Post(s) tagged with "Marvel"

The Amazing Spider-Man Official Trailer = Holy shit… This one is going blow the old ones out of the water. I’m calling it now.

Art you not entertained?

“Art is moral passion married to entertainment. Moral passion without entertainment is propaganda, and entertainment without moral passion is television.”~Rita Mae Brown
 
During an interesting debate with fellow bloggers, it came to my attention that deep analysis of popular culture and the entertainment through various mediums (comics, film, music etc.) it churns out isn’t needed. The idea was, these things are meant to be just entertainment, not art. I thought the various mediums were pumping out art, not just entertainment. “Its just a comic.” “Its just a game.” Can anything be quantified as “just” anything? In my stubbornness, I wanted to shout out that art and entertainment were separate things, and to illuminate their differences and to show how they could be reconciled so we could do real criticism about what mediums produce.
 
Then the article morphed when I came upon my own realization.
 
I realized I had created a false distinction. Seperating art and entertainment is not sufficient. Its a false division. Regardless if low to high brow, objective and subjective. Entertainment wants to inform, even at a subconcious level, while art wishes to entertain, even if its just the artist themself. The truth, if we can attempt to discuss such an abstract thing, is that we are to be responsible for what we put out in our mediums. We ought to be willing to look at every aspect, inspect it, and critique (find merits and faults) it without fear.

 
“Too often we… enjoy the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of thought.” - JOHN F. KENNEDY
 
As a society, it has been ingrained the idea of pass or fail, making money or losing money, to determine success. An idea that is anathema to experimentation. But from the low brow and banal to most experimental and high brow , the subject must be critiqued. Not to disparage the artist or the medium, but to elevate it, to improve it and to show how it has or will impact us. Whether its a toy that has dangerous characterizations, to a game to a comic to a novel to a film. We must criticize, for if we do not, we are irresonsible. Entertainment seeps into our culture, we consume it and digest it and process its contents through our own perceptions. We must be wary of what we are consuming.
 
If a person eats a doughnut, they are aware of the implications, yet can also enjoy it. Same with eating fruits and vegetables. The difference is unlike art, food has a tangible influence and rating. We want to know what our food is made of and how it has or will impact us. We see its effects on our health, and to remain ignorant is to become unhealthy, another thing we can see. To be ignorant of the art we consume, means to be ignorant of its effects on society and ourselves, something that we cannot easily see or understand.
 
Our responsibility; as educators, reviewers, commentators, bloggers and as human beings is to do this. This is, again, not to weaken or take the fun out of our entertainment but to strengthen it, to enlighten, to simply be aware. For without that, we are sitting at the doughnut shop becoming diabetic, becoming overweight, becoming sick, and dying. Because no one told us that we could eat something else, or ought to. We just consumed, and never questioned.
 
“I cannot teach anybody anything, I can only make them think.”- Socrates, Greek philosopher (469-399 BCE)
 
Resources:
 
A list of places you can go that are rampant with critical thinking of various mediums.
 
Son of Baldwin
DC Women Kicking Ass & SDCC Batgirl (Kyrax2)
Nerdy Bird & The Mary Sue
Too Busy Thinking About Comics & Sequart
Film Critic Hulk & Asking The Wrong Questions
Ars Marginal & Penny Arcade: Extra Credits

 

Just some of the sites I go to. Places I don’t always agree with, but they do help me think. For anyone out there reading, add in your own links to places that help you think. Enjoy, and I hope you enjoyed this article. I will be back to talk about individual stuff next time, but I wanted you all to know where I was coming from. Let everyone know what you think, here, tumblr, twitter, facebook or wherever you can find us :)
 
Images Courtesy of: Creativity Unleashed; Gladiator. Dir. Ridley Scott. Perf. Russel Crowe. Dreamworks Pictures/ Universal Pictures. 2000.; ProBlogger; Taught to Think; Homer Simpson Wikipedia ; Jodi Truscott Blog

