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The main reason I scanned this panel was to get it large enough for me to make sure they were actually shaking hands.

§ January 11th, 2011 § Filed under batman, the thing § 2 Comments

So I received for Christmas the slipcased oversized-hardcover edition of JLA/Avengers by Kurt Busiek and George Perez, giving me a change to revisit this fun intercompany crossover series and enjoy the crazily-overstuffed pages of art. And while there are lots of momentous events in the story that get the most attention, like Superman wielding Thor’s hammer, or the Avengers fighting Starro…I think one of my favorite moments is this brief meeting between Batman and the ever-lovin’, blue-eyed Thing:


Batman’s “uh…okay, sure” look makes it for me.

To see this panel in context, Bully the Little Stuffed Bull has the full page, presented as part of his 2009 365 Days with Ben Grimm series.

Ruinalista.

§ January 10th, 2011 § Filed under sir-links-a-lot § 16 Comments

You know, if I were releasing a boatload of Avengers comics to the stands every month:


…I don’t know that I’d obscure the subtitle of one of them, keeping customers from quickly identifying which Avengers title it happens to be. But, hey, what do I know, I just sell the things. It’s not like I’ve had to point it out to people specifically looking for it or anything.

In other news:

Because attaching it to your zipper would be totally unprofessional.

§ January 9th, 2011 § Filed under advertising, ufo mags § 8 Comments

yet another thing from that UFO magazine Employee Aaron gave me

Sluggo Saturday #88.

§ January 8th, 2011 § Filed under sluggo saturday § 5 Comments

THE SLUGGO

IS A HEAVY METAL INSTRUMENT

from Nancy and Sluggo #181 (Mar-Apr 1961)

Okay, this is the last predictions post for a while, I promise.

§ January 7th, 2011 § Filed under predictions § 14 Comments

Okay, I know this is probably going over like a lead balloon, but here’s part three of my commentary on your predictions anyway. (And here’s part one and part two.)

  • Bret tells us

    “There will be a public apology for the commercial failure of Scott Pilgrim vs the World. Whether it will be the public writing a letter to Edgar Wright, or Edgar Wright and Micheal Cera releasing one of those hostage videos at gunpoint apologizing to Universal for under-performing is unclear at this time.”

    I finally got around to seeing Scott Pilgrim, and it wasn’t a bad movie. It was cute and fun and got me to try reading the comic again…and it still didn’t grab me. Sorry folks.

    But I don’t know that anyone really needs to do any apologizing to anybody, really. Wright made a decent film, and it never found an audience outside of a small cult following. Not the first time it’s happened, and, of course, not the last. Just one of those things.

  • Al Ewing relates

    “Quick predictions – Steel is NOT going to die, but John Stewart is. There’ll be a funeral issue where the other Green Lanterns agree that he was the most soldierly, like a true soldier, and his past as an architect – wimp of the professions – will be erased once and for all. Probably he’ll be back as a Red Lantern within the year, blowing away some dudes with a sniper rifle.”

    “Wimp of the professions” makes me laugh, I have to admit. I’d be surprised if they “killed” John Stewart, if only because he’s the most prominent GL thanks to the Justice League cartoons (at least until the live action movie comes out), but I can totally see this as a possible sales-boosting outline for the Red Lantern comic.

  • demoncat calls forth

    “Marvel will have Mickey and co visit their universe. 2 Marvel will give the x-men a break with cross overs. right after they have jean grey come back from the dead as dark phoenix one more time and wreck havoc. marvel will finaly bring scarlet witch back in the avengers fold sane. dc not only will kick marvels butt sales wise digitaly but will have Oracle back walking around . the death of barbara a fake out to restore her walking. dc will also have swamp thing return in his own title and Mattel will give him his own dc classic wave. wave 25”

    What demoncat doesn’t tell you is that this all happens on the same day. Aiiieeee!

    But…I do wonder if there’ll be some kind of comic book crossover between the Marvel and Disney properties. (I mean, aside from the recent variant covers “Tronning-up” Marvel super heroes.) After all, if DC could have its Superman & Bugs Bunny mini-series, why not Iron Man & Uncle Scrooge McDuck? Depending of course on whether or not Disney sees Marvel as a storytelling arena and not just an exploitable-trademark farm.

    I keep thinking, sooner or later, Barbara will be out of that wheelchair. And I’m always good with more Swamp Thing toys.

  • Decker knocks us out with

    “Joaquin Phoenix will be hired to write a high-profile book, while ten genre-breaking, critically-acclaimed books will be canceled.”

    I’m sensing some cynicism re: slumming celebrities writin’ funnybooks in this year’s predictions lists. Not that I blame anyone. And like I said yesterday, people hardly seem to care anymore about celeb-comics.

