20160609 – Comics News :EXCLUSIVE: Doctor Doom is Marvel’s « Infamous Iron Man, » from Bendis & Maleev | Comic Book Resources

EXCLUSIVE: Doctor Doom is Marvel’s « Infamous Iron Man, » from Bendis & Maleev – Brian Michael Bendis & Alex Maleev’s latest collaboration puts Doctor Doom in the Iron Man armor, looking to succeed where Tony Stark failed.

Source : EXCLUSIVE: Doctor Doom is Marvel’s « Infamous Iron Man, » from Bendis & Maleev | Comic Book Resources

20160708 – Comics News :  Single Black Female Iron Man, and the Competing Narratives | Comic Book Resources

Single Black Female Iron Man, and the Competing Narratives – With Marvel’s announcement about RiRi Williams, the new Black female Iron Man, Joseph Illidge looks at the future beyond the new superhero.

Marvel Comics revealed this week that thenext Iron Man will be a young, Black teenage girl.

As the writer of Marvel’s monthly title« Invincible Iron Man » with the now-globally-known superhero, Brian Michael Bendis has been introducing the character of Riri Williams, a teenage student at M.I.T., over the course of months. Riri’s adventures in reverse-engineering Iron Man technology and taking her makeshift suit out for a spin, have served as the breadcrumbs for the path leading Marvel’s newest hero of color to adopt the identity of one of the publisher’s most popular characters.

Once the news broke, outlet after outlet shared the tidbit, fans went to social media and gave it a seal of approval, a questioning dismissal, or a discerning eye. Riri Williams, the next Iron Man (possibly, name-wise), is Marvel’s newest cog in a developing mechanism called « The Newer, More Progressive, Marvel Comics Universe. » This mechanism is being constructed and refined with tactical precision to yield the perfect mixture of media attention, profit, social relevance and authenticity of message.

« The Newer, More Progressive, Marvel Comics Universe » has more people of color on staff than ever before; has more Black writers working on projects than ever before; has more women in their editorial staff than ever before; has more female character-led titles in publication than ever before; has more characters of color being profiled than ever before; has more of a presence in real-world arenas ranging from late night talk shows to The White House than ever before.

With all of that, within the perfect armor which surrounds Iron Riri, covering her body in the positive publicity and the beautiful artwork and the viability of the « Iron Man » name and the timeliness of subject with a young Black girl adept in the STEM fields… there is a crack. This crack threatens to become a chasm. The one which so-called progressives who only care about « a good story » and « have Black friends » and are trying to save the comic book industry (and Planet Earth, in general) from « pandering » and « PC behavior » will undoubtedly have a problem with.

Because the writer behind Riri Williams, possibly one of the most important characters to emerge this year from the womb of « The Newer, More Progressive, Marvel Comics Universe, » is Brian Michael Bendis. He is one of the most impactful writers in American superhero comic books of the last fifteen years, by virtue of his talent, range, multimedia visibility and his goal to create a more diverse fictional landscape of superheroes. Bendis is the sure thing Marvel Comics needs, from a business perspective, to create, introduce, and plant Iron Riri into our collective fan mindscape in such a way that she will stick.

ironman spoilerInvincible Iron Man 9 Mike Deodato

Bendis has been introducing Riri over the past several months in « Invincible Iron Man, » preparing her to take her places as Marvel’s newest hero

But Riri Williams, Iron Riri, the next « Iron Man, » is mostly representative of a creative community which has been (to public knowledge) ignored by the character’s publisher for its entire publishing history.

The Black Woman. Black Women. Black Girls.

Bendis is the co-creator of the popular Afro-Latino Spider-Man Miles Morales. He is the co-creator of Jessica Jones, the superpowered private investigator from comic books and the Netflix live-action series of the same name.

His desire and ability to create characters of variety and make them compelling characters who make an impression on you, his body of work and his writing acumen — all of those things are a separate matter from the issue of Bendis being a part of the « Men writing stories of young, teenage, female superheroes » narrative, which is decades old and yet quite vibrant in today’s American superhero comic book industry.

This narrative, despite how brightly it shines, how the sound of it reverberates through our ears as a sign of « the way things are, » despite how many outlets of visibility reinforce it, is a tired narrative. An anachronistic narrative. A narrative that needs to arrive at its end of life. We know this.

A short while ago, on a day celebrating national independence, a New York Times book review was published in which a White male novelist was praised for his courage on writing about slavery in a science fiction story, a review that failed to mention the deceased Black female science fiction writer Octavia Butler.

