The
Defenders & The Avengers: Super teams by super teams
FEB 2001 Product
Click on graphics to view a larger version.
The
Defenders & The Avengers looks at the future of these two super teams
with the book’s editor, Tom Brevoort, Avengers writer and Defenders
co-writer, Kurt Busiek, and new Avengers
penciler, Alan Davis.
By
Westfield Editor, Roger Ash
|
The Defenders.
The Avengers. They’re two of Marvel’s greatest super teams and they’re
both drawn into the spotlight this month with a new series for the Defenders and
a new direction and art team for the Avengers.
The Defenders
haven’t appeared in their own title since the late 1980s. What makes now the
right time for them to return? Editor Tom Brevoort explains. “There's been
something of a groundswell of interest in Defenders
for a couple of years now - it's easily the book I was most often asked about
coming back in recent memory. It was also a name many creators were interested
in using. The whole reason I ended up editing Defenders was that I'd
been actively knocking down Defenders
proposals the year or so previous - all of which used the name and maybe one of
the characters, and nothing else. My argument was that, if the new idea being
pitched was a good one, it should be called something different. The people who
want Defenders
to come back want a specific thing - Doc and Namor and the Hulk and the Surfer.
If you don't have that, you're actually hurting your project by giving it that
name. And so eventually, the powers-that-be came back and said, ‘All right,
then, you do Defenders.’”
One of the
people who wanted to see Defenders
return was writer Kurt Busiek, although he didn’t initially intend on becoming
involved with the project. “I knew Tom was taking proposals for a new Defenders
book,” Busiek explains. “I was interested in what he'd come up with, because
I liked the Defenders a lot in their early days, but I knew Tom and I had
similar problems with the core concept - mainly, that if you have Dr. Strange,
Hulk and Namor get to a point where they don't mind getting together on a
regular basis, becoming a de facto team, it softens the antagonism that makes
the combo unique and fun. And if you don't - why do they keep getting together?
“But I
didn't have any spare time, so I didn't give the problem much thought.
“I was
talking to Erik Larsen, though, and he said he really wanted to do the book, but
was having trouble coming up with something that would get past Tom's problems
with the concept. So that got me thinking about it more, and I ended up talking
to Tom to get a more clear sense of what he was looking for, with the idea of
nudging Erik in the right direction - because I'd love to read a regular Defenders
book by Erik.
“And while
Tom and I were talking, I figured out a way to make the book work - a way to
keep the classic Defenders (Doc, Hulk, Namor and Surfer) involved without making
them joiners. I ran it past Tom, and he liked it. So I ran it past Erik, and he
liked it too - but when we got to the point where I was planning to say,
‘Great, you do it - I'll have fun reading it,’ I found I couldn't. I liked
the idea and wanted to be part of playing it out.
“So I
suggested that Erik and I co-write the book. We'd work out the plots together,
he'd draw the book and script it, I'd go over the script and add my stuff, and
presto, we'd have a Defenders book. So we
wrote up a pitch and sent it to Tom and he bought it.
“And here I
am, having a great time working on a book I never thought I'd have anything to
do with...”
Add Hellcat,
Nighthawk and Valkyrie to the Defenders and inker Klaus Janson to the creative
team, and you’ve got a book that sounds like a lot of fun. Never read a Defenders
story before? Don’t let that stop you from trying the book. “We're treating
it as a brand new series, so people won't have to have read any previous Defenders appearances in
order to understand or follow it,” says Brevoort. “On the other hand, it has
the same four central characters in it, so it's likely that there'll be some
similarity to the classic years of the original run.”
“While Erik,
Tom and I all like the early run of the series, we're not trying to recapture
any particular era,” adds Busiek. “We're starting fresh, with a classic cast
and the use of the best-remembered villains from the series - but we're starting
with the original concept, the idea of these humongously powerful loners who
don't really want to be a team but are drawn together anyway. We're going to
find our own direction from that. I expect it'll be something that longtime Defenders
fans will enjoy - but it'll also be something that readers who never heard of
the Defenders will enjoy, too. If you like the idea of a series bringing the
Hulk, Namor and Dr. Strange together, then this book's for you. You won't need
to know anything about the old series - just start reading here and if you have
half as much fun as we do, you'll have a ball.”
So what can
readers look forward to in Defenders?
