adgy-san
PJ Harvey is God
Superior Foes Of Spider-Man is really ****ing funny. It's going to end soon, though.

Good read, thanks for posting the link. I think the author is right on the money, personally, but for me... for the most part, it doesn't bother me. It's pretty rare that I buy a comic based solely on the artist attached to the book. A good artist is very important and can have a serious impact on the book, but I'm going to buy whatever Greg Rucka's name is on regardless of who's drawing it. I think a lot of people feel the same. A good writer can make a book worthwhile even if the art is subpar, but a great artist can only improve a poorly written book so much, you know?
How many books these days have an above-the-title credit like that? It used to be more of a prestige thing, but has it just become a general marketing trend?
I don't have as clear a perspective on it, due to previously stated reasons. Maybe it is just my age, but I think neither artists nor writers really got significant above-the-title credit until the late '70s or early '80s, in general. Were there exceptions? Will Eisner, perhaps? Of course, that's coincidentally the same time when I personally started to recognize the artists and writers I enjoyed. After that, I went back to see which artists and writers I had loved in the past without paying attention to credit. Anyway, I digress.
I don't think that being a comic book artist, in general, has ever been the most fair or lucrative, with the early days of Image being the notable exception. Although the article does go further into depth, I think the headline, at least, is a little off. It's not as much about the diminishing role of artists, because that, for obvious reasons, cannot be diminished; it's about the diminishing treatment of artists, which, if true, is unfortunate.
Last month, I saw 2011's All-Star Superman on cable. I thought it had problems, but some things in it were incredibly brilliant, enough that I ended up loving it. I didn't realize until the end credits that it was based on a limited series from the mid-aughts by Grant Morrison and Frank Quitely. I bought the collected version in order to compare.
Last month, I saw 2011's All-Star Superman on cable. I thought it had problems, but some things in it were incredibly brilliant, enough that I ended up loving it. I didn't realize until the end credits that it was based on a limited series from the mid-aughts by Grant Morrison and Frank Quitely. I bought the collected version in order to compare.
GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY Movie Images Feature Benicio Del Toro as The Collector and Karen Gillan as Nebula | Collider
14 Things We Learned From The Guardians Of The Galaxy Trailer
What have we learned???? Well let me sum it up for you. That this is just straight up gonna be a lot of fun. And that James Gunn(who, unfairly, is fighting claims of sell-out from his twitter fans) has finally given me back what I have wanted all along...a comic book movie...that LOOKS LIKE A ****ING COMIC BOOK.
Still a lot to see here basically with no real showing of Lee Pace's Ronan, Rooker's Yondu, the Nova corps in action(you see Reilly/Serifinowicz...but C'MON!!! We wanna see the helmets!!!!) and...GLENN CLOSE! I am glad they basically made this a longform version of the footage they showed at SDCC 2013. That was a little tighter and they used Hooked on a Feeling to better effect, but thats minor quibbling. So...those of you who were pessimistic, 'a tree? A violent gun-toting raccoon????', how ya feeling about this now?