Octavia Butler, the multiple recipient of the Hugo and Nebula awards, recipient of the MacArthur Fellowship, and among many other things author of the novel « Kindred, » a story about slavery wrapped in the genre of science fiction, published in 1979. The absence of a groundbreaking Black female writer in such a discussion that praises a male White author on a subject said Black female author tackled almost 40 years ago, that absence is an indicator of the exclusion narrative. The same exclusion narrative running throughout the origin and revelation of Riri Williams, the next Iron Man.

Now, unlike some writers and institutions harboring the belief that Marvel Comics can manifest and change content on the drop of a dime, pivoting with the speed of The Flash, most of us know that’s not how comic books work. A publisher like Marvel Comics plans their content anywhere from 12 to 24 months in advance.

MARVELNOWfinalKindred Octavia Butler

Marvel’s announcement speaks to greater issues of inclusion and exclusion, also on display in a New York Times book review that failed to mention Octavia Butler’s novel « Kindred »

Not only may Riri Williams be two years-old, but six months from now (or even less), Marvel Comics could reveal a Black female writer as the author of Riri’s heroic story. Those stories could be in the writing stage as you read this.

If that is true, the Black Girl Magic of Riri Williams will be more than aesthetic. It will be profoundly intrinsic. It will be historic. It will shatter today’s exclusion narrative for the American superhero comic book industry. But it will not be enough.

It will not be enough for Marvel to be the Sojourner Truth of the comic book industry, using their collective business acumen to smuggle Black female writers from the slavery of mainstream comic book industry anonymity into the bright and beautiful light of visibility, media attention, and creative opportunity. It will not be enough for Marvel’s peers to do the same.

The exclusion narrative will have to be put to its grave by the collection of creators, fans, and businesspersons within and outside of the comic book industry. A unification of separate efforts, all working in the same direction. The Inclusion Narrative must take root. It must choke the last vestige of life from its predecessor without mercy, compassion, or pause. It must do this, and remain ever vigilant and strong.

The Inclusion Narrative is in the progress of being crafted, whether or not the most prominent publishers in any given industry will help write that narrative in the near-future. When there is ample opportunity given to the various people who grew up knowing or being a Riri Williams to telling the stories that chronicle her growth, maturation and personal trials, then it will begin to be enough.

Soon, Riri Williams will be able to say « I am Iron Man. » I am waiting for the day to hear a Black woman say « I write Iron Man. »

Source : Single Black Female Iron Man, and the Competing Narratives | Comic Book Resources

Le prochain Iron Man de Marvel sera une ado noire, et c’est super malin – Livres – Télérama.fr

L’increvable Tony Stark raccroche ses gants en métal chez Marvel Comics et laisse la place à Riri Williams. Trois grands changements en un, donc, puisque l’iconique Iron Man, jusqu’ici incarné par un homme blanc quarantenaire, le sera désormais par… une femme noire et adolescente. C’est radical ? Pas si sûr : c’est dans la droite lignée des renouvellements du bestiaire des super, entrepris par Marvel depuis quelques années, afin de donner à ses BD une couleur plus actuelle – sans mauvais jeu de mots.

Après la fin du nouvel arc narratif Civil War II (en cours de publication aux Etats-Unis), l’armure d’Iron Man sera donc portée par Riri Williams, « génie des sciences entrée au MIT à 15 ans, comme l’explique le scénariste Brian Michael Bendis àTime, qui attire l’attention de Tony car elle a construit sa propre armure dans sa chambre étudiante ». Aucun spoiler à propos du futur de Tony Stark selon Bendis, le fait de ranger son armure ne signifie pas forcément la mort du héros milliardaire.

L’opération est maligne pour Marvel, qui s’assure une publicité gratuite, laissant les médias communiquer et les fans se saisir de la nouvelle en l’accueillant plus ou moins bien (évidemment) pour les raisons qu’on imagine (malheureusement). Mais elle reflète aussi les changements nécessaires des différents éditeurs de comics (Marvel et DC, les deux principaux concurrents se regardent en chiens de faïence et copient les différentes évolutions de l’autre) afin de se moderniser et de « représenter le monde qui entoure les dessinateurs et scénaristes », comme le note Brian Michael Bendis.

