REBOOT de 52 títulos de DC Cómics

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Shelby
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Re: Geoff Johns y Jim Lee planean soltar noticias Bomba sobr

Mensaje por Shelby »

Pues más o menos... la verdad es que yo ya estoy mentalizada para que puedan hacer cualquier cosa ya... :smt102


Bueno... y ya se sabe un poquito más sobre la Liga de la Justicia:
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Además de Aquaman, Green Lantern, Wonder Woman, Supermán, Batman, Flash y Cyborg, tendremos a Firestorm, Deadman, Atom, Element Woman, Green Arrow, Hawkman, Mara y lo que parece ser Powergirl, aunque también podría ser Zealot de Wildstorm.

http://www.bleedingcool.com/2011/06/26/ ... ll-lineup/?


No sé a vosotros, pero a mí el nuevo aspecto de Supermán no me desagrada demasiado... Quizá sea también porque siempre me han encantado los dibujos de Lee... :wink:



¿Y queréis liaros un poquito más? Os dejo otra de las últimas cosas que he encontrado:

Superman Action Comics - Es el único título junto a la Liga de la Justicia que empezará en el pasado. El primer arco detallará el debut público de Supermán. En este punto, Dan Didio se salió por la tangente para explicar que DC quería dejar atrás el pasado e ir hacia delante. Cualquier cambio en la continuidad sería mencionado en la historia si se necesitara, pero que realmente no se quiere sobrecargar así es que esas revelaciones se harán de forma gradual a medida que tengan sentido en la historia. Hay un documento en las oficinas de DC que refleja exactamente lo que ha pasado y lo que no en el nuevo Universo 52. Como ejemplo, la historia de la Muerte de Supermán ha ocurrido.

http://www.bleedingcool.com/2011/06/27/ ... manhattan/


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¡¡¡¡AY, OMÁ QUÉ CALORES!!!! ¡Gracias por tu regalo, Nitta!

Shelby
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Re: Geoff Johns y Jim Lee planean soltar noticias Bomba sobr

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- Imagen de Jim Lee con el Cómic de la Liga de la Justicia:

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- Video-presentación de los nuevos 52 Cómics de DC, presentado por Dan DiDio, Jim Lee, Grant Morrison, Bob Harras y Eddie Berganza (bleedingcool.com):

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LAYLSfeE ... r_embedded[/youtube]



- Fans Planean Protestar en el Comic-Con contra el Reboot de DCU (comicbookmovie.com):
Un grupo de fans están organizando una manifestación de protesta el sábado del San-Diego Comic-Con, contra la renovación de los 52 títulos de DC Comics de Septiembre a través de un evento de Facebook.


En la página de Facebook se puede leer:
¿Estás completamente desconcertado, decepcionado o tan sólo ENFADADP de ver cómo DC arruina el diseño de tu personaje favorito y borra décadas de historia de los cómics del universo sominante? Bueno, ¡no estás solo!

¿Y por qué no hacer ruido en el mayor evento de la cultura pop de este año, donde creadores, artistas y escritores aparecen en persona? - ¡Mostrémosles cómo los fans - los fans de los personajes clásicos (aunque ligeramente cambiantes) diseños, la historis del personaje y su personalidad - realmente se sienten sobre eso!

http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=191539177563602

http://www.comicbookmovie.com/fansites/ ... CU_Rebooti

- DC Publica Una Detallada Lista de "Preguntas Frecuentes" Relativas al Relanzado Universo (comicbookmovie.com):
Why do it? There is a lot of speculation out there, are you “rebooting” the titles?

This is an epic and ambitious initiative that ushers in a new generation of comics for DC Comics and will set the tone for storylines and characters for years to come. With all of the titles starting at #1, our creative teams have the ability to take a more modern approach – not only with each character, but with how the characters interact with one another and the universe as a whole, and focus on the earlier part of the careers of each of our iconic characters. A time when they didn’t have as much experience defeating all their nemeses. A time when they weren’t as sure of their abilities. A time when they haven’t saved the world countless times. It’s this period that is rich with creative opportunity as we show why these characters are so amazing, so iconic and so special.

We think fans will be excited by this approach and The New 52 will provide DC Entertainment an opportunity to aggressively reach the widest possible audience worldwide, through captivating stories and an accessible entry point. We see great opportunities to tell new, contemporary, cutting edge stories building off the best known, classic stories that make up each of the title’s back histories.

DC Comics has had a number of reboots, what makes this one different?

This is not a reboot, it’s a launch. This is a historic initiative for DC Entertainment and the DC Comics characters – and a first in the company’s publishing history. This next era of DC Comics characters will see 52 all-new #1 issues of its super hero titles at the same time AND same-day digital across the board. In addition to the number changes, our talented creative teams are working behind the scenes to create compelling storylines and new costume designs for many of our iconic DC Comics characters.

Why not call it a reboot?

It’s not a reboot. A reboot is typically a restart of the story or character that jettisons away everything that happened previously.

This is a new beginning which builds off the best of the past. For the stories launching as new #1s in September, we have carefully hand-selected the most powerful and pertinent moments in these characters’ lives and stories to remain in the mythology and lore. And then we’ve asked the best creators in the industry to modernize, update and enhance the books with new and exciting tales. The result is that we retained the good stuff, and then make it better.

Does The New 52 undo events or continuity that I’ve been reading?

Some yes, some no. But many of the great stories remain. For example – Batgirl. The Killing Joke still happened and she was Oracle. Now she will go through physical rehabilitation and become a more seasoned and nuanced character because she had these incredible and diverse experiences.

So will all titles be entry points or will you need to know back-story for some?

Each title will read as a #1 issue that will make jumping into the story extremely accessible for all types of readers. The stories are designed in a way that new fans will be able to pick up a book and immediately be drawn into the story, while at the same time existing fans will be engrossed by the new and epic moments that take place.

Do the new #1s mean that the previous stories didn’t take place?

Our creative teams have a firm understanding of the storied heritage of characters and titles. The new #1 issues will introduce readers to a more modern, diverse universe of DC Comics characters, with some character variations in appearance, origin and age. All stories will be grounded in each character’s legend – but will map to real world situations, interactions, tragedies and triumphs.

Overall, DC Entertainment is focused on putting out the most innovative storylines, featuring the most iconic characters, created by the most creative minds within the industry.

Might you just introduce a new DC “Ultimate” line and give it the spotlight for a few months, then have the opportunity to bring back the other continuity? Will this all be put back to “normal” after a few months?

No – this is the new universe of DC Comics characters. This is an epic and ambitious initiative that ushers in the next era of the DC Comics characters and will set the tone for storylines and characters for years to come. This is not an “event,” because events expire.

Why are you changing the costumes?

DC Entertainment is led by some of the biggest fans of comics out there. We know that if Geoff and Jim are excited about the stories and artwork, we’re on to something big. While there may be some naysayers, when we thought about starting the entire DC Comics universe line of comics with #1/first issues we looked at the benefits for the long haul, not just a year or two. Our goal is to create a watershed moment for DC Entertainment – and the industry as a whole – where fans will remember this as a time of innovation while maintaining DC Entertainment’s commitment to creating entertaining and masterfully created stories.

Do you not care about your company’s history? If you do this right, what do you want your legacy to be 75 years from now?

The legacy of DC Entertainment, and DC Comics before it, is based on the creativity of our editors and our creative talent, and our commitment to the best storytelling possible. DC has always been about character development and growth.

Take Batman for example. In the early days he was a vigilante who brandished a gun. Then he morphed into a whimsical character and then in the 1960′s he became more of the gritty, grim avenger of the night. We can all agree that we are glad Batman evolved.

Our goal is to create a watershed moment for DC Entertainment – and the industry as a whole – where fans will remember this as a time of innovation while maintaining DC Entertainment’s commitment to creating entertaining and masterfully created stories.

Specifically why end Action and Detective before they reach their 1,000th issues? Action Comics is the longest running American comic book, followed closely by Detective Comics, the company’s namesake. Isn’t renumbering these series actually a retreat from the love of “comics as comics”?

Our Co-Publishers and editors thought long and hard about this. It was an extremely important decision that was not taken lightly. But executing this unprecedented event meant taking creative risks on every level and pushing forward with big, new ideas. A partial renumbering would not have had the impact we needed to showcase the amazing changes and direction we have planned for the new DC Comics universe of characters. Counting issue numbers is focusing on the past, not the future.

Can this event fix/undo an event I don’t like from the past?/ Can this event bring back a character from the past that I miss?/ Does this event change the status of (insert pretty much any character here)? What would you say to someone whose favorite superhero no longer exists?

Characters are always evolving in the DC universe and part of the evolution means that characters come and go. While not all current characters will be part of the new DC Comics line of books, we are confident the ambitious plan we are creating will introduce a new generation of protagonists and antagonists that will captivate readers.

We are kicking things off with our best and brightest characters and what makes them so compelling and great. Simply because you don’t see a personal favorite in the September launches doesn’t mean your favorites are gone. This is just the beginning.

http://www.comicbookmovie.com/fansites/ ... s/?a=40803


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¡¡¡¡AY, OMÁ QUÉ CALORES!!!! ¡Gracias por tu regalo, Nitta!

Shelby
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Re: Geoff Johns y Jim Lee planean soltar noticias Bomba sobr

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- DC Cómics publicará "DC Comics: The New 52" para ayudar a establecer lo que ocurre en el nuevo relanzamiento de sus títulos:
"DC Comics: The New 52"
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DC Cómics ha revelado que publicarán un cómic gratuito titulado "DC Comics: The New 52", y que se dedicará a explicar lo que está pasando con el relanzamiento de DCU.

El libro incluirá una preview interna de "Justice League #1", escrita por Geoff Johns y con ilustraciones de Jim Lee.

Podéis encontrar "DC Comics: The New 52 #1" disponible en tiendas a partir del 20 de julio.

http://www.supermanhomepage.com/news.php?readmore=10014


- Grant Morrison Revela Algunos Detalles Sobre Su Nueva Interpretación de Supermán (metro.co.uk):
Grant Morrison Revela Algunos Detalles Sobre Su Nueva Interpretación de Supermán
Por Andrew Williams 12 de Julio, 2011



¿Qué has tenido programado en tu trabajo para Supermán?

