I'm at the DC Rebirth retailer road show

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weirdly a gis for 'thanks didio' brings up this image as the top result

https://cdn.meme.am/instances/500x/55063696.jpg

and then a lot of beefcake pics of some muscular young man

(main prostitute from Game Of Thrones) (bizarro gazzara), Monday, 23 May 2016 19:22 (seven years ago) link

Thanks, Dildo.

Corn Elephant, Jr. (Old Lunch), Monday, 23 May 2016 19:52 (seven years ago) link

not gonna gis 'thanks dildo' that's for sure

(main prostitute from Game Of Thrones) (bizarro gazzara), Monday, 23 May 2016 19:56 (seven years ago) link

FWIW I'm sure there are relatively few instances of anyone photoshopping Didio's face on the end of a sex toy.

Corn Elephant, Jr. (Old Lunch), Monday, 23 May 2016 19:59 (seven years ago) link

insulting to actual dildos everywhere

μpright mammal (mh), Monday, 23 May 2016 21:20 (seven years ago) link

An email from Evan Dorkin to his editor, in 2003.

glandular lansbury (sic), Wednesday, 25 May 2016 02:01 (seven years ago) link

Yes, as he notes, Didio is highly reminiscent of Jemas (lest we ever forget Big Bill).

Wet Food (Old Lunch), Wednesday, 25 May 2016 02:09 (seven years ago) link

Although Jemas originally fostered an environment where creative led and thrived, for a couple of years. And was fired within months after he began controllingly meddling in editorial, not repeatedly promoted for over a decade.

glandular lansbury (sic), Wednesday, 25 May 2016 03:05 (seven years ago) link

Ah yes, the Marvel days of Arad and Jemas, the action figure man and the baseball card man

μpright mammal (mh), Wednesday, 25 May 2016 03:09 (seven years ago) link

Thank god for Quesada and Alonso, seriously. I'm kinda dreading the day those guys are gone and Disney installs some junior exec from ABC as the new EIC.

Wet Food (Old Lunch), Wednesday, 25 May 2016 03:13 (seven years ago) link

There was a *brief* period when DC were pretty good during Didio's tenure -- maybe starting with Seaguy/Catwoman/Gotham Central up to the end of Seven Soldiers.

And then you get Countdown, which Didio apparently called "52 done right" (!) and everything except not by Grant Morrison goes off the rails, and the GM goes off the rails too.

Chuck_Tatum, Wednesday, 25 May 2016 10:00 (seven years ago) link

I'd contest the last point, but since he's not writing anything for them any more, it's a moot point.

Andrew Farrell, Wednesday, 25 May 2016 10:06 (seven years ago) link

I never finished his Batman run, but IMO Final Crisis and his Superman run and Joe the Barbarian and Multiversity were all good examples of him coming up with interesting ideas and premises, but not bothering with decent plotting and pacing, which made them kinda irritating to read. Though TBH this has always been a problem with Morrison (see "Rock of Ages" or "Here Comes Tomorrow" for some earlier examples), but it's become more pronounced in recent times. None of his post-SS comics have reached the heights of the works that preceded them.

Tuomas, Wednesday, 25 May 2016 10:53 (seven years ago) link

Eh, I think that cramming more ideas in than wise is always a feature of Morrison's work - as a complete stan, it's one of the things I really appreciate about it.

There's a great (but not short) review of Action Comics here - I was looking for evidence of editorial interference but it doesn't mention much (except with the artists):

https://them0vieblog.com/2016/03/07/grant-morrisons-run-on-action-comics-reviewretrospecti

Joe the Barbarian is fairly straightforward thought I thought - hallucinations + heroes journey contrasted with an urgent physical problem in the real world.

Andrew Farrell, Wednesday, 25 May 2016 11:33 (seven years ago) link

I agree that cramming tons of ideas into a single work has always been more a positive than negative thing with his comics, but IMO lately he just can't be arsed to pace them properly... Final Crisis, Superman, JtB, and Multiversity all reveal crucial bits of information towards the end of the comic, almost as an afterthought, which seriously diminishes the excitement because it's not even clear what's at stake in the story... And these last-minute reveals feel more like Morrison pulling stuff out of his arse that he forgot to add to earlier issues rather than any sort of well-timed plot twists.