  • Subzero coldly predicts

    “All the people who claimed none of the CrossGen books were any good after the company went bankrupt will be bitching that they aren´t as good now that Marvel does them. They will still buy them.”

    Oh, sure, almost certainly. I am wondering when the first Marvel crossover will involve the Crossgen properties, too.

  • Bully the Little Stuffed Bull toots his horns with

    “A comic book starring a water-skiing, flame-thrower wielding cat will becomes a surprise cult hit.”

    THE FLAMEFOILING FELINE, coming this summer from the Action Age of Comics!

    “At least one comic book will be published on lunch meat. At least one.”

    Haven’t they done a thing with printing images on lunch meat for kids? Maybe you’ve got something here.

    “One major DC or Marvel superhero character will be changed into a woman. Not replaced by a female version. Changed into a woman.”

    Clearly X-23 was just Marvel testing the waters for Wolverine’s next big “event.”

    “The Captain America or Thor movie will provide an easter egg which suggests a Marvel heroic character not even hinted at previously in movies or casting news will be in ‘The Avengers.’ And that character will be Rocket Raccoon.”

    That would make The Avengers potentially watchable, yes. Though I shudder to think what the hints would be. “Thor, look — by the river! Someone’s been washing and eating fish there! Who could it have been?”

  • Mikey Wayne sez

    “In the next big cosmic event for DC, the Spectre will be taken down first.”

    Well, I guess it’s sorta like the old Star Trek series, where the transporter would go out, and Kirk and the gang couldn’t just beam out of their problems. Taking the Spectre out of the picture certainly prevents an easy fix to whatever’s going on. I am sort of curious what spurred on this prediction, though. Care to elaborate?

  • Jeff R. reveals

    “Secret Six won’t last through more than half of 2011. However, we’ll get a new Suicide Squad monthly immediately after the cancellation.”

    Secret Six’s sales have been solid enough, so this would kind of surprise me. But I totally expect another Suicide Squad series at some point.

    “Hellblazer will get its final regular writer in 2011, starting a 15-20 issue arc that leads into the final issue, #300 in ’12.”

    Wow, we are awfully close to #300, aren’t we? Hellblazer sales aren’t the strongest they’ve ever been, but it’s still Vertigo’s longest running and most-flagship-y of their series, so I imagine there’d be some resistance to retiring it.

    “Miracleman will be republished, and, in the case of book 2, completely redrawn from Moore’s original scripts. Marvel and Gaiman will try to get Rick Veitch to do that art job, but probably won’t manage to talk him into it.”

    I do hope it gets republished, since that’s what everyone is waiting for…and not reprints of the ’50s Marvelman. I’d hate to see Chuck Austen’s work redrawn, though (I’m assuming that’s the work you’re referring to)…it had a clean, quirky style that I really liked. Though I am always up for more Rick Veitch, regardless.

  • MaxGRobinson declares

    “The last of DC’s Red Circle titles comes to an end. (unless that’s happened already?)”

    I think Mighty Crusaders appears to be the end of it, far as I remember. Ah, well.

    New Aquaman on-going spins out of Brightest Day. “

    DC keeps trying to make him work, so, yeah, I can see this happening. Which means we’ll never see a continuity-lite, kid-friendly version of the character ever again, which is a shame. “…In the comics,” I should add, because the Brave and the Bold cartoon version of Aquaman is awesome.

  • Andrew Leal says…well, let me sum it up with “comics may come back to department stores are impulse buys,” citing their reappearances in Toys ‘R’ Us, and suggesting Target might next be an ideal place for this to happen. I certainly hope so…kids do love comics, but they have to be able to find them, first. I hope this prediction comes true.

    “Another long-running serial soap strip which most folks were only vaguely aware existed will die within the year (after Annie and Brenda Starr, my own money is on Judge Parker or Rex Morgan”

    Man, after Annie bit the dust, it seems like no one is safe, doesn’t it? Look out, Walt Wallet!

  • Joe Schwind sez

    “Collisions between aging comic book artists and economic reality continue.”

    Sadly, this is almost certainly true. So folks, don’t forget The Hero Initiative, a charity for supporting comic creators in times of financial and medical distress.

  • Ray reveals

    “The Tin-tin movie will not be a commercial hit. The Tin-tin movie videogame, however, will be great.”

    There’s a Tintin movie? (That probably answers the first prediction.)

  • Mister Bile coughs up

    “[J. Michael Straczynski] is hired to ‘redefine’ yet another main comics character.”