“The first issue alone will have slam-bang action, strangeness, a global
threat from a bum in the San Francisco gutters, a contentious group of heroes, a
mystery or two, and an invading fleet of Toad Men. Fabulous art by Larsen and
Janson. Hitting. Arguing. Fishing. A Jamaican dwarf with mystic powers.
Don't-blink-or-you'll-miss-'em cameos by the FF and the Avengers. And a
desperate battle to save the Earth,” says Busiek.
“And that's
just for starters. We've got plans for Pluto and the Enchantress, for Attuma and
Tiger Shark, for the Headmen, for Xemnu, for a Squadron Sinister and lots
more.”
Both Kurt
Busiek and Tom Brevoort are also involved with another classic Marvel team, the
Avengers. How do the Defenders compare to the Avengers? “Well, on the one
hand, they're both very powerful, A-level teams,” says Busiek. “But that's
pretty much where the similarity ends.”
“The Avengers
is a classic team book,” adds Brevoort. “It's about what Kurt calls ‘the
varsity’ - the group of heroes the average person in the Marvel Universe is
most apt to call on in a time of crisis. Defenders is about a bunch of menaces. None of these guys is
somebody who makes ordinary people feel comforted. Heck, they don't even like
each other all that much. So it's a different dynamic entirely.”
“If there's
a big menace in the area, and the Avengers come over the hill, the general
reaction is, ‘Whew! We're safe now!’” continues Busiek. “But if the
Defenders come over the hill, the general reaction is more like, ‘Marge, get
the kids in the car, and don't bother to pack. We're getting out of the
state...’”
“The
Defenders are big, powerful, dangerous and scary. Three of their big four have
attacked humanity at one point or another - sometimes several times. It's a damn
good thing they're on our side. That's the big difference.
“And for
some reason, despite their being scarier than the Avengers, they're also funnier
than the Avengers. Maybe it's because they're so incongruous together.”
And speaking
of the Avengers, they’re in for a few changes as well, including the
introduction of the new art team of Alan Davis and Mark Farmer. And just as Kurt
Busiek’s involvement with Defenders
was a happy accident, so too was Davis’ joining Avengers. “I was working
with Tom Brevoort on a Killraven project, and he needed someone to fill in on
the Avengers
for a little while,” says Davis. “Since I’d been hanging around for three
years on the Killraven project, helping out for a little while on the Avengers
didn’t seem to be too much of an additional delay. I’ve always liked the Avengers
so I don’t want to make it sound like a chore. Although it wasn’t something
I sought, I’m grateful for the opportunity to draw such great characters.”
What led
Brevoort to ask Davis to join the Avengers
team? “Alan's an artist with a classic sensibility and a sleek, dynamic
style,” he explains. “He's no stranger to team books, having drawn Fantastic Four, X-Men,
Excalibur,
JLA:
The Nail and Batman
and the Outsiders at one time or another. He's got a clear affection for
the core of the Marvel Universe, but hasn't had much opportunity to play with
them yet. So he seemed like a good fit with Avengers
and what we hope to bring to the series in the next year.”
Davis’ has
the unenviable task of taking over as artist after a very popular run by George
Pérez. Does he consider this at all daunting? “It’s not really something
that I consider too much,” he says. “I can only concentrate on the work
I’m doing. I’ve been on other books where I’ve followed people who’ve
had critical acclaim or a good following. You really just have to concentrate on
the work or else you’re going to start trying to imitate the person who’s
just left.”
What does
Busiek see as the differences between working with Davis as opposed to Pérez?
“He sticks a lot closer to the plot as written, for one thing!
“But
seriously - it's a little early to tell. Alan's a phenomenal artist who does a
gorgeous job, and so is George. George is someone I've worked with for three
years, Alan's someone I've worked with for coming up on an issue and a half. The
book looks different, because Alan's storytelling approach and drawing style is
different. But it's just beautiful stuff, and I'll know more about what it's
like once we've got a couple of issues under our belts.
“But just as
George was returning to Avengers
after having done a classic run in the past, so his run on the current series
was very familiar and welcome to Avengers fans, Alan's strongly influenced by
classic Avengers artists like Neal Adams and John Buscema - so his run on the
book, too, will look and feel like the Avengers, right from the get-go. He's
putting his own stamp on it, but I don't think anyone'll look at the book and
go, ‘Naw, the Avengers aren't supposed to look like this!’ It doesn't look
like George. But it absolutely looks like Avengers.