Tuomas, Wednesday, 25 May 2016 11:45 (seven years ago) link

IMO, Seven Soldiers/52/Final Crisis/Batman is Morrison's magnum opus and works amazingly well read as a single work and features some of his most clear-headed plotting. Easily among my all-time favorite mainstream comics.

Wet Food (Old Lunch), Wednesday, 25 May 2016 12:23 (seven years ago) link

I read a lot of stuff from early in Didio's tenure. Blackest Night seems to me the line of demarcation when things started to sour quickly.

Wet Food (Old Lunch), Wednesday, 25 May 2016 12:24 (seven years ago) link

There was a *brief* period when DC were pretty good during Didio's tenure -- maybe starting with Seaguy/Catwoman/Gotham Central up to the end of Seven Soldiers

If you mean the Brubaker / Cooke / etc Catwoman, that predates Didio joining the company. Gotham Central began in his first year, two years before he rose to full power, and may have been commissioned before he joined at all. (Plus, Rucka has expressed specific bitterness about Didio's attitude toward it later.) Seaguy is the only one of those to be published after Didio became boss, was almost certainly commissioned earlier, and was under Berger anyway. (I think the other two were far better Morrison, personally - I've never gotten what Seaguy stans were clicking with.)

glandular lansbury (sic), Wednesday, 25 May 2016 12:50 (seven years ago) link

It just now occurred to me that Seaguy was almost certainly initially pitched as Seaman.

Wet Food (Old Lunch), Wednesday, 25 May 2016 12:52 (seven years ago) link

IMO, Seven Soldiers/52/Final Crisis/Batman is Morrison's magnum opus and works amazingly well read as a single work

As a Morristan - he was my favourite writing-only comics writer from the age of eight or so, though I didn't realise 'til my teens - I both concur with this and think he went off the rails almost immediately afterwards.

Happy was an embarrassingly awkward Mark Millar cover band. His first two issues of Action were dynamic and involving, then a wasteland of tedium with the alarming exception of #10, which felt like a burst of self-analytical id. Supergods was a hideous autohagiography, and the presentation of DC business history a whitewashing that Action 10 felt like a belching reaction to.

Multiversity was a pointless shambles, attempting to polish rims on a speeding car that's on fire, to avoid sitting inside it. (Pax Americana issue was great, though.)

Annihilator was cringingly undergraduate My First Creative Writing Exercise About Writers Block bullshit, not even rescued by Frazer Irving, so great with Morrison in 7S and ROBW, largely because he decided to include approx two panels of background per issue. I couldn't connect to these people or believe they existed because a) they were hack cliches but b) they weren't even existing convincingly in an environment or setting. Why keep having action scenes and chases when there's no sense of place?

And Nameless squandered one of Morrison's three best collaborators ever on a six-issue shaggy dog horror story, that again didn't even build scares or tension bcz I couldn't tell who anyone was or what they were supposed to be doing, let alone follow or care what was really, secretly going on. I'm not bothering with his violent Santa Claus miniseries that's going on now, and figure I'm probably off the bus altogether.

glandular lansbury (sic), Wednesday, 25 May 2016 13:07 (seven years ago) link

Oh yeah, the first issues of those aborted WildCATs and Authority runs were whatever-whatever too.

glandular lansbury (sic), Wednesday, 25 May 2016 13:08 (seven years ago) link

And the Robbie Williams booklet was embarrassing dickwaggle, presumably commissioned through his corporate motivational speaking company thingo.

glandular lansbury (sic), Wednesday, 25 May 2016 13:10 (seven years ago) link

I both concur with this

Except I only read the odd bit of 52 in the shop and later on bought one or two that turned out to tie into his Batman mega-run.

glandular lansbury (sic), Wednesday, 25 May 2016 13:11 (seven years ago) link

I'm a huge Morristan, too, but I'll admit that I've read next to nothing he's done since that block of genius. Although much of it is still somehow piling up around my place, waiting to be read (e.g. his inaugural issue of Heavy Metal, which I was initially very excited about but which looked fairly uninspired when I thumbed through).

