Showing posts with label Digital Comics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Digital Comics. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

See, Comics Aren't For Kids!

So, I'm toodling around the DC Comics digital site-a-ma-gig, because they have some comics on sale. Such as...

Batman #1 for only 99¢? Yowza, who could resist that?

Yet as I am about to download it, I look over at the right side of the screen, and I see...

"Rating Ages 12 and up"

Really? 12 and up? Well, I guess the Joker is in it and he kills some folks, and he gets killed and all. But really, I know I was a lot younger than 12 when I read a reprint of this issue for the first time. And I wasn't scarred horribly (at least, not so I noticed).

So I curiously poked around the DC Digital site ("powered by Comixology"). Next stop? Action Comics #1. And, lo and behold...

"Rating Ages 12 and up."

Oh c'mon--Action #1?!? Superman's origin is deemed inappropriate for youngsters? You know dang well pre-teens were among the biggest customers of comic books back in the day. But now the first Kal-El adventure is deemed not child-friendly?!?

OK, maybe the Golden Age was a seething cesspool of violence and mind-corrupting content. Let's take a look at the relative kid-friendliness of the Silver Age. How about Justice League Of America #21, the famous first JLA/JSA crossover. It's hard to to think of a safer, less inappropriate (dare I say bland and bloodless?) example example of comics safe for all ages, right?

"Rating Ages 12 and up."

Well. Maybe it's just a DC thing? So I went to the Comixology site to check how they handled Silver Age Marvels. Howzabout Amazing Fantasy #15?

"12+ only"

I guess "with great power comes great responsibility" is a lesson we shouldn't teach to 10 year olds. Stan and Steve--famous for being too intense for the youths.

A quick further dash around the classics from Origins Of Marvel Comics--Fantastic Four #1, Amazing Spider-Man #1, and others--all said the same thing:

"12+ only"

But here's the funny part. If you go to Marvel's own site, and surf the selections in Marvel Digital Comics, those same issues...have no ratings at all! The modern stuff, after the ratings were adopted...those have ratings listed. But the classic Silver Age stuff? No warnings at all.

So this seems to be Comixology's doing. And my highly unscientific survey tells me that they've slapped "12+ only" or "Ages 12 and up" on every single Golden and Silver Age comic they've got.

If I were to guess, at some point Comixology decided that every comic they carry had to be rated...but they didn't want to spend the effort to read through and rate all of those unrated comics, so they just called them all 12+ to cover their butts.

Of course, I don't have kids, and I can't claim any kind of special knowledge in child psychology or the like. So maybe all of those comics I read before I was 12 really were bad for me. I mean, I watched unedited Warner Brothers cartoons, rode a bike without a helmet, went to the local park unaccompanied by an adult, and ate lots of white bread and refined sugar...so clearly I was living on borrowed time anyway, and society was too stupid to realize that uplifting stories of heroes were bad for the young ones.

Still, come on, Comixology...I really think it's OK to let 9 years olds read Action Comics #1.

Monday, March 12, 2012

Manic Monday--Seriously, This Post Will Be Cooler In A Few Months!! Honest!!















AR

















What? You can't read this post?

Well, you see, the post is in Slay Monstrobot's propietary new Slay Monstrobot AR format! (No relation whatsoever to Marvel's new, and frankly inferior, AR format)

AR stands for "Augmented Reality" (which just goes to show that tech people shouldn't be allowed to name things). Just use the new app (not yet available), point your phone or pad or magic glasses (exact technology still not defined) at special posts (which ones are not announced yet) and you'll receive "exclusive content" (which so far seems to consist of "trailers" for the comic you're already looking at in the form of "motion comics," but really, we promise that there will be all sorts of world-shattering stuff--it's not just some silly gimmick like QR code-readers that you'll get bored with and stop using after a couple of months and relegate to your very last phone screen with other long-forgotten apps that were cool until you realized they kinda weren't actually cool).

See, it's all part of Slay Monstrobot's new ReEvolution (do you see what we did there? We combined two different words into one nonsensical marketing term!! Completely unlike Marvel's, of course!)

AR proves that, even though we can't sucker people with 3D comics anymore, Slay Monstrobot will never give up trying to prove that gimmickry is more important than content!! I mean, we've gotta justify the salaries of our marketing departing somehow, right?

