Modern Age of Comic Books
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The Modern Age of Comic Books is an informal name for the period in the history of mainstream American comic books generally considered to last from the mid-1980s until present day. In this period, comic book characters generally became darker and more psychologically complex, creators became more well-known and active in changing the industry, independent comics flourished, and larger publishing houses became more commercialized.
Alternate names for this period include the Dark Age of Comic Books, due to the popularity and artistic influence of grim titles, such as Batman: The Dark Knight Returns and Watchmen; and the Diamond Age of Comic Books, which was suggested by Scott McCloud, because of the new diversity found in the medium.
Although commonly considered part of the Modern Age, the period between the early 1970s and early 1980 is sometimes referred to as the Bronze Age of Comic Books.
[edit] Important developments
Because the time period encompassing the Modern Age is not well defined, and in some cases disputed by both fans and most professionals, a comprehensive history is open to debate. Many influences from the Bronze Age would overlap with the infancy of the Modern Age. The work of creators such as John Byrne (Alpha Flight, Fantastic Four), Chris Claremont (Iron Fist, Uncanny X-Men), and Frank Miller (Daredevil) would reach fruition in the Bronze Age but their impact was still felt in the Modern Age. The Uncanny X-Men is the most definitive example of this impact as Bronze Age characters such as Wolverine and Sabretooth would have a huge influence on the Marvel Universe in the 1980’s and beyond.
For DC, an event such as Crisis on Infinite Earths is the bridge that joins the two ages together. The result was the cancellation of The Flash (with issue 350), Superman (with issue 423), and Wonder Woman (with issue 329). The post-Crisis world would have Wally West as the New Flash, John Byrne writing a brand new Superman series, and George Perez working on the new Wonder Woman series. Batman would also get a makeover as the Year One storyline would be one of the most popular Batman stories ever.
In rough chronological order by the beginning of the trend, here are some important developments that occurred during the Modern Age, many of which are interrelated:
[edit] Fantasy, horror and "sophisticated suspense"
Horror and science fiction titles were absent from the comics market since the establishment of the restrictive Comics Code in the 1950s. In the mid-1970s (during the Bronze Age), Marvel revived these genres with their new fantasy and horror comics, including Conan the Barbarian by Roy Thomas, and Tomb of Dracula.. Steve Gerber’s work on Man-Thing and Howard the Duck was also very influential in this period based on its philosophical impact of questioning society. These titles would be the foundation for what was to come in the mid-1980’s (the beginning of the Modern Age).
Starting with Alan Moore’s groundbreaking work on DC Comics's Swamp Thing in the early 1980s, horror comic books incorporated elements of science fiction/fantasy and strove to a new artistic standard. Other examples include Neil Gaiman’s The Sandman (followed a couple of years later by Garth Ennis and Steve Dillon’s Preacher.). These new comics transcended easily identifiable genres.
Striving to apply some label to these titles, some of which did have at a similar feel and approach, some people began to use the phrase "sophisticated suspense." DC’s Vertigo line, under the editorship of Karen Berger, was launched in 1993, with the goal of specializing in this genre.
Existing titles such as Animal Man, Doom Patrol, Hellblazer (John Constantine) and Shade the Changing Man were absorbed into this new line. Later in the decade, popular titles such as Books of Magic, The Dreaming, The Invisibles, Lucifer and Sandman Mystery Theatre would continue to exert Vertigo’s influence. Vertigo would prove to be a very influential line of comics as it would continue to be published into the 21st Century. Titles such as 100 Bullets, American Virgin, Fables, Y: The Last Man, and the publishing of Harvey Pekar’s American Splendor would cement Vertigo’s reputation as a viable alternative to the superhero genre.
[edit] The rise of anti-heroes
In the mid 1970s Marvel anti-heroes such as the X-Men’s Wolverine, the Punisher and writer/artist Frank Miller’s darker version of Daredevil challenged the previous model of the superhero as a cheerful humanitarian. Miller also created Elektra who straddled the conventional boundary between love interest and villain.
Two artistically influential DC Comics limited series contributed to the trend: Batman: The Dark Knight Returns, also by Frank Miller and Watchmen by Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons, both of which were series of impressive psychological depth that starred troubled heroes.
By the early 1990s, anti-heroes had become the rule rather than the exception, and among the most popular were Marvel comics' Cable and Venom and Image Comics' Spawn, although some fans complained that too many of them were unlikable psychopaths of little depth and originality.
Some critics believe that this trend is tied to the cynicism of the 1980s, when the idea of a person selflessly using his extraordinary abilities on a quest for good was no longer believable, but a person with a deep psychological impulse to destroy criminals was.
The trend of creating characters with more psychological depth that were less black and white also affected supervillains. For example, The Joker, Batman's nemesis, was portrayed less as an evil criminal and more of a mentally ill psychopath who can't control his actions, Marvel Comics' galactic planet-eater Galactus became a force of nature who meant no personal malice in his feedings, and the X-Men's nemesis Magneto became more benign and sympathetic as a man who fights for an oppressed people, albeit through means others deem unacceptable.
