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Avengers vs X-Men
By Dan Horn
December 8, 2011 - 15:11
Marvel events are always about the next big slugfest, crossing bullishly
into the been-there-done-that territory of heroes against heroes. Some
of us salivate over the promise of the next Marvel comic book event
series, while others feel only a dutiful obligation to keep up with
convoluted crossovers for the sake of staying in the continuity loop.
Still, others wonder how they'll avoid the event altogether and how it
will interfere with their favorite monthly Marvel titles.
This week Marvel unveiled its next main attraction for 2012:
Avengers
vs. X-Men. The impetus bringing these two super-teams to blows remains
as of yet unclear. That's not the question that bothers me, however.
Several new, and surprisingly well-written, X-titles followed the latest
Marvel event,
X-Men: Schism. How long can we expect to enjoy great
content from
Wolverine and the X-Men or the rebooted
Uncanny X-Men
before they're subjected to months of obligatory event tie-ins? Remember
when, just this year, several new titles like
Ghost Rider and
Iron Man
2.0 debuted and were immediately hijacked by
Fear Itself supplements?
Titles with moderate sales that don't fit nicely into the Marvel event model, like
X-23,
Punisher Max, and
Black Panther, get the axe prematurely, but even books
that do sometimes find themselves canceled as well, and not without
good reason.
When
Ghost Rider #0.1 came out last year, there was a definite fan-base,
and an excitement over the new direction. The reaction to this debut
was overwhelmingly positive, which purported stronger sales for issue #1
the following month. However the first issues directly following that
premiere were already emblazoned with
Fear Itself banners and dealt with
things that left even the staunchest Ghost Roadie feeling more than
ambivalent toward the series. It was a disappointment. The
disappointment had nothing to do with a female Ghost Rider, except in
the case of closed-minded purists, and everything to do with
inconvenient, boring event shilling. It's no surprise that
Ghost Rider
has received cancellation notice since, though it is lamentable that it
never even got the chance to do its own thing.
Similarly Nick Spencer's
Iron Man 2.0 is on life support after its first
arc was interrupted mid-way to accommodate
Fear Itself. Sure,
Ghost
Rider and
Iron Man 2.0 may not cater to a demographic as large as those
that series like
Captain America and
Amazing Spider-Man do, but there
was an initial interest in those fringe mainstream titles that was
substantial nonetheless. Sales figures for
Ghost Rider rose considerably from an
estimated 25000 units sold of #0.1 in June 2011 to 41300 units of #1
in July, making it the thirty-seventh highest grossing single issue of
that month according to Diamond retailers. In August, once the reality
of a
Fear Itself overhaul set in, sales for
Ghost Rider diminished
drastically and immediately, though it retained a position in Diamond's
top 100 comics for that month. Likewise,
Iron Man 2.0's strong following
began dwindling during
Fear Itself tie-ins, and perhaps the reputation
of writer Nick Spencer alone has kept the series afloat.
Series like Rick Remender's
Uncanny X-Force, Mark Waid's
Daredevil, and
Greg Rucka's
Punisher seem to prove my point: smart, entertaining,
gorgeously illustrated, mostly self-contained stories that avoid
crossover dilution and remain among Diamond's top sellers. With the
advent of these newer, stronger titles, I assumed perhaps Marvel was
seeing the light. Jason Aaron's recent premieres of
Wolverine and the
X-Men and
Incredible Hulk were outperforming both
Fear Itself and
Schism
in October, only being trumped by strong DC New 52 sales. Once the New
52 novelty fades and the market once again equilibrates between the Big
Two publishers, one has to wonder, if every Marvel title was as worth
its cover price as
Uncanny X-Force or
Wolverine and the X-Men, wouldn't
the success of those books eclipse the singular appeal (and eventually
the sales) of an event book?
Fear Itself has left a bad taste in the mouths of many of those who
stuck with it as well. If the tepid events
Dark Reign,
Siege, and
Secret
Invasion hadn't made you absolutely loathe Marvel's "next big thing,"
Fear Itself was sure to. I have to wonder if another lackluster
event/crossover might be the straw that breaks the camel's back. DC, for
example has ostensibly done away with event series completely after
Flashpoint, opting for a much more grabbing marketing ploy with the
controversial reboot of their entire comics line. DC sales have since been
record-setting. DC's proclaimed focus on quality and the historical allure of the reboot drew more attention than most "crises" and
Flashpoint could have ever dreamed of.
Stick a fork in the event trend. Please.
Last Updated: August 31, 2023 - 08:12