    Well, that Earth One book wasn’t really all that good, but it sure sold well, and he wrote for television, you know, so I’m sure every company would be delighted to have him jump in and write, I don’t know, the Serious And Redefined for the Aughts Red Bee Comic Book.

    “Hawkman is rebooted.”

    Maybe he’ll get a new series out of Brightest Day, too. But good gravy, no more rebooting. I can barely make sense out of Hawkman as it is.

    “The next Spider-Man game will disappoint.”

    Does any superhero video game not disappoint? Every game gets people complaining about it.

  • MichaelfromJamaicaNY foresees

    “I predict this Halloween will be extra freaky deaky, what with all the Thor family, and the grown women dressed as the 14 year old from True Grit, and the latex clad Trons, and the Black Swans, and the Tron Swans.
    Freaky. Deaky.”

    This will be on your head, MichaelfromJamaicaNY. YOUR HEAD.

  • Steven E McDonald believes

    “Marvel finally caves in to the falling sales and ongoing hate and retcons the Spider-Marriage retcon, eliminating Carlie Cooper and fomenting the creation of the Carlie Cadre who boycott the revised book and spew venom at Marvel over this destruction of their Mary Sue.”

    I suspect that the re-retconning will happen sooner or later, which will, as you say, tick off somebody, because changing anything about a character at any time usually does.

    “We’ll see more original graphic novels, often set up like European albums. While DC will lead this trend in the Big Two, smaller publishers will expand upon the offerings they already have, with the result that Top Shelf will improve market share very nicely.”

    This sort of thing seems to happen a wee bit at a time…DC’s Earth One initiative is heading in this direction, but we have yet to see how a second in the series will do. But success with the smaller publishers will depend on how willing retailers will be, in this economy, to order original graphic novels that don’t feature familiar and marketable characters, which is about as shallow an insight as I can manage and still be considered sentient, I realize, but it’s likely true nonetheless. I mean, if a book is good and it catches on, it will sell, but it’s the “catching on” part that’s the real trick, and becoming increasingly difficult as the market consolidates.

    “Squirrel Girl will be the next big push. Not only will she get her own ongoing title and team membership in the Avengers, but a team-up book, and, in an attempt to broaden the market, a MAX romance book in which we’re treated to the erotic adventures of Squirrel Girl — just wait until you see what she can do with that tail!”

    You are a very bad person for even suggesting this. And yet, there’ll be a market for it.

    “During a DC panel at Comic-Con, during a convoluted explanation of his multiverse series, Grant Morrison begins to glow with an unearthly light, following this by ascending. Not dying. He simply becomes a Cosmic Consciousness on the spot. As can be imagined, this seriously complicates matters on a number of fronts.”

    The day is coming. Oh, yes.

    Speaking of which, the Internettings seems to have discovered this old post of mine with the Morrison promo poster again. Getting a lot of inbound links to this lately.

  • Darius dares

    “All periodical comic books will cease publishing in 2011!”

    Well, that’s a dramatic prediction, at any rate! Hopefully that’s not one of those ironic predictions where, yes, monthly comics will end, but so will everything else, because a giant meteor will collide with the Earth, killing us all.

  • londonKdS wraps up this batch of predictions with

    “Prediction I’ve been privately making for several years now: there will be a major controversy over some female Marvel/DC creator being caught doing erotic fanfic/fanart as a private commission or under a secret fan identity. Sexist fanboys will leap on this as what they wrongly think is a demonstration of the hypocrisy of feminist fangirls who attack oversexualisation in official canon, while the publisher involved will initially take harsh action against the person until people critique their hypocrisy given the tolerance of well-known male creators quietly doing erotic commissioned art of corporate-owned characters.”

  • I’m not sure what to say about that, except “erotic” commissions from superhero comic book artists are never not hilarious. But I can probably see the potential of a controversy of this sort breaking out, though ideally a publisher, if it takes a stand on this issue, should be even-handed about its policy regardless of the gender of the artist in question. (If a controversy does occur re: erotic commissioned art, it’ll be panicked dudes who are okay with drawings of Wonder Woman and Black Canary making out, but will freak if it’s Aquaman and the Flash making out.) (I am totally not Googling any of this, by the way.)

Okay, and that’s enough of that. Thanks for your patience, Ruinites, as I went through all these. And if I didn’t mention your prediction specifically, it’s because I hate you and everything you stand for. Especially you, Andres!

I notice that some of the repeated predictions generally involve DC’s $2.99 price point, and the whole digital download comics distribution thing, which tells me these are foremost on folks’ minds, so these will be the topics to watch over the coming year. Well, more the digital platform, where I expect a number of changes and refinements, whereas the $2.99 is more a matter of “how long can DC hold out without cutting more pages for finally just jumping back up to $3.99.”

