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  1. #1
    Mild-Mannered Reporter
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    Default CBR: When Words Collide - Jan 3, 2011

    In preparing to talk about Robert Kirkman's fascinating X-Men comics, Tim reflects on the way the Ultimate universe diverged from its original intent and how it has influenced mainstream Marvel comics today.


    Full article here.

  2. #2

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    Interesting.

    So many potential takes on the UU and yet....I don't know. I dropped off in a major way after Ultimatum. I could not bother picking up a single title (and I'm a huge fan of "alternate" universes).

    I'm looking forward to the next one because a lot of the issues raised here, actually happen in Kirkman's run which I'm sorry to say got beyond silly at points (Cable is Wolverine. Just....words fail me) but still managed to hit a fun page (I dug the pseudo-X lineup of Pyro, Beast, Psylocke, etc...).

  3. #3
    More Donald than Charlie stealthwise's Avatar
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    You know what was about a thousand times better than Kirkman's run on UXM? The run he followed, by Brian K Vaughan.
    - Art is whatever makes you feel human.

    - "You are what you love, not what loves you." - Donald Kaufman

    - "Deserve's got nothing to do with it." - William Munny

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  4. #4
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    I dunno, UXM sure did its best to get as much baggage and continuity problems as the 616 X-Men.

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    Quote Originally Posted by stealthwise View Post
    You know what was about a thousand times better than Kirkman's run on UXM? The run he followed, by Brian K Vaughan.
    co-signed...in fact, Kirkman's run killed what little remaining interest I had in UXM after Vaughn left.

  6. #6
    Handsomely Awkward AnoleX's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by LukeCage_2099 View Post
    co-signed...in fact, Kirkman's run killed what little remaining interest I had in UXM after Vaughn left.
    I'm really looking forward to this column next week, because Robert Kirkman RUINED UXM for me. I'm very interested in what next week's installment will entail. It all wasn't horrible, but I learned what habitual comic buying was with his run. Buying comics that you want to be good, but are not. Hoping they'll get better, but never did. Purely out of habit, keeping your collection complete. I def. learned not to do that again.

    Yanick Paquette was also a huge turn off for me. I didn't like his art in Young X-men either, although I will say Uncanny X-Men #512 (With the Science Team time-traveling) was nice. And, while I don't read DC titles, some of the Bat art he has done that I've seen looks great. Definite progression.

    I remember buying his UXM run, and the guy behind the LCS counter was trying to persuade me to pick up the Walking Dead. (He also didn't try to hide the fact that he wasn't a fan of the current UXM) I was NOT having it at all.

    I also learned that just because a writer doesn't work out for you in one arena doesn't mean they won't wow you in another.
    alpha flight 2011

  7. #7
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    Well said AnoleX. That pretty much sums up my feelings about the Robert Kirkman run of UXM also. By the end I was just collecting to collect.

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    I love a column like this that can bring perspective to multiple facets of a single topic. I particularly appreciated the casual assassination of the Ultimate design scheme and the well-summarized conflict of intent and execution.

    I'm from the same comic-reading age/demographic as Tim and I have some younger cousins who, along with their friends, learned to like the X-Men through the 90s cartoon. It seems like Ult.Spidey brought a number of new readers to comics (if trade sales are any indication) but I'd be curious to hear if Ult. X-Men was truly only a fanfic echo chamber or if it ever reached a 90s primed audience.

  9. #9

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    "Morrison's "New X-Men" didn't affect the Marvel mainstream at all, really, with everything he did being quickly retconned or forgotten"

    I am reminded of the scene from Life Of Brian...

    SO What did Morrison's run ever do for MU?

    Removed Jean Grey from the MU?

    Yes all right "Removed Jean Grey from the MU?" But apart from that what did Morrison's run ever do for MU?

    Set up a lasting relationship between Emma Frost and Cyclops, The Midwich Cuckoos, The destruction of Genosa, the removal of Professor X, Fantomex, the deconstruction of Magneto as a villain, Beast's cat form.

