By Paul Kupperberg
I gotta tell you, if I have
to read another proposal for a revival of the Yellowjacket, I’m going to
scream. I mean...he was a hero who kept a bee
in his freakin’ belt buckle that he would release to buzz around to befuddle
the bad guys.
Look, it’s called the
“Golden Age” not because of the overwhelming awesomeness of the majority of
comic books published during it, but because like the classical “ages of Man’
from which the term was taken, it was the first
period of comic books. Yes, there
was some great stuff published during the period (you can argue among
yourselves specifically which stuff that is), and it saw the birth of the form
and the creation of some its greatest characters and the medium’s visual
vocabulary, but most of the Golden Age characters and stories were pretty lame. The
stories were simplistic, even nonsensical, and the art was often as not little
better than a step above amateur. For every Spirit by Will Eisner or Plastic Man
by Jack Cole, there were scores of Yellowjackets or Madame Fatals.
That’s not to say these
lesser creations didn’t have a certain charm and appeal, even if most of them
come off as having been created by inserting random nouns in front of “man” or
“girl.” I can point to any number of features from that era that I’m really
fond of and will happily reread for old time’s sake. But they are products of
their time and place and don’t really work outside that historic context. What
might have worked for the 8-year old reader or entertainment starved G.I. in
1944 is just plain silly for the (arguably) more sophisticated readers of
today.
“It’s another one of those
damned archaeologists,” he growled. (Julie was a world class growler.)
“Archaeologists?”
“One of those writers who
are always digging up some fahcocktah
old character and bringing them back instead of coming up with something
original. And you know what they call me!” he declared.
I sure did: B.O. (Be
Original) Schwartz.
While few editors had
revived as many characters as Julie had in his career (The Flash, Green
Lantern, Atom, Hawkman, to name a few), he would always reinvent them from the ground up instead of settling for a mere
resurrection. And his reinventions were done not out of choice but under orders
from his corporate bosses. Given his druthers, Julie would rather have created
something like Adam Strange from scratch.
I don’t deny that early on, The Charlton Arrow (myself included) had
some fun digging up the oldies from Charlton Classic to play with. But as we began
evolving from TCA to Neo, we began to
shift our focus from the old to the new. Roger McKenzie’s Spookman was already
a ground up rebuild. My own Cheyenne Kid, Kid Montana, and Colonel Whiteshroud,
Monster Hunter (coming up in TCA #4)
stories were originally written for TCA
before the Neo line and spin-off titles like Wild Frontier were even a gleam in our eyes. But going forward,
neither Roger or I will be bringing back many Classic Charlton characters.
We’re going to focus on our own creations, in the spirit of what came before and not without the occasional nod to what came before (as with my upcoming Charlton Noir series, “Digger” Graves, Paranormal P.I., who is the son of Dr. Graves but as different from his old man as can be)...but leaving the past in the past, where it belongs. Just the other day, someone asked about submitting a proposal for a series bringing back one of Charlton Classic's horror hosts. My response was, "If you think you've got a fresh, contemporary slant on him, go for it!" Neo means "new," not "retro."
We’re going to focus on our own creations, in the spirit of what came before and not without the occasional nod to what came before (as with my upcoming Charlton Noir series, “Digger” Graves, Paranormal P.I., who is the son of Dr. Graves but as different from his old man as can be)...but leaving the past in the past, where it belongs. Just the other day, someone asked about submitting a proposal for a series bringing back one of Charlton Classic's horror hosts. My response was, "If you think you've got a fresh, contemporary slant on him, go for it!" Neo means "new," not "retro."
So, do as we do and as B.O.
Schwartz--arguably the greatest editor in the history of the medium--recommended:
“Be Original.” And please...no more Yellowjacket.
Or Nature Boy either, come
to think of it. I mean, his name is Nature Boy for cryin' out loud!
© Paul Kupperberg
Very well explained! I think that one of the reasons you may be getting a 'landslide' of revivals, is because that seemed to be, right up to this moment, the direction that the Arrow, and even Neo seemed to want. I know I felt that way... Glad to know that is not the case, though, thank you.
ReplyDeleteFor some of the characters, like Yellow Jacket, the desire to revisit them may not be from the character as written, or from the name... but from the appearance. In my case, I love the costume, and want to see it at least once, in a story with contemporary art styles. Nothing more.
Don't ever overlook the power of the image when wondering why someone is calling on the past.