Source : Le prochain Iron Man de Marvel sera une ado noire, et c’est super malin – Livres – Télérama.fr

20160707 – Odinson Looks for a New Hammer in ‘The Unworthy Thor’

The Odinson, the god formerly known as Thor, returns to his own title for the first time since 2014 in The Unworthy Thor.

Source : Odinson Looks for a New Hammer in ‘The Unworthy Thor’

20160707 -Marvel : Une nouvelle série Champions avec de jeunes héros | ACTUALITÉ | MDCU COMICS

Après l’annonce d’une nouvelle série Avengers U.S., Marvel Comics a annoncé l’arrivée d’une série intituléeChampions. Sous ce titre ce cache en réalité les « teen heroes » de l’écurie Marvel qui sont issus de diverses séries.

Entertainment Weekly rapporte que le titre sera écrit par Mark Waid (The Flash , Daredevil, 52) et illustré parHumberto Ramos (Out There, Impulse, TASM), avec des couvertures variantes d’Alex Ross. L’équipe deChampions sera composée de Ms.Marvel, Nova, et Spider-Man/Miles Morales qui ont quitté l’équipe desAvengers du titre All-New, All-Different Avengers. Les trois juniors seront rejoints par Amadeus Cho de Totally Awesome Hulk , Viv Vision (la fille de Vision), et n’oublions pas d’ajouter un mutant dans le lot à savoirCyclops.

Dans l’interview de EW, Waid explique qu’il veut avec l’aide de Ramos faire en sorte de distinguer l’équipe desChampions de celle des Avengers. Il explique également qu’il n’y a pas besoin de devenir un adulte pour atteindre le niveau de Tony Stark ou Captain America pour faire la différence dans le monde.

Le jeune Scott Summers est certainement le membre que l’on n’attendait pas, vu son rôle dans les histoires récentes des mutants. L’éditeur Tom Brevoort a expliqué que le jeune Scott souhaite se bâtir un meilleur futur pour lui-même. « C’est le Scott Summers issu du passé. Dans ma tête, il est un peu le premier défi que ce groupe va devoir affronter. Ce qu’ils font n’est pas simplement de rassembler une équipe de super-héros, ils sont un peu comme des activistes. Ils vont faire une annonce qui est pour tous les membres et pour leur génération : il est temps de s’unir et de réparer le monde. C’est un message qui parle et en réponse les gens vont participer. »

L’ancien Cyclops est une grande figure de division dans l’univers Marvel, alors la première question à laquelle ces gosses vont devoir répondre et celle de savoir s’il peut faire partie de leur mission ? Sa version du futur est devenu un révolutionnaire radical et a fait des choses terribles, mais est-ce le même type ? Et je pense que c’est pour ça qu’il est là. Il veut emprunter un chemin différent que celui de sa version plus âgée.

La nouvelle série Champions marque aussi la fin d’un conflit sur les droits entre Marvel Comics et Heroic Publishing, qui avait lancé un jeu de rôles nommé Champions dans les années 80, après que Marvel ait annulé la première série Champions. Quand Marvel souhaita redonner une seconde vie à la série, Heroic s’opposa ce qui donna lieu à une décision de Justice qui trancha en faveur d’Heroic. Du coup, la deuxième série qui devait s’appeler Champions fut rebaptisée The Order.

Néanmoins au jour d’aujourd’hui, Brevoort a expliqué que Marvel et Heroic sont arrivés à un accord. « Champions est un peu comme le grand nom d’équipe perdu par Marvel. Nous avons publié Champions dans les années 70 et n’avons pas pu la republier depuis. Nous sommes maintenant arrivés sur un accord avec les gens qui en détenaient les droits avant, et qui nous donne le droit de la publier et eux, de leur côté, ils peuvent continuer à faire ce qu’ils font. En gros, c’est comme si ce nom revenait à nouveau chez lui. Et ça fait du bien, car quand nous avons commencé à chercher un nom pour ce groupe, nous tenions à  » quelque chose Avengers « . Et cela semblait impossible pour moi. S’ils coupent le lien [avec les Avengers], et qu’ils continuent seuls pour arriver à se faire un nom, ils se devaient d’avoir un nom à eux. Ils sont en fait très consciencieux socialement, avec un esprit très activiste et sont positifs sur le fait d’être des super-héros, alors le nom se devait de faire très super-héros. »

Champions #1 paraîtra cet automne. Ci-dessous la couverture de Ramos et la variante de Ross.

