Posts Tagged ‘ reading

Media Madness: Words & Pictures, Enemies & Allies

In Media Madness, Matt. Murray reviews, revisits and rambles about comics, cartoons and their interactions in and with related media.

41y0keus4sl_ss500_

In Media Madness (on Mondays and other days) I’ve focused much of my attention on adaptations of comics into movies, television shows and other temporally sequential art forms. Largely, that’s probably what one thinks of when one mentions the adaptation of the comic medium into another.  However, there is a whole other strain of adaptation that has been around basically since the birth of the comic itself: the translation of comics and their characters into other print media that lack pictures… short stories and books.

Historically,  Stan “The Man” Lee’s first job at Timely comics was writing “Captain America Foils the Traitor’s Revenge” a text-only filler story that ran in Captain America #3.  Pieces like this were a necessity for comics in the Golden Age, so that a comic could be considered a proper “magazine” making it eligible for a mailing certificate with USPS.  To this day, there still exists a school of thought that comics are in some way a lesser form than text-only fiction, simply because they have pictures.

I actually witnessed an institutionalized version of this “thought” first hand a couple of years back  at a conference of Nassau County Public Librarians.  I was invited to their annual breakfast to speak on a panel in favor of the comic book as a form of adult literature, and although I applaud the organizer for even trying to posit this thought into the head of her colleagues, the feeling of the room was essentially summed up in the closing comment of an attendee who stood up thanked the panel for coming and then shook her bee-hived head and said “…but these ‘books’ are still for children.”

Read more

The Doctor is In: I Have Issues, but My Money’s on the Trade

In The Doctor is In, Allan “Doc” Dorison operates on a specific part of popular culture.

I recently walked into a comic book store in Brooklyn Heights and picked up the newest issue of Kick Ass.

The guy behind counter asked me: “Would you like a bag and board with that?”

“No I’m just going to roll it up, throw it in my back pocket and chuck it when I’m done,” I replied without thinking. The look on the clerk’s face was priceless.  I continued:  “It’s going to come out in trade paperback  in about six months  anyway.”

He gasped, then gave me a scowl and an unspoken “F&@% YOU!” as I walked out of the store.

As I strolled down the street with a rolled up comic in my pocket, I started to feel a little guilty. Only ten years ago, I would have torn someone’s head off if they treated a comic that way.  Not anymore, though.   Had I grown away from my obsessive fanboy tendencies?

Well, I still make weekly trips to the comic shop…  I read Wizard regularly… I sneak new “exclusive” and “limited edition” Mighty Muggs onto the shelves of my bookcases even though, as my fiancee reminds me, the tchotchke quota of our apartment has exceeded critical mass… So… Nope.  I’m still pretty nerdy.

As I dug deeper into my collector’s soul, I got down to the truth of the matter.  Basically, I feel the single issue is dead.

Read more

 
Better Tag Cloud