Quería resolver algunos de los problemas que han crecido alrededor del personaje. La gente pregunta ahora: ‘¿Por qué demonios se vestiría así?’ Quiero hacer de Supermán un personaje más contemporáneo. Cambiaremos cómo se ve, se viste y se comporta. Será más como el Supermán que apareció en 1938 - más activo socialmente y el campeón de los oprimidos.

Él sae está quitando sus calzones en los cómics actuales...

Con lo que estamos haciendo lleva puestos vaqueros y una camiseta - una versión de Supermán a lo Bruce, ese es el ángulo que estamos tomando. La capa sigue siendo indestructible pero el resto se ha comprado en una tienda.

¿De qué te sientes más orgulloso de conseguir en un cómic?

Estoy orgulloso de tener a Bruce Wayne tropezando por las calles de Gotham lleno de heroína. Cuando los malos atrapan a Batman y realmente lo estropean, eso siempre es divertido. Cuando crecí, los cómics que adoraban eran los que hacían los hippies a finales de los 60, los cuales tuvieron un gran efecto sobre mí cuando tenía 12 años. Siempre he escrito para un inteligente niño imaginario de 15 años. Estoy introduciendo a los jóvenes a grandes ideas, a los autores y a las nociones. El escritor Español Jorge Luis Borges estaba en la última historia de Batman que escribí así es que espero inroducir su trabajo a alguna gente nueva.

¿Llevan algunos fans las cosas demasiado lejos?

Hubo un chico en USA que estaba listo para matar a todos los de la oficina cuando trabajaba en Marvel. El FBI intervino y lo arrestó. Era por algo sobre un cómic de X-Men. No lo escribí pero lo había usado en cosas que había creado y habíamos hecho algo para arruinar la pureza de su personaje favorito de su infancia. No querría manchar a todos los fans con eso - hay de todo, desde gente que escribe inteligentes análisis hasta algunso que están realmente locos de remate.

http://www.metro.co.uk/lifestyle/869082 ... iams-magic

- Vaqueros y Camiseta en el nuevo Action Comics #1 (nypost.com):
Vaqueros y Camiseta en el nuevo Action Comics #1
Por DAREH GREGORIAN 18 de julio, 2011 1:17 AM

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Aquí está la portada del primer "Action Comics" No. 1 en 73 años -- y la última versión de Supermán is es una parte extraterreste, parte Paul Bunyan e incluso un poco de Bruce Springsteen.

"Este es un joven Supermán que aún cree en que es posible un mundo mejor para todos," dice el escritor Grant Morrison, quien estará realizando las crónicas de los días del Hombre de Acero como el perimer superhéroe del mundo cuando DC Cómics relance toda su línea de cómics en Septiembre.

The Post consiguió un vistazo a lo que nos espera esta semana en San Diego Comic-Con.

Mientras que la mayoría de sus títulos, incluídos "Batman" y "Green Lantern," mostrarán a los icónicos héroes de DC cuando aún están bien en sus carreras, "Action Comics" muestra las más tempranas aventuras de Supermán, quien es inicialmente un luchador contra el crimen que viste tejanos azules y camiseta con una pequeña capa roja.

"Sentíamos que era el momento para las grandes aventuras de un Paul Bynyan del diglo 21 que lucha por los débiles y los oprimidos contra bravucones de todo tipo, desde robots invasores y jefes del crimen a oficiales corruptos de la ciudad," dice Morrison, un antiguo escritor de los "X-Men".

"El nuevo look refleja su estatus como un defensor a nivel de calle de los hombres y mujeres corrientes."

La serie mostrará cómo Clark Kent se convierte en el más famoso superhéroe del mundo y cómo consigue su icónico traje, que ha sido cambiado en la nueva continuidad -- lo que significa que no habrá más calzones rojos.

El "Action Comics" No. 1 original, que presentaba el debut de Supermán, es uno de los cómics más demandados del mundo. Una copia se vendió por 1.5 millones de dólares el pasado Marzo.

Anteriormente este año, la serie alcanzó su número 900, que incluía una controvertida historia en la que Supermán declaró que tenía la intención de renunciar a su ciudadanía americana.

Esta historia es efectivamente anulada en el relanzamiento.

http://www.nypost.com/p/news/national/b ... cCUANvajFL

¿Entendéis algo? ¿Qué sentido tiene hacer una historia apenas este mes que va a ser borrada en los siguientes números?


Y siguiendo con la locura de últimamente, veamos lo que acaba de reportar TMZ y Newsarama:


- Divorcio, Muerte, Armadura Alienígena: Grandes Cambios para SUPERMÁN en DC (Newsarama.com):
Divorcio, Muerte, Armadura Alienígena: Grandes Cambios para SUPERMÁN en DC
Por Albert Ching, 18 de Julio 2011 10:27 am ET


Superman y Lois Lane están rompienso, y no es el único gran cambio que viene para el más icónico superhéroe del mundo.

El Action Comics #1 y Superman #1 de Septiembre introducirán muchos y grandes alteraciones en el personaje. Los orígenes alienígenas de Supermán serán enfatizados, con fuentes de DC diciendo que será "más Kal-El del planteta Krypton que Clark Kent de Kansas."

La profunda conexión de Supermán con sus raíces kriptonianas también explican que el nuevo traje, como se ha visto en la portada de Superman #1 y la Justice League #1 de Jim Lee/Geoff Johns, sea descrito como una "armadura ceremonial" de su planeta de origen.

Quizá parte de la razón por la que Supermán está abrazando su naturaleza alienígena es por la pérdida de sus dos padres adoptivos. Jonathan y Martha Kent entán ambos muertos en la continuidad post-Flashpoint de DC, un pronunciado cambio del pasado reciente, y un regreso a su estatus quo de la pre-Crisis de las Tierras Infinitas en este sentido.

Action Comics, que se centra en la temprana carrera como superhéroe de Supermán, describe a un "más joven y más melancólico" Hombre de Acero, que puede "saltar grandes edificios pero no puede volar en el espacio."

El presente de Kal-El será contado en present Superman, con un "soltero" Clark Kent, Lois Lane con un nuevo novio y un "nuevo status quo en el Daily Planet." Adicionalmente, fuentes de DC dicen que la serie mostrará que "hay un precio que pagar por ser Superman" y un nuevo villano, uno más poderoso que el Hombre de Acero, debutará.

Superman #1, de George Perez y Jesus Merino, está previsto que se publique el 28 de Septiembre. Esta serie está centrada en el presente, mientras que la serie de Action Comics #1 escrita por Grant Morrison, e ilustrada por Rags Morales y cuya publicación se efectuará el 7 de Septiembre, tendrá lugar en el pasado del Universo DC, revelando cómo llegó a convertirse en el último superhéroe.

La historia original proviene de TMZ.com, que reportaban:
Fuentes en DC Comics nos cuentan... que la compañía está reseteando la nueva serie de cómics de Supermán en Septiembre -- con un nuevo y brillante Superman #1 -- con la esperanza de crear un nuevo punto de unicio con historias más modernas y relevantes.

Y hay algunos GRANDES acontecimientos... incluyendo el hecho de que Lois y Clark NO están juntos. De hecho, nos han contado que Lois tiene un nuevo novio.

http://www.tmz.com/2011/07/18/superman- ... lark-kent/
Esto no hace más que reforzar lo que el co-editor de DC Dan DiDio contó a PopcornBiz el mes pasado de que el matrimonio estaba siendo "reexaminado".

http://www.newsarama.com/comics/dcnu-su ... 10718.html?

¡Hala, ya tienen lo que perseguían! ¡A la porra todo lo que caracterizaba el lado humano del personaje! ¡Démosle la bienvenida al nuevo Batman!...

Sin comentarios... :doubt:


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¡¡¡¡AY, OMÁ QUÉ CALORES!!!! ¡Gracias por tu regalo, Nitta!

Nitta
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Re: REBOOT de 52 títulos de DC Cómics

Mensaje por Nitta »

:smt013 :smt013 :smt013 :smt022 :smt022 :smt022 Pues para mí ese que se quieren inventar ahora no és Supermán. Para mi Supermán és el que hemos conocido siempre, el que siempre ha sido a lo largo de tantos años, criado por los Kent y adquiriendo una parte humana que le ha hecho convertirse en un hombre maravilloso de una nobleza increíble, compasivo, humilde y con unos valores que pocos humanos tienen. Y con el amor de su vida, Lois Lane, que ha sido un factor muy importante en su vida para que terminara de convertirse en el héroe que és.
Para mí ese siempre va a ser mi Supermán y su verdadera historia. Me niego a ver ninguna película ni a leer ningún cómic que cambie eso. :smt076


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Hasta siempre, Smallville...

Shelby
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Re: REBOOT de 52 títulos de DC Cómics

Mensaje por Shelby »

Pues lo mejor son los razonamientos... En fin...

- DIDIO y LEE Dicen que Los Cambios del Nuevo Universo de DC de SUPERMAN Lo Hacen "Accesible" (Newsarama.com):
DIDIO, LEE Say DCnU SUPERMAN Changes Make Him "Accessible"
Por Vaneta Rogers 18 Jde Julio 2011 04:06 pm ET


DC Co-Publishers Dan DiDio and Jim Lee are calling the reboot of Superman "more accessible," as the hero starts over his story in the comics universe in September.

"We've made Superman such an iconic figure over the years that we've lost some of the character and the ability to tell stories with that character," said Dan DiDio, co-publisher at DC. "There's so much continuity that's been built on this character. We really wanted to get a Superman that is more accessible to the audience."

DiDio said Action Comics by Grant Morrison and Rags Morales will take place five years in the past at the "dawn of the age of superheroes," with Superman introduced as more of a young, isolated alien who's trying to find his place in the world, without his parents to help him. The comic will show him developing his costume, starting out in a pair of jeans, and discovering his powers, since he cannot fly but only leaps over tall buildings.