Source : Marvel : Une nouvelle série Champions avec de jeunes héros | ACTUALITÉ | MDCU COMICS

20160707 -IRON MANTLE: Ten People Who Have Worn IRON MAN Armor | Newsarama.com

Tony Stark is out, and Riri Williams is in. But she’s not the first newcomer to take over as Iron Man.

See the 10 people who have donned the Iron Man Armor on the link below :

Source : IRON MANTLE: Ten People Who Have Worn IRON MAN Armor | Newsarama.com

20160705 – Comics News : Full MARVEL NOW! ‘Divided We Stand’ Image Released | Newsarama.com

A literal rift between two teams of Marvel veterans and Marvel’s younger heroes.

Joining the 16 characters in the previous « Marvel NOW! » teaesers is 10 new characters: Daisy Johnson/Quake, Elektra, Gamora, Cable, Squirrel Girl, Moon Girl, Kate Bishop/Hawkeye, Dr. Strange, and Amadeus Cho/Hulk.

In fact, it’s eleven if you count the massive green foot seen behind the group on the left. The publisher hasn’t clarified who that is referring to, although the first giant green lizard in the Marvel U that comes to mind is Fin Fang Foom, but it could also be the recently introduced American Kaiju (real name: Todd Ziller) from New Avengers.

In some ways, the two groups of characters mirror the way Marvel began promoting « All-New All-Different Marvel » with two groups of characters in a pair of pin-ups by Civil War II artist David Marquez. In this « Marvel NOW! » line-up, it’s interesting that two recent Invincible Iron Man characters – Dr. Doom and Riri Williams – are featured as the central figures in each group – one of mostly older heroes, and the other those who are portrayed as newer recruits into the superhero business.

Source : Full MARVEL NOW! ‘Divided We Stand’ Image Released | Newsarama.com

20160702 – Comics News : Revamped ‘ODINSON’ v Unexpected Character in in Latest ‘Divided’ MARVEL NOW Teaser | Newsarama.com

The one once-worthy at odds against the one once-ultimate.

Another « Marvel NOW! » teaser has arisen, this time featuring the return of the original Thor – now calling himself Odinson – being put at odds against the Miles Morales Spider-Man. This teaser (via IGN), like the others, is illustrated by Mike Deodato Jr., who coincidentally illustrated Odinson’s fall from worthy-ness to be Thor in 2014’s Original Sin a mystery that has yet to be revealed.

This teaser breaks the mold of previous pieces which contrasted a household character against a more esoteric choice from Marvel’s deep bench, but squarely comes down to the generational divide that Newsarama has theorizedcould be crux of « Marvel NOW! »

It’s also important to note Odinson’s revised features: a short, cropped haircut with some high-tech armor – perhaps compensating for his loss of power after being dethroned as Thor.

Look for more on « Marvel NOW! » as it develops on Newsarama.

Source : Revamped ‘ODINSON’ v Unexpected Character in in Latest ‘Divided’ MARVEL NOW Teaser | Newsarama.com

20160610 – Beast, Wonder Man & Captain America by John Byrne &… — John Byrne Draws…

Beast, Wonder Man & Captain America by John Byrne & Terry Austin. 1982.

via Beast, Wonder Man & Captain America by John Byrne &… — John Byrne Draws…

20160603 – Comics News :CIVIL WAR II #1: Behind Marvel’s Self-Aware, Fatal Choice – SPOILERS | Newsarama.com

Tom Brevoort discusses the onset of CIVIL WAR II, and the major ramifications that are already in place.

Spoilers ahead for this week’s Civil War II #1.

After two prelude issues and two deaths, the battle lines between Marvel’s heroes are drawn in this week’s Civil War II #1. With the conflict now fully underway, Marvel Executive Editor Tom Brevoort is talking to Newsarama about the events of this first full issue, the deaths, and the stances Iron Man and Captain Marvel are taking.

While Brevoort at times plays coy about spoilers to future issues, the long-time Marvel event editor does give a definitive answer on what happened to War Machine, as well as who he sees as the underdog – and that answer might surprise you.

Newsarama: Tom, let’s get right into it. Marvel has had a hell of a busy week.

Tom Brevoort: Oh, has it? I hadn’t noticed.

Nrama: I’m sure you didn’t get 50,000 Twitter notifications.

Brevoort: That’s typical for me – I’m a very popular guy [laughs].

Source : CIVIL WAR II #1: Behind Marvel’s Self-Aware, Fatal Choice – SPOILERS | Newsarama.com