10 Most Harmful Trends In Comics Today

4. Complete Ignorance Of Character History...

Batman Zero Year

Writers: let€™s get one thing straight. You are not a genius for thinking of a story that has never been done before, if it is completely out of character for the hero you are writing.

For all you know, it is entirely possible that the idea for your graphic novel €˜Wolverine: Flower Arranger€™ has already been thought of €“ and discarded €“ by someone with far more talent than you.

Stories where Batman retires to Sussex and opens up a chip shop are not clever at all, they are just wantonly out of character.

Although the characters in comic books have changed many times over the years, with different backstories, costumes, powers and so on, the core of the character really doesn€™t change much from decade to decade. It is their essence, their soul, if you like. They might become tougher, sadder, bigger or stronger, but who they are and what they do should always remain consistent.

One of the worst trends in today€™s comics concerns writers with MASSIVE egos coming in to work on a character and thinking that they can re-define it from the ground up. They change the character and everything about him/her. Don€™t misunderstand, its OK to change most things about the character, (this is how they stay fresh, of course) but not the character€™s central self.

However, all too often, today€™s writer decides to throw the baby out with the bathwater and then you get characters that neither look like, nor act like, any recognisable version of the character you€™ve paid to read about.

It isn€™t €˜bold€™ or €˜daring€™, it just highlights your own deficiencies as a storyteller.

The overall point should be, if you€™re offered an assignment on a character that you don€™t especially like, turn it down and write one you do like. Stop trying to reinvent the wheel. Its been done. Instead, figure out a way to make it go faster!

Contributor
Contributor

I am a professional author and lifelong comic books/pro wrestling fan. I also work as a journalist as well as writing comic books (I also draw), screenplays, stage plays, songs and prose fiction. I don't generally read or reply to comments here on What Culture (too many trolls!), but if you follow my Twitter (@heyquicksilver), I'll talk to you all day long! If you are interested in reading more of my stuff, you can find it on http://quicksilverstories.weebly.com/ (my personal site, which has other wrestling/comics/pop culture stuff on it). I also write for FLiCK http://www.flickonline.co.uk/flicktion, which is the best place to read my fiction work. Oh yeah - I'm about to become a Dad for the first time, so if my stuff seems more sentimental than usual - blame it on that! Finally, I sincerely appreciate every single read I get. So if you're reading this, thank you, you've made me feel like Shakespeare for a day! (see what I mean?) Latcho Drom, - CQ