[edit] Development of the X-Men franchise
By the mid-1980s X-Men had become one of the most popular titles in comics. Marvel decided to build on this success by creating a number of spin-off titles, sometimes collectively referred to as X-Books. These early X-Books included New Mutants (which would later become X-Force), X-Factor, Excalibur and a Wolverine solo series.
By the early 1990s X-Men had become the biggest franchise in comics, and by the middle of the decade over a dozen X-Men-related comic books, both continuing and limited series, were published each month. On an almost annual basis from 1986 until 1999, one storyline crossed-over into almost every X-Book for two to three months. These "X-Overs" usually lead to a spike in sales.
This sales boom resulting in a great deal of merchandising, such as action figures, video games and trading cards. This success was thanks in no small part to the Fox Network's animated X-Men series, which debuted in 1992 and drew in a large number of younger fans.
The sales boom began to wane in the mid to late 1990s, due to the crash of the speculators market and the effect it had on the industry. Marvel declared bankruptcy, and as a result, scaled back all of their franchises, including X-Men. A number of "X-books" were cancelled, and the amount of limited series published, as well as general merchandise, was reduced.
In the early 2000s, a series of blockbuster X-Men movies have kept the X-Men franchise healthy, and have resulted in a larger market presence outside of comics. In 1999-2000, a new animated series, X-Men: Evolution debuted, while new toys have been developed and sold since the success of the first X-Men feature film. The comic books themselves have been reinvented in series such as Grant Morrison's New X-Men and the Ultimate X-Men, which, like Marvel's other "Ultimate" series, is an alternate universe story, starting the X-Men tale anew. (This was done for X-Men, and other books, because Marvel feared that the long and complex histories of the established storylines of certain titles were scaring off new readers.)
[edit] Effect on other comics
The success of the X-Men had several effects on the comic book industry. Series featuring superhero teams, especially ones in which internal friction contributed to storylines, became much more common. DC Comics's The New Teen Titans series of the 1980s show the influence of the X-Men as do 1990s Image Comics teams such as Youngblood, WildC.A.T.s and Gen¹³. By the peak of the X-Men's popularity in the early 1990s, the team's chemistry was often imitated and many series featured an obvious Cyclops character (stoic leader), Wolverine character (gruff loner) and Storm character (strong-willed woman).
Also, many series tried to imitate the model the X-Men carved as a franchise. Marvel and DC expanded popular properties, such as Punisher, Spider-Man, Batman and Superman into networks of spin-off books in the mid-to-late 1980s. Like the X-Books, some of these spin-offs highlighted a concept or supporting character(s) from a parent series, while others were simply additional monthly series featuring a popular character. In another similarity to the X-Books, these franchises regularly featured crossovers, where one storyline overlapped into every title in the “family” for a few months.
With regards to storylines overlapping, the Superman stories from 1991-2000 were written on a weekly basis. One needed to buy Superman, Adventures of Superman, Action Comics, and Superman: The Man of Steel to keep up with any existing storylines. If a collector only bought Action Comics, they would only get twenty-five percent of the story. A triangle was featured on the cover of every Superman title with a number on it. This number indicated which week of the year the Superman title was released.
[edit] Makeovers
Complementing the creation of these franchises was the concept of redesigning the characters. The Modern Age of comics would usher in this era of change. The impact of Crisis on Infinite Earths was the first example as long-time Flash Barry Allen died in issue 8 of Crisis. Barry Allen signified the beginning of the Silver Age of Comics and his death was highly shocking at the time. Marvel Comics Secret Wars would usher in a new change as well as Spider-Man would wear a black costume. Ironically, this was also in issue 8 of Secret Wars.
The interest in the speculator market of a new Spider-Man costume led to other changes for Marvel characters in the 1980’s. Iron Man would have a silver and red armour in issue 200. Captain America would be fired and would be reborn as the Captain, wearing a black outfit in issue 337 of the series. The Incredible Hulk would revert to his original Grey skin colour in issue 325. Issue 300 of the first Avengers series resulted in a new lineup including Mr. Fantastic and the Invisible Woman, of the Fantastic Four.
The 1990’s would bring similar changes to the DC Universe. The two flagship characters of DC, Superman and Batman would be subject to huge changes. The death of Superman in 1992 resulted in the creation of four new Supermen (see Adventures of Superman 500) while Azrael became the new Batman, equipped in a gold armour (see Batman 500). Neither one of these changes would last long and this would be the trend with two other makeovers. Wonder Woman lost a challenge and Diana was replaced by Artemis as the new Wonder Woman (see issue 92) until her death in issue 100. Guy Gardner went from being a Green Lantern to drinking from a chalice in a cave and becoming Warrior. He is actually the descendant of a space-traveling race called the Vuldarians (see Guy Gardner Warrior 22). The only change that would last for more than 10 years was when Hal Jordan became Parallax and killed off all the Green Lanterns, resulting in Kyle Rayner becoming the new Green Lantern in issue 50 of the second series.
