have been more of the same ridiculous problem which had DC running into continuity walls with the exception of around 20% (estimate) of their titles. There were too many worlds and characters for any reader to care about the mess, along with the embarrassing histories & plots, etc. If any company ever needed to streamline / clean house, it was DC coming out of the 1970s, which is one of the innumerable reasons COIE was a major success.
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Post by Prince Hal on Jan 10, 2023 19:35:30 GMT -5
If a streamlining was indeed deemed necessary (I still say it wasn't), all DC had to do was create yet another Earth in the multiverse, but that would have been way too hard for experienced fans of comics, sf and fantasy to be able to follow. (He said ironically.) As it was, they invented Earth-Charlton and Lady Lark and Earth-6 (I think it was Lady Lark's Earth, wasn't it?) just so that they could be destroyed in COIE. Luckily for the readers, COIE straightened everything out perfectly. No need for multiple earths, different versions of the same character, and confusing retcons anymore! PH, where COIE is concerned, I will always disagree with your position; creating yet another earth would have been more of the same ridiculous problem which had DC running into continuity walls with the exception of around 20% (estimate) of their titles. There were too many worlds and characters for any reader to care about the mess, along with the embarrassing histories & plots, etc. If any company ever needed to streamline / clean house, it was DC coming out of the 1970s, which is one of the innumerable reasons COIE was a major success. All well and good, tark. And you're right, it might have worked, IF THEY HAD STUCK TO IT. But they didn't. They couldn't. Too many more convoluted stories were first required to make "sense" of the new whatever it was- cosmos, Earth, galaxy? See Hawkman. See Superboy and the "pocket universe." See the new old JLA. Then they realized that nobody in their audience wanted stories about one earth, one solar system, one galaxy. What they might have wanted was a manageable universe as Marvel had for a couple of years there in the early 60s. But comics readers had grown used to worlds within worlds, parallel universes, alternate futures, other dimensions, worlds vibrating in the same place in space-time as very similar, but not quite exact worlds and so on. These were reliable tropes (also great crutches for writers) and "stories told on an "epic scale" no longer meant a book-length "complete novel" team-up between the Doom Patrol and the Flash. Yes, DC continuity had become confining, but that was entirely the fault of the fanboys who had become the writers and editors. They made it so because they were forever worrying about whether Batman had met the Mad Hatter twice or three times before. And the fanboys wound up making the new continuity even more confining. You've gotta love the guy, but Roy Thomas and his obsessive need to tie everything with one big four-color bow didn't help. This as opposed to the Old Guard's way of dealing with this kind of pedantry: Stan Lee awarding no-prizes for continuity errors or Kanigher and Weisinger simply laughing them off and saying to the fans, "Lighten up, Francis" when somebody bitched about the difference in the number of Sgt. Rock's siblings in OAAW 121 and OAAW 135. Ignorance can be bliss, and nobody would have noticed if various aspects of DC's history had simply been ignored, as Schwartz did with Mopey and the Flash. He basically said "We blew it," so forget that fershlugginer story and let's all move on. You don't buy a new house and refill it when you decide the attic needs a cleaning. DC's fanboy writers not only burned down the old house, they refilled a newer, bigger one with the same s**t, just gussied up in computer colors. Another instance in which the creators took themselves and what they were doing way, way too seriously. Somebody needed to drop the F-bomb in the middle of the COIE planning. F as in F-U-N!
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on Jan 10, 2023 21:22:02 GMT -5
Thanks! I generally find Brian Cronin to be a very reliable source of info, so this is good enough for me. Byrne's an interesting one. While most creators have some degree of unreliability in their memories, Byrne gives himself credit for creating just about everything he was ever involved in. With the Superman reboot, he's outright lying. The Superman reboot was concieved by Frank Miller and Steve Gerber, and overseen by Andy Helfer. They brought Byrne in after the vision and bible had already been worked out, but they needed a high profile creator to be the face of it, and that was Byrne. If only Denny O'Neil had done that kind of prep work with/for his writers.