"We wanted to get back to some of the grass roots of the character," DiDio said.

"And the best way to do that is to really go back to the early days of the character, where you see him in his formative years, learning his powers, and learning how people react to him, as we'll be examining in Action Comics. But also, we want to re-examine his relationships, because we think there's a lot of fertile ground about him and the people he deals with."

The "relationships" part of Superman's story will be examined in Superman by George Pérez, which will take place in the present day of the DC Universe. Clark Kent will have a new status quo at the Daily Planet and will be a bachelor.

Lois Lane will have a new boyfriend, which is quite a change from the current situation, where Clark and Lois are married in the DC Universe.

"Marriage brings about a certain degree of comfort and security in one's life," Lee said. "If you have a life partner, you always have someone to rely on. So from a story conflict point of view, it makes for a less dramatic story. I think a lot of writers can agree that one of the most dynamic periods of Superman's history was that period where there was a love triangle between Clark Kent, Superman and Lois Lane. There's a lot of tension and interest you create in the characters by having that kind of dynamic."

But Lee said the new Superman will not be just revisiting the same old love triangle. "We're introducing other elements into it," he said. "Through that, we're really updating who the character is and making Superman a character that you think you know, but maybe not. We have some surprises up our sleeves. And I think Grant has some incredible ideas about not only what he wants to do with Superman but Clark Kent, and really updating the whole mythology so that people can relate to it on a more personal level."

The marriage choice — along with the decision to have Jonathan and Martha Kent be deceased in the Action Comics — was also related to Superman being isolated in these stories.

"We wanted to have that sense of isolation that might come with being an alien among men," DiDio said. "The two choices that were made, with both his parents being dead and not being married, isolated Clark a little bit more, so that he really had to do more exploration about mankind. There wasn't that one strong human tether that he was bonding with and learning through.

"He's had so much learning and understanding from the days with his parents, but the rest of the discovery is on his own," DiDio said, confirming the Clark will have been guided as a youth by the Kents, before their death. "If we had him married to Lois right now, he would always have a strong base to work from. We wanted to explore much bigger and wider stories with him. It's really the learning and growing of this character that is going to be the basis for so much of what Grant and George are going to be doing with their series and with Superman."


The theme of isolation will be further emphasized as Clark Kent has a sense of being an "alien." That sense of alien separation is not only being heightened in Superman and Action Comics, but also in Supergirl, where Clark's cousin will arrive on Earth for the first time.

"That's one of the things we're trying to explore much more," DiDio said. "We've told so many great stories over the years where Superman has embraced his human side and built stories around that side of the characterization. Now we're flipping it around a little bit and really embracing his alien side, so we can understand what it's like to be a man from another world, living amongst men, but not feeling like you're a part of it, but belonging to them all."

"I think the issue of self-identity and knowing who you are is something that's universal, and obviously, it's a very powerful theme," Lee said. "I think characters, not just Superman but other superhero characters, have a very public face and also a private, personal identity. I think it's that exploration between the two that's going to make part of the September relaunch very interesting on a story level."

DiDio said there was very little dissent among ranks at DC about changing the status of Clark Kent from married to unmarried.

"We actually had, last year, a very large writers meeting about the general direction and tone of the DC Universe, and one of the conversations that was the biggest conversation in the room was about the marriage of Lois and Clark, and it was a much discussed topic," DiDio said. "Most people saw the benefits of making this change, because they saw what the story potential was and how much they could open up their ability to examine the character in a bigger way, once we decided to move in this direction."

And when the Superman writing team got together, DiDio said everyone agreed that the marriage should go. "It gave us more potential for the stories at the starting point. We needed a really strong starting point here, and we felt this was a great way to do it," he said.

Part of Superman's introduction to the DCU will also be told in Justice League, the new comic that Lee is drawing for writer Geoff Johns. In the comic, which also takes place five years in the past (like Action Comics), the Justice League team members will come together for the first time. This new Superman will be among those heroes that discover each other in Justice League during the "dawning of the age of superheroes."

"It's really about re-introducing the concept of superheroes in the DC Universe, and doing it in a more contemporary, timely way," Lee said. "We wanted a situation in Action and in Justice League where we show the first public emergence of these so-called super-beings and how they impact society, politics, the world.

"In many ways, it starts out in a way that one would imagine in today's day and age with fear and caution, and people literally freaking out about this," he said. "It's through the introduction of a character like Superman and the Justice League that the public starts understanding and accepting these characters for who they are and sees them as heroes for the very first time, coining the word 'superhero.'"

DiDio admitted that one of the motivations for rebooting Superman was the fact that the last time it was done — by John Byrne in the mid-1980's after Crisis on Infinite Earths — the Superman comic was a huge success.

"It was done once before, and very successfully," he said. "We're hoping for the same luck here."

"[John Byrne] took the origin that we knew and updated it and added new subtleties and nuances," Lee said. "For me, that was my heyday of collecting Superman comic books. It really felt like this was my version of Superman. I know it really created a lot of excitement for that character, not just among die-hard DC fans, but across all comic book readers in general."

When asked if the upcoming Man of Steel movie, which is filming now, had any influence on the decision to reboot Superman in the comics universe, DiDio said: "Not at all."

"That said," he added, "I doubt they would ever start a series or anything where Superman was married at the beginning."

But Lee said the goal of creating DC Entertainment to work more cohesively with Warner Bros. was not to make all the stories in the different media line up perfectly. "This is really about making sure that the source material, which is the comics, remains as contemporary and fresh and exciting as possible," Lee said. "Comics are the drivers and the creative content. Comics is where we can take the creative risks and creative chances with the characters. It's our responsibility to keep them exciting and fresh. The overall mission of DC Entertainment is to allow filmmakers or people who work in games or animation the opportunity to go through and find things that interest them and that they think has potential in other media. That's part of the ecosystem we're trying to build.

"It's not about one lining up with the other," he said. "It's about keeping what we're doing on the publishing side as relevant and exciting as possible."

http://www.newsarama.com/comics/dcnu-di ... 10718.html?

- El Nuevo Hombre del Mañana (dccomics.com):
El Nuevo Hombre del Mañana
Por David Hyde Lunes, 18 de Julio, 2011


He has been called the Man of Steel, the Last Son of Krypton and a strange visitor from a distant planet.

He is Superman, the Man of Tomorrow. As part of DC COMICS – THE NEW 52, this September will usher in a new Superman for the new century.

In the pages of ACTION COMICS, writer Grant Morrison and artist Rags Morales will present humanity’s first encounters with Superman, before he became one of the World’s Greatest Super Heroes. Set a few years in the past, it’s a bold new take on a classic hero.

* This Superman is very much an alien, one struggling to adjust to his adopted home. In the series, he must come to terms with both the loss of his home world, as well as the loss of both of his adopted parents. He is more Kal-El from the planet Krypton than Clark Kent from Kansas. He’s a loner trying to find his place in the world.

* The series’ first storyline will explore the origins of Superman’s costume, as it evolves from a look that includes jeans and work boots to a new look: a suit of battle armor that pays tribute to his Kryptonian past.

* His great powers have limits. When the series begins, Superman can leap tall buildings, but his ability to fly is in its infancy.

And in the SUPERMAN ongoing comic book series, by writer George Perez and artist Jesus Merino, will be set in present day continuity and will unleash a series of new challenges for Superman and his alter ego Clark Kent.

* Clark Kent is single and living on his own. He has never been married.

* Lois Lane is dating a colleague at the DAILY PLANET (and his name isn’t Clark Kent) and she has a new position with the paper.

Timeless and modern, classic and contemporary, but younger, brasher and more brooding, this is Superman. The New Man of Tomorrow.

ACTION COMICS issue 1 goes on sale on September 7 and SUPERMAN issue 1 goes on sale September 28.

http://dcu.blog.dccomics.com/2011/07/18 ... -tomorrow/

- Supermán vuela solo en el relanzamiento de Dc Cómics (usatoday.com):
Supermán vuela solo en el relanzamiento de Dc Cómics
Por Brian Truitt 18 de Julio, 2011


Superman will be a bachelor again when DC Comics relaunches its entire superhero line in September. He had been married to longtime love Lois Lane since 1996 in comics.

"We just felt there were more interesting, creative stories to mine in that time period of Superman's history prior to him getting married," says Jim Lee, one of DC's co-publishers along with Dan DiDio.

"There was something special and unique about the love triangle that existed between Clark Kent, Superman and Lois Lane," Lee says. "By restoring that essential part of his mythology, we would get a lot more interest in the character and take Superman and Clark Kent in bold new directions that felt more contemporary and modern."

There will be two Superman-centric titles in DC's "The New 52" line.

George Perez's Superman takes place in the present of the new continuity. It features Superman sporting a new costume (red briefs are out, Kryptonian ceremonial armor is in); a new villain who's more powerful than the Man of Steel; Clark Kent as a bachelor; and Lois Lane dating a co-worker of hers and Clark's at the Daily Planet.

And Action Comics No. 1, written by Grant Morrison and illustrated by Rags Morales, will be set five years in the past. This book promises a younger, brooding outsider version of Superman who's still finding his way in the world as an alien from the planet Krypton.

His outfit? Jeans, T-shirt and a cape.

"Does he wear a skintight ballet suit? No, not today, and I don't think anyone falls for it," Morrison says. "And if the skintight ballet suit has to come into it, I want to have a really good explanation.

"We've been given a lot of leeway to change Superman and answer some of those questions that grown-ups ask nowadays: Why does he look that way, and why does he wear those pants?"

The first Action Comics No. 1 in 1938 introduced the world to Superman, and the new one is taking a similar approach. In his book, Morrison is telling a "Year One" story where Superman first wins the public's acceptance — and accepts mankind as well.

In addition, Justice League No. 1, illustrated by Lee and written by Geoff Johns, will show Superman's introduction to other heroes such as Batman and Wonder Woman, and the first issue of Superman will cast him as the world's greatest superhero.

