
AICN COMICS: Q&@ is our new semi-weekly interview column where some of your favorite @$$Holes interview comic bookdom’s biggest, brightest, newest, and oldest stars. Enjoy this latest in-depth interview filled with @$$y goodness and be sure to join the rest of your favorite @$$Holes for their opinions on the weekly pull every Wednesday with AICN COMICS REVIEWS!
@’s by Joe Casey & Tom Brennan
On Marvel’s new VENGEANCE!
MATT ADLER (MA): To begin, how would you sum up the central premise of VENGEANCE?
MA: How was the idea for the series developed?
JC: Very oddly. It morphed a few times before it got to where it’s at now. Not to mention, a story this big, this sprawling, this epic…it tends to develop even as it’s moving along. There’s a bit in issue #2 that I just wrote that I had no idea would be there. But, in the context of this series, it made perfect sense to go that way. I’ll give you a hint… it involves Bullseye and Lady Bullseye and it’s a love scene. And it ain’t a flashback. Can I get an “Awww, yeah!” up in this hothouse?!
TOM BRENNAN (TB): When you think pure, heartless, soulless, sociopathic evil – you think Joe Casey. Joe has both the ability to write a Marvel story AND tap into the off-beat creepier and darker sides of the Marvel Universe, and that’s what we needed here. Readers today are a very discerning group and stories that “count” matter much more to them. This needed a writer who’d be able to best serve the darker tone of a story celebrating villainy AND make it make sense as part of our larger continuity. Joe has consistently proven himself as a writer who can tell a unique story in the midst of our greater Marvel madness.
MA: What can you tell us about the new characters that will be introduced (or re-introduced) in this series? Are they all villains, as many have assumed? And is it too early to put names to the teaser images that were released last month?
TB: The great thing about younger characters is that they’re all much more organically “shades of gray.” They behave impulsively and selfishly – Spider-Man’s entire career was unfortunately made on that youthful irresponsibility.
JC: I think it’s more than that. These younger characters are looking at the current state of the classic villains of the Marvel Universe and they can’t believe how the mighty have fallen. There’s certainly a parallel of how comic book readers tend to feel about certain developments when it comes to their favorite characters or the real iconic characters. You take a character like the Executioner and consider his mother and how that relationship ended…he’s part of the next wave of Marvel super-villain but he’s also got an understanding of history and what the “big gun” villains mean to him. The fact that someone like Magneto -- the greatest mutant terrorist there is -- is now a good guy is probably a bit disillusioning to any young villain who wants to believe there’ll be a spot at the dinner table for them. But here they are, seeing the current landscape and to them it feels like, as John Lydon would say, No Future. In the case of this book, the Executioner is in a position to do something about it.
JC: They’re there in each and every issue. They play pivotal roles in the overall macro-epic. And, of course, they’re on the covers. But, once you see those covers, and if you’re fairly caught up with the current Marvel continuity, you start to ask questions like, “Hey, Bullseye’s dead. Is Lady Bullseye just as good?” or “Isn’t Dr. Doom the FF’s butler right now? How does the current ruler of Latveria stand up to a legend?” or “Loki is pre-pubescent. Is he even a villain?” All these questions are answered in the book itself. They are very much a part of the big story.
MA: How will this series fit in with “Fear Itself”? And with “Fear Itself” currently at the center of Marvel Universe events, how do you communicate the importance this series has for the Marvel Universe?
TB: This is not particularly connected to “Fear Itself” – we make mention of it, but this is going on under the noses of the Marvel U’s powers that be. In terms of communicating importance – there’s really only so much you can do with the current fan base. As I said before, it’s a very smart, very discerning readership. As much as we maybe could have slapped a “Fear Itself” banner on this book and crossed some T’s and dotted some I’s to make it feel like part of a crossover, the story Joe pitched was so epic and massive. It deserved to be its own beast. We only hope the fans recognize the fun they’re in for and judge it on those merits. I suspect they will.
MA: What's it like working with Nick Dragotta?
TB: The easiest thing in the world. Pages show up on time and pretty. I gushed enough before about his additive powers – comics are a team sport in many ways, and a guy like Nick is exactly who you want on your team – someone who works hard, puts the story first and still manages to shine.
JC: As many readers that bought the LAST DEFENDERS series -- which I had a blast doing, btw -- there will undoubtedly be even fewer who’ll buy this one. So I don’t know if familiarity with other, specific series is necessary. Familiarity with comics is necessary. This isn’t an outreach book. This is a pure comic book where we’re embracing the unique language of comic books. That might put a few casual readers off… but, let’s face it, we’re not getting any casual readers on this book anyway. But, rather than being bummed out about how horribly a book like this might sell, Dragotta and I are using it as an opportunity to stretch ourselves creatively. We’re not simply fulfilling the genre expectations…we’re actively blowing them up.
MA: In recent years there have been many miniseries or even short-lived ongoings that have introduced new characters, particularly young heroes, who don't seem to appear much after the series’ conclusion. Is there a larger goal with this series, in terms of expanding the character base of the Marvel Universe and making further use of characters who have already been introduced? And are you talking about plans for these characters beyond this series?
MA: Thanks Tom and Joe. Look for VENGEANCE coming soon from Marvel Comics.
Matt Adler is a writer/journalist, currently writing for AICN among other outlets. He’s been reading comics for 20 years, writing about them for 7, and spends way, way, too much time thinking about them, which means he really has no choice but to figure out how to make a living out of them. He welcomes all feedback.
Proofs, co-edits & common sense provided by Sleazy G