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on Jan 10, 2023 21:23:30 GMT -5
Byrne complained that he got flak for rebooting Superman, but no one complained about Batman's continuity getting changed because it was no "official" reboot. While I totally agree with the full reboot of Superman (as I've written elsewhere on this forum I'm convinced that Man of Iron Pre-Crisis was unsalvageable) I don't see why pick on Byrne. He was hired to do a job, it was at the top that decided the reboot. I understand that obviously readers have by now associated his name with the Post-Crisis Superman but it was, well, a team effort, wasn't it? Once again, you beat me to it. Now I really do enjoy picking on Byrne, but not because I hold him responsible for the reboot.
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Post by Hoosier X on Jan 10, 2023 23:56:06 GMT -5
Have you read the Earl of Oxford threads at Byrne Robotics? Calling Byrne a pseudo-intellectual would be gross flattery.
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Post by zaku on Jan 11, 2023 3:01:39 GMT -5
PH, where COIE is concerned, I will always disagree with your position; creating yet another earth would have been more of the same ridiculous problem which had DC running into continuity walls with the exception of around 20% (estimate) of their titles. There were too many worlds and characters for any reader to care about the mess, along with the embarrassing histories & plots, etc. If any company ever needed to streamline / clean house, it was DC coming out of the 1970s, which is one of the innumerable reasons COIE was a major success. All well and good, tark. And you're right, it might have worked, IF THEY HAD STUCK TO IT. But they didn't. They couldn't. Too many more convoluted stories were first required to make "sense" of the new whatever it was- cosmos, Earth, galaxy? See Hawkman. See Superboy and the "pocket universe." See the new old JLA. Then they realized that nobody in their audience wanted stories about one earth, one solar system, one galaxy. What they might have wanted was a manageable universe as Marvel had for a couple of years there in the early 60s. But comics readers had grown used to worlds within worlds, parallel universes, alternate futures, other dimensions, worlds vibrating in the same place in space-time as very similar, but not quite exact worlds and so on. These were reliable tropes (also great crutches for writers) and "stories told on an "epic scale" no longer meant a book-length "complete novel" team-up between the Doom Patrol and the Flash. Yes, DC continuity had become confining, but that was entirely the fault of the fanboys who had become the writers and editors. They made it so because they were forever worrying about whether Batman had met the Mad Hatter twice or three times before. And the fanboys wound up making the new continuity even more confining. You've gotta love the guy, but Roy Thomas and his obsessive need to tie everything with one big four-color bow didn't help. This as opposed to the Old Guard's way of dealing with this kind of pedantry: Stan Lee awarding no-prizes for continuity errors or Kanigher and Weisinger simply laughing them off and saying to the fans, "Lighten up, Francis" when somebody bitched about the difference in the number of Sgt. Rock's siblings in OAAW 121 and OAAW 135. Ignorance can be bliss, and nobody would have noticed if various aspects of DC's history had simply been ignored, as Schwartz did with Mopey and the Flash. He basically said "We blew it," so forget that fershlugginer story and let's all move on. You don't buy a new house and refill it when you decide the attic needs a cleaning. DC's fanboy writers not only burned down the old house, they refilled a newer, bigger one with the same s**t, just gussied up in computer colors. Another instance in which the creators took themselves and what they were doing way, way too seriously. Somebody needed to drop the F-bomb in the middle of the COIE planning. F as in F-U-N! While I can agree the Post-Crisis DC Universe wasn't managed in the best possibile way, there were characters stuck in a creative swamp who could be saved only by a total reboot (like Superman and Wonder Woman). Perhaps COIE wasn't the best possible solution but beat the alternatives Wonder Woman changing again city, job and another version of Steve Trevor or Lex Luthor wanting to destroy the world because he suffered of early baldness. Again.
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Post by zaku on Jan 11, 2023 4:37:36 GMT -5
While I totally agree with the full reboot of Superman (as I've written elsewhere on this forum I'm convinced that Man of Iron Pre-Crisis was unsalvageable) I don't see why pick on Byrne. He was hired to do a job, it was at the top that decided the reboot. I understand that obviously readers have by now associated his name with the Post-Crisis Superman but it was, well, a team effort, wasn't it? Once again, you beat me to it. Now I really do enjoy picking on Byrne, but not because I hold him responsible for the reboot. Uh, I just realized that I wrote a post full of errors (I was sleepy and tired) you are too kind... (^^)
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