By Barry Dutter
There is a rumor that the Marvel Universe will be rebooting in May of 2015.
This leads me to ask: Should Marvel Reboot? As a guy whose been reading Marvel Comics for over 40 years, I say… yes.
Wait. Hear me out.
I started reading Marvel Comics in 1974, and I’ve always felt one of the greatest things about the Marvel Universe was that it had so much history to it. All the characters were tied together, and it was fun learning all their back stories.
But at the time I started reading comics, the Marvel Universe was only 13 years old. There were some errors in continuity, many of them due to the faulty memory of Stan Lee, who had written the bulk of the Marvel books for the first decade or so. But it was a pretty cohesive universe over all.
Flash-forward to all these years later. Now the Marvel Universe is a convoluted mess. It’s hard to sustain the continuity of one character over 50 years. Now try doing it with hundreds, even thousands of characters over the course of five decades. (How many different versions of Deathlok have there been? How many different versions of the Guardians of the Galaxy? And are they all part of the same universe?)
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This means Spidey has had well over 2,000 adventures. Fought over 2,000 battles (and won just about all of them!) Encountered hundreds of different super-villains -- some of them on multiple occasions.
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It starts to push the willing suspension of disbelief of even the most die-hard Marvelite. How could one hero have so many adventures in one lifetime -- and not even have a scar to show for it?
The Marvel Universe is the greatest fictional universe ever created. It essentially started in 1961 with the publication of Fantastic Four #1. Yes, I know the company started in 1939 as Timely Comics, but let’s face it, most of the stories before 1961 are dated and silly and really do not fit the post-1961 continuity.
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So let’s go with 1961 as our starting point. That’s 53 years of continuity, and, as any longtime Marvelite can tell you, there are gaping inconsistencies. Such as? Well, for starters, there are the powers of Thor’s hammer.
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These are just a few random examples. There are hundreds, probably thousands more.
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Things were fairly stagnant at DC for the next 3 decades, with the next major reboot coming in 1985 at the conclusion of CRISIS ON INFINITE EARTHS. That was when John Byrne famously relaunched SUPERMAN with #1, and George Perez did the same with WONDER WOMAN. Inexplicably, BATMAN did not get a new #1, even though the company published Frank Miller’s acclaimed BATMAN YEAR ONE series at the time.
The reboots started coming fast and furious after that. Just 8 years later, DC published an epic mini-series called ZERO HOUR: CRISIS IN TIME, which reset everything back to square one.
And then, in 2011, DC famously scrapped just about everything and started their universe all over again with the New 52.
Meanwhile, over at Marvel, the company just kept chugging along with one consistent universe.
If any Marvel hero sat down and told you his life’s story, it would be the most depressing thing you ever heard. (It’s no wonder so many huge chunks of Marvel continuity are never referred to in the comics.)
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THIS IS FOR REAL! Ehhh...maybe not so much! |
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To that I would say, yes and no. The biggest problem with the Ultimate line is that it was designed to coexist alongside the OMU (Original Marvel Universe.)
I was not a big fan of the Ultimate Line, but what if it had been our only option? What if Marvel had completely replaced the OMU with the Ultimate Line? Fans of the Marvel heroes would have had no choice but to embrace the Ultimate books. If the Ultimate Line had been the only option, perhaps it would have been much more effective.
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But as an adjunct to the OMU, fans never really warmed up to it. Why follow these cheap imitations of the Marvel heroes when you could still get the real thing?
No, it would seem the Ultimate line was doomed from the start.
If you’re going to reboot your universe, you have to go all in. And that’s what I feel needs to be done today.
Aside from the obvious benefits, (great publicity and an initial sales boost), it would give hundreds of thousands of new fans a chance to witness the birth of the Marvel Universe from the beginning. And all of the new books could be made to resemble their cinematic counterparts even more, which seems to be the direction that Marvel wants to go in.
So yes, I’m proposing a fresh start for the Marvel Universe. A clean break. A chance to do it all over again, from the beginning. And maybe correct some of the mistakes that were made over the years. For starters, Spider-Man will never have to endure the Clone Saga. Gwen Stacy will never have babies with the Green Goblin. Peter Parker will never make a deal with Mephisto to save the life of Aunt May. And maybe, just maybe, if we're lucky, Tony Stark will never have to get a perm!
The movie X-MEN: DAYS OF FUTURE PAST won over fans and critics alike when it ended with a reboot of the franchise that fixed all the mistakes that had been made in previous movies. Now it's time to bring the same treatment to the entire Marvel Universe.
I’m not naive enough to think that a restart means they will get everything right this time. They may not make the same mistakes, but I’m sure they will find plenty of new ones to make.
But it would be fun to go along for the ride. It would be an amazing opportunity to say goodbye to the Marvel heroes we’ve known and loved all our lives, and say hello to them all over again.
A Marvel Reboot?
I say, why not?
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Namor has electric eel powers? Really? |
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