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There was a time in the late 1970's/early 1980's where John Byrne strode over the comic industry like a god.

He came to prominence with the Claremont/Byrne/Austin issues of X-MEN (issues 108,109, 111-143) from 1977-1981.

He also had memorable runs on:
AVENGERS (issues 181-191),
CAPTAIN AMERICA (issues 247-255),
IRON FIST (issues 1-15,
and
POWER MAN/IRON FIST 48-50),
among many others.

And his signature work, FANTASTIC FOUR 232-293, where he wrote, pencilled and inked the series (which is a great run up through issue 274) and his tour-de-force brought FF back to the heights of popularity. I would argue that it was during the last year and a half of Byrne's run on FF (issues 275-293) that he began to decline.

And although his MAN OF STEEL/SUPERMAN/ACTION COMICS/WORLD OF KRYPTON run from 1986-1988 was a period of renewed interest in Byrne for his significant changes in Superman's mythology, this also represented an even further decline in Byrne's art, despite some good writing.

From 1975-1982, Byrne's art got increasingly detailed and refined. And it seemed to me that he just stopped caring about his art sometime in 1983, and from that point forward over a period of years, his writing began to decline as well.
The first solid clue was when he announced in a letters page (FF 258) that he was drawing in ink, and skipping the pencil stage. I remember reading this and thinking that this guy no longer cares about his art.

But I still have fond memories of Byrne's early work, and occasionally have enjoyed some of his later work as well, such as his SENSATIONAL SHE-HULK run (1989, and 1991-1993)

I think Byrne's career breaks down into several different eras:

Early Period (Charleton) 1975-1976
Early Marvel period 1975-1980
Marvel, the Peak Years 1980-1986
DC/Superman period 1986-1988
Back at Marvel period 1989-1993
Dark Horse period 1992-1994
DC, Mid-1990's period 1995-1998
Marvel Again, Exploring Early Marvel period 1998-2001
Current DC period 2002-2003

I'm really curious why an artist who seemed so dedicated to the quality of his art, and was very popular and praised for that commitment, suddenly took such a shameless dive in quality and seems to have just stopped caring, despite being one of the highest-paid and most recognized artists in the field.
This is the same guy that in the early 1980's would rip on other artists like Gil Kane and Don Heck and Bob Layton for the slightest imperfection in their work, and in particular ripped on many Silver Age artists for "doing nothing" to advance their art. And then Byrne HIMSELF became the epitome of a hack who continues to churn out half-hearted work.

As hard as Byrne was on his fellow professionals, I think Byrne has gotten relatively little abuse for the drop in quality of his own work.

There was a time where Byrne's work just got better and better, and he was arguably on a par with greats like Starlin, Gulacy, Buckler, Romita Jr., Perez, Rogers, Grell, Brunner, Chaykin, Simonson, Day, Bissette, Tottleben, Golden, Miller, Giffen, Paul Smith, Art Adams, Brent Anderson and Bill Sienkiewicz.

And even approaching the level of Neal Adams, Berni Wrightson, Michael Kaluta, Barry Windsor-Smith, Frazetta and Corben.

But at some point Byrne just oddly stopped caring.

What went wrong?

And on a more positive note, what are some of your best-loved favorites by Byrne?



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I quite liked Sensational She-Hulk.

But then compare that to his atrocious run on Wonder Woman.

I read something somewhere that when Jack Kirby died, Byrne said someone said to him that he was in charge now, that he was the comics god. Byrne didn't object to this.

I think Byrne might have decided that anything Byrne was good, so why bother with effort?

Incidentally, Byrne has been the subject of criticism over his often sadistic portrayal of women - see the She-Hulk graphic novel (She-Hulk is naked, chained and watched on video by a voyueristic and corrupt SHIELD agent): Big Barda's apparent rape at the hands of a minion of Darkseid in an issue of Action Comics (in which she and Superman later make a porn film - I kid you not!), and others. They was a website on the subject, the link to which I've now lost.

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quote:
Originally posted by Dave:

I read something somewhere that when Jack Kirby died, Byrne said someone said to him that he was in charge now, that he was the comics god. Byrne didn't object to this.

iirc, in fact, he seemed quite pleased with the notion.

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quote:
Originally posted by Dave:
I quite liked Sensational She-Hulk.

But then compare that to his atrocious run on Wonder Woman.

The only good thing Byrne did there was turn WW into a goddess..then DC stripped her of her new powers the next issue sfter his run was over...tragic.
The only good thing Byrne did there was turn WW into a goddess..then DC stripped her of her new powers the next issue sfter his run was over...tragic

Incidentally, Byrne has been the subject of criticism over his often sadistic portrayal of women - see the She-Hulk graphic novel (She-Hulk is naked, chained and watched on video by a voyueristic and corrupt SHIELD agent): Big Barda's apparent rape at the hands of a minion of Darkseid in an issue of Action Comics (in which she and Superman later make a porn film - I kid you not!), and others. They was a website on the subject, the link to which I've now lost.

I have those...they are a bit twisted..I only realized recently that Shulkie's nipple was hanging out in one of the panels .


Next Men and Danger Unlimited were the last truly great Byrne stories IMO.

My favorite Byrne works in order are..

X-Men
Alpha Flight
Fantastic Four
Avengers (various 175-200)
Iron Fist
Secret origins Doom Patrol Issue.
Man of Steel/Superman/Action Comics (Action Comics Annual #1 being the jewel in the crown)
She-Hulk
Captain America
Next Men/Danger Unlimited
Marvel Team-Up
Hulk
Avengers west Coast (yeah, I liked it)
Omac
Namor (about half the run was pretty decent.especially the savage Land issues)

In terms of comparing Byrne to other artists i think John Buscema is a good comparison. John Byrne could have been a better version of John Buscema..but he got the attitude.

I met him..he was a decent enough fellow, but he exuded cockiness (if I can judge). he had a decent sense of humor and was relatively cheerful. It just felt that he lost all interest in comics when I finally met him in 92. He had no spark about him as other creators had.

His intent on inking his own work and writing his own work was to his detriment. He needed creative refreshers and he never allowed himself to have any. hopefully his new JLA work with Claremont will re-energize him..

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quote:
Originally posted by Grimm:
quote:
Originally posted by Dave:

I read something somewhere that when Jack Kirby died, Byrne said someone said to him that he was in charge now, that he was the comics god. Byrne didn't object to this.

iirc, in fact, he seemed quite pleased with the notion.
Yes, I got that impression, too.

quote:

I have those...they are a bit twisted..I only realized recently that Shulkie's nipple was hanging out in one of the panels .

Yes, her shirt was shredded by gunfire, and you can make out a green nipple on green skin.

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I've been following John Byrne's work for soooooo long. I used to wonder why he was the target of so much anger & derision from so many "fans". Of course, in the last 5 years, even I've started to tire of his stuff.

My first exposure to Byrne's art was IRON FIST. He & Chris Claremont were each the 5th person in their slot on that series (arriving a few issues apart). After a remarkable ink job by Al McWilliams, Frank Chiaramonte proceeded to BUTCHER whatever it was John was trying to do. I wasn't sure at the time WHAT he was trying to do, because I'd never seen a style like his before. (I had NO IDEA he was influenced at all by Neal Adams-- even when, years later, I finally discovered Adams' work some years after-the-fact.) It wasn't until Dan Adkins (WHAT A PRO!) teamed with Byrne that I started to like his art. (The stories also got a BIT less doom-and-gloom around then, as well.)

I got the 2nd STAR-LORD story when it came out-- stunning work! I read that issue of MARVEL PREVIEW was what led to Byrne taking over X-MEN when the book went monthly, as Dave Cockrum at the time wasn't able to handle the schedule. (Dave recently said he stayed on a bit longer than planned, as Byrne was chomping at the bit, and getting on his nerves even before getting on the book!) I always felt from the beginning that the revival of X-MEN was too damn dark, serious & gloomy all the time, but somehow Byrne's more "cartoony" style (compared to Cockrum) lightened the tone just enough to make it bearable (for me anyway).

