
This isn’t hearsay, but all events that actually happened and the events that drove Morrison to Marvel, a move that would give fans some great comics.

I remember reading about it in Wizard magazine. Maybe it’s time to go across town and work for the other guys. A movie produced by the people who sign your paychecks and publish your creator-owned stuff, which you wholly own.

They used your stuff, and you didn’t get paid for it. You find out that people were passing trade paperbacks of The Invisibles around the set and that the book was an influence on the movie. Then, you go and watch a movie called The Matrix, a movie produced by the parent company of the comic company you work for, and you notice a lot of similar ideas and designs from your creator-owned book, The Invisibles. And instead, DC goes with the safe choice of Jeph Loeb and Joe Kelly and keeping the status quo. You and some friends (Mark Waid, Mark Millar, and Tom Peyer) have a revolutionary pitch for taking over the Superman books, one which will upend the status quo of the Man Of Steel (here’s a link to the pitch- it’s amazing, and you can see where Mark Millar stole a bunch of stuff and gave it to Marvel because Mark Millar proved himself to be a tool- ). You’ve written him in so many places, including in a critically and commercially acclaimed run on JLA, a book that became the flagship book of the company. Picture this- you’ve been writing at DC Comics for years, and all you really want to do is write is Superman. Anyway, before we can start talking about the comics, let’s talk about Marvel in the year 2000 and the circumstances that brought Morrison to Marvel. That, of course, comes from the fact that Claremont was writing the book for 17 YEARS, but still. Sure, Chris Claremont’s 17 years on Uncanny X-Men is the most essential X-Men run, but for my money, it’s not as consistently amazing as Morrison’s is.

I haven’t even been to Disney World in a few weeks.Īnyway, we meet up this week to talk about Grant Morrison’s New X-Men. Plus, it’s the holidays, so I’m quite busy. Life is falling apart, I have a full-time job, depression, and another writing job with a website that doesn’t hold a candle to this one.

Hi, I’m David Harth, and this week, I’m totally to blame for how late this article is.
