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Don't Call It A Comeback |
by Josh Dahl |
In the last edition of “Don't Call It a Comeback” I talked
about how the relationship that today's creators have with
their heritage has resulted in a lot of really good comic
books. And it is a good thing, too, because today's readers
expect really good comic books. Developments in technology
and fan culture have created a fan base that knows what it
wants and knows how to get it.
I tried to break into comics about 10 years ago, and I am
trying it again. I find myself in a very different world
than the one I was in back then. Each week (or so) I write
about comic books, and how comics culture has changed over
the last few years.
Consumer based art forms develop and change very quickly.
They respond to the whims of their target audiences, which
are usually “anyone with money”. While more pure
artists have “influences” like trends and intellectual
movements, the commercial creator has a “mandate” from
publisher with a check book. Since their inception, comics
publishers have chased the dollar through many distinct
creative phases. Creators and fans are lucky to be in a
moment in comics history where the dollar has lead us to
quality. It seems that the mandate from the top is something
like “Good comics sell, DO GOOD COMICS.”
As with Darwinian evolution, these changes never happen like
Deus Ex Machina. They come from within. They happen when
some random risk is taken and people who have the power to
make decisions notice that the risk is paying off. The
mandate to do good comics came from the observation that
good comics were selling well. And good comics were selling
well because fans had raised the standards by which they
judged what a good comic was.
But how? Did everyone just get smarter? In a way, yes.
For reasons that are currently being debated and written
about all throughout academia, American consumers have
gotten smarter. Don't agree? Ok, remember when MacGyver
was the thinking man's
A-Team? They were both hit shows made for a broad
audience. Now compare MacGyver to CSI or any
of the similar shows in the evening line-up. You can argue
that Americans are, and always have been,
instant-gratification, hedonistic, consumers. But, it would
be hard to argue that the standard of that consumption has
not gone up.
Whatever the cause, this shift in standards has rippled
through most aspects of consumer culture. Naturally, it
rippled through comics as well. The effect, however, has
been magnified in comics.
Consumers wanted better comic books, so good comic books
started selling well. The people who watch the numbers took
notice and declared that there should be more good comics.
And yes, that is very reductive simplification of a process
which is constantly in motion. And, I don't really know what
caused it in society as a whole.
So, let's zero in on comics again.
I have made the assertion that we are living in a boom time
for well written and well produced comic books. Some will
argue. Some will say that comics are as good or bad as they
have always been. Others will say the de-compressed story
telling is just a meaningless trend. While others may
contend that de-compression is the worst thing to ever
happen to comics.
They'll say all that, and they'll say a lot more. They'll
say it on the internet, and at their Local Comic Shops, and
at conventions, and anywhere anyone will listen. The point
is, that they are saying it.
Step back and be impressed by that for a moment. For as much
as comics debate is still dominated obsessive minutia, fans
and creators are also debating on a different level. When
they talk about “retcons”, “de-compression”, “bookshelf
format”, and bunches of other terms, what they are actually
discussing is marketing and storytelling theory.
Excuse me, let me rephrase that.
They are discussing Theory. Capitol T. Theory.
Sure, we are all still talking about the dorky stuff, but
now we are publicly discussing all the big ideas that go on
behind the scenes.
See, fans know what is going on, now.
When Iron Fist died the first time around, it never occurred
to me that sales had slumped and that the series was being
canceled. All I knew was that the guy was dead. Now, when
Spider Girl and The Runaways were nearing the chopping
block, fans got it together and saved those books.
These days, readers look at sales figures and year-end
reports. They know who owns the rights to what characters.
They know who is under an exclusive contract to what
company, and why.
Fans have gotten a peak behind the curtains of the craft and
the business of comics, and the comics have risen to meet
their new expectations. A magic trick alone is good enough
until you figure out how it is done, then that magician
better be a heck of a showman.
Oh, I meant to talk a little bit more about technology's
role in all of this. So here it is. All of these ideas were
always out there. Somewhere, someone was thinking about this
stuff. It was the web, though, that got all of these ideas
together. It was the web that put these concepts on public
display long enough that their relevance started to sink in.
Sure, there is unprecedented gossip mongering and bickering,
but there is also a great dissemination of ideas.
Having a clearer idea of what has been going into their
comics, creatively and financially, has allowed comics
consumers to expect more. Sales reflected these expectations
and comics, in general, have improved as a result.
Visit Josh Dahl at his website
www.monolithllc.com
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