Showing posts with label Wildstorm. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wildstorm. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 8, 2012

Borg Match--Marvel/Malibu Vs. DC/Wildstorm

Tweets, conversations, quarter bin finds and other ephemera have put me in a mood to examine this particular question:

Nearly twenty years ago, Marvel bought and absorbed Malibu comics. It's been nearly 15 years since DC gobbled up Wildstorm. So how do those compare?

One popular theory is that the real reason Marvel purchased Malibu was to get access to Malibu's then high-tech coloring studio. Perhaps that's true, but Marvel surely made a pretty big effort to integrate Malibu, although that was obviously unsuccessful.

Almost immediately after the acquisition, Malibu launched the Godwheel event, bringing Thor over for a visit and establishing the Malibu universe as an alternate dimension in Marvel's cosmological scheme:

Not too much later, Marvel cancelled the existing line, and used an Avengers/Ultraforce series to re-launch the Malibu Universe:

Marvel made sure to seed a number of their own characters into the reborn universe. The Black Knight became the new leader of Ultraforce...

The Juggernaut came over to join the "All New" Exiles...

Adam Warlock became a regular in Rune, with a quest for the Soul Gems being the focus.

Then they had a multi-company crossover, the Phoenix Resurrection, which was essentially AvX 16 years early...

And we had a whole series of one shot inter-universe team-ups:




There were plenty more of those...

So it's hard to say that Marvel bought Malibu just for production reasons, as they made a pretty game effort of using Marvel intellectual properties to draw attention to Earth-93060.

But to no avail, as most of the Malibu mags were cancelled again within a year, never to be seen again, as undefined contractual issues have kept them from resurfacing.

Now, DC played the long game with their acquisition. For the first several years, they were merely publisher and distributor, leaving the Wildstorm books alone (although their are stories of editorial some interference).

After years of Wildstorm never finding continuity with creators or directions, DC began to assert itself, first with a few crossovers, and eventually they the Wildstorm Universe to be Earth-50. And of course, DC used Flushpoint to end that Wildstorm Universe, and integrate it as part of the all-new, all-different nu52 (no word if Earth-50 is still the "pure" Wildstorm Universe...).

So, now a year after the creative merger, let's ask: has DC been more successful than Marvel with their newly integrated universe?

I think the jury is still out, and to understand why, we need to see where Marvel went wrong, and where DC may--may--be repeating their mistakes.

Obviously, Marvel's careening towards bankruptcy at the time and the chaotic instability of the editorial staff were major contributors to Marvel-Malibu failing. But DC's not going bankrupt any time soon, and having Wildstorm's founder Jim Lee as co-publisher would seem to ensure that there is no lack of will to make it work.

Marvel also erred by keeping Malibu a separate imprint, I think. Many comic stores still shelved the books in the "independent ghetto," blunting the benefits of the crossovers, and guaranteeing lower sales compared to Marvel's own comics. So another plus for DC there, for avoiding that mistake--Wildstorm IS DC now, no one can miss it, and the books benefit from that.

But not so fast...DC is still repeating some of Marvel's miscues. Look at those covers above: almost all of the crossovers occurred under the Malibu imprint, and not in actual Marvel titles. Similarly, the characters who got ported over to the Malibu books were hardly the most impressive, or the most likely to drive sales. Black Knight? Really? Most people didn't care about him when he was with the actual Avengers, let alone Ultraforce. Juggernaut?? Adam Warlock? Those guys have never moved a lot of books.

No, Marvel's approach was too one-way, in the wrong direction, and needed bigger stars. They should have had some of the crossovers occur in Marvel mags, and not in one-shots, but in the proper titles. Have Prime guest in a couple of issues of Avengers. Heck, restart Marvel Two-In-One and have Ben Grimm team up with a different Malibu star each month. And they should exported some real stars to Malibu books. Have Kitty Pryde or Nightcrawler join the Exiles. Have Hawkeye or Namor or Cyclops end up leading Ultraforce. Have Iron Man & Prototype switch universes for a bit.

But that's not what happened. Marvel did try hard, but in a pretty conservative manner (and it's possible that some of those mysterious contractual obligations played a part in that), and the Malibu Universe didn't catch on. Maybe it still wouldn't have worked, but they should have been more aggressive.

And I think that's where DC and Wildstorm are right now. J'onn J'onzz in Stormwatch is the equivalent of Black Knight in Ultraforce--it's not bold enough a move, and it's all in the wrong direction.

Yes, there have been some crossovers...but again, it's mostly the B and C books and characters. Stormwatch/Red Lanterns? That sounds like a "who's most likely to get cancelled next" contest. Some characters have turned up hither and yon, but probably the biggest name who has turned up in a former Wildstorm book is Green Arrow. So why the hell hasn't Batman or Superman guested in one of these titles?

Whereas in "DC" books, aside from various Daemonite references and some Gen 13 riffs in the Superboy/Titans/Ravagers corner, the Wildstorm influence is pretty faint. But if you want us to believe that Wildstorm is actually a part of the actual DC Universe, we need some heroes in the keystone titles. Why no Wildstorm characters in the Justice League, which DC touts as its "cornerstone" title? Aside from a Daemonite villain, there's been no Wildstorm whatsoever in the Superman books, the Batman books, Wonder Woman, Flash...this is most assuredly not how you build up the popularity of your absorbed universe. And why in the name of Rao don't you have Jim Lee drawing some books with these guys in there?!?!?!?

