Marville (comics)

Marville

Cover of Marville #1
Art by Mark D. Bright
Publication information
Publisher Marvel Comics
Format Limited series
Publication date 2002
Number of issues 7
Creative team
Writer(s) Bill Jemas

Marville is a comic book limited series published by Marvel Comics in 2002. The series was written by Bill Jemas, and the stories generally involved satirical comment on comic book industry conventions and trends.

Overview

The main character was Kal-AOL Turner, the son of Ted Turner from 5002, but sent by back in time via a time machine made out of video game systems. He has no superpowers.

The title was a reference to the TV series Smallville; the cover of issue #1 featured the main character tied up as a scarecrow with a red 'M' painted on his chest, much as Tom Welling was in the first episode of Smallville and in related publicity material.

The series revisited several existing points of Marvel continuity in a completely irreverent and contradictory manner. For example, the issue titled "Originville" (referencing Origin) visited a prehistoric setting in which Wolverine was a mutant Neanderthal. Despite this, the series' main character, Kal-AOL Turner made a cameo appearance in the Marvel Universe series GLA and received a profile in The All-New Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe A to Z.

Issue #3 consisted entirely of art with the separations, with the script superimposed over it.

The final issue of Marville, issue #7, did not actually contain a story; instead, it contained the submissions guidelines to Marvel's new Epic Comics imprint.

U-Decide

Marville was created as part of Marvel's U-Decide event, in which fans would decide which of three books would survive. The event involved one existing book (Peter David's Captain Marvel, whose numbering was restarted at issue #1) and two new books (Marville and Ron Zimmerman's Ultimate Adventures), and was based around a bet between David and Jemas, of which Marvel editor-in-chief Joe Quesada later became a part. Jemas changed the stakes of the bet a few issues into Marville, stating that the loser would take a pie in the face for charity. Despite this, both Marville and Ultimate Adventures ended fairly quickly, while the rebooted Captain Marvel would last three more years and 25 more issues, for a total of 60 issues when combined with the first run.

Reference

1. http://thatguywiththeglasses.com/videolinks/linkara/at4w/33816-marville-1