    YES ALL RIGHT! BUT apart from... "Set up a lasting relationship between Emma Frost and Cyclops, The Midwich Cuckoos, The destruction of Genosa, the removal of Professor X, Fantomex, the deconstruction of Magneto as a villain, Beast's cat form."... what did Morrison's run ever do for MU?

    Emma Frost's diamond form?

    OH f**K off.

  10. #10

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    Quote Originally Posted by lead sharp View Post
    "Morrison's "New X-Men" didn't affect the Marvel mainstream at all, really, with everything he did being quickly retconned or forgotten"

    I am reminded of the scene from Life Of Brian...

    SO What did Morrison's run ever do for MU?

    Removed Jean Grey from the MU?

    Yes all right "Removed Jean Grey from the MU?" But apart from that what did Morrison's run ever do for MU?

    Set up a lasting relationship between Emma Frost and Cyclops, The Midwich Cuckoos, The destruction of Genosa, the removal of Professor X, Fantomex, the deconstruction of Magneto as a villain, Beast's cat form.

    YES ALL RIGHT! BUT apart from... "Set up a lasting relationship between Emma Frost and Cyclops, The Midwich Cuckoos, The destruction of Genosa, the removal of Professor X, Fantomex, the deconstruction of Magneto as a villain, Beast's cat form."... what did Morrison's run ever do for MU?

    Emma Frost's diamond form?

    OH f**K off.
    Those are all X-specific changes though.

    Instead of Jean standing behind scott as the acting telepath whenever the Uncanny X-Men guest-star we now have Emma.

    Don't get me wrong, Morrison and Whedon make up my absolute favorite X-era but he destroyed NYC (completely) and this was corrected in exactly one double-page spread.

    Maybe that's how it should be though.

  11. #11
    Watcher Dr. Orlando's Avatar
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    Marvel comics wouldn't be Marvel comics if NYC couldn't spontaneously rebuild itself every so many weeks.

    Revisiting the '90s in Ult. X-Men was enough to drive me away, as well. I didn't stick with that nonsense in the original (616) X-books; why should I stick with an even more nonsensical respinning that would cost even more?

    In his column, Tim writes:
    The saga of Cable and Bishop is not inherently different than the "Days of Future Past," in terms of quality. Those of us who grew up in the 1980s might disagree with that opinion at first, because we have a fondness of Chris Claremont and John Byrne showing Wolverine and Kitty Pryde in the future, but if you go back and reread that story, it is evocative but too brief. Underdeveloped. It impacted so many because it was something seemingly new, but it's not a story that's particularly well-told.
    Perhaps I'm guilty of looking back through wistful lenses at the early-80s Claremont/Byrne run on UXM, but I would say that the "Days of Future Past" issues (UXM #141-142) were brilliant simply because they WERE evocative, and they WERE too brief. There was no convoluted mess that got slopped onto the story, no "Days of Future Past: Alpha" preliminary issue, no kludge of previouslies. There was just this gripping cover filled with the faces of dead X-Men, and Logan and Kitty with their backs to the wall. The scenes in the future were all too brief, and provided no explanation of how things came to be: the Sentinels ascendant, Magneto crippled but on the side of good, Franklin Richards all grown up...

    What it meant for me was an opportunity for my mind to race with all the potential stories that existed between the "now" -- the Brotherhood's attack on Senator Kelly" -- and the then -- the dystopic world in which the X-Men were killed one by one. If this had played out over the course of half a dozen or more issues, with long, laborious future continuity points being established, it would have slammed the slam-bang pace of the story into the ground, killed the tension and quashed my imagination.

    It's that kind of "What if? What now?" excitement that I really never got from the UU -- and rarely if ever get these days in any corner of the MU. That one potential nightmare future of DoFP has just become one of countless such on-panel creations; the whole trope has been beaten like a harp seal by Cable, Bishop, et al., to the point where I'd rather DoFP had never happened, if it would mean that the last 20 years or so of temporal shenanigans could have been avoided.