[edit] Image Comics and the battle for Creator Rights
In the mid-1980s, artist Jack Kirby, co-creator of many of Marvel's most popular characters, came into dispute with Marvel over the disappearance of original pages of artwork from some of his most famous titles. Alan Moore, Frank Miller and many other contemporary stars, became vocal advocates for Kirby.
This event, as well as the influence of vocal proponents of independent publishing, helped to inspire a number of Marvel artists to form their own company, Image Comics, which would serve as a prominent example of creator-owned comics publishing.
By the early 1990s, Marvel artists, such as X-Men’s Jim Lee, The New Mutants/X-Force’s Rob Liefeld and Spider-Man’s Todd McFarlane, became extremely popular and were idolized by younger readers in ways more common to sports stars and musicians than comic book artists.
Propelled by star power and upset that they did not own the popular characters they created for Marvel, several illustrators, including the above three formed Image Comics in 1992, an umbrella label under which several autonomous, creator-owned companies existed. Image properties, such as WildC.A.T.s, Gen¹³, Witchblade and especially McFarlane’s Spawn provided brisk competition for long-standing superheroes. However, many criticized Image for prioritizing flashy artwork and cheap gimmicks over storytelling and originality. (Image in particular is singled out by some fans for contributing to the conditions which led to the speculator market crashing, as Image was known to release many alternate covers, foil covers, and other "collectible" comics.)
Many popular creators followed Image's lead and attempted to use their star power to launch their own series; ones that they would have licensing rights for and editorial control of. Chris Claremont, famous for authoring Uncanny X-Men, created Sovereign Seven, Joe Madureira, also made popular by Uncanny X-Men, launched Battle Chasers, and Kurt Busiek and Alex Ross, the creative team behind the popular limited series Marvels, created Astro City.
[edit] The rise and fall of the speculator market
By the late 1980s, important comic books, such as the first appearance of a classic character or first issue of a long-running series, were sold for thousands of dollars. Mainstream newspapers ran reports that comic books were good financial investments and soon collectors were buying massive amounts of comics they thought would be valuable in the future.
Publishers responded by manufacturing collectors’ items, such as trading cards, and “limited editions” of certain issues featuring a special or variant cover. The first issues of Marvel Comics' X-Force, X-Men, vol. 2 and Spider-Man became some of the first and most notorious examples of this trend. Another trend which emerged was foil-stamped covers. The first Marvel comic book with a foil-stamped cover was the second volume of the Silver Surfer, issue 50. A glow-in-the-dark cover for Ghost Rider, volume 2, issue 15 appeared as well. This led a market boom, where retail shops and publishers made huge profits and many companies, large and small, expanded their lines. Image Comics in particular became notorious for this, with many of its series debuting with alternate covers, wide use of embossed and foil covers and other "collectible" traits.
This trend was not confined to the books themselves, and many other pieces of merchandise, such as toys, particularly "chase" action figures (figures made in smaller runs than others in a particular line), trading cards, and other items, were also expected to appreciate in value. McFarlane Toys was notable for this, as it created many variations in its high-quality toys, most of which were main characters or occasional guest stars in the Spawn series.
But few, in the glut of new series, possessed lasting artistic quality and the items that were predicted to be valuable did not become so, often because of huge print runs that made them commonplace. A crash occurred, sales plummeted, hundreds of retail stores closed and many publishers downsized. In 1996, Marvel Comics, the largest company in the industry, declared bankruptcy (it has made a slow recovery since). The industry has still not yet fully recovered from the speculator crash.
The crash also marked the relative downfall of the large franchises, inter-connected "families" of titles that lead to a glut of merchandising. While the big franchise titles still have a large amount of regular titles and merchandising attached to them, all of these things were notably scaled back after the crash. Several franchises have once again gained prominence, such as the X-Men, due in large part to the feature films X-Men and X2, and many DC heroes thanks to the success of various animated series' based on their characters, such as Justice League, Justice League Unlimited, and Teen Titans.
[edit] The rise of the trade paperback format
Although sales of comic books dropped in the late 1990s and the early 2000s, sales rose for trade paperbacks, collected editions in which several issues are bound together with a spine and often sold in bookstores as well as comic shops.
Some series were saved from cancellation solely because of sales of trade paperbacks, and storylines for many of the most popular series of today (DC’s JLA and various Batman series and Marvel’s Ultimate Spider-Man and New X-Men) are put into trade paperback instantly after the storyline ends.
Trade paperbacks are often even given volume numbers, making them serializations of a serializations of sorts. Due to this, many writers now consider their plots with the trade paperback edition in mind, scripting stories that last four to twelve issues, which could easily be read as a “graphic novel.”