"Prior to Action and Justice League 1, there was no label 'superhero' for a superpowered being," Lee says. "It's really the emergence of Superman and the Justice League that gets the public comfortable with the idea of people amongst us who have extraordinary power and that they've agreed to be our champions."

Action Comics won't flash back to when Kal-El crash-lands on Earth, but DiDio says that when this Superman is introduced, it is after both his adopted parents have died and he is acting as a vigilante working outside the law — a nod to his original roots as a people's hero.

"With him no longer married and the loss of both his parents, he really is an island unto himself and there's a lot more self-examination and understanding of who he is," DiDio says.

There will be both new and old Superman rogues appearing in both titles. "World-class villains needed to be able to challenge the strength and the power of Superman," DiDio says. And while they may not be dating, the friendly work rivalry between Lois and Clark will be there in Superman.

Making them both single also makes Lois a more dynamic character within the DC Universe, Lee says. "People will be very surprised by not just what's happening with Superman, but also with Lois Lane and the entire staff of the Daily Planet."

Superman will be one of the cornerstones of "The New 52," and Lee is looking forward to presenting a truly different "Man of Tomorrow."

"Maybe as readers and fans, we've grown a little too comfortable with Superman," he says. "Part of the creative changes we've put behind the mythology is to tell people, 'Look, you may think you know Superman, but you don't.' There's a lot of great stuff about the character that we're going to show you that hasn't been discussed or presented before."

http://www.usatoday.com/life/comics/201 ... unch_n.htm?


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¡¡¡¡AY, OMÁ QUÉ CALORES!!!! ¡Gracias por tu regalo, Nitta!

NuLane
Lois Lane
Lois Lane
Mensajes: 788
Registrado: Sab Sep 04, 2010 3:55 pm
Ubicación: Flotando en el granero...

Re: REBOOT de 52 títulos de DC Cómics

Mensaje por NuLane »

:shock: :shock: Madre mía!!!! Ya me imaginaba por las noticias que iban llegando que los cambios que pensaban hacer no me iban a gustar nada, pero no pensé que se iban a atrever a tanto!!!! :smt022 :smt022

Así que ahora tendremos un Supermán más solitario, con más parte de alienigena que de humano, llevando tejanos y botas, sin el apoyo de los Kent y con una Lois Lane con nuevo novio, entonces... ¿dónde queda el Supermán que conocemos? :smt102


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Hawkman: Good, you're here. I've got something for you.
gifs: onebreath

Lau90
Lois Lane
Lois Lane
Mensajes: 634
Registrado: Mar Dic 08, 2009 2:21 pm

Re: REBOOT de 52 títulos de DC Cómics

Mensaje por Lau90 »

Bueno pues estoy alucinando ya entre los cambios tanto en la historia como en eso de ir con los vaqueros y la capa, me parece del todo incomprensible :roll: eso de que así es más accesible... no estoy para nada de acuerdo (aunque no lo he entendido del todo, luego leeré la traducción :wink: ) pero para mi la parte más cercana de Superman es su parte humana, su relación con Lois y con sus padres, sus valores... si le quitan esto a mi solo me queda la historia de un extraterrestre con poderes que llega a la Tierra, y para mi eso no es para nada cercano a mi ni me permite ponerme en el lugar del personaje. Yo tampoco creo que lea ningún comic ni vea ninguna peli si tienen esta dirección :doubt:


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erica_lane
Lana Lang
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Re: REBOOT de 52 títulos de DC Cómics

Mensaje por erica_lane »

que mal, de por si en este mundo, donde casi la mayoria se divorcia, que lleguen a los comics es el
colmo, yo no voy a ver esos comics, para mi siempre seran Clark y Lois, me han decepcionado


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avatar KatherineKent y gifs onebreath gracias

Shelby
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Re: REBOOT de 52 títulos de DC Cómics

Mensaje por Shelby »

- Grant Morrison está completamente volcado en "Action Comics" (comicbookresources.com):
Grant Morrison está completamente volcado en "Action Comics"
Por Kiel Phegley 19 de Julio, 2011


This September, the phrase "faster than a speeding bullet" may take on an all-new meaning in the pages of DC Comics' original superhero title.

As part of the publisher's 52-series, line-wide relaunch of its DC Universe titles, writer Grant Morrison and artist Rags Morales will be chronicling a new introduction for Superman in the pages of "Action Comics" #1, and as the writer told CBR News, making the Man of Steel fast and furious were the cornerstones of his new, blue collar approach. Set five years before the modern stories being told in other DC books like George Perez's "Superman: The Man of Tomorrow" and Geoff Johns and Jim Lee's new "Justice League," "Action" will rework the first superhero's earliest adventures and his relationships including his romance with Lois Lane and his struggle against Lex Luthor.

Below, Morrison explains how his new prose book "Supergods" (which he shared a look inside yesterday) influenced his approach to "Action," why this young Superman is more dangerous and faster than his "All-Star" counterpart, what dynamic working with Morales has brought to the series and when fans will finally be seeing the end of his blockbuster "Batman, Incorporated."

CBR News: You spoke about your rediscovery of the original "Action Comics" #1 in the process of preparing "Supergods." It seems that even with the career you've already had, someone coming up to you and saying, "Would you like to write 'Action Comics' #1?" would seem like a daunting task. Did the work for the book help ground you while you figured out how to reintroduce Superman again?

Grant Morrison: Yeah, it totally gave me the idea for how to do it. Basically, when I started the first "Action Comics," I started thinking about how I had to live up to that. It was the first time I have been quite daunted by the project. I was really looking at different techniques to find a way to do the series for a modern audience and also to take the core values of Superman and represent them in a way I hope we haven't seen before. And it's all there in that original story: what Superman is all about as a champion of the oppressed basically. I thought it'd be good to get back to that. It's a much more blue collar Superman, a Bruce Springsteen Superman. [Laughs] He's in a t-shirt and jeans, and he's fighting for poor people and people on the breadline who have been messed over by big businesses. It's back to that original Depression-era hero but updated to our current Depression era.


You already had great success with "All-Star Superman" which was viewed as your "everything I want in a Superman comic" story. How is this different? Obviously, it plays into the bigger universe, but did that change how you approached things?

"All-Star" was about Superman at the end of his life, and it was very ordered and majestic. I really wanted to do an earlier Superman because I hadn't touched on that in "All-Star." I liked the idea of a much younger Superman who's a bit more brash and more wild. He's willing to take the law into his own hands. At the end of "All-Star," I had all these ideas to go back to those early days, and I took some of them and used them to turn it into this new version of "Action Comics."

The storytelling style is quite different. It's a lot faster because I think if you have a comic called "Action" it should have a lot of action in it. [Laughs] The idea is to keep Superman constantly moving in every single scene. You open the first page, and he starts running and doesn't stop until the end. That's a different style from "All-Star" which was a kind of static, 1950s style, Wayne Boring colossal Superman.

Rags Morales is an artist who has a style that sets his characters in a real, physical world. Did you write the scripts for him from the start, and what kinds of strengths did you see in his work that you could play to in the scripts?

Oh yeah, I knew he was going to be drawing it, and obviously that meant I could put a lot of texture into the world, and he'd be able to do it. So it's quite phenomenal and amazing. It looks very real, even though Superman is a lot more... almost traditional. He's like an American folk hero again. The work Rags is doing is quite fantastic, and I can put in a lot of detail because he can actually do that. There's a chance to overload him with descriptions of machines and alien landscapes.

Superman has been reintroduced so many times and that original story has been "played" by so many other people hitting its grace notes in a different way like John Byrne's redesign of Krypton. A lot of people will be taking cues from you here as the character moves forward. How have you thought of that, and are you placing elements in to be intentionally picked up by other creative teams at DC?

We're trying to tie in to everything. I'm telling stories set five years prior to the stories, say, George Perez is telling in his "Superman" book. So we're kind of doing different parts of Superman's life, but there's definitely things that will tie in. I'll be setting up things in my book that will peel off into other books. The plan, of course, is quite big and always changing. We're introducing a lot of new characters and villains for Superman -- new environments and new takes on some familiar stuff as well.

There must be a level at which you can't entirely look to Siegel and Shuster because Lex Luthor hadn't become the villain he becomes and other changes...

And we're playing a very different take on the Lex Luthor/Superman relationship. It's quite flipped on its head. Luthor is almost the good guy to a certain extent. All of the relationships are going to be different. Superman's relationship with Jimmy Olsen is completely different, but it makes sense in a way that I'm surprised nobody has thought of before now. The same goes for Lois Lane. Things won't be quite the same for Superman and Lois, and we'll see how truly different their lives will be. I think it'll add some new tension and a new dynamic to it. It won't be predictable at all.

So we know that the book starts out running as fast as it can. Does it end with a wink?

Huh. I don't know how it's going to end. Not necessarily. And I think we've done the wink so often it may not be the best thing to end on. [Laughs] I'd like to do something at the end that's as different as the way we're starting it.

You've got a reinvention of the original superhero coming, you've got a book on the origins of that hero and the whole superhero concept... where does the page turn next? You've written and talked so much about how these concepts can work in the 21st Century. How does the work you're doing next help push those ideas forward?

There's always new opportunities coming up. The book has opened certain doors, and working in movies has opened certain other doors. But I just love comics more than anything else, and I can't imagine not always coming back to them. Certainly, the stuff I'm doing now seems somewhat like a huge slamming door. It's all tied in to "Supergods," but I don't know what's coming next. I know what the next few years are, so it'll probably all work out.


http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page ... e&id=33386

- Video-Entrevista: GRANT MORRISON Habla de Supergods, el Reboot de Action Comics y Más (newsarama.com):

http://www.newsarama.com/common/media/v ... n_supergod



- LEE, DIDIO: Reconstruyendo DC para Contrarrestar 'Las Reducciones de Mercado' (newsarama.com):
LEE, DIDIO: Reconstruyendo DC para Contrarrestar 'Las Reducciones de Mercado'
Por Vaneta Roger 19 de julio, 2011 11:05 am ET


When Dan DiDio and Jim Lee became co-publishers at DC Comics last year, they announced that their mantra was "no fear," implying that change was on the horizon for the company.