Chris & John's run on MARVEL TEAM-UP was a high mark for that entire misbegotten series, and I actually LIKED the "slick" look Dave Hunt brought to the inks. For a few years, I used to wonder what Byrne would look like if inked by Joe Sinnott (my favorite!), and I found out in MARVEL TWO-IN-ONE #50, the story when The Thing went back in time to meet his earlier self.

Later, Byrne took over from Keith Pollard right in the middle of Marv Wolfman's interminiably long outer-space epic in FANTASTIC FOUR. I LOVED the art-- the story was only so-so. After about a year off, Byrne returned to WRITE as well as draw the book. The ONE decision that irked me to no end was when he decided to INK his own work. Joe Sinnott had been a steady mainstay on the book since the middle of the Kirby run, and seen it through Buscema, Fradon, Buckler, Andru, Perez, Pollard, Byrne & even Sienkiewicz (what was HE doing on that book???). To have Sinnott REMOVED just so the look of the title could somehow be returned to an "earlier, rougher" style... WHAT was John trying to do, revive the GEORGE ROUSSOS era????? AUGH!!!

He eventually did get slicker... and then LESS so... when Jerry Ordway took over, it was as though Byrne had finally found his "own" Joe Sinnott. Strangely, Joe inked an issue or two late in the run-- and I noticed that John's style had changed SO much since their earlier teaming, that Joe was NO LONGER a good match with Byrne. how bizarre...!

John's SUPERMAN was interesting... but WHAT was the point of the "pocket universe Supergirl", when they'd gone to such LENGTHS to KILL OFF the original, then say she "now never existed"??? (And besides-- in Post-CRISIS DC, we have Power Girl-- AND Mary Marvel!!!)

John's runs on THE SENSATIONAL SHE-HULK and BABE rank very highly in my eyes, although NEXT MEN was a bit too gloomy for me. DANGER: UNLIMITED was incredible!!!!! I was genuinely PISSED when John stopped it prematurely, because he said the sales weren't doing his bank account enough good. (Some series NEED time to build an audience-- canning the book after only 4 issues was the kind of thing those underaged drug-addict TV execs have been doing for the last 25 years in Hollywood.)

WEST COAST AVENGERS started out as a huge improvement over what the 2nd half of Englehart & Milgrom's run had deteriorated to. But John NEVER finished his projected "Vision Quest" story, derailing the book's direction 5 issues in. I loved the art (who was inking those issues?) and John did the SEXIEST Scarlet Witch in ages. But his entire run seemed aimed at imposing violent retcons over whatever anyone before him had done. (When Roy Thomas took over-- because Byrne left ABRUPTLY-- Roy set about doing to Byrne what Byrne had done to Englehart!)

Since then... SPIDER-MAN: CHAPTER ONE was not only uncalled for, but between the multiple changes & INCESSANT choppiness of the plotting, near-unreadable AND an insult to the memory of the entire Steve Ditko run which was far superior to Byrne's rehash on EVERY level. John's AMAZING SPIDER-MAN was touted as being "independant" of SPECTACULAR SPIDER-MAN; within months you HAD to read both in sequence or be completely lost (and I HATED J.R.Jr.'s "art" with a passion). Plus, the break in all the depressing crap was not a new direction at all, as Byrne saw Peter's life turn into the worst hell it had EVER seen. I'd finally had it-- I dropped the series for the 3rd-- and FINAL-- time. Who needs to read just to be depressed?

The first 2 GENERATIONS minis were really interesting and quite fun. The 3rd (current) one suffers from the same OVER-complexity and SEVERE choppy plottig that murdered MARVEL: THE LOST GENERATION for me. What ever happened to "straightforward" storytelling? Whatever happened to letting scenes play out, instead of CONSTANTLY being interrupted with other scenes, so that by the end of a book, you feel you haven't been able to read ANYTHING? (I CAN'T be the only one who feels this way...)

I wish-- and I feel this way about a lot of creative types-- that John would create his OWN characters-- STICK with them for a really long time-- and find an INKER who can do his pencils justice. (Even Jim Steranko admitted that other inkers always did HIS work better than Jim did himself.)

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quote:
John's SUPERMAN was interesting... but WHAT was the point of the "pocket universe Supergirl", when they'd gone to such LENGTHS to KILL OFF the original, then say she "now never existed"??? (And besides-- in Post-CRISIS DC, we have Power Girl-- AND Mary Marvel!!!)

It was fucking pointless. You're right: Power Girl could easily have filled the role.

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Reading some of the early Byrne/Claremont X-Men issues is how I got completely hooked on comics. I thought his art was fantastic and aspired to draw like him (there's still a bit of his influence, I think, in my own work, and noticeable among many pros today). I followed him to the Fantastic Four, and of course his work on Superman. While not as good, artistically, as X-Men, they were so well written (me not really being a fan of either properties, it goes to show how good storytelling can save anything), and since he was doing his Jack-of-All-Trades thing, I forgave the slip in art.

I'm probably one of the rare few who immensley enjoyed his West Coast Avengers run, as well.

And then came OMAC. This is still high on my list of favorite books. This is when I realized that there is a world of comics outside straight up superhero books, and began to get into some of the edgy stuff released by DC and Epic back in the 80s, as well as some indie stuff.

I followed over to the Next Men, which I liked a lot, but the art had slipped so much, this is when I realized it. Shortly after, I kinda dropped out of comics for a year or two.

When I came back, Byrne was still around, and I couldn't believe it was the same guy. The quality of art had dropped so dramatically, and his writing was so subpar, and so... old... it didn't seem right.

This is when I started talking with a few people and hearing the horror stories of how he treated his "fans", his fellow pros, etc. One year at the Mid-Ohio Con, my friend, a retailer, and I were in line to meet Sergio Aragones. Byrne was sitting at the next table, and saw my friend with his retailer name tag. He then proceeded to harass and hassle him, at first trying to get him to go over to Byrne's table (since no one was there). He moved on to annoyance and then insulting both my friend and Sergio Aragones, sitting no more than 10 feet away.

I've tried giving his most recent work a try, but it's so bland, sloppy and unexciting, I've given up.

But, I'll always have my X-Men books.

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The simple answer here is that Byrne's ego got too big.

He started thinking he could do it all and he started thinking that he could do it quickly.

And his worked suffered.

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Alpha Flight #1 was the first comic book I ever read. I loved that series. Great stuff.

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quote:
Originally posted by Pig Iron:
hopefully his new JLA work with Claremont will re-energize him..

he said, prompting a "Chris Claremont: The good years, the bad years, and what the heck went wrong?" thread

I hope his JLA will be good. It's the only comic I buy mindlessly.

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My best friend Jim (who passed away from a heart attack 3 years ago) went with my to the 2nd (and last) "Marvel-Con" in NYC back in '76. He saw John Byrne up there (I missed him somehow, spending time at Marie Severin's table-- what a NICE and really FUN lady!). Jim always liked to say how, while Marie, a "famous pro" was doing sketches for FREE, Byrne, an "unknown newbie", was CHARGING for his. Maybe a silly complaint, but it stuck in HIS mind...

I forgot to mention CAPTAIN AMERICA! What a STELLAR run by Stern, Byrne & Rubinstein! They hit the ground running, cleaning up a MESS Roy Thomas had started 2 years earlier in only 4 PAGES-- then went on to tackle an even bigger mess left hanging since the Jim Steranko & Neal Adams X-MEN runs. And THEN it got better. UNTIL...!!! (as Bill Cosby once said) I mean really-- 8 issues in, and ALL 3 GUYS quit over some minor disagreement with the editor??? In the words of so many Message Board posters-- "WTF???!!!"

And of course, the same thing goes for his initial run on SHE-HULK. And what about his run on THE INCREDIBLE HULK ? That book had been, in one form or another, the PITS since shortly after Jack Kirby stopped doing plots & layouts (let's be HONEST, people-- 15 YEARS of treading water with the same mindless downbeat depressing pointless plots, with only the occasional bright points to break it up). Along comes Byrne with some radical thinking-- probably just what it needed... and he QUITS after only 6 ISSUES over some minor disagreement with his editor!!! (Hey, where have I heard this before???) And then, the issue he did that was rejected was PUBLISHED ANYWAY, 6 months later, in MARVEL FANFARE. Geez.