Anyway, come back in a year and we’ll see how folks did. And if you feel like it, come back before then, because I might have some other posts on the site in the interim. And I promise, no more prediction posts ’til next year!

More unwanted and certainly unnecessary commentary on your predictions, Part Two.

§ January 6th, 2011 § Filed under predictions § 4 Comments

And then, suddenly: more predictions! (Part one of my commentary here). Again, not commenting on every single one, but I will return to them in a year to see how folks did!

  • De declares

    “The summer superhero movies will perform well enough but not fantastically, causing studios to mine more past properties in hopes of making a quick buck (get ready for the Strawberry Shortcake movie in 2012!).”

    I think there’s probably some movement in that direct already, attempting to exploit the less-“name” properties to generate some real-world income outside the Superman/Spider-Man/Batman perennials. There’s talk of that TV show based on Teen Titans’ Raven, there may someday be an Ant Man movie, and so on. But too many second stringer comic book films like Punisher War Zone, The Spirit and Jonah Hex crashing and burning in the box office may be bit of a discouragement.

    “Marvel and DC will stop producing direct-to-video films as the public grows tired of the superhero genre.”

    Well, there will always be kids, and kids like superheroes (at least in animated form) so I think these may stick around for a while. There can be an oversaturation point, but I don’ t know that we’ve reached it yet. DC’s direct-to-DVD releases are about one every…four to six months, something like that. If they were monthly, that’d be a bit much.

    “The recently announced Carl Barks collections by Fantagraphics will receive public attention on the Today Show via Al Roker and become selections in Oprah’s Book Club. The widespread exposure of clever humor and commentary by 50-year old Donald Duck comics create a nationwide movement of crazy alternative-energy initiatives and treasure hunting.”

    De, I like the way you think. If more people read Donald Duck comics, the world would be a better place indeed.

  • Googum gums

    “Green Lantern may have a harder climb for that: imagine a mythical ‘new reader’ bounding out of the GL movie and into, say, Blackest Night. No.”

    Yeah, that is a good point. None of the current Green Lantern titles are exactly inviting to the non-initiated, are they? I’ve already begun planning orders on the Green Lantern Showcase and Chronicles reprint volumes for anyone expressing interest in early GL material, though I hope I don’t have to explain the whole “Pieface” thing to anyone. The two Sinestro War volumes might be a good sampling of recent material.

  • Matt remarks

    “My predictions for 2011, The Green Lantern movie will be critically panned, but commercially successful.”

    Yeah, probably. It looks cool, but will surely be your standard by-the-numbers, cliché-ahoy superhero flick.

    “The Superman books will reintroduce elements from the new krypton storylines.”

    Oh Lordy I hope not. After, what, two years of that hoohar? I’d be happy if they just reintroduced Superman to the Superman books. (Not a slam on the Luthor/Jimmy Action, which is a hoot.)

  • Frowny frowns

    “At some point Grant Morrison will be done with Batman and then there will be incredibly ham handed attempts to return the character to the status quo in time for the new film.”

  • I think eventually that’s gonna happen, like I’ve noted at the end of this post, but Batman is kind of a special case. Batman’s one of those characters that doesn’t necessarily need to adhere to any particular interpretation, and in fact seems to invite reinterpretation…and, almost uniquely, this facet of the character is understood and accepted by most people encountering the character. I get the “this doesn’t look like Superman” or “what’s with Spider-Man’s costume” stuff all the time, but different versions of Batman seem to be taken in stride. (Though a very small percentage of people didn’t appreciate All Star Batman‘s genius, but we can safely ignore them.) Even the Batman and Robin “Dick is Batman, and there’s a different Robin” thing was pretty easily grasped by most people newly exposed to that title.

    “For some stupid reason, Steve Rogers will be back in the Captain America costume in time for the new film.”

    That’ll probably happen, if only because Marvel seems to be a little more self-conscious about that sort of thing.

  • Wayne states

    “I honestly believe that each Earth-One GN will be terrible.”

    You’re right so far!

  • Sanctum Sanctorum conjures

    “Marvel will go back to the MARVEL ZOMBIES pool one more time, this time utilizing Disney’s animatronic special effects wizardry for a live-action amusement park thrill ride (because ‘teh kidz’ just love rotting corpse versions of their favorite heroes).”

    I could totally see a remade Pirates of the Caribbean ride long these lines. Would probably traumatize every kid that went through it, though. (Or maybe delight every kid and traumatize every parent, more likely.)