Coming soon: Slay Monstrobot Infinity!! (Yes, I know that has nothing to do with the actual definition of the word "infinite"--hey, marketing people, right?)

Monday, February 21, 2011

Manic Monday--Better Than The Quarter Bin!!

So, I've been pushing the Archie at you today, and now it's time for me to put on my pimpin' hat at hook you up with some really cheap Archie collections.

Amazon has a ridiculously low price on 3 DVD-ROM collections of Archie comics:

Bronze Age Archie...

Bronze Age Jughead...

And Bronze Age Betty & Veronica...

That's all the issues of each title from 1970 through 1979, all on convenient DVD-ROM in convenient PDF format. The price? $2.99 each for the Archie and Jughead sets, $3.99 for the Betty & Veronica (why more for them? Because there's two of them, silly, they have to split the royalties!)!

That's dirt cheap, folks. If you buy all 3 sets, you're getting 360 comics for 11 bucks.

I'm not sure why Amazon has gone so nuts, but why not take advantage? And, full disclosure, if you click on the links here to get there, I'll get a few (very few) drachma. It's win-win!!

And while I'm dealing, Amazon also seems to be clearing out this DVD-ROM of Star Trek comics books:

That's 500 Star Trek comics--originally published by Gold Key, Marvel, DC, Malibu, & Wildstorm--for $6.99. You must know some nerd who would appreciate this as a belated Presidents' Day gift!!

Thus endeth the unseemly commercial interruption...

Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Someone's Been Tapping Into My Christmas Dreams

I guess now he'll really know who's naughty and nice:


Santa Claus vs. The Illuminati by Brian Reed and Val Semeiks is free until December 31st and Marvel Digital Comics Unlimited.

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Whither Bond Comics?

In keeping up with the James Bond theme this week, let's talk about Bond comics. In yesterday's post, I questioned why, oh why we didn't have any ongoing Bond comics.

Well, just today Newsarama published an interview with Alan J. Porter, author of the newly published James Bond: The History of the Illustrated 007, which examines the history of James Bond comic books and comic strips. It turns out that there have been 145 stories--some adaptations, some original--over the years, in over 20 countries. U.S. publishers have included DC, Marvel, Eclipse, Dark Horse, and Topps. One thing Porter notes in the interview is:

Perhaps the most surprising thing to me from a historical perspective is the fact that outside of the British newspaper strips no-one has every managed to successfully publish a Bond comic on a sustainable basis. For whatever reason, Bond has had a very patchy career in comics.
It's hard to say why. You'd think that the market today could sustain a Bond comic, given the critical and commercial success of things like Criminal and Queen & Country. And you'd expect someone to try more or less continuously, as with the Star Trek licence--it's jumping from company to company, but usually someone is publishing Trek...so why not 007?

Maybe the rights are too expensive, or maybe the Fleming estate is too difficult to deal with...hello, don't you guys like money, as Chris Sims would say?!?

But speaking of Star Trek...Hey, GITCorp...remember the great job you did with the Star Trek DVD-Rom, gathering all the comics that had been published by diverse companies and gathering them into one beautiful little package? Looks like the James Bond comics might be ripe for such a treatment...

Thursday, September 11, 2008

Wednesday, September 10, 2008

Nerd Alert

Too busy to do a real post today, because I'm wallowing in Star Trek comics.

Yup, the GitCorp DVD-ROM with EVERY STAR TREK COMIC EVER showed up today (OK, they don't have the X-Men Star Trek crossover. Trust me...you're better off). And when you combine Star Trek with comics, well, it's nerdvana. Check out the table of contents.

That's a lotta Trek...And just to prove they have everything:

Dammit, now I have to hunt down the recordToo bad the soundtrack isn't included. But inside, a moment that makes my skin tingle:

Did you just call me stupid?John Buscema draws Kirk, Conan, and Gandalf...(there are no credits, and all I can find online is that the "writers" are Cary Bates and Neal Adams, and Neal obviously did the cover...but that's gotta be Johhny B on the artwork, right?

One odd moment:

And you guys thought Vixen had it bad...Uhura, you've become white and blond! (If it helps, they made Sulu black...) And what is up with those tights??

