Ch-Ch-Changes

digresssmlOriginally published April 21, 2000, in Comics Buyer’s Guide #1379

“Things were better the way they used to be.”

“Why can’t they leave well enough alone?”

“Why do they have to change everything?”

I’ve been reading that a lot lately in relation to comics… and in relation to me and my humble endeavors. I’ve read it everywhere from message boards to internet columns.

It’s not something that I can deny, of course. My run on Hulk was marked by repeated changes to the character, driving some fans to distraction as they proclaimed that my version of the Hulk was not true to the original character. The response to that, of course, is… what original character would that be? The one who spoke in short but grammatically correct sentences and changed at night? The one who was basically a mute puppet of Rick Jones? The thuggish bruiser who changed because Bruce Banner voluntarily stepped in front of a gamma machine? All versions which occurred in the first six issues alone.

My endeavors on Aquaman were received with vituperation by no less an authority than acclaimed (and rightly so) director Kevin Smith (whose own career has been utterly unmarked by controversy.) The fact that the series was actually being read was, to many, almost beside the point.

As for Supergirl, it would have been easy to transform the series into a virtual clone of the other “S” titles. Very easy. And then I could have spent a few months watching fans complain that she’s not Kara, and why should they buy a book that’s a virtual clone of the core Superman titles when the Superman titles are right there? After which the book would likely be canceled. I knew I couldn’t count on the Superman audience to support it, so I opted to give the series an entirely different tone and style and developed the entire Earthborn angel mythology. I hoped that by developing a separate audience while picking up at least some of the Superman readers, I might help the title survive.

After all, these days that’s the name of the game. It’s not just about creative decisions or entertainment. It’s about pulling in enough readers just to keep yourself, and the title, above water. That’s the job I’m being hired to do. And recently fans of Supergirl celebrated what they felt was a milestone as the current series rolled past the total number of all previous series starring Supergirl combined. Like the song goes, “I’m Still Here.”

Much of the protest is raised by something that publishers never used to take into consideration: Long time fans. Once upon a time, the conventional wisdom was that there was a complete turnaround in readership every four years or so. The notion that there would be readers who would even remember, much less care about, stories that happened ten, twenty, thirty years ago simply didn’t factor in to creative decisions that were made. Naturally I wasn’t privy to those decisions, but I think it’s a fairly safe assumption, considering the way that histories would be blithely reinterpreted (how many totally different races did Mars have, anyway?)

The thing is, what I hear a lot is the “sandbox” theory. The “caretaker” theory is another. That as writers of work-for-hire characters, we are playing with someone else’s toys, so to speak. That we are merely the “caretakers” of these characters and are obligated to treat them, not like people whose lives change, but rather like blister packed action figures whose adventures must ultimately leave them perfect, untouched… mint.

The obvious answer is that, by dint of the fact that the stories appear at all, we’re in violation of neither. After all, the companies own the characters. The editors, the powers that be, are approving publication of the story. Legally, they are the ones whose toys these are. So when I replace Aquaman’s hand with a harpoon, when I transform Supergirl into an Earthborn angel, when Bruce Banner’s personalities are merged into one wise-cracking-but-tormented individual… it’s “okay” because the owners of the properties have approved it.

The problem is that the fans feel they have a proprietary interest. They like the characters just so. And when the characters aren’t that way, why, the person making those changes must be disrespectful. Aquaman used to be a cheerful, short-haired, pleasant guy who chatted with fish and had no problem with the mantle of kingship. Supergirl was a pleasant, naïve cousin of Superman (Superman in a skirt, as some would uncharitably say). Sure, they had been unable to sustain their own titles in those guises, but so what? Why couldn’t Aquaman be just like he was before… so he could be safely cancelled? Why couldn’t Supergirl be Kara Zor-El once again… so she could be ignored and tossed on the dustheap once more?

Fans say it’s disrespectful of the character… but is that really what it’s about? I mean, the fans have to know on some level that this is just fiction, the works just comic books.