    Seriously, I do expect a return to the Marvel Zombies thing in the comics at some point…maybe a full-on “Marvel Universe Vs. The Marvel Zombies” event, which seems like the only way for this oddball franchise to go at this point.

    “Mike Sterling will email me to tell me how much I owe him for the variant editions he obtained for me.”

    Nah, that Mike Sterling guy is a jerk. He’ll never do this.

  • philip speaks up with

    “We’ll see the end of ‘events’ for a while and a return to good, long-form storytelling (okay, that’s really a “hope” more than a prediction and though it is unlikely, please just let me have this).”

    That would be nice, but don’t hold your breath.

    “There will be just enough new work from Los Bros Hernandez to make me wish there was more new work from them.”

    This is always true of every year.

    “DC will still not know what to do with Wonder Woman.”

    Sadly, also true of almost every year.

  • Ben peeks into my dreams with

    “DC will guerrilla market a one-shot via leaked uncolored pages, wherein Swamp Thing returns to the main DCU, but he is wearing tights and is traveling across America with his perky goth girlfriend Death. The comics intarwebs will collapse upon itself in an orgasm of hate.”

    If only this would happen. If only.

  • Dan Wars enters the battle with

    “By the end of 2011, the original Fantastic Four will be reunited. Duh!”

    And it will feel so good. But yeah, that’s pretty inevitable, I think. “Thanks for buying us for billions of dollars, Disney…don’t mind if we ‘permanently’ alter one of our properties, do you?”

  • Greg Merritt merits a response with

    “Gin Genie will make her long-awaited return to the Marvel Universe.”

    I honestly had to look that up, because my brain immediately went to David Bowie’s “The Jean Genie,” and I couldn’t get that out of my head. But, yeah, any character whose Wiki entry reads “there was some indication that alcohol helped or increased her powers” probably needs to come back.

  • Mr. A leaves no gray area by predicting

    “Without Dirk Deppey’s daily links roundup, traffic to TCJ.com will crash by at least 90%.”

    Well, I certainly hope not, as there’s still some quality material there, and the Fantagraphics blog is a fine place to start. But I think the internet will certainly miss Dirk Deppey’s fine linkblogging, if it hasn’t already.

  • Gordon unleashes

    “Smaller, more independent press comics focusing on non-superhero fare will begin to become more prevalent and receive more press, since superhero comics will be seen more as ‘movies-in-the-making.'”

    That would be nice, but unfortunately, with the number of comics-friendly press outlets shrinking, and the competition for attention increasing, the press may focus on the big, loud and splashy versus the subtle and challenging. You know, unlike before.

    “The trend towards “graphic novels” made specifically to be turned into other media (30 Days of Night, anyone?) will increase, with a plethora of celebrity-driven “vanity projects” arising (one example – Ron Jeremy’s CAPTAIN HEDGEHOG)”

    First, that is the most horrible example you could have possibly made. Second…yeah, that’s a given, especially in this economy, where a nice fat TV or movie studio check would be quite welcome. And…I’m trying to think of some current celebrity comics, but am drawing a bit of a blank. …Is Turf by Jonathan Ross still happening? I don’t even remember. But I’m sure there will always be some marketplace presence of comic books with licensed celebrity names attached to them, even if, as of late, it doesn’t really seem to help sales that much. Oh, wait, I just remembered…one of those guys from Heroes had a comic book, too. Is that still going? I should probably check.

    “The repeated use of ironic quotation marks, ‘…,’ ‘anyone”’and ‘meh’ will gradually fade, as more articulate comics/pop culture aficionados emerge online, thereby causing nerd critical sites (and Mike Sterling’s Empire 4.0 tumbler thingie) to disappear.”

    That would be Estate 4.1, thank you, and alas, “meh” is a blight that will never fade.

    “Next franchise for DC to exploit: Joel Schumaker’s SWAMP THING. (Sorry, Mike)”

    Would still totally see it.

    “Dan DiDio and Brian Bendis will both wrestle a bear at a convention…and lose.”

    Better get my bear costume drycleaned.

    “Finally, Mike Sterling will still be seen as the greatest comics blogger in the multiverse.”

    Well, naturally.

And on that point, I’d better stop for the day. Yes, that means there will be a third part to this. I’m very sorry.

Lookin’ at your predictions, part one of about a thousand.

§ January 5th, 2011 § Filed under predictions § 6 Comments

Okay, I’m going to start a little earlier on your predictions than I planned, only because there’s a whole lot of them, and I don’t know what my schedule is going to be like for the rest of the week. As it is, even though I don’t plan on discussing every prediction, I’m still probably breaking this into two parts. Besides, the real fun will be going back to these predictions a year later and seeing who was right!

