Kevin Completes Green Arrow Issue Six, Books Expected Soon…

October 5th, 2000 @ 5:34 pm | No Comments » | Scooped by Zeebadaboodee

  • As you probably knew, DC didn’t want to start releasing the new Green Arrow comics until they had issue six’s script from Kevin, and, well, that time has come. Kevin seems very happy with the script and it looks like DC will start soliciting for shops to order their copies. The first of Kevin’s Green Arrow stories should hit shelves sometime this winter. We urge the comic shops around to order a lot of copies, as numbers always skyrocket with Kev on board. Here’s Kevin with the official word:
Today, I finished the script for issue six to the new ‘Green Arrow’ (and I’ve gotta say – it’s pretty darn sweet). This means that DC can now start soliciting for the book.

Depending on how quickly the good folks in marketing can pull together the necessary material to make the Diamond catalogue deadline, it’ll be in either the January or February solicitations.

I’ve also seen all the art to issue one and most of the art to issue two, and it’s great. The boys are doing a fantastic job.

Add to that the beautiful cover sketches I’ve seen thus far (courtesy of Master Wagner), and I can assure you, you won’t be disappointed in this relaunch (well, at least not in the art, anyway).

Huzzah for all of us long-suffering ‘Arrow’ fans (and sorry for causing some of the suffering myself). Our day is now dawning.

Kevin went on to field a question regarding the Daredevil arc (and the death of a couple characters). Folks were wondering if the Green Arrow arc was going to be “sensationalistic” as well:

In all honesty, I don’t think what we’re doing on ‘Green Arrow’ is sensationalistic crap. Ollie is the Ollie most have known for years, and will become even more so as the series progresses. I never wanted to re-create or re-invision the character; I just wanted to tell a good Green Arrow story. Don’t fix what’s not broken, I say (except, of course, that we’re bringing a character that was considered dead back to life; and as mentioned by someone above, I don’t think DC ever really considered the character dead; Ollie was always meant to come back, sooner or later; at least, that’s what I was told by higher-ups at DC, long before I was ever involved with ‘Green Arrow’ as a writer).

And in terms of the ‘Daredevil’ arc…

I think if we’d thrown DD into a new costume, or gave him the ability to fly, or cut off his legs, or gave him a few more limbs – THAT would’ve been sensationalistic crap. As it stands, I don’t think we tried to re-invent the character; just tell another DD story – one that we thought was good. Killing off characters in the process of telling said story is far from sensationalistic crap, as neither was crassly marketed as “BUY THIS ISSUE, BECAUSE WE’RE KILLING SOMEONE!!! HURRY!!!” And there’s a long history of supporting characters and villains getting killed in comics. If I remember correctly, Gwen Stacey (Stacy?) was killed in a comic. Kraven was killed in a comic too. Both are considered great stories, not sensationalistic crap. Having a character die in a book, I think, is bound to happen, sooner or later, and is also healthy for the title. We all love comics, and we all love their episodic nature, but come on – these characters are usually always embroiled in life-or-death battles with their antitheses(is that the plural of ‘antithesis’), and the reader is usually rewarded for their fervent interest in such a story with seeing the villain jailed by story’s end. And nine times out of ten, that’s just fine; it’s something we all accept and justify to ourselves as readers of serial adventures. But every once in awhile, isn’t nice to see something that reflects what the reality of the situation might be? A guy who dresses up like a Goblin and is obsessed with defeating his arch-nemesis (who dresses up like something that doesn’t remotely resemble a spider) – even if he won’t kill him because, for some comic-y bullsh*t reason, it’s more satisfying to humiliate or best him – must eventually cross the line and do SOMETHING to hurt his enemy in some heinous and irreversible fashion, if for no other reason than to feel like he’s getting somewhere in their imagined chess game.

In our ‘DD’ storyline, Bullseye – a long-time bitter foe of DD’s – hurled a club to potentially slay said nemesis. DD’s long-time, on-again/off-again girlfriend (who most long-time readers HATED, as per internet sites and letter columns I’d read and re-read, prior to my story arc) jumps in front of the projectile, in an effort to save her love, and is slain in the process for her trouble. I, and many, many others, felt it was a poignant death – hardly sensationalistic. And the writers that followed me have been able to use Karen’s (the character in question) death in their stories (some unpublished, as of yet) for their benefit, as DD’s loss gives them something new to play with while writing his character.

As for Mysterio – come on. Here was a character nobody but me and JM DeMatteis appeared to give a sh*t about anymore, UNTIL he was dead. Suddenly, because some older and more established writers felt my editorially-approved killing off (and, for the record, the character took his own life, and was dying anyway), I was made the whipping boy. “Who does this newbie think he is, killing of our beloved Mysterio? *F* him!” (and for the record, it was worked out with then-editorial that while Quentin Beck was, indeed, dead, Mysterio didn’t have to be; let’s be honest – Mysterio’s really the suit; how many readers even really knew his name was Quentin Beck?). And the fact that the character’s BACK in the Marvel Universe (albeit, a little too soon, for my tastes) should take the heat off me for that move, as I didn’t actually kill of two characters, ultimately; just one.

But enough of that. If you want to consider the ‘DD’ run as hypocritical nonesuch – and my condemnation of the ‘Aquaman’ revamp as a case of the pot calling the kettle black – that’s okay. At least you read both the ‘DD’ run and that ‘Preacher’ trade paperback (in which that comment was made), as well as, presumably, ‘Aquaman’ – so that means the comics industry, contrary to popular belief, isn’t dead.

And even if you didn’t like what we did on ‘DD’, then maybe you’ll read the ‘Green Arrow’ run – if for no other reason than just to see if I’m a total hacky hypocrite. And that, too, will be good for the comics industry. Because, at the end of the day, isn’t that what we all want – the longevity and vitality of this pocket of the literary arts that we all love and support?

And on a side note: that metagene stuff? I got nothing to do with that, and it’s not addressed in our run at all. So I’m not taking a bullet for that.

Again – I’m not reinventing the wheel on this title (just like I didn’t try to do on ‘DD’); I’m just adding another spoke. I have tons of respect for continuity (just ask Scott McCullar), and I’m not going to disrupt any of it – trust me. Even with bringing Ollie back from what many presumed (and rightly so) was his death, I’m STILL not disrupting continuity. It’ll all come together by the end of the twelve issue arc.

And if you don’t like it then, well jeez – you guys are f*cking tough.

(Please excuse the * stuff; I’m not sure if you can hurl even mild obscenities in this Warner Bros.-financed forum).>>>>>

No Comments Yet...

Scroll down and be the first!

Got Something To Say?

You must be logged in to post a comment.