In September, that promise of change becomes a reality, as DC starts over the numbering of all its comics at #1 and reboots some of its most popular franchises, with a completely new history for its Justice League and a rebooted Superman.

It's all part of a sales plan the company is calling the "New 52," which features 52 new #1 issues that are designed to attract new readers — and to bring back what DC is calling "lapsed" readers who have stopped reading comics.

According to DiDio, DC is hoping the move will counteract a comic book market that is shrinking.

"We need to be the best we can be right now, because if we look around us, we see a market that is shrinking," DiDio told Newsarama yesterday as he and Lee addressed the upcoming changes. "We feel like we're in the position right now that we have the ability to really start rebuilding ourselves and rebuilding the brand and rebuilding our characters for the future."

The "New 52" plan sees the launch of several new programs at DC. Beginning that month, the publisher — which didn't even have a digital program two years ago — will release every one of its comics in digital the same day as print.

Then over the month of September, DC will ship 52 new #1 issues that will reveal the new status quo of the DCU, including a younger, unmarried Superman, a healed Barbara Gordon as Batgirl and a much shorter, more modern history, with superheroes only emerging five years ago.

What causes the changes in-story will be explained in the final issue of this summer's big event, Flashpoint, the five-issue mini-series by Geoff Johns and Andy Kubert that ends on August 31st.

That same day, DC will release the much anticipated Justice League, the new comic from Johns and Lee, who are two of the most respected creators in the business. And the Superman reboot will be guided by Grant Morrison and George Pérez, two of DC's other big guns.

Newsarama talked with the co-publishers to find out more about the initiative, and some of their comments were included in our story yesterday about Superman's changes.

Today, we're sharing the entire transcript of our interview with Lee and DiDio about the changes, including how they hope the initiative will expand the shrinking comic book market and what they will use to measure whether it's a success.

Superman

Newsarama: Dan and Jim, the news just broke about what's coming for Superman, and there are a lot of changes to his status. We've already been told there are few if any changes to Batman. So why change Superman so much?

Dan DiDio: It's one of the things we were looking at, how the storylines and characters were working. We saw a number of things we wanted to change with Superman because we've gone down so many roads with the character, in regards to the "Grounded" storyline, we've looked at things that took place with the "War of Krypton." We've looked over the last few years at what we've been doing and the changes we've been making with Superman.

But we also wanted to get back to some of the grass roots of the character. And some of the best ways to do that is to really go back to the early days of the character, where you see him in his formative years, learning his powers, and learning how people react to him, as we'll be examining in Action Comics. But also, we want to re-examine his relationships, because we think there's a lot of fertile ground about him and the people he deals with."

Nrama: But Dan, these changes are huge. There must have been something you felt was just not working with the way Superman was going. Was it too complicated? Did he feel too old? Was it that people couldn't relate to him? Or what?

DiDio: I think in some cases, he felt a little old. We've made Superman such an iconic figure over the years that we've lost some of the character and the ability to tell stories with that character. There's so much continuity that's been built on this character. We really wanted to get a Superman that is more accessible to the audience.

And one of the reasons we did it with Superman is it was done once before, and very successfully. We're hoping for the same luck here.


Dawn of Superheroes

Nrama: There are some mixed signals out there with this language you're using by labeling five years ago as the "dawn of the age of superheroes," which is the time period when the new Justice League and Action Comics take place. We've been told that Stormwatch has a long secret history, and Demon Knights takes place hundreds of years ago. And there's a lot of history you're keeping with Green Lantern. Was it really only five years ago that superheroes "dawned" in the DCU?

Jim Lee: It's really about re-introducing the concept of superheroes in the DC Universe, and doing it in a more contemporary, timely way. Even though you have books like Demon Knights or even All-Star Western, it's not about public recognition or understanding that there are beings amongst us with extraordinary powers.

We wanted a situation in Action and in Justice League where we show the first public emergence of these so-called super-beings and how they impact society, politics, the world. In many ways, it starts out in a way that one would imagine in today's day and age with fear and caution, and people literally freaking out about this. It's through the introduction of a character like Superman and the Justice League that the public starts understanding and accepting these characters for who they are and sees them as heroes for the very first time, coining the word "superhero."

So I think it's a re-examination of how superheroes are perceived in culture, and doing it through the lens of the modern era versus looking back at the history of superheroes through five or six decades of actual time.


Isolated Alien

Nrama: Both Superman and Supergirl are playing up their status as this "brooding alien" who feels isolated on Earth. Is this something you feel is relevant now? Something people can identify with — feeling like an alien?

DiDio: A little bit of that is the sense of separation or isolation that people might face when they don't feel like they truly belong or they just really don't know what their full place in society is. And Superman is someone who presents a very public image and he needs to be accepted by everyone, because there might be fear that's generated by who he is, at the start, but there's also a high level of acceptance of who he is.

Understanding his alien nature of where he comes from, and where his roots are, are essential as he makes choices about who he is.

That's one of the things we're trying to explore much more. We've told so many great stories over the years where Superman has embraced his human side and built stories around that side of the characterization. Now we're flipping it around a little bit and really embracing his alien side, so we can understand what it's like to be a man from another world, living amongst men, but not feeling like you're a part of it, but belonging to them all. Yet everyone turns to you for leadership.

Lee: I think the issue of self-identity and knowing who you are is something that's universal, and obviously, it's a very powerful theme. I'll tell you that, on a personal level, as an immigrant that was born in South Korea and moved to the United States, I can very much identify with being part of society, but also feeling like you're an outsider at the same time.

I think characters, not just Superman but other superhero characters, have a very public face and also a private, personal identity. I think it's that exploration between the two that's going to make part of the September relaunch very interesting on a story level.

Nrama: I read a survey recently where people are more connected through the internet now, but they actually feel more lonely and isolated. I guess it's comparable to having that "public" face be different from the private one, and feeling like nobody knows the real person behind the mask, or in this case, the computer screen.

Lee: Sure! Yeah, I read that too! There are a lot of interesting, even oxymoronic things happening in our society right now.

I think that even plays into what I think is one of the most interesting discussions in comics, where, "Is Batman actually Bruce Wayne? Or is Bruce Wayne actually Batman? Which one is the real character and which one's the mask?" I think the exploration of those things is what makes comic so interesting.


Lois and Clark

Nrama: For us married folks, it feels like there's this implication that marriage isn't interesting enough for superhero stories, but is that what influenced your decision to get Clark out of the marriage to Lois? The lack of drama that marriage offers?

DiDio: It's not that marriage isn't interesting. It's just that we want to make the subplots and soap opera aspects of comic book storytelling open and accessible to us. Naturally, as we get older, our lives move on. But we move our characters too quickly, and what we do is limit our stories and story potential by doing so.

Also, we wanted to have that sense of isolation that might come with being an alien among men. The two choices that were made, with both his parents being dead and not being married, isolated Clark a little bit more, so that he really had to do more exploration about mankind. There wasn't that one strong human tether that he was bonding with and learning through.

He's had so much learning and understanding from the days with his parents, but the rest of the discovery is on his own. If we had him married to Lois right now, he would always have a strong base to work from. We wanted to explore much bigger and wider stories with him. It's really the learning and growing of this character that is going to be the basis for so much of what Grant and George are going to be doing with their series and with Superman.

Lee: I'm also married, and I love it! So I don't think this is a knock against marriage. That said, marriage brings about a certain degree of comfort and security in one's life. If you have a life partner, you always have someone to rely on. So from a story conflict point of view, it makes for a less dramatic story. I think a lot of writers can agree that one of the most dynamic periods of Superman's history was that period where there was a love triangle between Clark Kent, Superman and Lois Lane. There's a lot of tension and interest you create in the characters by having that kind of dynamic.

We're not doing exactly that love triangle. We're introducing other elements into it. Through that, we're really updating who the character is and making Superman a character that you think you know, but maybe not. We have some surprises up our sleeves. And I think Grant has some incredible ideas about not only what he wants to do with Superman but Clark Kent, and really updating the whole mythology so that people can relate to it on a more personal level.

DiDio: When we sat down the writers, we were all pretty much in agreement that this was the best place to go, because it gave us more potential for the stories at the starting point. We needed a really strong starting point here, and we felt this was a great way to do it.


Man of Steel

Nrama: When DC Entertainment was first formed, one of the ideas behind it was to align what you're doing in comics with other media. Was this move to reboot Superman in comics informed or influenced by the fact that the movie universe is rebooting Superman with the Man of Steel film?

DiDio: Not at all. That said, I doubt they would ever start a series or anything where Superman was married at the beginning. You go back to when Superman got married, that was a stunt tied to a television show at that particular moment in time, and when that show ended, the marriage continued. But every other interpretation of Superman that followed did not have them married.

So it just shows you that we do operate at our own rate and in our own rules, and that's the way we operate now.

Lee: I'm very honored and excited to be part of an initiative with a character that is originating in print. This is really about making sure that the source material, which is the comics, remains as contemporary and fresh and exciting as possible.

It's not a situation where the comics are licensed from games, or movies, or TV shows, or animation, where these characters are frozen in time to reflect something that might be a bigger business part of Warner Bros. It's in fact the reverse. It's comics.

Comics are the drivers and the creative content. Comics are where we can take the creative risks and creative chances with the characters. It's our responsibility to keep them exciting and fresh. The overall mission of DC Entertainment is to allow other gifted filmmakers or people who work in games or animation the opportunity to go through and find things in the DC library that interest them and that they think have potential in other media. That's part of the ecosystem we're trying to build.

So it's not about one lining up with the other. It's about keeping what we're doing on the publishing side as relevant and exciting as possible.


Decision to Relaunch the DCU

Nrama: Let's back up to when the decision for the relaunch took place. When Marvel announced their Civil War storyline, they admitted there was a division among people in the room about whether they should do it. I think Tom Brevoort even said on the record that he hated the idea at first. Yet the language from DC feels more like everyone singing the party line. Surely you guys considered challenges to this and had some in-house, didn't you?