O M A C, after-the-fact, turned out to be my favorite of Kirby's 70's DC books. One more inspired project cut off in mid-stream, far too early. Ressurected in a completely ill-conceived and obscene (yet technically impressive) rethink by Starlin, who dropped off too soon because of the "DC Implosion". Continued to no avail by Mishkin, Cohn & LaRocque, whose attempt to back-peddle back to Kirby's intent felt awkward when compared to both Kirby AND Starlin. And then Byrne came along, and like HULK, did something UTTERLY bizzare... It was VERY interesting. I loved the part where OMAC killed Adolph Hitler! the discovery that "The World That's Coming" had always been an alternate-reality, NOT part of the "normal" DCU, created by time-travel, seemed inspired. But somehow, in the last half of part 4, I think he went to far-- OVER-COMPLICATING it to the point where, after reading the entire mini TWICE, I STILL couldn't make heads or tails of it. I see this as the real beginning of his downward slide-- and the start of the kind of things he's been doing in MARVEL: THE LOST GENERATION and GENERATIONS. (What's "wrong" with "simple" stories???)

Incidentally-- I believe it was Dan Green, who'd been slipping for ages, who did a really SUPERIOR job inking Byrne on some issues of AMAZING SPIDER-MAN. But it was John Romita (the "real" one) who inked ONE issue of that book over Byrne, who REALLY did the best-looking Byrne art I've seen in ages, even above the work Tom Palmer did on X-MEN: THE HIDDEN YEARS. I do wish John would find an inker or three who knows what they're doing.

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I thought I'd add a Checklist of Byrne's early work (the first two eras of Byrne's career).

The first 1975-1980 part of the checklist is from the SQ Productions book THE ART OF JOHN BYRNE ( I added the book itself to the list, along with cover-dates and page-counts for each issue), which goes up to mid-1980. Some of the series listed continue past the July 1980 cut-off date, and I'll complete these runs in the 1980-1986 checklist section.



___________________________________________________

********** JOHN BYRNE CHECKLIST (1975- May 1980)**********
____________________________________________________

MARVEL titles:



AMAZING SPIDERMAN ANNUAL
12 (Cover only, pencils and inks) 1978
13 (Austin inks)30p 1979

AMAZING SPIDERMAN
189 (Mooney inks)17p 2/1979
190 (Mooney i)17p 3/1979

AVENGERS
164 (Marcos i )17p 10/1977
165 (Marcos i )17p 11/1977
166 (Marcos i )17p 12/1977

181 (Gene Day i ) 3/1979
182 (Janson i) 4/1979
183 (Janson i ) 5/1979
184 ( "Diverse hands" i , Wiacek, Milgrom, Rubinstein, Green , Austin) 6/1979
185 (Green i ) 7/1979
186 (Green i ) 8/1979
187 (Green i ) 9/1979
188 (Green, Springer i ) 10/1979
189 (Green i ) 11/1979
190 (Green i ) 12/1979
191 ( Green i ) 1/1980

CAPTAIN AMERICA
223 cover
238 cover
239 cover
247 (Rubinstein i )17p 7/1980
** Byrne run continues to issue 255, in "1980 to 1986" section of checklist

CHAMPIONS
11 (Layton i)17p 2/1977
12 (Layton i)17p 3/1977
13 (Layton i)17p 5/1977
14 (Esposito i)17p 7/1977
17 (Tuska i)17p 1/1978

DAREDEVIL
138 (Mooney i )17p 10/1976

DEVIL DINOSAUR
9 ( cover only: Kirby p/ Byrne i ) 10/1978

FANTASTIC FOUR
209 (Sinnott i )17p 8/1979
210 (Sinnott i )17p 9/1979

211 (Sinnott i )17p 10/1979
212 (Sinnott i )17p 11/1979
213 (Sinnott i )17p 12/1979
214 (Sinnott i )17p 1/1980
215 (Sinnott i )17p 2/1980
216 (Sinnott i )17p 3/1980
217 (Sinnott i )17p 4/1980
218 (Sinnott i )17p 5/1980
220 (Sinnott i )17p 7/1980
221 (Sinnott i )17p 8/1980
** this FF run continues in "1980 to 1986" section of checklist.

GHOST RIDER
20 (Perlin i )17p 10/1976

GIANT-SIZE DRACULA
5 (Nebres i )8p 6/1975

HULK ANNUAL
7 (Layton i )35p 1978
8 Byrne script, co-plot with Roger Stern, no art 1979

IRON FIST
1 (McWilliams i ) 18p 11/1975
2 (Chiaramonte i )17p 2/1976
3 (Chiaramonte i )17p 3/1976
4 (Chiaramonte i )17p 4/1976
5 (Chiaramonte i )17p 6/1976
6 (Chiaramonte i )17p 8/1976
7 (Chiaramonte i )17p 9/1976
8 (Adkins i )17p 10/1976
9 (Chiaramonte i )17p 11/1976
10 (Adkins i )17p 12/1976
11 (Adkins i )17p 2/1977
12 (Adkins i )17p 4/1977
13 (Adkins i )17p 6/1977
14 (Green i )17p 8/1977
15 (Green i )17p 9/1977

IRON MAN
109 cover
118 ( Layton i )17p 1/1979

JUNGLE ACTION
23 Byrne/Adkins cover 9/1976

MARVEL CHILLERS
2 cover 12/1975
6 (Springer i )17p 8/1976

MARVEL PREMIERE
25 (McWilliams i ) 18p 10/1975
47 (Layton i )17p 4/1979
48 (Layton i )17p 6/1979

MARVEL PREVIEW (b & w magazine )
11 Starlord (Austin i )52p 10/1977
reprinted in color as STARLORD: THE SPECIAL EDITION, in 1982

MARVEL TEAM-UP
53 (Giacoia i )17p 1/1977
54 (Esposito i ) 17p 2/1977
55 (Hunt i )17p 3/1977
59 (Hunt i )17p 7/1977
60 (Hunt i )17p 8/1977
61 (Hunt i )17p 9/1977
62 (Hunt i )17p 10/1977
63 (Hunt i ) 17p 11/1977
64 (Hunt i) 17p 12/1977
65 (Hunt i )17p 1/1978
66 (Hunt i )17p 2/1978
67 (Hunt i )17p 3/1978
68 (Wiacek i )17p 4/1978
69 (Villamonte i )17p 5/1978
70 (Dezuniga i )17p 6/1978

75 (Gordon i )17p 11/1978
76 cover

79 (Austin i )17p 3/1979

MARVEL TWO-IN-ONE
43 ( "Diverse hands" : Grainger, Tartaglione, Patterson )17p 9/1978

50 (Byrne script and p /Sinnott i) 17p 4/1979

53 (Sinnott i)17p 7/1979
54 (Sinnott i)17p 8/1979
55 (Sinnott i)17p 9/1979

POWER MAN
48 "Power Man/ Iron Fist" team-up begins (Green i )17p 12/1977
49 (Green i )17p 2/1978
50 (Green i )17p 4/1978

SPECTACULAR SPIDERMAN
17 cover

STAR WARS
17 cover

SUPER-VILLAIN TEAM-UP
14 cover

X-MEN
108 (Austin i )17p 12/1977
109 (Austin i ) 17p 2/1978
111 (Austin i ) 17p 6/1978
112 (Austin i ) 17p 8/1978
113 (Austin i ) 17p 9/1978
114 (Austin i ) 17p 10/1978
115 (Austin i ) 17p 11/1978
116 (Austin i ) 17p 12/1978
117 (Austin i ) 17p 1/1979
118 (Villamonte i)17 2/1979
119 (Austin i ) 17p 3/1979
120 (Austin i ) 17p 4/1979
121 (Austin i ) 17p 5/1979
122 (Austin i ) 17p 6/1979
123 (Austin i ) 17p 7/1979
124 (Austin i ) 17p 8/1979
125 (Austin i ) 17p 9/1979
126 (Austin i ) 17p 10/1979
127 (Austin i ) 17p 11/1979
128 (Austin i ) 17p 12/1979
129 (Austin i ) 17p 1/1980
130 (Austin i ) 17p 2/1980
131 (Austin i) 17p 3/1980
132(Austin i ) 17p 4/1980
133 (Austin i ) 17p 5/1980
134 (Austin i ) 17p 6/1980
135 (Austin i ) 17p 7/1980
** continues to issue 143, in "1980 to 1986" section of checklist.




