The Final Word by Ian Johnston

What The Hell Took So Long?

He was allegedly very overbearing and controlling. Scores of fans frequently and repeatedly cited him as one of the primary reasons for high creator turnover and poor quality control. Some perhaps even laid more blame on him than he deserved. If you haven’t guessed whom I’m talking about by now I am speaking of Bob Harras, now former Editor-In-Chief at Marvel.

The guy Marvel picked to replace him is perhaps the best decision they’ve made in the last decade. Joe Quesada, co-founder of Event Comics and the driving force behind Marvel’s extremely successful Knights line, is now calling the shots for the comics industry’s #1 company, and I firmly believe his appointment will signal a rebirth of sorts for Marvel. While it’s definitely too early to ordain Quesada as Marvel’s savior, the fact that he’s well liked among his fellow creators and that he’s willing to give the writers and artists he oversees a far greater degree of freedom and control than Harras is reason for a lot of optimism.

Quesada understands what being a writer and artists is like, and that perspective is something Bob Harras sorely lacked. Harras was so sure that the vision he had for Marvel’s titles was the "right" one that he overstepped his bounds and reduced the writers that answered to him to nothing more than puppets. Mr. Harras might as well have written the books himself.

Joe Quesada, on the other hand, has proven that he works well with a multitude of creators and has the ability to attract top- notch talent. Could Bob Harras have lured Garth Ennis to Marvel? The guy who’s a self-professed superhero-hating Irishman? I suppose it’s possible, but highly unlikely as far as I’m concerned. Would projects like the upcoming Killraven: 2020 series - written and drawn by Joseph Michael Linsner of Dawn fame - have even gotten off the ground under Bob Harras? Again, I suppose it’s possible, but I really, really doubt it.

The two most important things Joe Quesada will do for Marvel is 1) make working there a lot more pleasant for those there and attractive to those who aren’t, and 2) allow for the Marvel line to become a lot more diverse in terms of the types of books it contains. These two changes will dramatically increase the overall quality of the Marvel line and will attract readers that haven’t been interested in any Marvel titles to date. Better books and more readers; exactly what Marvel needs to make itself a far more strong and stable company. The books coming out of Marvel over the course of the next year should, for the most part, be excellent reading, and I for one am enthusiastically looking forward to the metamorphosis I’m sure Marvel will soon be making.

--Ian Johnston


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