I realized I was going to come up with some predictions of my own, and…well, boy, I’m having a hard time coming up with some. I think DC will hold the $2.99 price through the year, because not doing so would certainly look bad for them, wouldn’t it?

Sales will continue to suffer on redundant books (i.e. the thirteen or so Thor mini-series, for example) but no one will learn any lessons from this.

Someone will put out a complete edition of William Overgard’s Rudy. (Hey, let a boy dream.)

A new Swamp Thing series will be announced by the end of the year, firmly planted (heh) in the DC Universe. And it will turn out to be awesome.

The rerelease of Grant Morrison and Frank Quitely’s Flex Mentallo in a new collected edition will be met with confusion and fear from the usual suspects.

And I think Wizard will end its print edition and move solely online…if it continues to exist at all. Unless the decision is made to relaunch with a New! Number! One! amongst much ballyhoo and a new, expanded price guide (which is the primary reason anyone asks for Wizard anymore, anyway).

Okay, on to your predictions:

  • Mike (no relation) says

    “not a prediction- but I would love a year where a powerful character or entity isn’t easily bamboozled and ‘taken over’– skrulls, black lanterns, chaos and other things become tiresome!”

    Well, that is a standard storytelling trope for superhero funnybooks…it is a little played out, but we’ll see if folks can resist bringing it back!

  • The Sniffer sniffs

    “Joe Quesada will end his reign as Editor in Chief at Marvel. He will be given another job within the Disney Company, higher up. He will be replaced by a Disney insider, not currently someone working for Marvel.”

    Actually, you were part right already…Quesada is out as E-I-C, but remains as “Chief Creative Officer,” which, technically, is still within Disney, if more a lateral transition than a promotion. His replacement is from within Marvel, however. So, mostly a hit, I think!

  • Pal Kurt proclaims

    “Marvel and DC will be forced to merge, due to low sales, creating a new company called Marcy. The best-selling book will be their team up book, Brave & The Two-in-One.”

    Actually, I wonder, with the change in E-I-Cs, if we will see a new intercompany crossover between the Big Two. It’s been a while…but with the current focus on movies and exploiting the properties and corporate identities outside of the comics world, blurring the lines with crossovers may be put on the backburner.

  • Rich Handley hands in

    “Swamp Thing will return, but in the mainstream universe. His story will become far less cerebral as he regularly interacts with folks in Spandex.”

    Oh, sir, perhaps less cerebral, but as I said about, more awesome. Frankly, I’m pretty Vertigo-ed out on the Vertigo Comics Swamp Thing comics…I can use a Swamp Thing/Doc Savage team up about now.

  • Hey ho, TomO sez

    “DC will lose patience waiting for everyone to flock to their titles now that they are all $2.99, and we’ll see a line-wide increase to $3.99 announced by October 2011.”

    Like I said, I think DC will hold out at least through the year…but I totally expect a line-wide increase to $3.99 sooner rather than later, and it will certainly be because sales won’t increase enough to justify holding the lower price point.

    “Pogs come back in a big way!”

    This is the worst thing you could have possibly said.

    Seriously, though…we’re edging ever closer to that 20 year nostalgia cycle. Will there be Pog nostalgia?

    God I hope not.

  • Steve has some interesting predictions here:

    “At least one independent publisher will go completely day-and-date with digital releases.”

    “Marvel and DC won’t go fully day-and-date, but one of them will try it with an *ongoing* series (priced the same as the print version).”

    I’ve not really much to say about the whole digital thing, since, obviously, my bias is toward selling print editions and I haven’t paid much attention to the whole digital hoohar. But the above predictions seem reasonable to me.

    “The Thor and Captain America movies will make a ton of money, but not quite as much as was hoped for, leading some to question whether the superhero movie is dead and whether Marvel’s strategy in that arena is sound, even though they make a ton of money.”

    I suspect there is a danger of oversaturation, but I don’t know that we’ll see a real decline until after the Avengers movie, which will either do well on the novelty value of teaming all these characters together, or be outright rejected as being too much to take in one film. We’ll see.

    “Fear Itself will make a relative ton of money, but not quite as much as hoped for, leading some to question whether the event comic is dead and whether Marvel’s strategy in that arena is sound, even though it makes a relative ton of money.”

    At least at our shop, the constant onslaught of crossovers and events from Marvel is result in dismal sales for the tie-ins. While the central series might do okay (like Shadowland and Chaos War), the tie-ins wither on the vine. I expect Fear Itself to go the same way.

    “DC will launch another new ongoing Superman book.”

    Ooh. That’s a possibility, though I think Action will go back to running Superman stories, which would relieve the need for another books for Supes. And with the end of the “Grounded” storyline (hopefully) in sight, we’ll have plain ol’ Superman stories in Superman soon, too.