SKYWALD Publishing:

NIGHTMARE
20 "The Castle" (Byrne p/Duffy Vohland i)2p 8/1974






CHARLETON comics:


DOOMSDAY PLUS ONE
1 (Byrne pencils and inks) 23p 7/1975
2 (Byrne pencils and inks) 23p 9/1975
3 (Byrne pencils and inks) 23p 11/1975
4 (Byrne pencils and inks) 23p 1/1976
5 (Byrne pencils and inks) 23p 3/1976
6 (Byrne pencils and inks) 23p 5/1976
** issues 7-12 reprint issues 1-6
**also later reprinted with better colors and offset printing as THE DOOMSDAY SQUAD 1-7, in "1980 to 1986" section of checklist. The reprint series includes an unpublished 7th issue.


E-MAN
6 Rog 2000, "That Was No Lady" (Byrne pencils and inks) 8p 1/1975
7 Rog 2000, "Withering Heights" (Byrne pencils and inks) 7p 3/1975

9 Rog 2000, "The Wish" (Byrne pencils and inks)7p 7/1975
10 Rog 2000, "The Sog" (Byrne pencils and inks) 7p 9/1975

EMERGENCY
1 (Byrne pencils and inks) 23p 6/1976

SPACE 1999
3 (Byrne pencils and inks) 22p 3/1976
4 (Byrne pencils and inks) 22p 5/1976
5 (Byrne pencils and inks) 22p 7/1976
6 (Byrne pencils and inks) 22p 9/1976

THE MANY GHOSTS OF DR GRAVES
54 cover

WHEELIE AND THE CHOPPER BUNCH
1 2p (4 illustrations with 2-page text feature) 5/1975
2 (Byrne pencils and inks)20p 9/1975
3 (Byrne pencils and inks)22p 11/1975

John Byrne has also had work published in:

Charleton Bullseye
Charleton Portfolio
Chronicle
C.P.L.
Eclipse
Epoch
Fans of Central Jersey
F.O.O.M.
Heroes. Inc.
Quest
The Collector
The Comics Journal
The Comic Reader
The Monster Times




Earliest known work:

A.C.A. COMICS # 1, featuring the Death's Head Knight (written, drawn & lettered by John)

THE EMERY WEAL , 12 installments in the Adventures of Gay Guy, a satirical comic strip




SQ Productions, book:

THE ART OF JOHN BYRNE (1980)
  • Editorials by Roger Stern, Chris Claremont and Terry Austin
  • Photos of Byrne and other artists.
  • Sketchbook drawings
  • Paintings
  • Interview (17 pages)
  • a 25-page science fiction story (written, pencilled and inked by Byrne)
  • CHECKLIST of comics by Byrne:

** all titles listed above are from the book's checklist**






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Profh0011, IRON FIST is an early Byrne title I have a special attachment to.

I also like some of Byrne's earliest work. The first I purchased off the stands of Byrne's work was DOOMSDAY PLUS ONE # 1, which I still find very entertaining on re-reading.
And the ROG 2000 strips, in E-MAN. Which I first purchased in the 1981 Pacific comics reprint edition, in b & w.
SPACE 1999 also has some nice Byrne artwork, and painted covers.
But IRON FIST is the series where you can really see him develop, from 1975-1977. (And the IRON FIST storyline then continues in MARVEL TEAM-UP 63-64, and in POWERMAN/IRONFIST 48-50)

I especially like AVENGERS 181-191, as much for the Michelinie scripting as for Byrne's art. And Byrne has a huge range of inkers on this 11-issue run. I especially like the first issue, outstandingly inked by Gene Day.

But as you say, Prof, there are many other series I remember fondly. Some of the best were just single issues Byrne did, such as MARVEL TWO-IN-ONE # 50.
And also MARVEL TWO-IN-ONE # 43.
And HULK ANNUAL # 7 (1978)
And MARVEL PREVIEW magazine # 11 (Starlord)
And the two-part MARVEL PREMIERE story (Antman) in issues 47 and 48.
To Name a few.

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The Doom Patrol issue of secret origins is my favorite Byrne art..also the Doom Patrol pages he did in Who's Who. You can tell he has alove for the characters. It's amazing he's never done them yet...

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I read the first Fantastic Four issues he inked without pencilling, and I liked them. That can't be easy.

I have OMAC and I like it a lot. Art and story are excellent.

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Fro some odd reason I got put off by the fact that it was in black and white.

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That's because you're Australian.

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Dave probably prefers black & tan...

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I have to admit, there was a point where I started separating my comics by creator rather than series, as certain runs might be so far superior to what surrounds them as to be absurd. But I do prefer thinking about series as whole entities, despite revolving-door creative teams-- the kind of thing which has been bugging me more of late than it ever did when I was younger.

I'd have to go back and look at those POWER MAN / IRON FIST issues. I recall how ABOMINABLE the book became, art-wise, during the McGregor & Wolfman runs (Frank Robbins! Aubrey Bradford! AUGH!). I don't recall Dan Green doing a bad job-- but later on, Green MURDERED Byrne's art on that AVENGERS run with Michelinie. I couldn't believe an inker who'd started out so good could sink as far as he did. It was like he started talking lessons from Frank Chiaramonte-- AUGH! Then again, Bob Wiacek has been on a steady downward slide for 20 straight years-- if he's still in the biz today. So Byrne is not alone in letting his craft slip away from him.

Ah yes-- ANT-MAN!!! Amazing. I've heard recently that Byrne got very puissed at Bob Layton for changing his art too much, and never wanted to work with him again. which I thought was strange, because I'd heard 20 years ago the same feelings were held by Dave Cockrum, after Layton completely redrew some faces in the one issue of X-MEN they did together.

I believe TWO-IN-ONE #50 was Byrne's writing debut-- he really showed what he could do. Oddly enough, in the 80's, more and more guys who started as pencillers and later did writing & pencils suddenly ONLY wanted to do writing-- Starlin, Grell, Miller, Giffen, Byrne... Of these, ONLY Byrne's work REALLY suffered terribly whenever anyone else would pencil his stories. I realized that John's art was ESSENTIAL to his entire "style" of storytelling-- without it, one would be suffering through interminable long storylines, without any pretty pictures to jazz it up.

I'm thinking of his ENTIRE RUN as writer of IRON MAN-- maybe I just really, REALLY HATE J.R.Jr.'s "new style", which he'd developed right about then-- but even after he left and Paul Ryan took over, there was hardly any noticeable improvement in the storylines. Yes, it's true-- long before, as legend now tells me, I.M. went COMPLETELY to hell, Byrne bored the hell out of sop much I stopped buying the series, so i missed all the REALLY awful stuff that came later!

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quote:
Originally posted by Pig Iron:
Dave probably prefers black & tan...

The tough choice between the pink and the brown.

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I think John Byrne got overconfident in his own abilities. He took on too much in the 80s after he became convinced that he was the ultimate comics creator in the field. He started off drawing them (UXM), then writing and drawing them (FF), then re-conceptualizing them (Superman).

I recall a spread in USA TODAY back in 86 or so where Byrne's pulling aside his Oxford shirt to reveal Superman's S on a shirt underneath. Life imitates art. Byrne probably was convinced he could do it all.

Now, it seems, not only is he convinced he can still do it all, he's convinced that his visions for comics are the RIGHT ones. Just read his SLUSH shit. Or his posts on his own site. The man reeks of perceived self-importance. Good ole 50K Byrne.

I have little use for his work nowadays. I totally ignored his LAB RATS because the premise didn't grab me. The last serious reading I did of his work was his THE HIDDEN YEARS series of the X-Men he did. I found it had promise, but I disagreed with much of his execution and found his insertion of Storm to be nothing more than a cheeky wink and nod to the 4th Wall.

I still treasure those old UXM. But for me, Byrne is someone from my past.

