Comics
Today
I
just put down the latest issue of Warren Ellis' Planetary
comic, a series that both dissects comics (and sci-fi,
and pulp stories from the '40s, and more) and yet tells
a really interesting story. It comes out, unfortunately,
very infrequently. I realized as I finished it, that
reading this comic is like watching a really good movie,
five minutes at a time, every few months.
It's
not an inherent comic book problem. Years ago (okay,
decades ago), writers put entire stories in a single
issue. Sometimes, more than one entire story. With the
success of great writers like Ellis, Brian Michael Bendis,
and now Joss Whedon (of Buffy and Firefly)
in recent comics, though, the entire method of comic
book storytelling has changed. Now it's common to see
a scene where one character says something in one panel,
and then another showing another character's reaction,
a third with the second character's retort and then
another with a reaction shot of the first character.
In a 36-page comic (and that's with 12 pages
of ads) like that, not a whole lot happens before you
reach the last page.
In
comics, it used to be that, panel after panel would
be fight scene after fight scene. Each punch or ray
blast was carefully shown, perhaps to remind the reader
of the amazing powers the characters had. If there was
too much "story," a fight scene was thrown
in for good measure -- the archetype of this was Spider-Man
running into a mugging on his way home from work and
beating up the bad guy(s).
Most
comics aren't like that anymore at all. Story has taken
precedence over fights, and dialogue has become more
important than character powers. The details of most
fights are glossed over. We know that Superman is tough,
and so we're not shown every move he makes. We see the
X-Men crashing through the window to get at the terrorists
in one panel, and the terrorists have all been dealt
with by the next. And I'm not complaining.* But it's
an interesting switch. Gone are the days of villains
attempting to rob banks. Nowadays, the villains are
super-soldiers created through the government's genetic
engineering, trying to steal a sample of a retrovirus
from a megacorporation that seeks to frame the heroes
by... well, let's just say that it's all a lot more
complicated.
But
with such involved stories, many plot twists, complex
characters with realistic relationships, and involved
conversations with witty dialogue, not much happens
in a given issue. The stories take forever to tell.
Is
this a criticism of these writers' work? Not really.
I wouldn't change their writing at all. What I would
change is this: Comics, as a medium, needs to evolve.
The books need to get longer. Maybe the 36-page comic
needs to go away entirely. It had its place when these
books cost 25 cents (or far less), but most are in the
neighborhood of three bucks now. Back before they got
so expensive, you could put them on a newsstand and
passersby might casually buy an issue the way they'd
buy a newspaper. And they'd get a complete story, or
at least an enjoyable chunk of one. But I've got to
think that that happens far more rarely now. Now you
really need to be involved in a comic to buy each issue,
and you've got to buy five to six of them to get a whole
story.
It
would be a more satisfying purchase for me, the consumer,
to buy ten issues all in one book for $15 to $20. (Being
in publishing myself, I know that one comic 10 times
as long does not need to be 10 times the price to be
profitable.) Then I'd get a whole story at once. They
publish such collections, of course -- and I often buy
them rather than individual issues. I wonder whether
the natural evolution isn't toward publishing only the
collections. That way, the writers aren't confined to
writing the story in 36-page spurts but could just let
it all flow naturally within 360 pages.
Just
a thought.
*Although
I can think of some really great older comics that showed
every move of a super-hero battle. The Fantastic Four
and Silver Surfer versus Tyros the Tamer and Dr. Doom
in John Byrne's fantastic run on the Fantastic Four
comic comes to mind. So does the confrontation between
the X-Men and the Hellfire club in Central Park back
when Chris Claremont wrote the book. And Walt Simonson's
run on Thor was filled with such fights. These
were all the comics I cut my teeth on in the early 1980s,
when I really became a fan.
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