u/Godallah1

Days of the future past

During the latest discussions, several people said Days of Future Past is Marvel's best comic.

I have it in my collection. But whoever I let him read is told that this is a stupid piece of shit and that I would never advise them such comics again. Literally nobody in the real world outside of a reddit likes it.

However, everyone liked the film with this name.

u/Godallah1 — 1 day ago

Marvel's best comics with unpredictable ending

I love the Civil War because it is a very rare comic book that actually makes you worry about the characters and you can't predict that Iron Man will win. On the other hand, if the Captain won, the government would simply send an army against them and the heroes would be sent to the coffins instead of the Negative Zone.

Yet what other comics are there that don't end with a return to the status quo and the beating of a villain?

u/Godallah1 — 2 days ago

Thoughts on this book?

I saw a funny passage from there, where a gang of teenagers call the captain a clown and do not know anything about the World War 2. But should you buy this comic?

u/Godallah1 — 3 days ago

My preschooler son likes Flash, but knows nothing about the character except that he's fast.

In my country they sell hardbooks of comics of the 4th and 5th volumes. Which of these is better for him to buy?

reddit.com
u/Godallah1 — 21 days ago

The other day they said that Spider-Man fans hate comics about him and are stuck in the 70s. But it seems to apply to comics about the Captain, Iron Man and even Thor.

Why can't people just accept that characters change over time, their relationships change, their view of the world changes?

The character is not a picture cast in granite.

Why not just say yes Stark was delusional and wrong and but he has to go the redemption route.

And instead, we will erase the character's identity, make a deal with mephisto, get him out of the chest star like a Pokémon...

Why not accept the character as he is with all the advantages and disadvantages?

u/Godallah1 — 23 days ago
▲ 47 r/CaptainAmerica+1 crossposts

Isn't Marvel and their editors deciding what a character should be?

Is not man the totality of all his actions? Can't a person say one thing and do another? Don't people do bad things or make mistakes? People are multifaceted.

You cannot choose one story that is beneficial to you, and on its basis build the entire image of the character's personality.

u/Godallah1 — 23 days ago