--Jim

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Yes, Jim. I agree that Byrne thought he could do it all. And for a while, he actually COULD.
His first few years on FF (1981-1984, issues 232-275 or so) were phenomenally good reading. As I recall, it was the second highest selling book through most of those years, and deservedly so. Script, art, and a good mix of both nostalgia and originality, I thought it was a great series.
But as many here have stated, it finally went to Byrne's head.

I recall Claremont had a science fiction novel called First Flight that came out around 1986 or so.
And then right after, Byrne had a science fiction book come out as well.

Byrne really was trying to do it all. Although there has been a long-standing hostility and bitter rivalry between Byrne and Claremont, that I thought motivated Byrne to also pursue novels, when Claremont got published. I wonder if Byrne and Claremont would have both ventured into novels, if not for their competition.
Both Byrne and Claremont demonstrated egotism that beyond a certain point ruined their previously outstanding work. And both declined at about the same time, the 1986-1988 period.
(I like the idea voiced above for a similar "what went wrong" topic for Claremont. )

~


[url=http://www.milehighcomics.com/cgi-bin/backissue.cgi?action=fullsize&issue=30663729872%20232%20NEWSSTAND]http://fullsize.232



Here's the second part of a Byrne checklist I concocted, expanding on the one above:


______________________________________________

*********** Marvel, 1980-1986, the peak years ********

ALPHA FLIGHT
1 (Byrne story, p and i) 22p 8/1983
2 (Byrne story, p and i) 22p 9/1983
3 (Byrne story, p and i) 22p 10/1983
4 (Byrne story, p and i) 22p 11/1983
5 (Byrne story, p and i) 22p 12/1983
6 (Byrne story, p and i) 22p 1/1984
7 (Byrne story, p and i) 22p 2/1984
8 (Byrne story, p and i) 22p 3/1984
9 (Byrne story, p and i) 22p 4/1984
10 (Byrne story, p and i) 22p 5/1984
11 (Byrne story, p and i) 22p 6/1984
12 (Byrne story, p and i) 22p 7/1984
13 (Byrne story, p and i) 22p 8/1984
14 (Byrne story, p and i) 22p 9/1984
15 (Byrne story, p and i) 22p 10/1984
16 (Byrne story, p and i) 22p 11/1984
17 (Byrne story, p and i) 22p 12/1984
18 (Byrne story, p and i) 22p 1/1985
19 (Byrne story & p, Keith Williams i) 22p 2/1985
20 (Byrne story & p, Keith Williams i) 22p 3/1985
21 (Byrne story & p, Wiacek i) 22p 4/1985
22 (Byrne story & p, Wiacek i) 22p 5/1985
23 (Byrne story & p, Wiacek/Williams i) 22p 6/1985
24 (Byrne story & p, Wiacek i) 22p 7/1985
25 (Byrne story & p, Wiacek i) 22p 8/1985
26 (Byrne story & p, Wiacek i) 22p 9/1985
27 (Byrne story & p, Keith Williams i) 22p 10/1985
28 (Byrne story & p, Keith Williams i) 22p 11/1985

AMAZING SPIDERMAN
206 (Gene Day inks) 7/1980 17p

AVENGERS
233 (Sinnott) 7/1983 22p
234 (Sinnott) 8/1983 22p

BIZARRE ADVENTURES
31 Violence theme issue (2 page story) 4/1982

CAPTAIN AMERICA
247 (Rubinstein)17p 7/1980
248 (Rubinstein)17p 8/1980
249 (Rubinstein)17p 9/1980
250 (Rubinstein)17p 10/1980
251 (Rubinstein)22p 11/1980
252 (Rubinstein)22p 12/1980
253 (Rubinstein)22p 1/1981
254 (Rubinstein)22p 2/1981
255 (Rubinstein)22p 3/1981

DOOMSDAY SQUAD (reprints DOOMSDAY PLUS ONE, with better printing) by FANTAGRAPHICS
1(Byrne pencils and inks) 23p 8/1986
2(Byrne pencils and inks) 23p 9/1986
3(Byrne pencils and inks) 23p 10/1986
4(Byrne pencils and inks) 23p 11/1986
5(Byrne pencils and inks) 23p 1/1987
6(Byrne pencils and inks) 23p 4/1987
7(Byrne pencils and inks) 23p 6/1987 --previously unpublished 7th issue


EPIC ILLUSTRATED
26 (Byrne s and p/ Austin i ) 6p 10/1984
27 (Byrne s and p/ Austin i ) 6p 12/ 1984
28 (Byrne s and p/ Austin i ) 6p 2/1985
29 (Byrne s and p/ Austin i ) 6p 4/1985
30 (Byrne s and p/ Austin i ) 6p 6/1985
31 (Byrne s and p/ Austin i ) 6p 8/1985
32 (Byrne s and p/ Austin i ) 6p 10/1985
33 (Byrne s and p/ Austin i ) 12p 12/1985
34 (Byrne s and p/ Austin i ) 6p 2/1986

FANTASTIC FOUR
220 (Sinnott) 17p 7/1980
221 (Sinnott) 17p 8/1980

232 ( Byrne s, p and i)22p 7/1981
233 ( Byrne s, p and i )22p 8/1981
234 ( Byrne s, p and i )22p 9/1981
235 ( Byrne s, p and i) 22p 10/1981
236 ( Byrne s, p and i)40p 11/1981
237 ( Byrne s, p and i)22p 12/1981
238 ( Byrne s, p and i)22p 1/1982
239 ( Byrne s, p and i)22p 2/1982
240 ( Byrne s, p and i)22p 3/1982
241 ( Byrne s, p and i)22p 4/1982
242 ( Byrne s, p and i)22p 5/1982
243 ( Byrne s, p and i)22p 6/1982
244 ( Byrne s, p and i)22p 7/1982
245 ( Byrne s, p and i)22p 8/1982
246 ( Byrne s, p and i)22p 9/1982
247 ( Byrne s, p and i)22p 10/1982
248 ( Byrne s, p and i)22p 11/1982
249 ( Byrne s, p and i)22p 12/1982
250 ( Byrne s, p and i)38p 1/1983
251 ( Byrne s, p and i)22p 2/1983
252 ( Byrne s, p and i)22p 3/1983
253 ( Byrne s, p and i)22p 4/1983
254 ( Byrne s, p and i)22p 5/1983
255 ( Byrne s, p and i)22p 6/1983
256 ( Byrne s, p and i)22p 7/1983
257 ( Byrne s, p and i)22p 8/1983
258 ( Byrne s, p and i)22p 9/1983
259 ( Byrne s, p and i)22p 10/1983
260 ( Byrne s, p and i)22p 11/1983
261 ( Byrne s, p and i)22p 12/1983
262 ( Byrne s, p and i)22p 1/1984
263 ( Byrne s, p and i)22p 2/1984
264 ( Byrne s, p and i)22p 3/1984
265 ( Byrne s, p and i)22p 4/1984
266 ( Byrne s, p and i)22p 5/1984
267 ( Byrne s, p and i)22p 6/1984
268 ( Byrne s, p and i)22p 7/1984
269 ( Byrne s, p and i)22p 8/1984
270 ( Byrne s, p and i)22p 9/1984
271 ( Byrne s, p and i)22p 10/1984
272 ( Byrne s, p and i)22p 11/1984
273 ( Byrne s, p and i)22p 12/1984
274 ( Byrne s, p / Gordon i )22p 1/1985
275 ( Byrne s, p /Gordon i)22p 2/1985
276 ( Byrne s, p / Gordon i )22p 3/1985
277 ( Byrne s, p / Gordon i )22p 4/1985
278 ( Byrne s, p / Gordon i )22p 5/1985
279 ( Byrne s, p / Gordon i )22p 6/1985
280 ( Byrne s, p / Gordon i )22p 7/1985
281 ( Byrne s, p / Gordon i )22p 8/1985
282 ( Byrne s, p / Gordon i )22p 9/1985
283 ( Byrne s, p / Gordon i )22p 10/1985
284 ( Byrne s, p / Gordon i )22p 11/1985
285 ( Byrne s, p / Gordon i )22p 12/1985
286 ( Byrne s, p / Gordon i )22p 1/1986
287 ( Byrne s, p / Gordon i )22p 2/1986
288 ( Byrne s, p / Gordon i )22p 3/1986
289 ( Byrne s, p / Gordon i )22p 4/1986
290 ( Byrne s, p / Gordon i )22p 5/1986
291 ( Byrne s, p / Gordon i )22p 6/1986
292 ( Byrne s, p / Gordon i )22p 7/1986
293 ( Byrne s, p , and i )22p 8/1986

