Decade in Review
Posted: Tue Jan 19, 2010 9:13 am
I didn't see a thread on this show, but I've been up since 4am...
Very cool episode. You guys always come up with topics that get me thinking. Don't know how you do it.
Anyway, here are a few comic things that I think have been significant in the past ten years:
1. Print on demand has helped a lot of indie comic creators self-publish. Don't need to Xerox your ballpoint pen masterpiece anymore (unless you want to.) If you pick up any of Danielle Corsetto's collected volumes, they look completely professional.
2. Computerized coloring has made some books look better than ever. Makes traditional coloring with a limited palette seem like Flintstone technology. The downside is that there is often less detail in the inked original art, if it is inked at all. There is also some bad, over-the-top coloring, but overall, I am a big fan.
3. Though not directly comic book related, CGI has helped a lot of superhero movies get made with effects that would have been previously impossible.
4. I love virtually everything that comes out of WB Animation Studios for cable TV and direct-to-video. Forget trades and digital comics. Give me 22 half-hour episodes of full animation every year for less than the cost of twelve $3.99 floppies anytime.
5. Two Morrows Publishing puts out various titles that are absolute love letters to comic book history. I can revisit the 70s and 80s with creator interviews, original art and behind-the-scenes stories with a level of nostalgia that just might surpass my original childhood memories.
6. Video games are also not directly comic book related, but titles like Ultimate Alliance and Arkham Asylum let you play your favorite characters like never before. Many games have a decent storyline to boot!
7. Zombies! From Walking Dead to Marvel Zombies to Blackest Night, most of it has been a really good read. Too many covers though...
8. I got out of comics in the 90s and came back 10 years later, so mostly I'm glad comics aren't crap anymore. Even if there are still 90s-worthy gimmicks out there, you can be blissfully ignorant of them while reading some of the best comics ever. I'm no scholar on the medium, and today's comics can't have historical significance yet, but I do believe that every week there is probably a comic or two that is as good as any comic ever published.
Very cool episode. You guys always come up with topics that get me thinking. Don't know how you do it.
Anyway, here are a few comic things that I think have been significant in the past ten years:
1. Print on demand has helped a lot of indie comic creators self-publish. Don't need to Xerox your ballpoint pen masterpiece anymore (unless you want to.) If you pick up any of Danielle Corsetto's collected volumes, they look completely professional.
2. Computerized coloring has made some books look better than ever. Makes traditional coloring with a limited palette seem like Flintstone technology. The downside is that there is often less detail in the inked original art, if it is inked at all. There is also some bad, over-the-top coloring, but overall, I am a big fan.
3. Though not directly comic book related, CGI has helped a lot of superhero movies get made with effects that would have been previously impossible.
4. I love virtually everything that comes out of WB Animation Studios for cable TV and direct-to-video. Forget trades and digital comics. Give me 22 half-hour episodes of full animation every year for less than the cost of twelve $3.99 floppies anytime.
5. Two Morrows Publishing puts out various titles that are absolute love letters to comic book history. I can revisit the 70s and 80s with creator interviews, original art and behind-the-scenes stories with a level of nostalgia that just might surpass my original childhood memories.
6. Video games are also not directly comic book related, but titles like Ultimate Alliance and Arkham Asylum let you play your favorite characters like never before. Many games have a decent storyline to boot!
7. Zombies! From Walking Dead to Marvel Zombies to Blackest Night, most of it has been a really good read. Too many covers though...
8. I got out of comics in the 90s and came back 10 years later, so mostly I'm glad comics aren't crap anymore. Even if there are still 90s-worthy gimmicks out there, you can be blissfully ignorant of them while reading some of the best comics ever. I'm no scholar on the medium, and today's comics can't have historical significance yet, but I do believe that every week there is probably a comic or two that is as good as any comic ever published.