Tuesday, August 5, 2008

Digital Comic Update--Star Trek

Well, we've had a number of discussions here about how DC hates us, and how Marvel hates us but still wants our money so at least they're giving us something, on the issue of digital comics.

But they're not the only players in town. Coming September 1st from our good buddies at GIT Corp:

Our 500 issue mission...Yup, every Star Trek comic EVER, from 1967-2002. From assorted publishers, including Gold Key, Marvel, DC, Wildstorm, and Malibu. TOS, TNG, DS9, and Voyager. Annuals, mini-series, one-shots. Doesn't include the stuff published under the current IDW license, but man o man...And unlike one of the more annoying aspects of their Marvel sets (no issues from crossovers that happened in "other" titles, so you get incomplete stories), this time they've got it all.

Yeah, there's some real crap in there--you ever read any of those Gold Key Star Treks??--but 500 issues of Star Trek on one DVD-Rom?? You can't beat that with a stick. So order it from Amazon, or bug your comic shop to get it. And GIT Corp...keep on keeping on.

Memo to DC: Are you at all embarrassed that other people are putting out digital versions of comics that you published, while you're giving us nada? Dudes...wake up!!

Confidential memo to Siskoid: This is what you do when you're done with the episodes...review one Star Trek comic per day...it's perfect!!

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

An Opposing Viewpoint

Last week, I ragged on DC's first foray into digitial comics, the "Motion Comic."

Well, today Newsarama had an interview with a couple or Warner corporate weasels discussing the concept. So in the interest of fairness, I'll present the link to it.

Warning: if you're allergic to corporate double-speak, you might want to be careful. "Designed to maximize this medium?" "Leverage the strength of the digital experience?" "We do look at core art assets to make sure they can be effectively utilized?" Yeesh. DC has been taken over by the Borg.

Friday, July 18, 2008

DC Doesn't Get It

You've all heard me bemoaning the lack of any kind of availability of DC's archives in a cheap and friendly digital form. No matter what the drawbacks of Marvel's current formats, they sure as hell beat NOTHING. Which is what DC had.

Well, no more. Earlier this week, Warner Bros Digital Distribution announced this:

Wow. Talk about ridiculously underwhelming.

Instead of giving us what we want--just the comics, man--Warner is going to tart them up with narration and "motion." And charge us $1.99 per issue for the privilege.

No, I'm not making this up.

On the GIT Corp DVD-ROMs, we got 500+ comics for less than 50 bucks. Complete runs of Fantastic Four, Amazing Spider-Man, Avengers, etc.

Even Marvel's forthcoming DVD releases are giving us 50 issues for 50 bucks.

And you can. if you choose, subscribe to Marvel Digital Comics Unlimited online, and for a monthly fee have access to 27,000+ back issues, all you can read.

Again, you can quibble with Marvel's formats. But lordy, DC, you're making them look good. $1.99 per? Downloads for my phone (if I happen to have Verizon with VCast)? Relatively recent releases that almost everyone who cares to already has? With the craptacular "subtle motion" of panning a camera over a panel and using computers to move figures around? With one guy doing ALL of the voices??

Listen carefully, DC (or Warner...DC is mentioned just once in the whole press release!). You have in your possession the largest, most valuable store of comic archives in the world. And you're just sitting on them, releasing them in ridiculous teensy drabs, while Marvel is freaking eating your lunch. You're getting shut out of a growing market, a huge potential source of income, not to mention a way to attract new, younger fans. How many of your readers have never read a Golden Age JSA or Flash story, and don't want to spend $50 on an Archive? You want to attract new Legion readers? Don't just publish another randomly selected "Legion's Greatest Hits" trade...that's not the best way to hook people. They need to follow the month to month relationships and soap operas. Make 'em available on a cheap DVD set.

Use those archives, DC. Get creative. Find a way to use them that Marvel is missing out on. Can you imagine what the readership would be for an online reprinting of all the stories Grant Morrison is referencing in R.I.P. or Final Crisis?? Surely there are lots of innovations, far more creative than this con job you're pulling.

Issue #1 of Watchman "motion comic" is a free download for iTunes for a couple of weeks, so check it out if you're interested. But you won't be impressed.

Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Digital Comics Update--Marvel brings Back DVDs

Well, Sunday I did an extensive comparison of the GIT Corp DVD-ROM collections of Marvel comics, and Marvel's Digital Comics Unlimited online service.

So of course, two days later Marvel decides to change the equation.

As the GIT DVD's are discontinued and disappearing from shelves, Marvel has decided to publish its own DVDs. From September's solicits:

You saw the movie--buy the DVD!IRON MAN: DVD DIGITAL COMIC BOOK ARCHIVES 1 Written by STAN LEE, LARRY LIEBER, ROY THOMAS, ROBERT BERNSTEIN, DON RICO & AL HARTLEY Penciled by DON HECK, GENE COLAN, JACK KIRBY & STEVE DITKO Slipcase Art by ADI GRANOV DVD Case Art by JACK KIRBY CONTAINS THE FIRST FIFTY ISSUES OF IRON MAN COMICS! As the Marvel Age of Comics exploded on the pop-culture scene, super hero after super hero that redefined the genre leaped forth from the imagination of the Marvel Bullpen. Adventurers and innovators, scientists and high-school bookworms, they were amazing men and women with all the failings and foibles of you and me. And there are none that touch both that adventurer ideal and human reality as Tony Stark, the Invincible Iron Man. A jet-setter, playboy and brilliant scientist, Tony is cut down to Earth when a battlefield explosion rips into his heart. Only by creating the amazing Iron Man armor can he stay alive! Packed with the debonair and debutantes, Cold War monsters and sultry super-spies, this DVD-ROM collection presents the stories of one of comics’ most intriguing characters from the very beginning! Featuring the first appearances of such classic Marvel characters as the Mandarin, the Black Widow, Hawkeye, the Crimson Dynamo and the Titanium Man in lushly-illustrated stories by “Dazzling” Don Heck, Gene “The Dean” Colan and scripted by no less than Stan “The Man” Lee himself, this is go-to volume for the Iron Man fan. Including the exclusive Marvel Digital Comics Reader versions of TALES OF SUSPENSE #39-88 and TALES TO ASTONISH #82, plus bonuses galore! ALL AGES...$29.99

Answer: Monster
HULK: DVD DIGITAL COMIC BOOK ARCHIVES 1 Written by STAN LEE & GARY FRIEDRICH Penciled by JACK KIRBY, STEVE DITKO, MARIE SEVERIN, GIL KANE, BILL EVERETT, JOHN BUSCEMA, JOHN ROMITA, DICK AYERS, MIKE ESPOSITO & BOB POWELL Slipcase Art by ALEX ROSS DVD Case Art by JACK KIBRY CONTAINS THE FIRST FIFTY ISSUES OF HULK COMICS! Dr. Robert Bruce Banner may have the appearance of a mild-mannered scientist, but after being caught in gamma bomb explosion, he became the unstoppable engine of destruction know as the Incredible Hulk! Marvel is proud to present the tales of the everyone’s favorite man-monster from the very beginning: From the earliest Stan Lee and Jack Kirby issues that put an irradiated angle on the Dr. Jekyll/Mr. Hyde complex to the Steve Ditko’s psychological slobbernockers in TALES TO ASTONISH and the Jade Giant’s return to his solo series, this DVD-ROM collection is the foundation for every purple-pants’d adventure ever! Featuring artwork by a who’s who of Marvel Age luminaries and scripts by Stan “The Man” Lee, they’ll introduce to you to General Thunderbolt Ross; the tortured woman who loves both the man and the monster, Betty Ross; the Leader; the Abomination; and a series of earth-shaking fights between the Hulk and the Silver Surfer, Thor, Giant-Man, Namor, Hercules and more! Including the exclusive Marvel Digital Comics Reader versions of INCREDIBLE HULK #1-6, TALES TO ASTONISH #59-101 and INCREDIBLE HULK #102 — plus bonuses galore! ALL AGES...$29.99

Well, well, well.