FANTASTIC FOUR ANNUAL
17 (Byrne s, p, and i) 38p 1983
19 (Byrne s, p and i)35p 1985

FANTASTIC FOUR ROAST
(6 pages by Byrne, artist jam, with other pages by Golden, Sienkiewicz, Buscema, Brent Anderson,
Romita Jr, Layton, Fred Hembeck, and the rest of the entire Marvel Bullpen at that time) 4/1982

FURTHER ADVENTURES OF INDIANA JONES
1 (Byrne s, p, Austin i ) 1/1983
2 (Byrne s, p, Austin i ) 2/1983

INCREDIBLE HULK
314 (Byrne script, p /Gordon i)22p 12/1985
315 (Byrne script, p /Gordon i)22p 1/1986
316 (Byrne script, p /Gordon i)22p 2/1986
317 (Byrne script, p /Gordon i)22p 3/1986
318 (Byrne script, p /Gordon i)22p 4/1986

MARVEL FANFARE
1 (two-page poster) 3/1982
29 (Byrne s, p and i)22p 11/1986
48 12/1989

MARVEL TEAM-UP
100 (Mcleod i)10p 12/1980

MARVEL TWO-IN ONE
100 (Byrne scripts,Ron Wilson/Sinnot art) 22p 6/1983
continues in THE THING, issues 1-36

ROG 2000 (reprint of Charleton material by Pacific Comics)
1 reprints (Byrne p and inks on all 5 stories)28p 7/1982, b & w magazine

ROG 2000
1 reprints, in color (Byrne p and inks) 1987
2 reprints, in color (Byrne p and inks) 1987


SHE HULK (Marvel graphic novel # 18)
(Byrne s, p and i ) 64p 1985

SPECTACULAR SPIDERMAN (PETER PARKER...)
58 (Colletta) 17p 9/1981

STARLORD:THE SPECIAL EDITION
1 (reprints MARVEL PREMIERE 11)51p 2/1982

UNTOLD LEGEND OF THE BATMAN (for DC)
1 (Aparo i)22p 7/1980
2 (Aparo i)22p 8/1980
3 (Aparo i)22p 9/1980

UNCANNY X-MEN
136 (Claremont s, Byrne p/Austin i)17p 8/1980
137 (Claremont s, Byrne p/Austin i)35p 9/1980
138 (Claremont s, Byrne p/Austin i)18p 10/1980
139 (Claremont s, Byrne p/Austin i)22p 11/1980
140 (Claremont s, Byrne p/Austin i)22p 12/1980
141 (Claremont s, Byrne p/Austin i)22p 1/1981
142 (Claremont s, Byrne p/Austin i)22p 2/1981
143 (Claremont s, Byrne p/Austin i)22p 3/1981

WHAT IF
36 (Byrne s, p, and i)20p 12/1982
What if FF had not gained their powers?




_______________________________________________






If there's any titles I missed, please feel free to post them.




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Here's the third installment of my home-grown Byrne checklist:


___________________________________________

******************* DC / Superman period, 1986-1989 **************

ACTION COMICS
584 (Byrne script and p/Kesel i)22p 1/1987
585 (Byrne script and p/Kesel i)22p 2/1987
586 (Byrne script and p/Kesel i)22p 3/1987
587 (Byrne script and p/Kesel i)22p 4/1987
588 (Byrne script and p/Kesel i)22p 5/1987
589 (Byrne script and p/Kesel i)22p 6/1987
590 (Byrne script and p/Kesel i)22p 7/1987
591 (Byrne script and p/Kesel i)22p 8/1987
592 (Byrne script and p/Kesel i)22p 9/1987
593 (Byrne script and p/Kesel i)22p 10/1987
594 (Byrne script and p/Kesel i)22p 11/1987
595 (Byrne script and p/Kesel i)22p 12/1987
596 (Byrne script and p/Kesel i)22p 1/1988
597 (Byrne script and p/Kesel i)22p 2/1988
598 (Byrne script and p/Kesel i)22p 3/1988
599 (Byrne script and p/Kesel i)22p 4/1988
600 (Byrnescript and p/Perez i) 22p 5/1988

ACTION COMICS ANNUAL
1 (Byrne s, Art Adams p/ Giordano i) 1987

BATMAN
433 (Byrne s/Aparo a)22p 5/1989
434 (Byrne s/Aparo a)22p 6/1989
435 (Byrne s/Aparo a)22p 7/1989

LEGENDS
1 (Ostrander s/Byrne p/Kesel i ) 22p 11/1986
2 (Ostrander s/Byrne p/Kesel i ) 22p 12/1986
3 (Ostrander s/Byrne p/Kesel i ) 22p 1/1987
4 (Ostrander s/Byrne p/Kesel i ) 22p 2/1987
5 (Ostrander s/Byrne p/Kesel i ) 22p 3/1987
6 (Ostrander s/Byrne p/Kesel i ) 22p 4/1987

MAN OF STEEL
1 (Byrne script and p/Kesel i)22p early 10/1986
2 (Byrne script and p/Kesel i)22p late 10/1986
3 (Byrne script and p/Kesel i)22p early 11/1986
4 (Byrne script and p/Kesel i)22p late 11/1986
5 (Byrne script and p/Kesel i)22p early 12/1986
6 (Byrne script and p/Kesel i)22p late 12/1986

SECRET ORIGINS ANNUAL
1 (Doom Patrol, Kupperberg s, Byrne p and i ) 8/1987

SUPERMAN
1 (Byrne script and p/Austin i)22p 1/1987
2 (Byrne script and p/Kesel i)22p 2/1987
3 (Byrne script and p/Kesel i)22p 3/1987
4 (Byrne script and p/Kesel i)22p 4/1987
5 (Byrne script and p/Kesel i)22p 5/1987
6 (Byrne script and p/Kesel i)22p 6/1987
7 (Byrne script and p/Kesel i)22p 7/1987
8 (Byrne script and p/Kesel i)22p 8/1987
9 (Byrne script and p/Kesel i)22p 9/1987
10 (Byrne script and p/Kesel i)22p 10/1987
11 (Byrne script and p/Kesel i)22p 11/1987
12 (Byrne script and p/Kesel i)22p 12/1987
13 (Byrne script and p/Kesel i)22p 1/1988
14 (Byrne script and p/Kesel i)22p 2/1988
15 (Byrne script and p/Kesel i)22p 3/1988
16 (Byrne script and p/Kesel i)22p 4/1988
17 (Byrne script and p/Kesel i)22p 5/1988

18 ( Byrne s, Mignola p/Kesel i) 22p 6/1988

19 (Byrne script and p/Kesel i)22p 7/1988
20 (Byrne script and p/Kesel i)22p 8/1988
21 (Byrne script and p/Kesel i)22p 9/1988
22 (Byrne script and p/Kesel i)22p 10/1988

SUPERMAN ANNUAL
2 (Byrne art) 1988



SUPERMAN: THE EARTH STEALERS (Elseworlds)
1 (1988)




______________________________



--------------------


"This Man, This Wonder Boy..."



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Quote:

Dave said:
</font><blockquote><font size="1" face="Verdana, Helvetica, sans-serif">quote:</font><hr /><font size="1" face="Verdana, Helvetica, sans-serif">John's SUPERMAN was interesting... but WHAT was the point of the "pocket universe Supergirl", when they'd gone to such LENGTHS to KILL OFF the original, then say she "now never existed"??? (And besides-- in Post-CRISIS DC, we have Power Girl-- AND Mary Marvel!!!)
</font><hr /></blockquote><font size="1" face="Verdana, Helvetica, sans-serif">It was fucking pointless. You're right: Power Girl could easily have filled the role.




