Monday, November 10, 2008

parade of sub-stellar objects

Oh, how I miss those comics anthology series of yesteryear.

When I first started collecting comics, many moons ago, no trip to the flea market quarter bins (which is where the bulk of my childhood collection came from) was complete without an issue or three of Marvel Premiere, Marvel Spotlight, Marvel Presents, or any of the reprint-heavy "100 Page Giant" books DC put out in the early 1970's. This was before peer and industry pressure imprinted themselves on my tastes, and the criteria for selecting which comics to buy was based entirely on my own childhood whims. Thus my formative comics-reading years featured a parade of of d-list (or lower) characters...and as the twig is bent, the tree is inclined.

That the stories were utter crap for the most part didn't matter as much as the gnostic aspect of being the kid who eschewed Superman (boring) or Batman (tired) in favor of an optimistically-branded "sensational new character find of 197x" or a back-bencher given some solo face time. There's something magical about that mix of youthful enthusiasm and gullibility, where you're eight years old and totally jazzed about owning the first appearance of 3-D Man or The Torpedo. While there's always a chance that such affections can calcify into an unfortunate state of fan-entitlement and delusions of "ownership," that sincere fascination with the excitingly stupid and absurd is fandom's unpolluted state of grace.

It's not about collectability, speculation, or gratifying the yearnings for vicarious bad-assery -- it's about enjoying entertaining nonsense for its own glorious sake.

Comics publishing has changed since then, and despite calls from the usual armchair quarterbacks, the anthology format is a non-starter in the current evironment. Readership has contracted across the board, and publishers have retreated to the security of proven franchises. The days when straight-ticket Marvel or DC buyers could float a solo appearance by Woodgod or Monark Starstalker are unquestionably over...if it was even feasible to begin with. I didn't realize it back then, but the quarter bins I dug through in the early 1980's were filled with the previous decade's unsold stock.

The growing shift toward trades as long-term revenue generators has effective killed the incentive to publish one-off slush pile stories featuring obscure characters. If a franchise is deemed strong enough to merit publication, prevailing wisdom demands going with either a prestige format one-shot or a limited or ongoing series better suited for publishing in collected format.

While it saddens me that scattershot risk-taking wide-tapestry approach of thirty years ago has gone the way of the dodo, it is difficult enough these days to sustain sales on proven properties. Quality titles outside the major franchise boundaries (Manhunter, Blue Beetle, etc.) are lucky if they clear the two-year hurdle before their cancellation is inevitably announced.

Sure the next generation of pre-adolescent quarter bin divers won't have the joy of discovering the 21st Century's answer to Woodgod, but then again, what kid reads superhero comics these days?

The Innsmen - Things Are Different Now (from a 1967 single; collected on Green Crystal Ties Vol. 8, 1998) - Here's another fine piece of midwestern garage rock, this time from a Michigan outfit unafraid of letting the bassline call the plays.

11 comments:

. said...

nice tune

Bill S. said...

Do they still have quarter bins?

When I was a kid, I loved the quarter (and dime, and nickle, and, if I was feeling rich, 50 cent) bins. So much great stuff (and, oddly, a lot of E-Man comics). Now they try to charge you a dollar for a comic with the cover ripped off.

AC'63 said...

good read ... think Kamandi .. and I have that Jack of Hearts issue.

bitterandrew said...

Everyone should have that Jack of Hearts issue.

Quarter/fifty cent/dollar bins are still around, though crammed to bursting with terrible 90's comics that make Son of Satan and Woodgod look like high art.

Mondo said...

That's me of to the loft - I'm sure I've got J of H, and several other one-off types. They were like the one hit wonders of comics and I loved them. I know for def' I've got 1 - 10 of The Human Fly, and mid-seventies early run (well the two issues) of DC's Black Orchid - must have only been about 8 when I bought BO, I can't believe it appealed at that age.

Justin said...

I kind of want to go back in time and assume the form of Marv Wolfman or somebody, scrap Giant Size X-Men #1, and stick Wolverine in Marvel Spotlight to see what happens.

I think another reason you don't see try-out series like these today is nobody's creating new superheroes anymore. Derivatives of existing characters like X-23 or any of Geoff Johns' thousands of legacy characters, yeah, but nobody's doing superheroes from scratch in the Marvel or DC universes.

In addition to the current superhero-comics market rejecting the outright new, I think there's still the sense of creators afraid that they'll give the next big thing away as work-for-hire. I guess Runaways is the exception.

bitterandrew said...

Yeah, as much as Jim Shooter's recollections can be trusted, he linked the 70's explosion of new characters to the introduction of creator royalties (before there were venues for self-owned work).

Granted the chance of there ever being a Torpedo lunchbox was remote as hell, but if you were already getting paid for the script/art, it's a hazardless wager.

bitterandrew said...

PM: Were you aware of this post?

http://armagideontime.blogspot.com/2007/06/whos-that-girl.html

TheMadBlonde said...

Now I'm TOTALLY curious about the WoodGod & Jack of Hearts books. May I put in a request that they be serialised here someday, please??

TheMadBlonde said...

A NEW ADVENTURE FEATURING THE MAN-BEAST *WOODGOD*, his evil arch-nemesis WoodTick, & his creepy sister WoodSorrell.

can you tell I can't get past this one?

Mondo said...

Thanks for the tip off - just missed that one (my pre-blogging days) - the graphic would make a great T shirt, and you're right the all new 90's update lost the essence of the 73 model who was almost the Kate Bush/Stevie Nicks of super heroines