Wet Food (Old Lunch), Wednesday, 25 May 2016 13:13 (seven years ago) link

52 started off kinda shaky and was occasionally bogged down by the weaker writers (and, one assumes, editorial interference) but it eventually came together quite nicely against all odds. And it seemed like those weaker writers were forced to step up their game a bit to keep up with Morrison.

Wet Food (Old Lunch), Wednesday, 25 May 2016 13:15 (seven years ago) link

They're reprinting it as (I think) two super-fat trades soon so this is a good time to check it out.

Wet Food (Old Lunch), Wednesday, 25 May 2016 13:16 (seven years ago) link

Supergods was a hideous autohagiography, and the presentation of DC business history a whitewashing that Action 10 felt like a belching reaction to.

OTM. Lost quite a lot of respect for the dude after reading the terribly partial and inaccurate Supergods - for someone so keen to stress, in that bk and elsewhere, his working class socialist credentials, he sure sounded like a good corporate shill, and his comments about Chris Ware from around the same time were similarly obnoxious and ill-informed.

Chicamaw (Ward Fowler), Wednesday, 25 May 2016 13:17 (seven years ago) link

Seven Soldiers is my favourite Morrison work of the 00s, and Final Crisis is not bad either, but IMO both of them suffer from the thing I mentioned above: by the final issue there are so much subplots left open that said issues are absolutely crammed with stuff, which leads into things getting resolved in a quick and unsatisfactory way (the Guardian's part of the SS finale is compressed into a mere news article, the morticoccus subplot in FC is resolved in one offhand panel, etc), or they're not resolved at all (what exactly happens to Klarion? why and how did Barry Allen come back in FC? etc, etc?).

52 is fun to read, but the four-writer thing means that a lot of the plot elements and hints it introduces ultimately lead to nothing. Douglas' old blog posts go into detail about that, and I fully agree with his points.

I do agree thought that all of Morrison's work that came after FC is worse than what preceded it. Despite their flaws SS, 52, and FC are all good comics, and FC in particular is a flawed masterpiece... Without the awful pacing in the final issue, it'd be the best comic he ever wrote.

Tuomas, Wednesday, 25 May 2016 13:28 (seven years ago) link

Sorry, a typo there, I meant to say that that *Seven Soldiers* is the flawed masterpiece, not Final Crisis.

Tuomas, Wednesday, 25 May 2016 13:31 (seven years ago) link

Seriously, do yourself a favor and read his Bat-epic. It's amazing and an amazing feat of deep long-term plotting.

And a lot of the dangling plot stuff is because these are still mainstream DC projects rather than discrete and finite works unto themselves. The Klarion bit I can 'klarify', at least: I believe his final appearance in 7S was meant to lead directly into his first appearance in Kirby's Demon series. Can't remember how that works chronologically, exactly, but I believe that was the intention.

Wet Food (Old Lunch), Wednesday, 25 May 2016 13:36 (seven years ago) link

IMO, Seven Soldiers/52/Final Crisis/Batman is Morrison's magnum opus and works amazingly well read as a single work

I have no problem with that, though I still have a lot of love for The Invisibles (and like many here I skipped on 52 quite early).

I'd forgotten Happy, I had somehow never even heard of Annihilator (probably - the cover looks familiar), I was properly unnerved from the first issue of Nameless that I read, and I can confirm that Klaus is entertaining but uninspired.

Ah well, he's Grant Morrison, he was never one for stopping where he should.

Anyway, this is 19 issues over 4 years, none of them for DC.

Andrew Farrell, Wednesday, 25 May 2016 13:42 (seven years ago) link

Gotham Central began in his first year, two years before he rose to full power, and may have been commissioned before he joined at all.

In fairness to Didio, this does mean there was a period while he was at full power and GC was still great, which is all Chuck was saying. Now obviously ordinarily "Don't stick your dick in the well-regarded series" isn't something you'd get credit for as a EiC, but we're grading on a curve here.