I am sure to remember in an interview in one issue of the fanzine Amazing Heroes of the time, that he originally planned to use Powergirl.

I vaguely remember to have read that "Powergirl would have been discovered in the ice of the Antarctic, with no memories of her past".

But it came the issue of Secret Origins and the mini-series, that made Powergilr unavailable, so he choose to create the pocket Universe.

I still have that issue of Amazing Heroes at my mother's home. If any of you is interested in that, I can try to find it.

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Quote:

the G-man said:
The simple answer here is that Byrne's ego got too big.

He started thinking he could do it all and he started thinking that he could do it quickly.

And his worked suffered.




G-man, I was going to say exactly the same thing. Byrne became convinced he could do no wrong at some point, and he stopped trying very hard.

I think Byrne can still produce quality work now, but he has to be controlled and limited to a single function on a book. He can write, but no artwork. He can pencil, but he needs an inker. NEVER leave him in charge of everything, and for god's sake, EDIT HIM!


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And, as I noted on another thread about Bryne and Claremont's recent work on JLA:

    Back in the 1970s, Byrne and Claremont were considered groundbreaking. They brought dynamic art, innovative story-telling and rich characterization to team books (such as JLA) that had previously been known for nothing so much as rote plots and cookie cutter personalities.

    Now, they're doing the same kind of lame, throwaway, plot that we used to get in the "Justice League of America" nearly every month in the 1970s (and what drove us to give up on the book for comics like "X-men" in the first place): One or more members of the team is/was captured/mind controlled by some no-name villain and its up to the remainder of the team (whose personalities seem interchangeable) to come to the rescue. And Byrne's art, while still ahead of the hen scratchings that he's fostered upon us lately, was pedestrian and stiff.

    Not only aren't these guys innovators any more, but they are ripping off the very type of comic book that we used to buy their work to avoid. And they aren't putting a unique or modern spin on it, either (the way that Moore does with his ABC comics, for example).

    It's almost as if the Beatles were all alive, and reunited to do nothing except cover the old Frankie Avalon and Fabian tunes they forced off the charts back in 64.

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I can kind of understand what Byrne and Claremont are doing creatively.

When I was younger, I was less interested in the stuff from the 40's and 50's and early 60's. I considered that stuff "before my time" and a bit stiff in its storytelling. But over time, once I'd exhausted my craving for the current fare, I began to look back and more fully appreciate the charming conventions of these earlier eras.

So Byrne and Claremont, with a similar appreciation, have done the equivalent of re-creating Frankie Avalon. Which I don't have a problem with, except that it's a poor re-creation by two creators way past their prime.

Byrne's FF (beginning with issue 232) was similarly a re-creation of that earliest Lee/Kirby era on FF. And Claremont similarly captured a Stan Lee brand of melodrama in his best X-men work, in Claremont's first 100 issues or so ("I've never seen Reed so...", "How can I face Sauron again, when the the last time we fought he... raped my soul !", and similar drama ).

From Claremont/Byrne/Austin's glory days, here's one of my favorite X-Men covers:




In the current Marvel titles, as I'm sure most of you have noticed, they're selling a statue figure re-creation of this cover.



Also, here's a few more installments of my Byrne checklist:





**************** Back at Marvel period, 1989-1993 *****

AVENGERS
305 (Byrne scripts, Ryan p/Palmer i)22p 7/1989
to
316 (Byrne scripts, Ryan p/Palmer i)22p 4/1990


AVENGERS WEST COAST
42 (Byrne script and art in all)22p 3/1989
to
57 (Byrne script and art)22p 4/1990


NAMOR, THE SUB-MARINER
1 (Byrne script and art)22p 4/1990
2 (Byrne script and art)22p 5/1990
3 (Byrne script and art)22p 6/1990
4 (Byrne script and art)22p 7/1990
5 (Byrne script and art)22p 8/1990
6 (Byrne script and art)22p 9/1990
7 (Byrne script and art)22p 10/1990
8 (Byrne script and art)22p 11/1990
9 (Byrne script and art)22p 12/1990
10 (Byrne script and art)22p 1/1991
11 (Byrne script and art)22p 2/1991
12 (Byrne script and art)22p 3/1991
13 (Byrne script and art)22p 4/1991
14(Byrne script and art)22p 5/1991
15 (Byrne script and art)22p 6/1991
16 (Byrne script and art)22p 7/1991
17 (Byrne script and art)22p 8/1991
18 (Byrne script and art)22p 9/1991
19 (Byrne script and art)22p 10/1991
20 (Byrne script and art)22p 11/1991
21 (Byrne script and art)22p 12/1991
22 (Byrne script and art)22p 1/1992
23 (Byrne script and art)22p 2/1992
24 (Byrne script and art)22p 3/1992
25 (Byrne script and art)22p 4/1992

26 (Byrne story, Jae Lee art) 22p 5/1992
27 (Byrne story, Jae Lee art) 22p 6/1992
28 (Byrne story, Jae Lee art) 22p 7/1992
29 (Byrne story, Jae Lee art) 22p 8/1992
30 (Byrne story, Jae Lee art) 22p 9/1992
31 (Byrne story, Jae Lee art) 22p 10/1992
32 (Byrne story, Jae Lee art) 22p 11/1992

OMAC, ONE MAN ARMY CORPS ( for DC)
1 9/1991
2 10/1991
3 11/1991
4 12/1991


SENSATIONAL SHE-HULK
1 (Byrne story/pencils, Wiacek inks)22p 5/1989
2 (Byrne story/pencils, Wiacek inks)22p 6/1989
3 (Byrne story/pencils, Wiacek inks)22p 7/1989
4 (Byrne story/pencils, Wiacek inks)22p 8/1989
5 (Byrne story/pencils, Wiacek inks)22p 9/1989
6 (Byrne story/pencils, Gordon inks)22p 10/1989
7 (Byrne story/pencils, Wiacek inks)22p 11/1989
8 (Byrne story/pencils, Wiacek inks)22p 12/1989

31 (Byrne story/pencils, KeithWilliams inks)22p 9/1991
32 (Byrne story/pencils, Keith Williams inks)22p 10/1991
33 (Byrne story/pencils, Keith Williams inks)22p 11/1991
34 (Byrne story/pencils, Keith Williams inks)22p 12/1991
35 (Byrne story/pencils, Keith Williams inks)22p 1/1992
36 (Byrne story/pencils, Keith Williams inks)22p 2/1992
37 (Byrne story/pencils, Keith Williams inks)22p 3/1992
38 (Byrne story/pencils, Keith Williams inks)22p 4/1992
39 (Byrne story/pencils, Keith Williams inks)22p 5/1992
40 (Byrne story/pencils, Keith Williams inks)22p 6/1992
41 (Byrne story/pencils, Keith Williams inks)22p 7/1992
42 (Byrne story/pencils, Keith Williams inks)22p 8/1992
43 (Byrne story/pencils, Keith Williams inks)22p 9/1992
44 (Byrne story/pencils, Keith Williams inks)22p 10/1992
45 (Byrne story/pencils, Keith Williams inks)22p 11/1992
46 (Byrne story/pencils, Keith Williams inks)22p 12/1992
47 (Byrne story/pencils, Keith Williams inks)22p 1/1993
48 (Byrne story/pencils, Keith Williams inks)22p 2/1993
49 (Byrne story/pencils, Keith Williams inks)22p 3/1993
50 (Byrne story/pencils, Keith Williams inks)22p 4/1993


STARBRAND
16 (Byrne s, p and i) 1/1989
17 (Byrne s, p and i) 1/1989
18 (Byrne s, p and i) 3/1989
19 (Byrne s, p and i) 5/1989


WOLVERINE
17 (Goodwin script, Byrne layouts, Janson art)22p 11/1989
18 (Goodwin script, Byrne layouts, Janson art)22p 12/1989
19 (Goodwin script, Byrne layouts, Janson art)22p 1/1990
20 (Goodwin script, Byrne layouts, Janson art)22p 2/1990
21 (Goodwin script, Byrne layouts, Janson art)22p 3/1990
22 (Goodwin script, Byrne layouts, Janson art)22p 4/1990
23 (Goodwin script, Byrne layouts, Janson art)22p 5/1990


****************Dark Horse period, 1992-1994 *************

NEXT MEN
1 1/1992
to
30 12/1994

DANGER UNLIMITED
1 (Byrne story and art) 2/1994
2 (Byrne story and art) 3/1994
3 (Byrne story and art) 4/1994
4 (Byrne story and art) 5/1994

JOHN BYRNE'S 2112
1 (Byrne script and art) 10/1994

BABE
1 (Byrne script and art) 7/1994
2 (Byrne script and art) 9/1994
3 (Byrne script and art) 11/1994
4 (Byrne script and art) 1/1995

BABE 2
1 (Byrne script and art) 3/1995
2 (Byrne script and art) 5/1995

HARLAN ELLISON'S DREAM CORRIDOR
1 "I Have No Mouth, I Must Scream" adaptation , part 1 (of 4) 3/1995
2 4/1995
3 5/1995
4 6/1995



________________________________



There were a number of good stories, and good art, that Byrne continued to do throughout this period. His art quality was slightly less than his 1976-1983 work, but it was still good in the late 80's /early 90's.

