From Salon
By Panio Gianopoulos
Thanks to the box office
domination of superhero movies like “The Avengers,” “Iron-Man,”
“Spider-Man” and “The X-Men,” Marvel Entertainment has become as widely
recognizable as Disney, its parent company. What you may be less familiar with,
however, are Marvel’s comics.
Decades before the movies
and TV shows and fast-food tie-ins, before the lunchboxes and the Halloween
costumes, a tiny, understaffed and restlessly creative magazine publisher began
churning out pages and pages of comic book art. Whereas comics had once been
characterized by junky kids’ titles, repetitive genre pieces and stiff,
wearyingly noble superhero archetypes, Marvel characters were a revelation.
Marked by humor, pathos and bold artwork, they were refreshingly complicated
creations.
Perhaps the most
complicated creation of all, however, was Marvel itself. As Sean Howe details
in his exhaustively researched and extraordinarily compelling “Marvel Comics: The
Untold Story,” the company behind the creative onslaught was as
contradictory and capricious as any of its characters. In the “Merry Marvel
Bullpen,” friendships were wrecked, careers were destroyed and hearts were
routinely broken. Peter Parker’s stint at the arachnophobic Daily Bugle was, in
comparison, like working at Google.
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http://www.salon.com/writer/panio_gianopoulos/
for the rest go here:
http://www.salon.com/writer/panio_gianopoulos/
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