Lee: If there was anything, we had questions about whether we're being bold enough, not just in terms of Superman, but across the whole 52 line. We wanted to do a line-wide initiative and really make some dramatic changes that really refocused attention on the characters.

There's always a tendency, with these characters, to play it safe, to hedge your bets, because you know these characters are so well loved that there will be controversy and outcries and all this kind of stuff.

But I really do feel that if you have the best creative team on the characters, you have sound ideas, and you have a great direction that you want to explore, then you should go in that direction.

I remember the last time there was interest in Superman was, like Dan said, the last time, when John Byrne rebooted the franchise. He really took the origin that we knew and updated it and added new subtleties and nuances. For me, that was my heyday of collecting Superman comic books. It really felt like this was my version of Superman. I know it really created a lot of excitement for that character, not just among die-hard DC fans, but across all comic book readers in general.

DiDio: We actually had, last year, a very large writers meeting about the general direction and tone of the DC Universe, and one of the conversations that was the biggest conversation in the room was about the marriage of Lois and Clark, and it was a much discussed topic.

Most people saw the benefits of making this change, because they saw what the story potential was and how much they could open up their ability to examine the character in a bigger way, once we decided to move in this direction.


Oracle to Batgirl

Nrama: Let's talk about the decision to change Barbara Gordon's status from Oracle to Batgirl. Was there any consideration about how this would affect diversity in the DCU, since you're basically eliminating one of your most beloved disabled heroes?

DiDio: I think we have a really strong line that features a wider range of diversity throughout it. And in this particular case, we were looking specifically back at the Barbara Gordon character. And when you talk about Batgirl, whether it's with a casual fan or even to somebody who just knew the Batman character, Barbara Gordon is always the one people default to as "who Batgirl is."

Believe it or not, this was the more difficult choice to make for us, because we saw what the benefits of the Oracle character were, we saw what the challenges of making this change were going to be.

A couple things helped make our decision on this. One is that we felt like Barbara Gordon was always going to be the strongest Batgirl. And we had chances to tell new stories with her too. And also, the role of Oracle as a character in the DCU has changed greatly. When Oracle was first created, there was a sense of an emerging internet, and an emerging world of data out there. A lot of that has changed, and the role of Oracle has changed over the years.

What we needed to do was to continue to make Barbara Gordon one of the strongest characters possible, in or out of the wheelchair. And we felt that this was a strong direction for us.

But also, we're not discounting anything that character has gone through. And we want to make her change and her challenges a part of her story. And [writer] Gail [Simone] is doing a wonderful job with it.

Nrama: We've heard that she will go through physical therapy. Are you confirming that her past disability will continue to be part of her story going forward?

DiDio: Yes!

Lee: Absolutely. And I really think because of her past as Oracle, Batgirl will become — no, not become — she will remain one of the most interesting characters in the DC Universe. What Gail has been writing has been tremendously inspirational and exciting at the same time.



"Soft" Reboot and New Readers

Nrama: You're trying to reach new readers, and you're making Superman more "accessible" by dropping his convoluted history. And yet at the same time, you have this "soft" reboot where you've got Barbara dealing with her lengthy past, you've got a Green Lantern #1 comic that doesn't star Hal Jordan because of a recent storyline, and you've got a Batman with a son from a past storyline. Isn't this making continuity more convoluted? Why did you make the decision to keep this type of continuity when you're dropping others to attract new readers? Was it only about what books were already selling well?

Lee: I would say it was all creatively decided, but obviously if you have really strong content and really great creative direction, it's going to affect sales.

On an editorial level, we instinctively knew what was working and what wasn't working. We knew what needed a fresh coat of paint or even a complete overall. I'll use Teen Titans as an example of a concept where we changed it a lot. In that case, we felt that the book should be doing better, and creatively, we felt it was one that needed a shock to the system.

That's what you're seeing. Sometimes we realized we had to take a pretty strong stand and do something dramatically different.



Fill-In Artists and Timeliness

Nrama: Timeliness seems to be a big part of your communication to DC artists and writers leading up to September, and we've heard there's an intent to use fill-in artists whenever needed. We saw some indications that's happening in October, because there are some new names that have shown up to help out. What's the thinking behind how you're approaching book timeliness now, and why is it more hard-line than in the past?

DiDio: It's more hard-line than in the past for several reasons, and one is that it's the largest concern we've heard from retailers on a continual basis. They've been concerned in the past about our inability to put out books on a consistent basis, especially the books that people are looking for.

The reality is that we're in a periodical business. Periodical means that we have to be out every month. We've made a contract with the retailers, and a contract with the fans, to deliver our product to them on a consistent basis, and we should do so.

Over time, we've gotten a little lax in our delivery, and people were willing to wait for books because those books mattered to them. But as it spread throughout the business, people became less patient and sales suffered for it.

We have to rebuild the retailer confidence, we have to rebuild the fan confidence in our ability to deliver, which means we have to hold a hard line and be there.

And a lot of people are just not monthly people anymore, so we have to be smarter about how we schedule our books, how we plan our books, and how we plan who's going to be on them. I think what matters more than anything else is our ability to be there month-in and month-out.

We want to build that fan loyalty again. We want to build that consistency. We want people who walk into a store expecting a comic to be able to find that comic. There's nothing more frustrating for me or any of the fans, I'm sure, to be excited about something then not be really sure when it's coming out.

It's something I feel extraordinarily passionate about, and we're going to great lengths to make sure we hold that schedule.

Some people say to me, how can you guarantee 100 percent delivery? And the answer comes back: "It's our job to do that." We will make sure we will do that, and we'll make sure we don't sacrifice quality or story along the way. We want to make sure that everybody working on the books deserves to be on those books and we're putting out our best products.



Digital Market

Nrama: Jim, I heard a retailer talk about some analogies he'd heard you use where you'd said that if the digital market is like a hair, then the print market is like an 8"x10" piece of paper, which implies the digital market is very small compared to print. What analogy would you use for what you hope to see after this initiative? Will they be more comparable? Will print shrink to expand digital, as many retailers think?

Lee: The ideal state would be for the digital slice to grow, but the overall size of the whole pie to grow as well. We hope and expect the influx of digital readers to be an additive layer of business on top of our existing print business.

That's not to say you're not going to have some conversion of print-to-digital customer. But we've found that the huge majority of print customers prefer comics in print, and they are going to stick with print.

We really feel the digital format going day-and-date, making this accessible to everyone with a portable media device, will allow a lot of lapsed fans and new fans to check out what we're doing in the DC Universe come September, and that level of interest will convert some of those new readers and lapsed readers back into regular readers. And that will benefit the entire comic book business.

So we want the digital slice to be larger, and we want the overall size of the pie to get larger along with it.



Pants and Reaction to Change

Nrama: Jim, you just put Wonder Woman in the pants a year ago. Why the change back to the bathing suit/bloomers look so soon?

Lee: I don't think anything has been officially announced in that regard. I think there have been a couple of interesting images online, but it's something that we'll discuss at San Diego Comic Con.

Nrama: The cover for Wonder Woman #1 used to feature her wearing the pants, but now it's been changed back to being the bathing suit look. Your spokespeople confirmed that was the new cover.

Lee: Yeah, here's the thing... the internet is like everyone looking at tealeaves for direction. There's so much interest in what's going on in September that everyone's looking at every little image and trying to interpret it.

It's exciting to see that level of passion for what we're doing in September.

I'll just say, as far as Wonder Woman, it's something we'll discuss at San Diego Comic Con.

The funny thing about what I've seen, in regards to whether she should have the bloomers or the long pants, is that there are probably just as many people who hate the concept of the shorts versus the long pants. There are just as many people who say, "What? No pants? What's going on?"

It's interesting to see how quickly the look for a character can take hold with the readership.

I think that's an important thing to note in all this. It feels like there's a lot of discussion and hoopla about the changes that are coming in September. A year from now, if we do our jobs right, there will be as many people who love what we've done as there may be now who are fearing the changes.

What we accept as the "status quo" for these characters now were big changes at some point. We have to invite change as we go forward in time, because if we don't, they become the pulp heroes of yesteryear. Part of the driving force behind the September initiative is not to rest on our laurels, to really step up and examine every bit of their mythology and look for exciting opportunities to really take these characters in new directions.

Nrama: Is that a goal? To change minds in a year?

Lee: I think it will be a lot quicker than in a year. What I'm saying is that the level of adoption and acceptance by fandom is much more elastic than people think.

Yes, people are surprised by change. People question it. But the truth is, a lot of people will check this material out, and given the line-up of creators, I would not bet against the DC Universe.

I think people are going to be pleasantly surprised by the storylines and new directions, the new looks, and you're going to have some really die-hard DC September relaunch fans come September 2012. I think that's just part of the history of comics, and part of the history of fandom.



Overall Goals

Nrama: Dan, how would you describe the overall goals of the September initiative, and how will you measure whether or not this worked?

DiDio: You know, naturally, increased sales is always a great measure for us. It's probably our strongest measure to gauge any level of success.

But realistically, I'm most excited about our ability to galvanize the industry and get people excited about it again, and about what we're doing.

I always say that apathy is the worst thing for comics, because the last thing we want to do is wake up one morning and find out that all the fans have left us. But our goal right now is to find a way to re-energize the business, re-energize our company and our characters.

How do I gauge that? I gauge it by the level of excitement, the level of conversation, and the level of sales we achieve.

We're in a position ourselves for a changing market, but we want to make sure everything we do is in the best interest of telling the best stories as possible. At the end of the day, it always comes down to, what are the stories? Whether we're putting it in print form or digital form. If the stories are there, if the stories are good, people will find them.

