I've been reading comics since the late 1980s, but the Byrne run on Fantastic Four is something I've never read before, besides the odd issue here and there. With the movie out this year (and all signs pointing towards it not being something I'd like), I decided to read the entire FF run from start to finish. I've been looking forward to reaching Byrne for a while, and I've just recently got there.
I have to say, it's not clicking for me. After two decades of following the same characters, and for the most part enjoying it, Byrne's takeover is really jarring. It's almost a soft reboot. Reed and Sue feel like completely different characters. Reed and Johnny are really off-model; both of them drop about a hundred pounds between issues. There's a marked shift towards more simplistic stories, and there are a number of touches that seem deliberately there to take the title back to the Lee-Kirby run; and not even the Lee-Kirby that people loved! Byrne's homaging the early stuff from the first couple of years, before the classic Inhumans/Galactus arcs.
It's not that these are bad comics. They're really solid, the craft is there. Taken in isolation I'd probably enjoy them a lot more. I was wondering anyone else out there has experienced this in the same way I did, or perhaps if any of you were there to see it first-hand. Thoughts?
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*@WetRats said "hamfisted". Take a drink!
It might have been jarring then but the things he did taking over the book happen all the time today. I mean, back then, creators didn't try to rock the boat too much when they took over from someone else. Today all new directions and art styles are the norm(along with a new number one).
I had already become quite fond of his work in the Uncanny X-Men under Terry Austin’s inks. And when he came to the Fantastic Four penciling under Jerry Ordway's inks, his work displayed a really polished feel. However, I won't pretend that there hasn't always been resistance to Byrne's take on the FF - as this interview with Jay Zilber, Len Wein and Marv Wolfman illustrates in Dec '81 (from The Fantastic Four Chronicles):
Len Wein: Marv Wolfman: I think they were less put off by his style, and more upset with his back-to-basics storylines.
I own volume 1 of the John Byrne Fantastic Four omnibus and I cherish it. His work epitomizes what comic books meant to me and hearken to an era of my youth when I was able to truly escape the daily doldrums of life and join in the adventures of Marvel's first family.
Read what they said. (emphasis added)
It wasn't his back-to-basics storylines, it was his "imperious" approach.
Byrne's undeniable talent has repeatedly been eclipsed by his formidable ego and his tendency to bulldoze his vision through, despite the concerns of people who are supposed to be his collaborators.
Which is not to say views don't change over time. But interesting to see.
(BTW- the new colouring introduced in this version is atrocious.)
I don't have much to add to this thread. I'm obviously Byrne biased, particularly to his run on the FF. I had picked up the odd issue of Fantastic Four off the rack, here and there, prior to the Byrne run, but they didn't feel all that "Fantastic" to me. I did have some reprints of the Lee/Kirby era stuff that I enjoyed, but I didn't really "get" Kirby's artwork back then (although I love it now).
When I finally stumbled into the Byrne FF run about a year after he took over, I was hooked. For life. I gave the first Volume of the Omnibus to my young daughters a while back. It is the "go-to" bedtime story book.
I own volume 1 of the John Byrne Fantastic Four omnibus and I cherish it. His work epitomizes what comic books meant to me and hearken to an era of my youth when I was able to truly escape the daily doldrums of life and join in the adventures of Marvel's first family.
I really never knew there was a counterpoint to what I thought was universal admiration of the Byrne stuff. The low 200's were my intro to the FF so I noticed the change over from Byrne art to Bryne story/art. I love that era of FF but I can see the opposition arguement now even if then I did not. I do own the 1st Omnibus and I love it but I will not get the 2nd as the stories fall off drastically in my opinion.
Most of the objections seem to have been not so much to the work itself, but to the heavy-handed way Byrne made changes without any consideration for other creators. If I'm not mistaken, at the time, other artists at Marvel were drawing characters from very consistent style sheets, and Byrne just did whatever he pleased. When you play by your own set of rules, you tend not to engender the admiration of your peers.*
*Especially if you come across as considering yourself peerless.
Despite 30+ years reading, I have never read a lick of FF. So this will be my starting point from absolute zero. My only Byrne experience, despite liking what art I've seen over the years, has been with his late 80s She-Hulk stuff, and I found that book to be hilarious, and enjoyed the art a lot.