    “Dynamite and BOOM! move to the ‘front’ of the Previews catalog.”

    Surprised they haven’t yet, though Boom! feels a more likely suspect than Dynamite, for some reason.

  • aj submits

    “Grant Morrison will be revealed for the acid tripping megalomaniac he truly is.”

    I believe you mean “the acid tripping genius.”

    “JLA will be cancelled, lacking editorial directives that can make a cohesive book.”

    Justice League is one of those flagship books that will exist in one form or another, regardless. Though, I could see the book being relaunched and centered on Superman, Batman, and Wonder Woman yet again.

    “Walking Dead will have season two, and rabid fans will boycott it.”

    Seems like this was already happening, as there seemed to be pretty vocal criticism of every episode past the first one. (Though I thought the series has been fine, so far…just about as good as I expected a series based on a comic book called The Walking Dead to be.)

  • Thwacko make a critical hit with

    “One of the second or third tier publishers will go out of business or be bought out by a bigger publisher.”

    The first part…sure, they go out of business all the time. And I expect even more of a contraction of publishers in the marketplace in the near future. But as for buying out…not sure if anyone has the money for that kind of thing right now. Maybe some creator owned titles might swap publishers, sure.

    “The return of licensed character titles to the big two.”

    Well, DC has Doc Savage and Spirit, which probably isn’t what you mean. I’m trying to think of other available cartoon and movie properties…but it seems like Dark Horse, Boom! and other indies have got the licenses pretty well tied up. Marvel has quite a few licensed properties right now…like Anita Blake and all the sci-fi and novel adaptations. DC might be more interested in focusing on Warner Bros. properties, and Marvel may have an influx of Disney properties to deal with…I’m sure we’ll see soon enough.

  • Thelonius Nick jazzes things up with

    “The Cap and Green Lantern movies will do well at the box office without translating into any significant sales bump for their respective comic franchises. Thor’s Asgardian setting won’t translate well to the big screen and will be critically shunned and poorly attended.”

    Well, the sales bump thing almost goes without saying…as usual, if there’s a bump at all, it’ll be before the film comes out. I think Thor might actually do very well, to be honest…the trailers certainly look exciting, and the general public usually seems okay with giving superhero movies (if not comics) a chance.

    “Marvel will continue to dick around with Dr. Strange in the pages of the Avengers and fail for yet another year to give him his own ongoing title. Pissed off Strangefans will hex Marvel by the powers of the Vishanti and the company will end the year in flames, literally.”

    Don’t mess with Dr. Strange fans, that’s for sure. But Doc is one of those characters that seems to be waiting for just the right interpretation to keep a book going for more than a few months or so. Maybe he’ll get a book eventually…but probably not this year, is my guess.

  • Buzz buzzes

    “Sudden & dramatic collapse of brick & mortar stores, both mainstream & speciality shops (such as comic book shops). Existing stores that survive will do so by either offering services to readers (such as B&N allowing one to browse through any e-book they offer while in their store, thus encouraging people to buy a Nook & regularly visit the B&N coffee shop; or in the case of comic book/pop culture stores to offer gaming, etc.).”

    Well, as I said, I have a bias, so I certainly hope not. Though it does seem like small businesses of all kinds are taking it in the shorts right now, as the economy struggles for stability. I’d like to think that there will always be room for print comics, and I’m guessing we’re still a bit away from digital platforms totally replacing physical formats, but as old guys like me, who like reading from paper, die off, and are replaced by kids with internet jacks plunged directly into their eyes, it’s possible bookstores and comic book stores will go the way of record stores: small, dusty places in the bad part of town, frequented by creepy old guys. Which describes some comic book stores now, I realize.

  • Ian @TRO orders

    “More Omnibi. “

    Well, sure. Digital hasn’t killed the four color star yet, so folks are always interested in big fat collections of old comics.

    “More Vertigo characters in DCU.”

    For a while there it seemed like the only Vertigo character that wasn’t allowed in the DCU was Swamp Thing. Well, okay, and John Constantine, too. I don’t know who’s left to make the transition…but I’d pay one American dollar for a Preacher/JLA team-up.

    “Hopfully more than one Milestone character gets an ongoing (IE, in addition to Xombi mini)”

    If Xombi does well, sure. I’d like to see Icon come back.

  • “Marvel will have some events.”

    Oh, sure, what are the chances of that?


      Okay, that’s enough for today. Be back tomorrow for more prediction shenanigans.

On the other hand, the Gladstone albums came with those cool trading cards.