We need to be the best we can be right now, because if we look around us, we see a market that is shrinking. We feel like we're in the position right now that we have the ability to really start rebuilding ourselves and rebuilding the brand and rebuilding our characters for the future.

http://www.newsarama.com/comics/dcnu-di ... 10719.html


Imagen Imagen
¡¡¡¡AY, OMÁ QUÉ CALORES!!!! ¡Gracias por tu regalo, Nitta!

pau_23
Lionel Luthor
Lionel Luthor
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Registrado: Lun Abr 05, 2010 10:03 am

Re: REBOOT de 52 títulos de DC Cómics

Mensaje por pau_23 »

:smt021 :smt021 :smt021 para los de DC leyendo esto a mi no me importan que les cambien los trajes que creen nuevas historias pero que me separen a Lois y a Clark si me toca los webs ¿no los pueden poner aunque sea saliendo juntos? nos tienen que fastidiar de esa manera. Hay si es mejor tener a un Superman solo y huraño a un verdadero kryptoniano sin nadie que lo comprenda ni pq el que regresar a la tierra , nadie que le importe realmente solo a un seudosuperman salatarin ni volar va ser capaz. Bravo, bravo señores de Dc el reebot del siglo van a hacer.

Obviamente muy cabreada


Imagen

perrottha
Chloe
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Re: REBOOT de 52 títulos de DC Cómics

Mensaje por perrottha »

:shock: ¡POR DIOS SEÑORES HAY QUE HACER ALGO!, :shock: ¡ESTOS ESCRITORES VAN A DESTRUIR UNA MITOLOGIA DE AÑOS!. AHORA NOS SALEN CON QUE LOIS Y CLARK YA NO ESTAN CASADOS. :smt013 Y LE QUIEREN QUITAR EL LADO HUMANO QUE ADOPTO CON MARTHA Y JONHNATAHAN KENT. TAMBIEN NOS SALEN CON LA TARUGADA DE QUE EL TRAJE QUE VA A USAR ES UNA ARMADURA kRYPTONIANA (ENTONCES EL TERMINO HOMBRE DE ACERO ES POR ESO?)O QUE NO SE SUPONE QUE LE SOL AMARILLO ES EL QUE LE DA SUS PODERES Y LO HACE INVUNERABLE, SUPERMAN NO NECESITA DE ARMADURAS (EL NUEVO TRAJE), EL TRAJE DEBE SER EL QUE TODOS CONOCEMOS CLASICO EL QUE LE HIZO MARTHA KENT (QUE TIENE DE MALO, ESE TRAJE NUNCA A PASADO DE MODA). :smt018 CON ESOS CAMBIOS NO DAN GANAS DE ADQUIIR ESTOS COMICS.
Y apoyo lo que dice NITTA: Para mi Supermán és el que hemos conocido siempre, el que siempre ha sido a lo largo de tantos años, criado por los Kent y adquiriendo una parte humana que le ha hecho convertirse en un hombre maravilloso de una nobleza increíble, compasivo, humilde y con unos valores que pocos humanos tienen. Y con el amor de su vida, Lois Lane, que ha sido un factor muy importante en su vida para que terminara de convertirse en el héroe que és.
Para mí ese siempre va a ser mi Supermán y su verdadera historia. Me niego a ver ninguna película ni a leer ningún cómic que cambie eso.



Shelby
Administrador/a
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Re: REBOOT de 52 títulos de DC Cómics

Mensaje por Shelby »

- El nuevo novio de Lois Lane revelado: Supermán pierde frente a Jonathan Carroll en 'Superman #1 (nydailynews.com):
El nuevo novio de Lois Lane revelado: Supermán pierde frente a Jonathan Carroll en 'Superman #1
Por Ethan Sacks 21 Julio, 2011, 4:00 AM


Imagen Imagen

¿Supermán perdió a Lois Lane frente a este chico?

El Hombre de Acero ha estado enamorado por la intrépida reportera del Daily Planet desde que saltó por primera vez a la cultura pop Americana en su debut en los cómics en 1939. Cuando la pareja finalmente se casó en los 90´, se convirtieron en el equivalente en los cómics de Richard Burton y Elizabeth Taylor – o al menos en Popeye y Olivia.

Todo eso cambia en Superman #1, que llegará a las tiendas a finales de Septiembre, como parte del reboot de DC Cómics de todos sus establecidos libros de cómics. El nuevo amante de Lane, un ganador de la lotería que parece que no puede tener puesta su camisa, es un compañero del Daily Planet, Jonathan Carroll, según ha sabido Daily News. El rubio y amistoso pretendiente es un nuevo personaje que hace su debut en Superman #1 en Septiembre, que, a juzgar por la preview, no tiene problemas en enseñar su tirso desnudo a los visitantes nocturnos... Clark y los lectores. En otras palabras, parece ser lo opuesto a Clark Kent. No hay por qué preguntarse por qué Lois está entusiasmada.

Superman es el Mayor de los Superhéroes del Mundo, pero no puede tenerlo todo.

Muchos de nosotros sabemos cómo es ser el raro y pensamos que los lectores sentirán debilidad por Clark cuando vean su reacción hacia el nuevo novio de Lois.

La compañía ha creado un revuelo en la industria con su decisión de rejuvenecer a todos sus personajes tras las repercusiones de una historia en la que el enemido de Flash causó estragos con el tiempo y creó toda una realidad alternativa para los héroes de DC.

El movimiento se supone que pretende hacer más fácil el que los nuevos lectores salten a bordo sin que estén aterrados por décadas de historias pasadas, pero algunos cambios -- como la repentina soltería de Clark Kent -- han sido difíciles de aceptar para los fans de siempre.

"Parece muy raro que pudieras eliminar el que ellos estén casados, ya que es un hecho estabilizado en los cómics desde hace 20 años," dice Ron Hill, manager en el Jim Hanley's Universe, una tienda de cómics de midtown Manhattan.

"Aunque me siento mal por el nuevo novio. Al final del día Lois y Supermán se supone que estarán juntos."


http://www.nydailynews.com/entertainmen ... _supe.html

http://robot6.comicbookresources.com/20 ... -revealed/

http://www.newsarama.com/comics/sdcc-11 ... 10721.html?

http://io9.com/5823513/meet-lois-lanes- ... an-carroll

- Resumen de informaciones sobre el Reboot de Supermán & family en el SDCC '11:
Este fin de semana se ha celebrado el SDCC y DC ha contado con varios paneles y de muchos de sus artistas para hablar sobre el reboot que se publicará a partir de finales de Septiembre.

A continuación, os dejo un resumen sobre las cosas más llamativas que han dicho sobre Supermán.

¿Qué le gustó más a Grant Morrison, escribir Batman o Superman? Morrison dijo que aunque va y viene, estaba emocionado de escribir para Supermán de nuevo. 'El millonario capitalista parece tener un poco menos que decirnos que el campeón de los oprimidos,' se rió Morrison.

Explicando que su Supermán en Action Comics sería un personaje más pícaro y 'anti-autoritario', Morrison reveló que Clark Kent se convertiría en un nombre casi tan grande en Metrópolis como Supermán. 'Él es un reformista social, y Clark Kent hace tanto trabajo como Supermán básicamente arrancando de raíz la corrupción y exponiéndola, así es que los dos están trabajando en equipo,' dijo Morrison. Elaborando que en su versión Ma y Pa Kent están muertos, Morrison le dijo a la audiencia que en su Supermán 'La Justicia puede no involucrar a la ley a los ojos de Supermán,' añadió.

Adicionalmente reveló que su plan incluye el hacer 16 números en Action, y que el cómic inicialmente tiene lugar unoc cinco años en el pasado, pero que en el número #7 se equiparará al tiempo actual, a partir de lo cual las historias saltarán en el tiempo; y en cuanto a por qué la gente prefiere Batman a Supermán, dijo que Batman es guay, sexy y tiene un montón de dinero, mientras que Supermán tiene jefe, trabaja en una oficina y está encadenado a que tiene que representar a la bandera y al patriotismo.

Clark Kent está soltero, Lois Lane sale con un nuevo compañero y el cielo es el límite para su carrera como la nueva jefa del departamento de TV y Medios del Daily Planet, con lo que Perry ya no es su jefe, puesto que ocupan el mismo escalafón, lo que origina un gran cambio en su relación, al igual que con Clark, que ahora está en un escalón profesional por debajo de ella. Todos están intentando adaptarse a la nueva situación. El Daily Planet está bajo la dirección de un nuevo dueño, ya que el periódico ha sido comprado por un conglomerado a escala mundial.

“Mucha de la agitación que hemos viesto en la prensa y online se han centrado en Supermán,” dijo Jim Lee, Co-Publicista de DC Entertainment. “Estamos realmente excitados por que los fans vean esta versión de Lois en Septiembre. Este personaje siempre ha sido una exitosa y moderna mujer y su nuevo papel en el Daily Planet abre nuevas y dramáticas posibilidades en las historias.”

“Estamos dando una perspectiva fresca, tanto física como emocionalmente a Supermán,” dijo Dan DiDio, Co-Publicista de DC Entertainment. “Además de su vida como soltero, Clark Kent tiene que ajustarse a Perry White teniendo un nuevo jefe y un nuevo status en el Daily Planet.”


En cuanto a "Action Comics", Grant Morrison dijo que explorará cómo Superman consiguió el traje y por qué y que la idea de ser un chico de 17 años cuya madre cose su disfraz es un poco ridícula. "Este libro explora el realismo de lo que un joven en la posición de Supermán sería o haría." Clark sabe que es un alien pero no que es de Krypton. Inicialmente será muy joven y descarado. "Action Comics" es temáticamente más similar a "All Star Superman", si es que no está directamente unido a él. 'All-Star' fue Superman al final de su vida, pero este Superman es joven y atrevido-... queremos ver a este hombre luchar en las calles por el ciudadano común". Supermán no será como Batman. No será melancólico... pero "pateará más traseros". Morrison también mencionó que Lex Luthor es un joven rico en alza que vendió algunas patentes y es más bien el chico bueno. No hay planes ni para Lionel Luthor ni para Chloe Sullivan. Jimmy Olsen es el amigo Clark, no de Supermán y compartirán aficiones. Esperad a "Action Comics #3" para descubrir más sobre Jor-El y Lara, y la Fortaleza de la Soledad.