These aren't out yet, I haven't seen the contents, but a couple of points:
  • These issues all ALL already available online at MDCU. $60 for a one year, all-you-can-eat subscription, the same as you'd pay for both DVD's.
  • Since Marvel already has these cleaned up and digitized, I presume that you'll be getting the same versions as are on MDCU, which means cleaner and brighter that the GIT DVDs, but without ads, letter columns, etc. Although the solicit promises "bonuses galore..."? And it will use the same interface as MDCU online, as opposed to the Adobe Reader version GIT used.
  • Holy shit, Marvel, you greedy bastards! What's with that price point? $30 for 50 issues? Hell, you can get 500+ issues on the GIT discs for only $50 list (although given that they're out of print, prices have started going up--Iron Man is $90, if you can find it...but still, it's a FAR better per issue deal than the new Marvel DVD's). Given that Marvel already did all the work to clean these up and digitize them for MDCU, there's really no justification for limiting each disc to an arbitrary 50 issues and charging an outrageous amount for them. Assuming Marvel sticks to 50 issues per disc, you'll end up paying over $300 for the same issues GIT gave you on one disc for 1/6 of the price. Granted, it's cleaner and brighter...but is it worth 6 times the price?!?
Again, you've got a choice of formats...but Marvel's new DVD's seem to give you so much less for so much more money, I've got to ask if it's at all a good deal, especially as compared to the MDCU versions, or even the still-available-for-now GIT DVDs.

And yet again, the question remains: WHERE THE HELL IS DC???? I recently saw an interview with Paul Levitz admitting that DC was far behind marvel on the digital issues, and that they would have something coming soon. Well????

Sunday, June 15, 2008

Digital Comics Shopping Guide

UPDATE: When Marvel solicits were announced Tuesdays, it was revealed that they will be releasing their own DVD-ROM collections. So after you read this, hop over to Tuesadys post for the full story. We now return you to the regularly scheduled post...

Sorry for the inconvenience. Because I love you, my readers, and because all these darned "give gifts to other people" holidays are finally past us, I'm going to talk about things that you can buy for yourselves. Namely, comic books for your computer.

First, a note to DC Comics--where the hell are you on this? Marvel is eating your lunch, Paul Levitz!! Even if Marvel's products aren't perfect, they're still much better than NOTHING!

Anyhoo, for Marvel-heads, there are two options available, and one of those is fast becoming unavailable.

The latter are the DVD-ROM sets put together by GIT Inc, covering the entire runs of such classics as Fantastic Four, Amazing Spider-Man, Avengers, Captain America, Incredible Hulk, etc. Marvel did not renew GIT Corp's license, so they could push their own online digital comics, and the sets are no longer in print. You can still most most of the readily enough on Amazon or EBay, and even at your local comics store. But you'd best act fast if you're interested in this option, because they won't be around forever. Already the Iron Man set is almost impossible to find for less than $90 (list is $49.99 for most), and I imagine that as the other sets sell down, they'll also get more expensive.

The other method, of course, is Marvel Digital Comics Unlimited, the online subscription service that gives you access to tens of thousands of Marvel's comics in an all-you-can-eat style, for $4.99/month if you pay annually, or $9.99 one month at a time.

So what are the differences? The DVD-ROMs give you depth, while MDCU gives you breadth.
When GIT Corp promised you a complete collection, well, they mostly mean it. The Fantastic Four collection has every single issue and Annual for the Fantastic Four from #1 all the way up to the first couple of issues of 2007. Captain America has his complete run from Tales of Suspense (including the Iron Man stories from those issues!!) and all the various volumes of Captain America, up until the death of Cap in Volume 5 #25. Let me emphasize, though, that it's not 100% of everything...while they have all of the Annuals, they don't have the Giant-Sizes that Marvel published in the 1970s, many of which contained important stories (especially the Avengers!). Stories that cross over into other titles can be frustrating, because you won't get the part that appeared in some other title. Also, spin-offs, mini-series, one-offs, and oddballs aren't included. Still, you get a lot of bang for your buck: over 500 comics in the Cap set, 750 (!) in the FF/Silver Surfer set, for a hell of a lot less than it would cost to get those things in trades/ Essentials/Omnibi.

MDCU, by contrast, is not nearly as complete. Right now, you really can't get complete runs of titles. As opposed to 543 issues and 32 Annuals for the FF from GIT Corp, MDCU offers fewer than 200 issues of the main FF series, and only 4 annuals. More comics are being added every week, but if you're interested in complete runs, this may not be the way to go for you.