§ January 4th, 2011 § Filed under sir-links-a-lot § 6 Comments

Still looking for your 2011 comic book predictions, so please feel free to add them in the comments on that post…even if they are just gag predictions, you jokers. I’ll probably discuss some of the predictions in a couple of days, and maybe lay down a few of my own.

In other news:

  • Well, here comes the fourth ongoing Green Lantern series, only it’s all about the Red Lanterns, which seems awfully unnecessary, except 1) it’s written by Peter Milligan, so, you know, it’ll probably be good, and 2) Dex-Starr, the Red Lantern cat is in it, and who can resist a cute little homicidal kitty? Stronger folks than me, that’s who.

    This still leaves us with about two too many Green Lantern-related comics, but DC’s still riding that huge bump of interest in the franchise after the sales success of Blackest Night, and sales on the GL books are still very strong. Plus, Marvel’s not the only company that’ll saturate the shelves with books tying into a forthcoming movie…just that DC doesn’t get to do it too often.

  • In other DC news, letter columns are coming back, so losing those two pages of story and art in DC’s books in order to keep the price point (temporarily) at $2.99 will be countered by content provided by you, the reader.

    I used to really like reading letters columns, probably for the same reason I enjoy fanzines…exposure to what other fans are thinking about the same books I’m reading (and of course trying to glean hints about What’s to Come from the editorial responses). Nowadays, for those of us who regularly endure online fandom, there’s no shortage of this sort of thing available to those who want it, even if it’s without the editorial filter that would weed out the…less socially-adapted, shall we say. I admit I’d sort of stopped reading the letter pages in recent years, before DC dropped them entirely. Not sure I’m looking forward to their return, but…hmm, I wonder if I wrote in, they’d let me plug my site? Always look for the silver lining!

    (Johanna has additional commentary.)

  • So Bully, The Little Bull What Is Stuffed, was pulling your leg (with his little stuffed hooves wrapped around your ankle, tugging furiously) with his 365 Days with The Guy Freaking Out on The Cover of Action Comics #1, but he’s not pulling your leg with 365 Days with the Warriors Three! Spend the year the way our forefathers intended…with Fandral, Hogun and Volstagg!
  • Big news from Fantagraphics, as they’re publishing the complete Disney Ducks work of Carl Barks in full color hardcover volumes. This really is some of the best storytelling comics has to offer, and if you don’t have any of this stuff already, you need to check it out.

    Now, I already spent 10+ years (and, ahem, more money than I care to think about) buying the Gladstone color Carl Barks Library softcover albums, which, as I seem to recall, covered nearly all of Barks’ Disney output. There was apparently a story or two that were left out…I don’t recall the specifics, but I seem to remember at least one Daisy Duck story not making it into the series, and probably more that that…but they are long out of print, and the binding on these wasn’t the best in the world, so the Fantagraphics project is quite welcome. There are some comics that should never be unavailable, and the work of Carl Barks is at the top of that list.

“…For that is where you and I are going to spend the rest of our lives.”

§ January 3rd, 2011 § Filed under predictions § 56 Comments


Haven’t done this for a couple of years, and my pal Cable up there ain’t gonna let you go ’til you have something to say in the comments section. And what I’m looking for is…your predictions for 2011! No, no, not Coast to Coast AM-style “psychic” predictions, like “I expect a major storm to hit the U.S.” or “there will be unrest in the Mideast.” I mean, predictions about the comics industry, about publishing trends, about what may happen to your favorite characters, about the retail market, about fandom, etc., so on, and so forth.

Just leave ’em in the comments, but first read these rules that I cut ‘n’ pasted from the last time I did this, and that I’m asking you to please respect:

1. Don’t read the other predictions before entering your own! I’m curious to see how many people come up with similar ideas…that might tell us something about common perceptions of the industry.

2. Don’t criticize other people’s predictions There’ll be a chance to discuss the likelihood, or lack thereof, of some predictions in my forthcoming post analyzing the contributions. I would prefer not to have any arguments break out in my comments section.

3. Don’t predict anyone’s death. I mean, honestly. (ADDENDUM: I mean, the death of real people. Comic characters are fair game. Like B.C.‘s Cute Chick. She’s totally a goner.)

So, please, if you are so inclined, give it a shot. What do you see happening in the funnybook world over the next twelve months? Feel free to leave your predictions, as we are all interested in the future….

image from X-Men Adventures #8 (June 1993) by Ralph Macchio, Chris Batista & Mark McKenna

No time to post…too busy reporting UFO sightings.

§ January 2nd, 2011 § Filed under advertising, ufo mags § 6 Comments

from the back cover of that UFO magazine Employee Aaron gave me

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