I would like it if the cover was actually the first panel of the issue's story. That way, the readers not only has something to grab their attention, but it helps tie the story in from the start. It would also make it easier to organize issues that cross-over between titles. Now, I know why cover art is the way that it is, and I have already figured out some problems with my idea. Still, should I ever write a comic, I would like my covers to be more related to the story and less designed just to shock.
So often lately, I've found myself disturbed by the cover images on comic books. Batman, in particular, has been a figure whose cover images tend to be disturbing to such a degree that I try to not even look at them before I read the issue. However, many comics have covers that have very little (sometimes nothing at all) to do with the story contained within. Those that are connected usually are intentionally misleading, putting the characters into a shocking position which is never really attained in the story.
I would like it if the cover was actually the first panel of the issue's story. That way, the readers not only has something to grab their attention, but it helps tie the story in from the start. It would also make it easier to organize issues that cross-over between titles. Now, I know why cover art is the way that it is, and I have already figured out some problems with my idea. Still, should I ever write a comic, I would like my covers to be more related to the story and less designed just to shock.
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I've been reading the "Forever Evil" crossover from DC comics. Now, I have an entire other rant about some of the trends in comics later, but that's not today's focus. On the first day of the Crime Syndicate's appearance in the DC universe, Ultraman (the Earth 3 opposite of Superman) pulls the moon to create an eclipse of the sun because the sun is poisonous to him. The eclipse darkens the entire Earth.
The entire Earth. . . In a solar eclipse due to the moon. . . You know, the moon that's one sixth the size of the Earth. . . It's somehow blocking all of the sun's rays from hitting any point on the Earth. . . Never mind the aliens, super powers, alternate universes, the fact that Ultraman could move the moon, or that somehow the moon stays perfectly in place after a single alignment, THIS complete misunderstanding of how eclipses work has my blood boiling. There are going to be people who believe this sort of thing is a possibility, who will think that just because they are seeing a solar eclipse, everyone in the world is seeing a solar eclipse. How did the editors even let that pass? I know . . . I know . . . a person reading stories about beings with super powers probably shouldn't get upset over nit-picky science-y things like this, but . . . SERIOUSLY?! |
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