The popularity of trade paperbacks, has resulted in older material being reprinted as well. The Essential Marvel Comics line of trade paperbacks has reprinted heroes such as Spider-Man and The Fantastic Four and has been able to introduce these silver age stories to a new generation of fans. These editions tend to resemble a phone book in that these are very thick books and are black and white (to help keep the cost down).
DC Comics has followed suit by introducing a line called Showcase Presents. The first four have included Superman, Green Lantern, Jonah Hex, and Metamorpho, The Elemental Man. Other characters have included Green Arrow, The Superman Family, The Teen Titans and The Elongated Man.
[edit] Celebrity writers and artists
While many creators, artists, and writers had achieved celebrity status by the modern age (1960s-era Marvel Comics innovators Jack Kirby and Stan Lee being perhaps the best known), the late 1980s and the 1990s saw this phenomenon become very widespread.
Artists Rob Liefeld, Todd McFarlane, and Jim Lee, writers Neil Gaiman, Alan Moore, and Grant Morrison and writer/artist Frank Miller, became very well known and developed dedicated fans who followed their work closely. This changed comics readership to some extent. Previously, fans were more dedicated to specific characters and franchises than creators. By the 1990s, many readers, especially older ones, began to follow their favorite artists and writers more fervently.
The rise of celebrity artists and writers helped to make the independent comics boom possible. Moore and Miller launched independently-published unconventional comics, such as Moore's historical fiction epic From Hell and Miller's noir series Sin City. Meanwhile, Liefeld, McFarlane and Jim Lee banded together with four other former Marvel artists to form Image Comics in 1992, which used the star power of its owners/contributors to instantly become the biggest competitor to Marvel and DC in 30 years.
Many Hollywood directors and producers became involved with Marvel and DC Comics. Filmmaker Kevin Smith was responsible for the relaunch of Daredevil and wrote Green Arrow for DC. J. Michael Straczynski, of Babylon 5 fame, became involved with the Amazing Spider-Man, turning Spider-Man into a high school teacher. Later on, he became the scribe of the Fantastic Four. Reginald Hudlin, the president of BET became the writer of Black Panther (comics) and scripted the wedding of the Black Panther and Storm in 2006. Richard Donner, who directed the Superman blockbusters of the 1970s, became a writer on Action Comics in 2006.
[edit] Big budget film adaptations
While comics had been adapted as films since the serials of the 1940s, these films had low budgets and were generally aimed at children, and were never meant to be taken seriously.
In 1978, Superman: The Movie became the first superhero film to feature sincere performances, convincing special effects and a storyline geared towards both children and adults. 1989's Batman was a similarly successful film that mirrored the dark tone of Modern Age comic books. Although both the Superman and Batman franchises became less critically and commercially successful with each sequel, the series helped introduce the characters to new generations of fans, as well as demonstrating that comic based films could be major summer blockbusters. However, the mocking influence of the 1960s Batman television series still held sway and both of these film series eventually became self parodies by producers convinced that the public wouldn't accept the comic book medium's creation depicted in any other manner. That assumption was finally largely discredited with the release of Batman & Robin which became a critical and box office embarrassment for Warner Bros. While its failure temporarily made comic book film adaptations a less desirable idea, it also encouraged film producers to suspect that Richard Donner's reverential approach in his Superman may have more audience appeal.
The early 2000s saw a renaissance of superhero films including 2000s X-Men, 2002's Spider-Man, 2003's Daredevil, X2: X-Men United, and Hulk, 2004's Hellboy and Spider-Man 2, 2005's Fantastic Four, Elektra and Batman Begins, and 2006's X-Men 3 and Superman Returns. These films have helped popularize or re-popularize many of these heroes, and many, including Spider Man 2 and Batman Begins, have lead to sequels that are already in production, Spider-Man 3 and The Dark Knight respectively.
Additionally, some non-superhero films based on comic books have helped draw attention to the diversity of the medium. These films include The Crow (1994), Ghost World (2001), Road to Perdition (2002), American Splendor (2003), Sin City (2005), A History of Violence (2005), Constantine (2005), V for Vendetta (2006) and 300 (2007).
[edit] Noted Modern Age talents
NOTE: This is not a definitive list whatsoever. These are merely people who have represented a high level of quality and have been involved with some of the greatest projects of the age.
Writers
- Brian Michael Bendis (Daredevil, New Avengers, Ultimate Spider-Man)
- Ed Brubaker (Sleeper, Captain America, Daredevil, Uncanny X-Men)
- Kurt Busiek (Astro City, Marvels, Thunderbolts, Untold Tales of Spider-Man)
- Chris Claremont (Uncanny X-Men, Wolverine)
- Darwyn Cooke (DC: The New Frontier)
- Peter David (Incredible Hulk)
- Warren Ellis (Doom 2099, Transmetropolitan)
- Garth Ennis (Preacher, Punisher)
- Neil Gaiman (Eternals, Sandman)
- Dan Jurgens (Marvel vs. DC, Superman)
- Jeph Loeb (Batman: Dark Victory, Batman: Hush, Batman: The Long Halloween)
- Scott McCloud (Understand Comics, Zot!)
