Edward
Bartender
- Messages
- 25,074
- Location
- London, UK
I must mention this thread to Rufus, though he's mostly too busy these days drawing comic books to talk about 'em online...
I at one time much preferred Marvel, though in my experience (I suppose later on, into the 90s) DC was much darker. Never cared for Superman much - too fluffy, as some have said, no inner conflict.... the X Men were my favourites for that reason. Well, moreso Logan out on his own. Always preferred him that way than in the X uniform. About 1990, I think, I collected a Punisher series that was printed for the UK market. Good stuff - all bar the first issue, which I missed, are probably still in my parents' place. At one time when I was about 15, I had every Judge Dredd title available on the market on hold in our local newsagents. Still love Dredd. What really killed buying comics for me, though, is how damned expensive they got. 2000AD, last I looked, was a couple of quid a week for something I'd read in half an hour.... I prefer now to go with graphic novels. The Judge Dredd Casebook series is excellent, collating all Dredd from the very beginning missing out only the Burger Wars story uring the Cursed Earth epic, that due to legal reasons (McDonalds and Burger King both sued for TM infringement over a story based on an outlaw town dominated by rival gangs led by Donald McRonald [sic] and The Burger King). I'm also a big fan of Robert Kirkman's The Walking Dead series. These are set in a post-Zombie apocalypse world, the basic concept being 'what happens after the credits roll in a Romero film?'. The stories centre on the living individuals, how they relate to each other in such a changed world - the zombies are almost incidental in that sense; several times it is put that it is the survivors, shorn of their comfortable, consumerist existence, who are truly the walking dead.
Watchmen is, of course, fabulous - though I'm enough of a heretic to prefer the ending in the film, which replaces the squid with Dr Manhattan. Oh... and on the theme of Moore, The Killing joke is outstanding, truly the way I picture the Joker.
I at one time much preferred Marvel, though in my experience (I suppose later on, into the 90s) DC was much darker. Never cared for Superman much - too fluffy, as some have said, no inner conflict.... the X Men were my favourites for that reason. Well, moreso Logan out on his own. Always preferred him that way than in the X uniform. About 1990, I think, I collected a Punisher series that was printed for the UK market. Good stuff - all bar the first issue, which I missed, are probably still in my parents' place. At one time when I was about 15, I had every Judge Dredd title available on the market on hold in our local newsagents. Still love Dredd. What really killed buying comics for me, though, is how damned expensive they got. 2000AD, last I looked, was a couple of quid a week for something I'd read in half an hour.... I prefer now to go with graphic novels. The Judge Dredd Casebook series is excellent, collating all Dredd from the very beginning missing out only the Burger Wars story uring the Cursed Earth epic, that due to legal reasons (McDonalds and Burger King both sued for TM infringement over a story based on an outlaw town dominated by rival gangs led by Donald McRonald [sic] and The Burger King). I'm also a big fan of Robert Kirkman's The Walking Dead series. These are set in a post-Zombie apocalypse world, the basic concept being 'what happens after the credits roll in a Romero film?'. The stories centre on the living individuals, how they relate to each other in such a changed world - the zombies are almost incidental in that sense; several times it is put that it is the survivors, shorn of their comfortable, consumerist existence, who are truly the walking dead.
Watchmen is, of course, fabulous - though I'm enough of a heretic to prefer the ending in the film, which replaces the squid with Dr Manhattan. Oh... and on the theme of Moore, The Killing joke is outstanding, truly the way I picture the Joker.