Bass
Nexus of the World
I think I'm a bit snobby too. I like mine to come on a silver platter with caviar.
I think I'm a bit snobby too. I like mine to come on a silver platter with caviar.
Do I look like a peasant?
The negotiations took over two years, and contracts between the Anons and Emotiv were drawn up three weeks before the Marvel announcement, when suddenly Emotiv stopped returning calls and e-mails to the Anons. This was after they asked about a contract clause - in that they would have had to sign a statement that Emotiv were not responsible for the legal rights that the buyer would or would not buy. So if there was a subsequent challenge to them, the buyer not the seller would be responsible for all legal fees to fight it.
One aspect of this was the name of the character possibly infringing Marvel's trademark. And with Todd McFarlane making legal noises, there was even a possibility from Emotiv that the character would would be renamed again to Masterman.
Glad you're enjoying it!
Miracleman had no problem working out "Steppenwolf" would switch off Miracledog.
Mike Moran was too scared and not bright enough to work it out any faster than he did.
Remember, Miracleman thinks better than Mike too.
I think Moore conveyed it brilliantly here and with Doc Manhattan in WATCHMEN. No, I do not know how he did it.
I did read Gaiman's run.
It was okay, but I can hardly remember of any of it. I remember that when I was reading it, I was upset. Not because it's bad, it certainly wasn't that at ALL. It was because I didn't want to know any more about the characters or see them do anything else. It was done. For me, at least.
The fact I can hardly remember any of it, is quite pleasing.
I wish I could do that for THE SOPRANOS and THE MATRIX.
My mistake.
See, I've found the little bit I've read of it to be very interesting, mainly because Gaiman wasn't really focusing on Miracleman so much as the world around him (as a result of him). This is the stuff I find interesting: Miracleman's "utopian" world and the different views of it (the Bates followers, the regular people, etc).
In fact, in the sense of you not wanting to learn more about Miracleman, Gaiman's run seems almost exactly what you'd want since (at least the first book) focuses on everyone BUT Miracleman.
Regardless, I don't really know what I'm talking about since I've only just begun Gaiman's run, but I just really enjoy his writing style so far (this is the first thing I've ever read of Gaiman's). Its serious and dark, but in a much different vein than Moore's writing style. I guess Gaiman's run is less personal than Moore's since it jumps from character to character, but I feel it gives a better understanding and scope of the world they've created by looking outside of just Miracleman and his immediate supporting cast.
In the end, Moore's is obviously the definitive run, but as said, I think Gaiman deserves some credit for what he brought to the table.
The Sopranos is the most over-rated television show ever. The Matrix should have been a stand-alone movie, not a trilogy.
But come on, thats no fair comparing Sopranos/Matrix to Gaiman's run. The Matrix? Really?