- Grant Morrison (52, All Star Superman, Doom Patrol, JLA, New X-Men, Seven Soldiers of Victory)
- Mike Mignola (Hellboy)
- Mark Millar (Civil War, Marvel Knights Spider-Man, The Authority)
- Frank Miller (Batman: The Dark Knight Returns, Daredevil, Sin City)
- Alan Moore (Swamp Thing, Tom Strong, Watchmen)
- Jeff Smith (Bone)
- Mark Waid (Flash, Kingdom Come)
Artists
- Mark Bagley (Amazing Spider-Man, Thunderbolts, Ultimate Spider-Man)
- Frank Cho (Liberty Meadows, Shanna The She-Devil, University2)
- Adam Kubert (Action Comics, X-Men)
- Erik Larsen (Amazing Spider-Man, Savage Dragon)
- Jae Lee (Inhumans)
- Jim Lee (Batman: Hush, Uncanny X-Men, WildC.A.T.s)
- Rob Liefeld (X-Force, Youngblood)
- Todd MacFarlane (Spider-Man, Spawn)
- George Perez (Crisis on Infinite Earths, JLA/Avengers, Wonder Woman)
- Joe Quesada (Ash, Daredevil, X-Factor)
- Frank Quitely (All Star Superman, New X-Men, The Authority)
- John Romita, Jr. (Amazing Spider-Man, Eternals)
- Alex Ross (Kingdom Come, Marvels)
- Tim Sale (Batman: Dark Victory, Batman: The Long Halloween)
[edit] Key Issues of the Modern Age
[edit] 1980’s
DC Comics and Independents
Title | Issue | Publisher | Relevance |
---|---|---|---|
Batman | 404 | DC Comics | Year One, Part One |
Dark Knight Returns | 1-4 | DC | Batman in future by Frank Miller |
Justice League | 1 | DC Comics | Cover considered a classic; established 'satiric super-hero' style later used by Peter David and Dan Slott |
Sandman | 1 | DC | Popularity would lead to creation of Vertigo |
Superman | 423 | DC | Last Issue, Written by Alan Moore |
Watchmen | 1 | DC | Considered one of definitive projects of decade |
New Teen Titans Vol. 2 | 1 | DC | First relaunch of a popular series, leading to Spider-Man #1 & X-men#1 |
Batman:Death In the Family | 426-429 | DC | death of Robin II (Jason Todd) |
Arkham Asylum | 1 | DC | Grant Morrison's graphic novel is still the biggest money maker of all time. |
The Man of Steel | 1 | DC | DC starts Superman from scratch, by John Byrne. This idea would later inspire Marvel's 'Ultimate' line. |
Wonder Woman | 1 | DC | DC starts from scratch with Wonder Woman, by George Perez. |
Crisis on Infinite Earths | 7 | DC | The Death of Super-girl |
Crisis on Infinite Earths | 8 | DC | The Death of The Flash (Barry Allen) |
Crisis on Infinite Earths | 11 | DC | Earths 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, Q, S and others merge into a new earth, and DC continuity restarts. |
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles | 1 | Independent | Inspired success of independent titles |
Marvel Comics
Title | Issue | Publisher | Relevance |
---|---|---|---|
Amazing Spider-Man | 252 | Marvel | Spider-Man wears black costume |
Amazing Spider-Man | 300 | Marvel | Spider-Man vs. Venom |
Amazing Spider-Man Annual | 21 | Marvel | Spider-Man marries Mary Jane Watson |
Captain America | 332 | Marvel | Steve Rogers no longer Captain America |
Daredevil | 227 | Marvel | Daredevil’s identity exposed by the Kingpin |
Incredible Hulk | 340 | Marvel | Hulk vs. Wolverine |
New Mutants | 87 | Marvel | 1st Appearance of Cable (comics) |
Punisher (Limited Series) | 1 | Marvel | Punisher in his own solo adventures |
Secret Wars | 8 | Marvel | 1st Appearance of Spider-Man’s black costume |
Star Wars | 106 | Marvel | Last Star Wars book published by Marvel |
Transformers | 1 | Marvel | Popularity of toy line became a comic book |
Uncanny X-Men | 222 | Marvel | 1st Appearance of Mr. Sinister |
Uncanny X-Men | 248 | Marvel | 1st Jim Lee Artwork for X-Men |
Web of Spider-Man | 1 | Marvel | New Spider-Man book for the 80’s |
Wolverine (Monthly Series) | 1 | Marvel | 1st Monthly Wolverine title |
X-Factor | 1 | Marvel | The original X-Men reunite in a new title |
[edit] 1990’s
DC Comics
Title | Issue | Publisher | Relevance |
---|---|---|---|
Green Lantern | 50 | DC | Hal Jordan becomes Parallax, Kyle Rayner becomes the new Green Lantern |
JLA | 1 | DC | Written by Grant Morrison |
Kingdom Come | 1 | DC | Painted by Alex Ross |
Superman (Vol. 2) | 75 | DC | Death of Superman |