“I think
people are going to love it.”
Although he
has no single artistic influence on Avengers,
Davis is quite familiar with the book’s history. “My favorite period of Avengers,
from childhood, began with the heyday of John Buscema, Gene Colan and,
obviously, the Neal Adams stuff. Then I sort of lost interest until John Byrne
came on. So they’re really the influences. But I’ve been following the Avengers
since the first issue. I’m old enough to have seen it come out.”
Davis is also
happy to approach Avengers “purely as the
penciler.” “The last couple of things that I’ve done for Marvel, aside
from special projects, were Fantastic
Four and X-Men,
and on both of those, I ended up getting far more involved in the writing than I
ever intended,” he says. “In fact, when I was working on the X-Men,
I had only agreed to do 6 issues. I ended up plotting 29 and I penciled 11.”
What’s
coming in the months ahead for the Avengers? “We're definitely making a clean
start - there's a strong break between #37 and #38, Alan's first issue,” says
Busiek. “We're introducing a new approach, a new status quo for the team, so
it's almost like a new first issue. And it'll have plenty of scope - involving
lots of Avengers, both classic members and lesser-known members, both current
roster members and returning Avengers. It'll involve the Marvel Universe from
the Savage Land to outer space, from Atlantis to the Siberian wastes. It'll have
loads of big villains, from folks the Avengers have clashed with often to folks
they've never met to completely new characters.
“We start
off with a three-part story that'll involve the Hulk, as well as the team's new
direction. And once that's over, we're launching a huge epic that'll take us
through #50 and beyond.
“Lots of
action, lots of drama, lots of twists, lots of surprises. And did I mention
it'll look gorgeous?”
But there’s
more on the way from both Busiek and Davis. “Also this month, I've got a
one-shot coming out from Image, called Superstar:
As Seen On TV,” says Busiek. “It's by me, Stuart Immonen and Wade
von Grawbadger, and it's a 48-page no-ads one shot graphic album about a
superhero who's more powerful the more famous he is, so he's got to stay popular
in order to save the most lives. It's a project I've been playing around with
literally since my high school days, and it's a thrill to finally be getting it
done and into print. It's an unusual twist on the superhero concept, and I'd
think that anyone who's liked my work on Avengers,
Untold Tales Of Spider-Man,
Thunderbolts
or Astro
City would find it at least worth a try.
“We
previewed the character with a 5-page story in Shockrockets
#6, but this is his full-length debut. I hope everyone'll check it out.”
As he
mentioned, Alan Davis is working on a Killraven project for Marvel. ”I’d
actually written the plots and the proposal for it over three years ago and, for
various reasons, that was put on hold. Mainly because Marvel wanted me to do the
Fantastic
Four, or the X-Men.
I’ve just finished the first issue while I was waiting for my first plot on
the Avengers.
It’s going to get done sometime soon, but it depends on how long I’m on the Avengers.”
Davis has also
recently finished working on a project for DC. “It’s a Legion Elseworlds
written and inked by Mark Farmer,” he says. “It captures the flavor and fun
of the Legion as Mark remembered it from his childhood. He’s not slavishly
following any particular story. It’s more a distillation of the entire history
to create a comic that’s fun and enjoyable. The story itself, I can’t really
say too much about without giving it away, but there’s an awful lot of Legion
and there’s quite a few villains, so it’s jam-packed and action-packed.”
The Avengers.
The Defenders. Two classic Marvel teams poised for a new era of excitement and
fun. And with top-notch creators like Kurt Busiek, Erik Larsen, Klaus Janson,
Alan Davis and Mark Farmer working on the books, you know you don’t want to
miss a moment of the action.
Published by The Westfield Company of Wisconsin, Inc., 8608 University Green, P.O. Box 620470, Middleton, WI 53562-0470. ©1999 The Westfield Company of Wisconsin, Inc. Westfield is a registered trademark of The Westfield Company of Wisconsin, Inc. All rights reserved. Nothing may be reprinted without permission. All products and artwork pictured herein are TM & © their respective owners. Product descriptions and other information is largely taken from publishers' news releases and distributor catalogs, and is as up-to-date as possible. We cannot be responsible for last minute changes made by publishers.
|
|