But, oh, the breadth!! MDCU does give you most of those mini-series or Specials. And whereas each GIT Corp set is focused on one mag, while you subscribe you have EVERY MDCU comic available to you...over 2,700 at last count. Virtually every title Marvel has ever published has at least some issues represented. And as I mentioned...it's all you can eat, so if you want to read thousands of comics a month, well, I envy your free time, but more power to you.

So, completists should look at the DVD-ROMs, browsers the MGDC.

Permanence and accessibility is another factor to consider. Once you own the GIT Corp sets, they're yours forever, obviously. But with MDCU, you can't actually download them. You have to view them online through your browser, so obviously you need an internet connection going for the service to be useful. If you want to access these on the road, you might have some trouble, whereas you could just pop in the DVD with the other option (or burn it straight to your hard drive if you have room...the FF disc is less than 8GB). Also, once you let your subscription lapse, you can no longer access the issues. So, if you're a read-it-once-and-done type, MDCU might be your best option. If you want it forever, GIT Corp is the way to go (unless, of course, you plan to subscribe to MDCU forever...).

The quality of the comics on screen has a big difference. GIT Corp took actual copies of all the comics and scanned them. So, especially with older titles, the quality was limited by the condition of the mags available to them. Note, for example the first page of FF#1 below, complete with fading, somebody's stamp inside the cover (!), and other deterioration. MDCU, by contrast, went back to "the original files" to create their online offerings, which means clean, clean, clean. I've presented their version of that same page below, as well.


FF #1, GIT Corp DVD
FF #1, Marvel Digital ComicsThat difference in procedure does lead to one more difference in product, as you saw. GIT Corp scanned the entire comic, so you get EVERY single ad, every single letter column, every single Bullpen Bulletin, every back cover...you get the entire published book. MDCU only gives you the story pages, nothing else. Do you find that kind of thing a nostalgia trip, or do they just get in the way of your enjoyment of reading the book? Decide how much those type of things matter to you before you decide which to invest in.

Printing? GIT Corp does allow you to print out pages, but a (not terribly intrusive) Marvel watermark will turn up on each page. MDCU doesn't allow printing, but of course you can do screen caps and print those...but that's a lot of work. Who wants to print out whole comics, anyway??

The interfaces are different, but both come from Adobe. (Info note: I'm looking at these on a 19" monitor with 1280X1024 resolution...please take your own screen into account when reading the next bit) GIT Corp uses a straight Adobe Reader format, which most of you are plenty familiar with. You cannot alter the two-pages-at-a-time format, which can be a drag. My screen is big enough to show the pages at 100% size...if yours isn't, you have the standard Adobe Reader magnify tools, but that can make panel navigation very tricky. It's a very functional interface, but very basic, and no bells and whistles. Also very annoying...each menu choice opens a new Adobe window, so by the time I choose Fantastic Four, decade, year, and issue number, I've got 5 seperate Adobe windows open...very sloppy.

MDCU uses Adobe Flash to view the books within your browser. One drawback--the entire comics can take 30 seconds to a minute to load completely, depending on your internet connection. You have a choice of two page or one page mode, but if you do one page you will have to greatly reduce your magnification to fit it on your screen, and the stupid application will NOT remember your magnification settings from page to page!! Yuck. Fortunately, one more option is provided: "smart panels," which essentially blows up one panel or row of panels at a time, and you can you use your arrow keys to navigate back and forth. Pretty nifty, but unusual panel structures will confuse it, and sometimes it just acts herky-jerky and clunkity. See screen caps of Captain America #100 in both formats below. Oh, yeah, and MDCU gives you freakin' ads! I hope that's only on the free samples, and not when you subscribe, because giving us crap ads for crap movies when we've already paid our bills is crap, Marvel!

Cap #100, GIT DVD
Cap #100, Marvel Digital ComicsSo you've got 2 formats, neither perfect, each with pluses and minuses, each of which fits the needs of some users and not others. For those who are interested, hopefully I've given you the info to help you make an informed decision, if you're interested.

And DC, where the hell are you guys? It's the 21st century!! Do you know how much I would pay for a Legion of Super-Heroes DVD-ROM??