Image Comics
Title | Issue | Publisher | Relevance |
---|---|---|---|
Gen¹³ | 1 | Image | Introduction of new super team |
Spawn | 1 | Image | Title that helped launch Image Comics |
Marvel Comics
Title | Issue | Publisher | Relevance |
---|---|---|---|
Daredevil (Vol. 2) | 1 | Marvel | Written by Kevin Smith and drawn by Joe Quesada |
Hulk (Volume 2) | 8 | Marvel | Hulk vs. Wolverine |
Incredible Hulk | 377 | Marvel | New Incredible Hulk |
Incredible Hulk | 449 | Marvel | 1st Appearance of Thunderbolts |
Marvels | 1 | Marvel | Painted by Alex Ross |
Spider-Man | 1 | Marvel | Written and drawn by Todd MacFarlane |
Thunderbolts | 1 | Marvel | New superhero team for 1990’s |
Uncanny X-Men | 266 | Marvel | 1st Appearance of Gambit |
[edit] 2000’s
DC Comics
Title | Issue | Publisher | Relevance |
---|---|---|---|
Infinite Crisis | 1 - 7 | DC | Continuity reset, large ramifications for all DCU characters. |
Justice League of America (vol. 2) | 1 | DC | Written by Brad Meltzer, the restart of the team after DC's One Year Later event. |
Green Lantern: Rebirth | 1 - 6 | DC | Written by Geoff Johns with art by Ethan Van Sciver, the return of Hal Jordan as the Lantern of focus, which will also bring about the return of the Green Lantern Corps. |
52 | 1 - 52 | DC | Filling in the gap after Infinite Crisis and before One Year Later. The DC multiverse is reestablished. |
Batman | 608 - 619 | DC | Batman: Hush takes place. The best selling Batman story in history deals with all the rogues, and teases the eventual return of the Jason Todd character. |
Marvel Comics
Title | Issue | Publisher | Relevance |
---|---|---|---|
Amazing Spider-Man | 533 | Marvel | Reveals identity (follow-up to Civil War 2) |
Black Panther (comics) | 26 | Marvel | Romance between Black Panther and Storm |
Civil War (comics) | 2 | Marvel | Spider-Man reveals his identity to the public |
Origin | 1 | Marvel | Origin of Wolverine revealed |
Ultimate Spider-Man | 1 | Marvel | 1st Appearance of Ultimate Spider-Man |
[edit] Timeline of events
- Please see Bronze Age of Comic Books for events prior to 1984
[edit] 1980s
- 1984: Alan Moore takes over writing on Swamp Thing
- 1984: Marvel begins releasing the first "big event" storyline, Secret Wars, which would, along with Crisis on Infinite Earths, popularize big events, and make them a staple in the industry.
- 1985: DC begins to publish Crisis on Infinite Earths, which would drastically restructure the DC universe, and popularize the epic crossover in the comics industry along with Secret Wars.
- 1985: In the aftermath of Crisis on Infinite Earths, DC cancels The Flash, Superman, and Wonder Woman.
- 1986: DC publishes Frank Miller's Batman: The Dark Knight Returns, setting a new grim tone for Batman.
- 1986: DC Comics begins publishing Watchmen, seen by many as a pivotal title of the Modern Age.
- 1986: Dark Horse Comics is founded. It would come to be the third largest comic publisher in the U.S., and would be known for its line of film-based comics (notably Alien and Predator), its small line of Manga, and the titles Sin City (Frank Miller) and Hellboy (Mike Mignola.)
- 1986-1987: Superman is relaunched by John Byrne. The relaunch starts in 1986 with the six-issue limited series titled The Man of Steel. A new Superman # 1 begins in Summer 1987.
- 1987: The first volume of Art Spiegelman's Maus is published. It would become one of the most famous graphic novels of the modern age.
- 1988: Neil Gaiman's The Sandman debuts.
- 1988-1989: Batman: A Death in the Family published. The storyline called for readers to phone a 900 number to decide the fate of then-Robin Jason Todd. The majority decided he should die, so he was brutally murdered by the Joker.
- 1989: Tim Burton's Batman film premieres, to commercial success and critical acclaim.
- 1989: Fantagraphics Books publishes the first issue of Daniel Clowes' Eightball, which would became a famous alternative comic, and would serialize a number of Clowes' most famous stories, including "Ghost World" and "David Boring".