I'm no big fan of the Wildstorm characters, so I've got no horse in this race, not really. But Voodoo has been cancelled, Grifter reportedly is on the edge, no one seems very interested in the post-Cornell Stormwatch, and a new Team 7 consisting of 60% DC heroes focused on fighting DC heroes seems more like trademark preservation than an actual desire to make Wildstorm an integral part of the nu52.

So one year in, I can very much see Wildstorm going the way of Malibu, unless DC ups their game. Come on, DC--if you want us to take the Wildstorm incorporation seriously, act like it!! Enough half-assed sorta kindas...commit to the idea, or it will die!

Saturday, December 17, 2011

Spoiler Saturday--Demon Knights #4 (& The Whole nu52)

If I had a webcam, you'd be able to see that I am dancing the Dance Of Much Joy And Happiness right now.

Cast your mind back to November. Reread this post of mine, wherein I posit that a silly pun is actually the basis for the entire set-up of the post-Flushpoint DCU.

Go read it, it's a short one. I'll wait.

Welcome back. Gosh, I love it when I'm right.

So how do I know that my silly theory was actually correct? Well, check out this weeks Demon Knights #4. Merlin is talking to The Shining Knight in a vision, warning her him about the past and the future:

(There's that mysterious "they" again...)



See, they just thought that Merlin was naming the group the Demon Knights, but nope, he was trying to warn Ystina about the Daemonites.

The mysterious Ms. Monitor told Flash that "they" had split the timeline into three, in order to weaken us for their coming. Merlin was trying to establish Camelot again and again in hopes of stopping this "they." In Stormwatch, also by Paul Cornell, a mysterious being came to cause great devastation on Earth, in order to toughen us up for "their" coming.

And you may recall back in Superman #1, someone blew that mysterious big-ass horn, summoning "them." And ever since then Kal-El has been fighting mysterious alien menaces. And now there's the solicitation for Superman #7 in March:

The start of an insanely epic arc from the new writing team of Keith Giffen and Dan Jurgens! New love interests, new roommates, and a new foe: the wicked Helspont! What does this monster want with Superman, and how does it all connect to the Daemonites?

Straight outta Wildstorm, it's Helspont and the Daemonite menace.

Folks, "Demon Knights" is a pun that proves that Jim Lee is full on importing his Wildstorm villains, the Daemonites, to be the new Big Bad for the nuDCU.

I predict that by the end of the first Justice League arc, Darkseid himself will name drop the Daemonites, probably one again as the mysterious "they." And we'll see more and more references dropped in the other nu52 books to the Daemonites.

And the first big mega crossover for the nu52 will be the Daemonite invasion of Earth. Yup, I'm calling it right now.

And you'd better believe me--I'm on a streak!! After all, I was right about the Teselecta in Doctor Who...

And my dance of happiness?!? If you could see it, it would look a little like this:

Thursday, November 10, 2011

The Pun That Explains The New 52

As per usual, I'm really wrong here.

But say this out loud (quietly, if you're at work):

"Demon Knights"="Daemonites"

Say it again.

Now think about the other book Paul Cornell writes, and where it's crossed over with other books in the nu52. And notice where Grifter made a cameo this week (no, not in his own title, silly). And consider the mysterious "they" who split the timelines, as revealed in Flashpoint, and not in the face's theory of the true identity of Ms. Monitor.

Further: if they're already going to use Darkseid for the first Justice League arc, how do you top that? It's like using Galactus for the first Fantastic Four story...there's nowhere left to go, unless...and he is the artist of JL, so...

Holy crap, I've discovered the Rosetta Stone of the nu52!!!

Then again, maybe it really is just an inadvertent pun...

Saturday, March 21, 2009

Early April Fools??

So, this week at ComicsPRO, Wildstorm announced that the Grant Morrison/Jim Lee run on WildC.A.Ts would be released a graphic novel, which will be solicited "only after it's complete."

They also said that the final issue of Planetary would ship "sometime this year."

Hahahahahaha...oh, wait, they weren't joking?

I'm just a poor corrupt official, but I'd be willing to wager many quatloos against both of those things happening in 2009. Heck, give me good odds and I'd bet that neither would happen.

Some other bloggers out there have wondered about Wildstorm having an identity problem as a brand. Me, I think they've got a perfectly clear identity as the home for unfinished-runs-by-popular-creators-who-are-slower-than-hell-or-else-left-to-do-better-paying-work-for-the-Big-Two (not to mention home for near-infinite-relaunches-of-the-same-five-franchises).

For all the (justified) mockery of the delays for Ultimate Hulk vs.Wolverine, we're now 2 1/2 years since the release of Planetary #26 and Morrison & Lee's WildC.A.T.s vol 4 #1 (although without the same public scorn, for some reason). During which time John Cassaday found plenty of time to draw 10 or so issues of Astonishing X-Men and countless covers, including LOTS of incentive covers for Dynamite and others; and during which time Warren Ellis seems to have a comic coming out every week; and during which time Morrison & Lee have been apparently too busy in high-profile work for DC to actually tell more than 1/6 of their story. Guys, I really love Planetary (WildC.A.T.s not so much)--but it's hard for me to work up any enthusiasm when the creators can't be bothered to finish their story.

That's Wildstorm--it's the comic book version of the Island of Misfit Toys.