I'm at the DC Rebirth retailer road show

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like the radio play adaptions

the star wars radio play, which i listened to obsessively as a child before we had a vhs machine, was 13 30-min episiodes, so there was a LOOOOT of extra material

I came across a few George R.R. Martin letters in silver age Marvel titles.

― What's Your Definition of a Dirty Baby? (Old Lunch)

true fact: he was the first paying attendee at a comics convention

hypnic jerk (rushomancy), Wednesday, 8 June 2016 23:24 (seven years ago) link

http://awoiaf.westeros.org/images/4/4b/George_R_R_Martin.jpg
You'd never guess from his physical appearance

To me, I think if Marvel really wanted to get it together they should do what they did on those Star Wars titles, which are in someways the most old school Marvel books they have done in a while. They have an inner continuity, they are written for a wide audience and are both stylistically and content wise true to the original creations with room for the creators to tell a story.
According to New Star Wars Rules (tm) all spinoff media is now officially canon and goes through Disney for approval (I believe, someone correct me if I'm wrong) I can see how it can be more limited, but it's kinda cool that all these little things are now canon in all media, comics/novels/tv series/video games etc.

Nhex, Thursday, 9 June 2016 07:57 (seven years ago) link

I think they had the same rules with the previous (pre-Episode VII) canon? All comics, games, novels, etc. had to be approved by Lucasfilm's continuity guards, and they were all considered canon... And then what happened was that, once The Force Awakens was in the works, obviously a lot of the old canon would have to be abandoned (since it depicted post-Episode VI events in ways that would contradict with Episode VII), so they decided that all of the old canon except for the movies + the Clone Wars TV series was now set in an alternate universe. I think the old canon is now called "Star Wars Legends" or something.

AFAIK Star Wars has been pretty unique in this regard that they've tried to include all stories in different media into the canon, so that the timeline of their universe includes all that material, and different stories shouldn't contradict each other. With Star Trek, for example, only the TV series and the movies are considered to be official canon, everything else is non-canonical.

Tuomas, Thursday, 9 June 2016 09:31 (seven years ago) link

IIRC there were levels of canon, so the book level was canon unless it was contradicted by the films, the comics were canon unless it was contradicted by the books or the film, and so on.

Andrew Farrell, Thursday, 9 June 2016 10:59 (seven years ago) link

I like earlnash's point about the Star Wars books being "old school Marvel" - i.e. mild continuity, one author just getting on with it for several years, each new story really *is* a potential starting point for new readers, etc

Chuck_Tatum, Thursday, 9 June 2016 11:25 (seven years ago) link

i.e. the days before continuity was a beartrap and american otaku and children were the key demographics

De La Soul is no Major Lazer (ulysses), Thursday, 9 June 2016 13:57 (seven years ago) link


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