[edit] 1990s
- 1990: The first issue of Hate by Peter Bagge is published by Fantagraphics books. The comic would come to be associated with the Seattle Grunge scene, which was becoming popularized by bands such as Nirvana and Alice in Chains.
- Summer 1990: Todd MacFarlane releases Spider-Man #1 with two alternate covers (one green, one black). It becomes the best-selling comic book in history, only to be supplanted by X-Men #1 the following year.
- 1991: The X-Men universe is radically reinvented, with a new X-Men monthly series, including 5 different covers for the first issue, running alongside of the Uncanny X-Men, a new X-Factor lineup, and the creation of the follow up to The New Mutants, X-Force. Rob Liefeld and Jim Lee ascend to star status, partly because of their work on these titles. At this time, X-Men became a huge franchise and would remain so until the mid 90's, with toys and an animated series giving the series wide mainstream exposure by drawing in a new generation of fans.
- 1991: Jeff Smith begins publishing Bone, which would become well known in the comics world. It would end its run in 2004.
- 1991: Volume 2 of Maus is released.
- 1991: Frank Miller's Sin City begins, originally in Dark Horse Presents.
- 1991: The beginning of foil stamped, and other gimmick covers begins with Silver Surfer # 50.
- 1992: Maus wins a Pulitzer Prize
- 1992: Dark Horse begins to publish comic books based on the Star Wars films. The first project is titled Dark Empire.
- 1992: Image Comics is founded by a number of former Marvel artists who were unsatisfied with how Marvel handled them and its books. The artists included Todd MacFarlane, Rob Liefeld, Jim Lee, Jim Valentino, Marc Silvestri and Erik Larsen. The company would become controversial in the comics world, but had a huge number of fans following the work of the artists, whom published their own creations under the Image name. This same year, naturally, saw the first issues of many of the best known image titles, including Spawn, Youngblood, Savage Dragon, and WildC.A.T.s
- 1992: November - The Death of Superman in Superman #75.
- 1993: DC launches its Vertigo imprint. The early titles include Sandman, Animal Man and the Doom Patrol.
- 1993: Dark Horse launches "Comics Greatest World." Their first venture into Super-Heroes features characters such as the undead vigilante X, Ghost and Barb Wire (which becomes a film starring Pamela Anderson). The series includes 16 books released weekly for $1 each.
- 1993: Malibu Comics launches the Ultraverse, including characters such as Prime, Hardcase, and Mantra; several issues come bagged with a coupon. Upon getting all the coupons, fans could mail in the coupons to receive Ultraverse # 0. Malibu Ultraverse becomes well-known for its computer colouring process and is acquired by Marvel Comics in 1995.
- 1993: Azrael assumes the role of Batman in Batman # 500.
- 1994: February - Kyle Rayner becomes the new Green Lantern.
- 1994: Lady Death and Shi are both published, by Chaos! Comics and Crusade, respectively. This begins the Bad girl art phase.
- 1994: Warren Ellis starts writing in America. His early works include Doom 2099 and Hellstorm.
- 1994: October - The Spider-Man Clone Saga begins.
- 1994: Gen¹³ debuts and quickly becomes one of the most popular titles in the medium. Its popularity not only ignites a trend of bad girl/good girl superhero titles but capitalizes on the craze of alternate covers. Gen¹³ Vol. 2, No. 1 has 13 covers including spoofs of the Janet Jackson Rolling Stone cover, Heavy Metal, the Brady Bunch, Sandman, and Pulp Fiction.
- 1995: Sam Kieth begins publishing The Maxx via Image Comics.
- 1995: Artemis becomes the new Wonder Woman but dies in issue # 100.
- 1995: The last issue of Sandman is published. The acclaimed DC/Vertigo series ends at # 75.
- 1995: David Lapham publishes Stray Bullets and the craze towards alternative comics begins.
- 1996: December - The Spider-Man Clone Saga ends.
- 1996: Amidst a sales slump, the speculators crash, and massive downsizing in the industry, Marvel officially declares bankruptcy.
- 1996: Summer - Marvel Comics unleashes Onslaught. The battle against Onslaught results in the "deaths" of Captain America, Iron Man, The Incredible Hulk, and the Fantastic Four. The result is the cancellation of Captain America, Iron Man, Avengers, and Fantastic Four. All four books are relaunched in Fall 1996 with Rob Liefeld and Jim Lee spearheading the creative teams.
- 1996: The Amalgam Comics run, an infusion of DC Comics and Marvel Comics, begins
- 1997: Batman and Robin premieres in theatres, and is a huge financial and critical flop, causing Warner Bros. to put the Batman franchise on hold. There would not be another Batman film until 2005, with Batman Begins. The flop of Batman and Robin resulted in studios exercising more caution in adapting comics to film.
- 1997: The Amalgam Comics run ends, with a total 24 books published
- 1999: DC Comics begins to publish its MILLENNIUM EDITIONS. A total of 56 editions are published on a weekly basis as a way of honouring the great achievements in DC Comics history. All editions contain reprinted material and the first edition is a reprint of Action Comics # 1. Other reprints include Detective Comics # 27 and Showcase # 4.