Andrew Farrell, Wednesday, 25 May 2016 13:44 (seven years ago) link

Don't forget 18 Days, which continues to be bait-and-switch solicited as a Morrison title and which I continue to buy for some reason (he does at least occasionally co-write an issue).

I have great, great affection for The Invisibles and I will always hold it in high esteem as a cultural artifact and on the basis of how much of an impact it had me, but it's kind of a mess story-wise, especially compared to that later stretch of DC greatness.

Wet Food (Old Lunch), Wednesday, 25 May 2016 13:46 (seven years ago) link

xpost

Wet Food (Old Lunch), Wednesday, 25 May 2016 13:46 (seven years ago) link

But on his first Kirby appearance he's alone on Earth, while SS ends with him becoming (possibly?) the new king of Sheeda... So there's really no continuity from one to the other.

The same thing also happens with Frankenstein: in SS he's trapped in the Sheeda future, and IIRC Klarion is controlling him. But in FC he's back on 21s century Earth and working for some government agency, with no explanation.

(xxpost)

Tuomas, Wednesday, 25 May 2016 13:47 (seven years ago) link

That was an answer to Old Lunch's comment on Klarion.

Tuomas, Wednesday, 25 May 2016 13:47 (seven years ago) link

Also, I do get that Barry Allen's comeback in FC was used as a prelude to him getting a new ongoing series, but it really wouldn't have hurt if Morrison had at least inluced *some* explanation why he's back, now it just comes off as deus ex machina.

Tuomas, Wednesday, 25 May 2016 13:56 (seven years ago) link

imo Morrison's Batman run kind of fell off in the coda w/the Leviathan plot, but by that point he was trying to work around or ignore the fact he wasn't working in anything connected to actual continuity anymore

μpright mammal (mh), Wednesday, 25 May 2016 14:14 (seven years ago) link

Without the awful pacing in the final issue, it'd be the best comic he ever wrote.

I love that final issue of Final Crisis, I think it's the highlight of the series!

Agree that Action Comics/Annihilator/Nameless/Klaus/Multiversity/Happy were all not much cop, albeit with occasional standout issues like Sic mentioned.

Seven Soldiers/52/Final Crisis/Batman is Morrison's magnum opus

Totally, and I'd include JLA and JLA Classified in there too.

Chuck_Tatum, Wednesday, 25 May 2016 15:32 (seven years ago) link

(And the second, nu-52 season of Batman Inc is a lot less inspired than what came before it, Batcows excepted.)

Chuck_Tatum, Wednesday, 25 May 2016 15:35 (seven years ago) link

All-Star Superman is also technically tied in with that magnum opus (with the various permutations of Nebula Man being the thread tying that to 7S and JLA Classified).

Wet Food (Old Lunch), Wednesday, 25 May 2016 15:44 (seven years ago) link

I realize I still haven't read the new 52 Batman Inc yet. It appears that I may have dropped the Morrison ball at just the right time, eh?

Wet Food (Old Lunch), Wednesday, 25 May 2016 15:44 (seven years ago) link

It's pretty good! But it's a small, downbeat ending - it works better as a conclusion to the Batman story than as an ending to the magnum opus (which should probably end at Batman and Robin).

Chuck_Tatum, Wednesday, 25 May 2016 16:37 (seven years ago) link

Oh yeah, the first issues of those aborted WildCATs and Authority runs were whatever-whatever too.

Was there ever an explanation as to what happened with these never getting to issue 2?

Same thing that happened to the 1963 Annual.

(The Authority did make it to #2, five months later, and then had #3-12 by a different creative team a few years after that.)

glandular lansbury (sic), Wednesday, 25 May 2016 23:05 (seven years ago) link

Don't even talk to be about that damn 1963 annual!

μpright mammal (mh), Wednesday, 25 May 2016 23:33 (seven years ago) link

what is that exactly? morrison couldn't be arsed? artist problems?

#1 was so spectacular he decided to stop there

μpright mammal (mh), Thursday, 26 May 2016 03:22 (seven years ago) link

Jim Lee

glandular lansbury (sic), Thursday, 26 May 2016 04:06 (seven years ago) link


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