Is it disrespectful to the original creators? I don’t think so. Creators understand that change is what stories are all about. Indeed, if a character is adaptable enough to still have something to say to new generations of readers, albeit in different form, that’s a compliment to the character’s versatility, not a slam at the original concept. My God, look at the original incarnation of Batman: A solo and grim vigilante, armed, shooting at criminals, showing not one iota of pity at the death of his enemies. Contrast that to the Batman of barely a decade or so later, sworn off guns, accompanied by Robin and undergoing adventures so far out that they bordered on the hallucinogenic. And are we to feel that the entire Silver Age can fairly be summarized as a massive dissing of the Golden Age as new characters bore the names of old ones?

Face it, guys… it ain’t about the characters, nor is it about the original creators. It’s about you, the fans. More specifically, the fan ego. Because you like the characters the way they are. So if they change, fans feel (I believe) that it’s an insult directed at them and at their taste.

I’ve never been a big fan of retcons precisely because of that, because there’s an implied message that there was something wrong with those stories and, by extension, if you liked them, there’s something wrong with you, too. I’ve tried to avoid doing that myself. I didn’t contradict stories that went on with Aquaman, Supergirl and Hulk before I started on the title (well, not intentionally, at any rate.) I tried to build on what had gone before and go off in a different direction. But for some fans, even that is a transgression, an abomination. The characters “worked” as they were. Why not keep them that way?

Well… because if they are kept that way, they’ll probably cease working. What fans say they want is a very different thing from what they actually want. What you guys actually want is to have your imagination engaged. I know because, hey, I used to be on that side of the fence. When I was reading comics as a fan, I remember the astonishment when Green Arrow changed literally overnight from a pleasant Batman-clone with a sidekick and trick arrows into a bearded, angry activist. Oddly enough, I didn’t know enough to feel outrage (as would surely have been the reaction nowadays.) The entirety of my reaction was, “Cool. This is different. What happens next?”

Change is nothing new to comics. Change is part of comics. Grim Batman becomes Goofy Batman turns into New Look Batman. Kryptonite-Vulnerable-But-Otherwise-Invincible Superman becomes Kryptonite-Gone-But-Less-Powerful Superman. Green Arrow becomes Mean Arrow. Those who are self-appointed defenders of comic book tradition might want to acknowledge that in making changes to characters, modern creators are in fact upholding a genuine tradition of change, rather than adhering to a fan-created mandate of frozen-in-amber status quo. A status quo that evolves, not from any realistic look at the history of comics, but rather an ego-centric view that says, “I like what I like when I like it, and anything that varies from what I like is disrespectful of me.”

Except nothing can be further from the truth. If creators really had no respect for the fans… we’d just give you same-old same-old and figure you won’t care. Coming up with something different is a lot more work than recycling what’s gone before. Fans are entitled to better than rehash.

Come to think of it… when the new version of Green Arrow showed up… if he’d lost his hand and had it replaced with a bow, that’d have been even better…

(Peter David, writer of stuff can be written to at Second Age, Inc., PO Box 239, Bayport, NY 11705.)

 

13 comments on “Ch-Ch-Changes

  1. Grodd, I can only imagine the avalanche of poutrage (not a typo) if Liberal Ollie were just being introduced today.

    Fifteen years on the Internet have convinced me that you’re on the mark; it’s ego and entitlement. About the time this piece was published, I was having an argument with a guy about the Iron Man comic. His thesis was basically that anything that wasn’t Michelinie and Layton was an insult to the readership and the worst thing in the world. It was an important lesson in the fact that some people just can’t be talked to.

  2. As far as change in comics goes these days, as far is Marvel is concerned anyway (I haven’t followed any New 52 series other than the now-cancelled Sword of Sorcery, so I can’t judge there)….

    I think that there is an inordinate amount of change caused solely by new status quos established by the seemingly-endless cycle of line-wide “events”. I’ve seen many favorite books cancelled over the last few years for no apparent better reason than those books did not fit the new status quo post-[insert event here]; either the series “mission statement” did not work in the post-event climate, or enough characters were being pulled out of the book for a relaunch/new #1 spinning out of the event that the series couldn’t really go on anyway.