The Fall of the Comic Book Epic Event

Remember when comics were entertaining?  You didn’t need to have 3 or 4 fancy crossovers every stinking year just to increase sales because there was a creative team who created interesting stories.  There was no need to have someone on this team accidentally kill someone on that team, or have an explosion from another universe bring all the heroes together to fight one cause.  Not on a regular basis, anyway.  Though originally started to help sell toys (Secret Wars) or celebrate anniversaries (Crisis on Infinite Earths); “Epic Events” and “Crises” were things that people got excited about because they only occurred once in a while, say once every few years These days the big two comic companies (Marvel and DC) have gotten into the habit of having these ginormous events AT LEAST once a year, and Marvel is worse than DC.





In recent years, Marvel has just thrown money at some of their big name writers and said, “Sure, you can make a shitty epic event title, but just make sure it’s got as many characters in it as possible so we can make as many tie-ins as we can.”  The lack of relevant stories has been multiplied because of this.  When Captain America died a few years ago it was big…no, it was huge!  But it was a good story.  The X-titles’ House of M was both done well and has had an impact that is still felt today throughout the Marvel U.  The superhero Civil War wasn’t even that bad, just a little too drawn out for most peoples’ tastes.  But Chaos WarSiege (don’t even get me started)?  Even The Thanos Imperative, which I enjoyed, seemed to not really do anything other than kill off a couple cool characters which could have been done without a huge event.  It didn’t carry any epic story that brought a significant change, it just kind of happened and the status quo resumed, unlike the Annihilation War from a few years ago that had a HUGE impact.


Now DC has been better, but far from not having a piece of the blame pie.  DC’s Crisis events just tend to have a more extensive impact on all characters throughout the DCU. The recent epic events like Green Lantern’s Blackest Night which killed off some characters while bringing back others, has had a significant impact.  The return of Aquaman and Hawkman was big enough, but the return of Max Lord gave a profound impact on several different ongoing series’.  Not to mention all the awesome merchandise that has come out of the woodwork as a result.  So, you see?  There can be profound epic events!  It is possible!  But the millions of tie-in issues were not necessary.


Now all these events may be a little more acceptable if they weren’t so…freaking…long.  Secret Invasion went for 8 issues PLUS all of the tie-ins when it could easily have been finished in 4 or 5 issues. I know Bendis is wordy, and a lot of the time it’s worth reading that wordiness, but for 4 whole issues that don’t move the story along and don’t really need to be there? You’re killing me!


A friend brought up a good point to me the other day about the “Dark Reign” era, which though it wasn’t an “event” still had a similar impact in the Marvel U. at the time.  It was a long and drawn out era that, if you look at the Marvel U. now, hasn’t had an impact impact other than bringing back and subsequently killing The Sentry.  We’re back to where we were at the start, as if “Dark Reign” had never happened.  So what was the point!?  Oh, that’s right…the comic industry needs to make money. Batman, the JLA, Captain America, and the X-Men can’t make money by themselves, even if they have exceptional creators who consistently, arc by arc, move the story along and progress the characters.   No, no.  We don’t need good storytelling in comics anymore, we just need someone to make a big stinky pile of poop with every character in it so we can appeal to everyone and make the most money.


This is my plea to both Marvel and DC writers, editors, and senior staff: please bring back the epic event the way it was meant to be, something to look forward to.  I don’t want to cringe every time I hear that there is a new event like Fear Itself or Flashpoint, especially when it seems the publishers don’t even have enough faith in it themselves that they push it in the fans faces hoping people will cave in (hint, hint Marvel).  All we ask is that it’s dialed back a few notches.  We don’t want to always be running at 11, turn the nob down to 6 or 7 so when you crank it back up people get excited and are happy to throw down their hard earned cash to read it instead of regretting the purchase and loathing the day the epic event was first created.

Infoz


Members

Connect