    That Kirkman saw Ultimate X-Men as underserving '90s-era X-fans, and that he then took steps to remedy it was the end of the title for me, long before Ultimatum proved just how bad a comic book (and just how shameless the company publishing it) can be.

  12. #12
    Valued Member Since 2008 semicyon's Avatar
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    You're such a tease!

    I barely remember Kirkman's run on Ult.X-Men and was hoping someone could point out something notable. Loved your evaluation of the Ultimate universe and it's role in Marvel's creative endeavors. I was primed to see how you thought Kirkman's X-Men fit within that... and then, in old-school comic book style, you left me with a cliffhanger. Ah, well, next week.

    Thanks for the interesting read!

  13. #13

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    Quote Originally Posted by Radical_dreamer View Post
    Those are all X-specific changes though.

    Instead of Jean standing behind scott as the acting telepath whenever the Uncanny X-Men guest-star we now have Emma.

    Don't get me wrong, Morrison and Whedon make up my absolute favorite X-era but he destroyed NYC (completely) and this was corrected in exactly one double-page spread.

    Maybe that's how it should be though.

    Last I checked the X books were in the MU.

    Yes now we have a powerful couple leading the mutant nation instead of a miserable husband and wife act always dieing or wanting to sleep with Wolverine.

    Some of the changes/additions made have stuck longer than most in comics. I personally would like to see Jean Grey dead longer than Barry Allen.

  14. #14

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    Thanks for bearing with me on this, gang. I was planning to jump right into Kirkman's X-Men (which is a problematic run, but doesn't deserve anywhere near the knocks it got at the time, or still gets, it seems), but when I started to provide content for why I'd even bother talking about his run, I ended up with 2500 words of "introduction" and I realized, "well, I guess this will be a two-parter!"

    I'm glad you're looking forward to the next part, even if it's to rip me to shreds because you think Wolverine as Cable is some kind of blasphemy.

    And, Lead Sharp, good points, indeed. And funny! I would say those contributions were important, but Morrison's X-Men didn't change the STYLE of the way stories in the Marvel Universe were told, and the Ultimate comics did. That was what I was talking about. Has Furry Beast really changed anything? Isn't it just a superficial change, really?
    Timothy Callahan
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  15. #15

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    Quote Originally Posted by TimothyCallahan View Post
    Thanks for bearing with me on this, gang. I was planning to jump right into Kirkman's X-Men (which is a problematic run, but doesn't deserve anywhere near the knocks it got at the time, or still gets, it seems), but when I started to provide content for why I'd even bother talking about his run, I ended up with 2500 words of "introduction" and I realized, "well, I guess this will be a two-parter!"

    I'm glad you're looking forward to the next part, even if it's to rip me to shreds because you think Wolverine as Cable is some kind of blasphemy.

    And, Lead Sharp, good points, indeed. And funny! I would say those contributions were important, but Morrison's X-Men didn't change the STYLE of the way stories in the Marvel Universe were told, and the Ultimate comics did. That was what I was talking about. Has Furry Beast really changed anything? Isn't it just a superficial change, really?
    The problem with "furry" Beast as a concept is that it hasn't really been addressed by any writer since Morrison, safe Whedon. It's treated exactly as you put it; as a superficial change/matter of artist interpretation that doesn't mean anything to the character.

    That's not it. Hank McCoy is devolving. His mutation seems to be that every trauma to his body sends him further and further towards a pure beast that's incapable of sustaining what he values most; his intellect. If we're talking "What do you fear the most?" that's Hank's answer right there. And it's ripe for some great stories.

    And just to clarify, I don't consider it blasphemy (I still don't take comics that seriously, thank heavens :) ) it was just....really, really, bad on all fronts. An ostensibly bad idea, that was, in my subjective opinion, executed just as poorly.

    I don't need Cable (...the sentence could end here) to have the accurate eye be the glowing one, techno-virus, or an excess of pouches but if you're going to throw such a curve to the mythos, I need some pay-off as to why and a reasoning that goes beyond "doesn't-that-sound-badass?"
    Last edited by Radical_dreamer; 01-04-2011 at 04:06 PM.

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