[edit] Unknown dates in the 1990s timeline
- The rise and fall of the speculator market occurred roughly in the frame of 1990-1996, but pinpointing exact dates for this events is difficult, although some would argue that one of the definitive moments of the crash was when Marvel declared bankruptcy. Many would go so far as to argue that the Marvel bankruptcy marks the end of the era of the speculators market. The rise of the market is trickier to pinpoint, though most would place it in the timeframe of 1989-1991, with the seeds being planted by mainstream media reports on comics appreciating in value. The seeds grew in to the full speculator boom sometime in the early 1990s, but the process was so gradual that specific dates are not possible.
[edit] 2000s
- 2000: Chris Ware's Jimmy Corrigan, the Smartest Kid on Earth, is published by Fantagraphics as a single graphic novel. The story was previously serialized in the Acme Novelty Library magazine, but it gained a great deal of attention when it was published in 2000 in a single edition. It received some mainstream media exposure, including an article on CNN's website.
- 2000: Marvel launches its Ultimate Marvel line, which would feature recreations of its most popular titles, due to the fear that the complex history behind their established books was turning off potential new readers.
- 2000: The long awaited X-Men film adaptation is a big enough hit to revive the superhero film genre, which had been damaged reputation wise by 1997's massive flop, Batman and Robin.
- 2001: Marvel Comics hires writer Grant Morrison to reinvent the X-Men, resulting in New X-Men, or "Grant Morrison's X-Men" as some fans would call it.
- 2001: The hit television series Smallville (TV series) begins it's first season.
- 2001: As a way of honouring the tragedy of September 11, 2001, all comics companies create special edition comics. Marvel Comics creates Heroes, A Moment of Silence (a comic consisting solely of art, without dialog or narration), and Amazing Spider-Man # 36 (an issue devoted to Spider-Man's reaction to the tragedy, featuring a black cover). DC Comics and other companies publish two special editions called 9/11. A black and white version. 9/11 Emergency Relief, is also published.
- 2002: The first ever Spider-Man movie launched and broke the record of the highest grossing movie in first day and week. Spiderman super success was also followed by Spider-Man 2 in 2004 which was even a bigger success and made the Spider-Man franchise the most successful superhero movie series ever made.
- 2004: Dave Sim and Jeff Smith both end the runs of their respective books, Cerebus and Bone, both of which had become famous in the comics world and helped popularize self publishing.
- 2004: DC begins the Identity Crisis limited series. This series resulted in the death of Elongated Man's wife, Sue Dibny, and marked the start of a darker tonality for DC's product line.
- 2004: Green Lantern: Rebirth is published, marking Hal Jordan's return to the mantle of Green Lantern. The character had ceased being Green Lantern nearly a decade earlier. The move is seen by some as the start of a nostalgia movement within DC Comics.
- April 1, 2005: Sin City is released in theaters. Co-directed by Robert Rodriguez and Frank Miller.
- June 15, 2005: Batman Begins is released in theaters as a reboot of the Batman film series. A commercial and critical success, it is credited with reviving the franchise. A sequel is scheduled for 2008.
- 2005: Vertigo/DC along with Warner Brothers Studio release V for Vendetta movie based on Alan Moore's graphic novel.
- 2005: DC begins the Infinite Crisis limited series, a sequel to the Crisis on Infinite Earths of two decades earlier. This series results in a "new Earth" being created, restoring bits of continuity back into the DC Universe, such as Wonder Woman being a founder of the JLA. Marvel releases its own crossover event limited series, House of M. The House of M series results in "M-Day", in which most of the mutant characters lose their powers.
- 2005: DC launches their "All Star" brand of comics, beginning with All Star Batman and Robin The Boy Wonder #1, by Frank Miller and Jim Lee. This brand is created in an attempt to tell iconic, out-of-continuity stories about DC's characters, using some of the more popular creators in the industry. All Star Batman and Robin is followed by Grant Morrison and Frank Quitely's All Star Superman.
- 2006: DC follows up Infinite Crisis with One Year Later, where all storylines jump ahead one year and 52, a weekly comic lasting 52 issues which will chronicle that missing year.
- 2006: Marvel begins the Civil War. After a group of superheroes accidentally kill some school children while fighting a group of supervillains, the US government passes the Superhero Registration Act, subjecting superheros to government oversight. Some heroes, most prominently Iron Man, see it as a necessary step and are quick to register; others are opposed to it and form a resistance movement under Captain America, bringing them into conflict with those registered heroes who try to enforce the new law. In a move controversial with fans, Spider-Man unmasks at a press conference and reveals his identity to the public.
- 2006: X-Men 3 and Superman Returns are released in theatres.
- 2007: Captain America is killed during Marvel's Civil War, resulting in attention from the national media.