Los comentarios de Matt Idelson sobre "Superman" fueron que él "no es un boy scout" y que "no tiene una esposa trofeo". 'Superman' se lleva a cabo en el presente. "Clark Kent no será el más amado", nos aseguró Idelson al que describió como una especie de tipo solitario tratando de encontrar su lugar en el mundo gracias a las manos de George Pérez. El Daily Planet no es un periódico sagrado, comprado por un conglomerado de medios de comunicación. Se ha convertido en un periódico, una emisora de TV y un contenido Web. Lois Lane está en una posición igual a la de Perry White, y dirige la sección de TV/Web mientras que Perry dirige el periódico.

JMS habló sobre sus progresos en "Superman: Earth One - Part 2". En él veremos el primer apartamento de Clark y cómo encaja en él. Conoceremos a su vecina Lisa, que lo adora. Un 'flashback a una conversación con Jonathan Kent sobre los "pájaros y las abejas". Supermán se cruzará con Parasite que le quita sus poderes. Y descubriremos una oportunidad perdida de Clark de tener una experiencia sexual. '

Scott Lobdell habló sobre "Superboy", y dijo que Conner había sido secuestrado antes de que el libro se abra, al el ser ingeniería inversa lo ha fastidiado y se le ha borrado la mente. Aunque es el mismo Conner de hace 15 años.

El escritor de "Supergirl" Mike Johnson comentó que Supergirl no era alguien a quien querrías cabrear. Está encontrando su lugar en el mundo y qué le ocurrió. No sabe dónde está o cómo llegó a la Tierra. No conoce a Supermán. Los escritores quieren que los lectores experimenten todo lo que Kara hace y lo que le ocurre. Johnson quiere que Supergirl sea divertida y no sólo tensa. Mostrará siferentes poderes, y diferentes niveles de poder y manifestaciones.

En cuanto al tema de los cómics digitales, JMS piensa que el audio necesita incluirse de alguna manera, para oñir a los personajes a medida que lees.

Encuanto a la armadura, Matt Idelson dijo que es posible que Supermán salga herido y que por eso necesita la armadura. Grant Morrison comentó que la capa de Supermán es lo que tiene de Krypton, que es indestructible y se usó para protegerle y que es lo que ha tenido junto a él toda su vida. Al parecer, el traje de Supermán es algo que se tenía planeado desde hace año y medio y los cuellos en los trajes se hicieron pensando en darles un aire de majestuosidad.

En cuanto a la continuidad para "Superman", la historia de "La Muerte de Supermán" ha ocurrido.

Steel sigue estando en "Action Comics", pero tiene un papel muy diferente.

El pasado de Supermancon la Legion sigue estando, pero también es diferente.

La mayor parte del pasado de Conner sigue estando intacto hasta que se unió a los Teen Titans. Surante el primer año de los nuevos "Teen Titans", Superboy es el villano.

"Action Comics" y "Supermán" serán cómics para todos los públicos.


Didio en cuanto a la posibilidad de una mini-serie de Lois Lane: "Ella tiene un prominente papel cuando Supermán se relance, y un prominente papel profesionalmente en su personaje". "En cuanto a una miniserie o a un cómic, hemos hablado sobre ello pero necesita construirse la base primero".


Unido a esto, anunciaron que Supermán estará presente en 3 de las próximas películas animadas.

La primera será "Justice League: Doom", influenciada y basada en la historia de "JLA: Tower of Babel" de Mark Waid y Howard Porter. El guión fue el último proyecto escrito por el fallecido Dwayne McDuffie quien previamente adaptó All Star Superman.

El próximo año también veremos a Supermán tomando protagonismo en una adaptación de lo que se describió como Supermán vs. The Elite, que los fans recordarán como la historia "What's So Funny About Truth, Justice & de Action Comics #775 por Joe Kelly, Doug Mahnke y Lee Bermejo.

El último proyecto es una película en dos partes sobre el Batman de Frank Miller: The Dark Knight Returns que muestra la famosa batalla entre Supermán y Batman.

Los tres proyectos están actualmente en producción.

Y para los fans de Batman, Batman: Year One saldrá a la venta en DVD, Blu ray, y descarga digital el 18 de Octubre.


- Jim Lee habla sobre el Reboot:

http://www.newsarama.com/common/media/v ... m-lee-sdcc


Y por si queréis echarle un vistazo a los nuevos diseños:

http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page ... e&id=33553



http://www.comicbookmovie.com/fansites/ ... s/?a=42541

http://dcu.blog.dccomics.com/2011/07/22 ... he-new-52/

http://www.supermanhomepage.com/news.php?readmore=10050


Supongo que a algunos os encantará esto:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=57RKoT8V ... dded#at=16[/youtube]


Imagen Imagen
¡¡¡¡AY, OMÁ QUÉ CALORES!!!! ¡Gracias por tu regalo, Nitta!

erica_lane
Lana Lang
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Re: REBOOT de 52 títulos de DC Cómics

Mensaje por erica_lane »

lo que me causo mas "gracia" jonathan, de verdad?, no habia mas nombres

"Aunque me siento mal por el nuevo novio. Al final del día Lois y Supermán se supone que estarán juntos."
esto ya no entendi


ImagenImagen
avatar KatherineKent y gifs onebreath gracias

Shelby
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Registrado: Dom May 21, 2006 12:15 am

Re: REBOOT de 52 títulos de DC Cómics

Mensaje por Shelby »

Os juro que yo con esta gente no entiendo nada... se dicen y desdicen según les venga el aire... :smt102


- Grant Morrison sobre "Action Comics" y el Sobre el Matrimonio de Supermán (comicbookresources.com):
Grant Morrison estuvo con CBR durante el SDCC '11 y habló, entre otras cosas sobre "Supergods", "Action Cómics" (que, según él, no se verá afectado por el matrimonio de Supermán al estar centrado 5 años en el pasado), las presiones por ser responsable de volver a contar y actualizar los orígenes del Hombre de Acero y por qué tomó el reto de poner su granito de arena en la masiva iniciativa de DC.


Sobre el Matrimonio de Supermán, Grant Morrison dijo:

CBR: Quiero saber lo que piensas sobre el matrimonio de Lois y Clark que se va a disolver con este no-reboot, no-relanzamiento, este nuevo DC (sea lo que sea como quieras llamarlo). Me gustaría que me dijeras qué piensas del matrimonio de Lois y Clark y por qué puede ser mejor (¿O es mejor? No lo sé) que ellos no estén juntos.

GM: Honestamente, pensaba que estaba bien. La razón por la que ellos no están ahora juntos es para crear algo nuevo—para crear a un nuevo Supermán para una nueva generación de la manera en que, digamos, John Byrne hizo y que cambió un montón de cosas. Y Superman siempre ha sido un personaje con el que podías hacer eso, ¿sabes? Hay algo menos sólido sobre sus orígenes, así es que es fácil cambiarle un poco. Así es que no he estado ralmente involucrado con todo el tema del matrimonio, poque el libro que estoy escribiendo está centrado cinco años en el pasado, así es que soy seguro un Supermán que apenas conoce a Lois Lane—ellos se han encontrado unas cuantas veces, ella lo conoce—pero no estoy tratando realmente con eso. Es decir, es realmente George Perez en su libro quien va a tratar mucho más con eso. Así es que no estoy muy al corriente de las decisiones que han hecho, para ser sincero. Odiaría hablar por ellos sobre esto. Para mí, con Supermán, puedes contar todas las historias que quieras; ellos contaron algunas historias sobre el matrimonio. Sé que Gail Simone, creo, escribió a un Supermán casado realmente genial y Kurt Busiek escribió a un Supermán casado realmente bueno . Pero esto es tan sólo algo nuevo, derribarle de nuevo y empezar a levantarle desde cero. Pienso que es una cosa interesante por hacer —cambiar las cosas—ver qué tipo de dinámica conseguimos sacar de eso.

CBR: Es curioso. Es el único matrimonio que pensé que funcionaba realmente bien en los cómics... Lois y Clark casados, pensé que siempre funcionó.


http://video.comicbookresources.com/cbr ... much-more/

- Jim Lee habla con CBR sobre la “Justice League,” el Reboot de DC y más (comicbookresources.com):
Jim Lee habló con CBR TV en el Comic-Con International de San Diego sobre la exitación y los retos de ilustrar el primer súper equipo del Universo DC, el proceso de empezar desde cero centrándose en Batman y Green Lantern antes de expandir la lista de los 15 miembros, su emoción al trabajar con su amigo Geoff Johns en la saga, las diferencias de ilustrar un libro de un equipo en lugar de un personaje único como Batman y la motivación de tener una dura fecha límite debido a la nueva política de DC de “día y fecha” para publicar las versiones digitales de sus títulos.

Y también sobre la presión que Lee sintió mientras trabajaba en los diseños de los renovados personajes, desde el punto de vista artístico y empresarial, su proceso artístico de su trabajo en la “Justice League” y el efecto que el mundo de los cómics digitales ha tenido en las historias de los cómics.

http://video.comicbookresources.com/cbr ... unch-more/

- Grant Morrison habló con Wired.com sobre la evolución de los libros de cómics, la necesidad de los superhéroes y qué es lo que significa Supermán:

http://bcove.me/oxyd9nc7


Imagen Imagen
¡¡¡¡AY, OMÁ QUÉ CALORES!!!! ¡Gracias por tu regalo, Nitta!

donovan320
Lois Lane
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Re: REBOOT de 52 títulos de DC Cómics

Mensaje por donovan320 »

Vaya lío,yo no entiendo nada.Yo nunca he sido de comic,mas de tele y cine.Me compré el comic de "Superman:Por el mañana",y digo,no no ,es muy avanzado para mí.Y ahora me he comprado,el de los origenes de Superman,que es de Abril del 2011,que lo recibo mañana.Y según leo y entiendo,posterior a esta fecha,¿han vuelto a cambiar la historia de los origenes de superman,en una próxima edición?.


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