Byrne's FF was done in the early 80s which were my formative years as a reader, and it has been so highly acclaimed on CGS and elsewhere that I've long wanted to give the run a whirl. I do find the dissenting opinions to be very interesting. Time has a way of erasing criticism of work that goes on to be so acclaimed, so I'm fascinated to see the contrary opinions. It's one of the reasons I'm happy to have the run in issues- so I can read the letter columns and see if there were people writing in who disliked it. I feel pretty strongly that artists & works that I am a HUGE fan of (in all mediums) are not above some criticism, and I've always liked to see how those perceptions of quality evolve over time.
But I'll have none of the reference as to things changing with #232 or being like the Lee/Kirby run, since I've never read FF before.. so that'll inform my "maiden voyage"- and any subsequent reading I do as well- with the characters.
Plus, it goes without saying (but I'll say it anyway): as interesting as this discussion is, it's a little worse for us all missing out on whatever Jamie D would have added to it.
I loved it at the time, but haven't read it since it first came out.
I'm curious as to how well it has aged.
So, I agree the differences are substantial. But, to me, if we are talking about "tampering", to use Wein's word, then I see what Before Watchmen was as a worse example of tampering than anything that any creator to follow Kirby and Lee on FF could do. As I think the nature of the ongoing, never-ending corporate superhero serial is that things get retooled, continuity gets dumped, new things are thrown at the wall, etc. I think history at both DC and early Marvel show that was just part of the game when you are working in the era of the audience that is expected to turn over every few years. Heck, even Kirby and Lee pretty much rebooted FF just a few issues in, where they went from a kind of mystery-solving club to a uniformed and branded team of capital-S Superheroes. They themselves didn't seem that precious about committing and keeping every detail and decision they made (and, don't get me wrong, I think that was great-- and clearly was the right idea for what they were doing at that time.
But Watchmen had a very different intent behind it. And it a relentless, perhaps obsessively, detailed, specific, and complete novel. So those who tampered with that, were doing a different, and I think, bigger thing.
(And, again, it is not like I now boycott those creators, or that I think Len Wein and Brian Azzarello should be shot at sunrise, you know what I mean? I just couldn't resist what I see as the ironic dissonance between 1981 Len Wein's feelings about tampering with what is established, and the Len Wein of the last five years, and what he has said in defense of Before Watchmen.)
Also, and maybe it is too soon to compare, and we'll wait and let history judge, but also putting the relative merits and results of Byrne's "tampering" with the run on FF he had, and the results of Before Watchmen...?
Up until Byrne's FF run, changes to established books, characters and continuity were additive, while Byrne's approach (seen soon afterward in an even more drastic fashion on Superman) was revisionistic.
Byrne's approach has often been to negate the work of his predecessors (or even his collaborators--see various accounts of his work with and against Claremont) in favor of his own "better" ideas, rather than to build upon what they had done. It was insulting, and it was breaking the unspoken "gentlemen's" rules.
Byrne's approach has become fairly commonplace in the years since, but it was pretty shocking at the time.
I think he was quite measured in resetting the table and then moving forward and the stories hold up well. In fact, I can make the case that it was Byrne's last solid run on comics.
LOVED that poster. Stared at it for hours. And then it meant so much more after I finally got around to reading the first 100 issues of FF.
My problems with Byrne's strong belief in the superiority of his vision and his tendency to run roughshod over his colleagues in no way diminish my fondness for the comics you mentioned.
As for the Bearded One, I feel very little concern for what he did or didn't want. I've seen too many quotes of him whining about other people building off of his characters and works while many of his own works are based on predicates. I get that he thought that he was going to get rights reverted and that didn't happen. I'm not sure that that was a matter of ill intention on the part of DC when the contracts were drafted any more than I think that anyone anticipated the way distribution rights issues would muddy other media (and screw with screenwriter residuals), trades were, at that point, a relatively new concept and, I think, the idea of evergreen titles was likely not on anyone's radar. Trying to bring it back on topic, it seems like using Stan as a support for this position seems a little off given the way he was treated by Marvel and his whole work-for-hire fight.
Ultimately, I guess that, as long as the continuity is respected, I've got no issues with the stories being expanded upon. I don't get that from Byrne.