    I will say, though, that PAD in particular is very skilled in rolling with the “punches” of those changing climates and keeping a series going without the changes feeling abrupt or ruining the flow of the ongoing story, at least from a reader’s perspective. I would take far less issue with the revolving door of events and their corresponding changes if Marvel took more of that outlook in the post-event shuffle; less relaunches and new books, and more organic changes to the existing books that incorporates the new status quo while maintaining a narrative flow, rather than an abrupt reset.

  3. I like change when it has a purpose and advances the story and the character in a properly thought out way. I like change when it has a goal and even more so when that goal is to make the character a more heroic character or make the character’s core essence that much stronger.

    But too much of the change I see anymore, in my rare trips into modern comic books these days, is change just for the sake of change. I swear, it almost comes across like writers and editors have backed themselves into a corner and suddenly declare that “change” is the answer without actually mapping out the change or having any real idea of where they want to go with it other than to go “someplace new” or someplace different” with the character.

    Change is great when there’s an idea behind it. Too many times though, the changes I was starting to see in comics were ones where the entire idea was to change and the direction afterwards was more or less a roll of the dice.

  4. I think the main reason comics are so susceptible to this is that they last so long. TV shows can get the same problem. It’s even on a pretty consistent schedule.

    The first season people feel like they’re being introduced to the characters and they’ll accept almost anything as long as it is entertaining. Shows from Heroes to Angel have killed characters in the first season (even popular characters) with minimum blowback because people aren’t too attached yet. Viewers will even rave about how great it is because “anything can happen.”

    The second season, viewers seem more likely to get upset if characters die or a bunch of new characters are added. The viewers are a little more set in their ways, but they’re still willing to accept new wrinkles with the original characters. You can reveal that someone had a brother that hadn’t been mentioned yet, viewers will accept that.

    By the sixth season, viewers feel like they “know” the characters and get very resistant to new ideas. Sometimes it feels like if the characters do anything surprising, it feels out of character, but if they do what you expect, then it is predictable.

    For example, The Simpsons. Many, many people start to hate The Simpsons after about six seasons. It doesn’t matter when they started watching, whichever season was their sixth is when it all turned to crap. From then on, they’ll belligerently tell anyone who will listen that the first seasons they watched were the golden age and the show isn’t as good as it used to be. I used to say that, until I realized that the people who were agreeing with me started watching six years after I did. They thought that the seasons I hated were the best years ever.

    It’s hard to continue paying attention to something that never changes. It’s also hard to accept changes in something you thought was fine before. At this point, I’ve read so many origin stories for Superman that I just can’t get interested in the New 52 from DC. I’m aware of this and I’m not bashing them for doing it. Another reboot might have been the best thing for the company. I just don’t have any enthusiasm for reading DC at the moment.

  5. I like change when it feels like a natural progression of the character or their circumstances. When Superman and Lois Lane married, I felt it was about time, and it didn’t make me one iota less interested in Superman’s adventures. Same with Spider-Man and his marriage. By the time I got to Fantastic Four, Reed and Sue were already married and had a son. The changes in style for Green Arrow were also adequately explained and made sense to me, so I was okay with it.

    98% of what is currently happening at DC is not natural progression of their characters. It’s an attitude of “let’s dispense with all that continuity, and by extension the older readers, and just start the characters over again, changing things just for the sake of making changes.”

    I approve whole-heartedly of taking the characters in new directions as PAD has tried to do…so long as one doesn’t ignore what came before and incorporates that into the new direction. I disagree vehemently with re-launches like DC’s New 52.

  6. Change was one of the things I enjoyed in the comics back when I still read them.

    Sometimes it was annoying when they’d make big changes with no explanations, but at the same time, it kept things fresh. And if a particular round of change I didn’t like, I knew that in a few months there’d be another round of changes and a good chance something I’d like in the new setting/character/etc.

  7. What an interesting coincidence that this article goes up, right after people get mad about the cast of the new Fantastic Four movie.

    1. Before, actually–this posted on the 17th, and the FF casting was just announced today.

    2. Can you blame them, though, really?

      I mean, just look at the guy they cast as Ben! No way he can bulk up enough to carry off that role!

      1. What bugged me is that my first (and really only) glimpse of the cast is the set of four headshots at Newsarama and, with the exception of Sue, I couldn’t tell you who is supposed to play which character.

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