It was after this period where I felt Byrne's work really began to decline.


--------------------


"This Man, This Wonder Boy..."




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For me, Byrne began losing it during ALPHA FLIGHT. His Snowbird story, where she's the only thing he's drawn in the entire book, trying to convince readers that she's lost in a snow storm, was really pathetic. His issues began to feel less and less like a full book (though I commend him on the creation of one of my favorite characters, Northstar, that was a bold move).

And like many, I found his attitude toward taking over Superman to be somewhat lacking in proper reverence. As though his vision for the character was the only correct one.

And his Internet persona has never been the most fan-friendly.

Of his work lately, I really wanted to like THE HIDDEN YEARS, but I just didn't care for what he was doing with the characters. His inclusion of Storm was silly. LAB RATS was never a concept that interested me.

With his revising the Doom Patrol, I'm interested because it's got the original team in it, not because it's Byrne. Though I will fully admit, I got a bit of a chill reading JLA 95 and seeing some of the DP's action. I'll stick with John's DP as long as the stories are to my liking. There's a lot of sturm und drang over on the DCMBs because John's probably going to wipe out just about all DP history. But I'm not in a knot over it. Tell a good story.

OT a bit: anybody else think that this "Tenth Circle" story that he and CC are doing in JLA is just a kind of a cheeky X-Men reference...as X stands for 10, and I'm envision an X in a circle...which is a classic X-Men symbol (I have a tee shirt with that very symbol on it and I wore it proudly to the premier of X:2 last summer).

Jim


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Byrne did lose it during Alpha Flight and he says that's why he left that book. He felt there was no depth to the characters and that a new creative team was needed. I enjoyed his writing on Iron Man though. His use of the Marrs twins as Tony's competition in the business world was very creative and his run on Namor was well done also. (But when he stopped pencilling it, IMO he became too experimental in his scripting.) His West Coast Avengers was so-so though. I did, however, appreciate his bringing the Original Human Torch back and doing some continuity clean up in his origins.


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The last installment of my checklist:



_______________________________________________________

****************Back at DC period, 1995-1998 ********

WONDER WOMAN
101 9/1995
to
136 9/1998


NEW GODS
12 Byrne story and art 10/1996
13 Byrne story and art 11/1996
14 Byrne story and art 12/1996
15 Byrne story and art 1/1997

JACK KIRBY'S FOURTH WORLD
1 Byrne story and art 3/1997
to
20 Byrne story and art 10/1998

SUPERMAN AND BATMAN: GENERATIONS ( Elseworlds )
1 Byrne story and art /1999
2 Byrne story and art /1999
3 Byrne story and art /1999
4 Byrne story and art /1999





*************** Marvel again period, 1999-2001 **********
*************** Exploring Early Marvel Period *****


SPIDERMAN: CHAPTER ONE
1 (Byrne script and art)22p 12/1998
2 (Byrne script and art)22p 1/1999
3 (Byrne script and art)22p 2/1999
4 (Byrne script and art)22p 3/1999
5 (Byrne script and art)22p 4/1999
6 (Byrne script and art)22p 5/1999
7 (Byrne script and art)22p 6/1999
8 (Byrne script and art)22p 7/1999
9 (Byrne script and art)22p 8/1999
10 (Byrne script and art)22p 9/1999
11 (Byrne script and art)22p 10/1999
12 (Byrne script and art)22p 11/1999
0 (Byrne script and art)22p 5/1999

MARVEL: THE LOST GENERATION (issue numbers run in reverse)
12 (Stern script/Byrne art) 3/2000
11 (Stern script/Byrne art) 4/2000
10 (Stern script/Byrne art) 5/2000
9 (Stern script/Byrne art) 6/2000
8 (Stern script/Byrne art) 7/2000
7 (Stern script/Byrne art) 8/2000
6 (Stern script/Byrne art) 9/2000
5 (Stern script/Byrne art) 10/2000
4 (Stern script/Byrne art) 11/2000
3 (Stern script/Byrne art) 12/2000
2 (Stern script/Byrne art) 1/2001
1 (Stern script/Byrne art) 2/2001

X-MEN: THE HIDDEN YEARS
1 12/1999
to
22 9/2001

*************** DC period, 2002-2003 ****************


[ work unknown, from 9/2001 to 6/2002 ]

LAB RATS
1 (Byrne script and art)22p 6/2002
2 (Byrne script and art)22p 7/2002
3 (Byrne script and art)22p 8/2002
4 (Byrne script and art)22p 9/2002
5 (Byrne script and art)22p 10/2002
6 (Byrne script and art)22p 11/2002
7 (Byrne script and art)22p 12/2002
8 (Byrne script and art)22p 1/2003



____________________________



Not including Byrne's current JLA collaboration with Claremont.


And from what you say, Jim Jackson, DOOM PATROL will be Byrne's next project.



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Go here to see Byrne's JLA 94 pencils

jla 94 pencils


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I have to give Byrne credit. Those pencils look pretty good, especially the Batman pages.

Maybe Byrne ought to draw a Batman arc, if possible with his old inking buddy Terry Austin.

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Much as I like Ordway, I think his inks may have done Byrne a mis-service, those pencils are great.

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Here's another great cover, from back when Byrne was still at the peak of his powers:



The "Pegasus Project" storyline from MARVEL TWO-IN ONE was a very good one (issues 53-58) that has faded into obscurity in recent years.
The storyline also provides an interesting but very compatible set of contrasting artists. The first three issues (53 to 55) are by John Byrne/Joe Sinnott, and the latter three issues are by George Perez/Gene Day.

I love Day's inks on these and other issues of MARVEL TWO-IN-ONE (particularly issue 60, also inking Perez).
And inking Byrne in AVENGERS 181.
And of course, Day's longest run, in MASTER OF KUNG FU.

Day was one of Marvel's best inkers, when after 30 or so issues inking Zeck in MOKF, he switched to pencilling in MASTER OF KUNG FU 102-120.
And issue 120 was the last story Gene Day did before he died very unexpectedly in late 1982 of a heart attack at the age of 31.




Regarding Ordway, I like Ordway on Ordway, but not really with anyone else. His style as an inker is too dominant. I like his less dominant inks on ALL STAR SQUADRON back in the early 1980's, especially on ALL STAR SQUADRON ANNUAL # 1 (1982). Much cleaner work.

Ordway also did a great job inking Perez in issue 11 of CRISIS. But for most of the CRISIS series, I felt he took away from Perez's art, and made it look stiff.


Byrne and Austin were such a great art team during X-MEN (1977-1981), but even when Austin came back just a year later to ink FURTHER ADVENTURES OF INDIANA JONES, issues 1 and 2, you could see the two had diverged in style to the point that the same magic was no longer there.
Likewise in 1986, when Austin inked the first issue of Byrne's new SUPERMAN series.



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Quote:

Dave the Wonder Boy said:
MASTER OF KUNG FU 102-120.
And issue 120 was the last story Gene Day did before he died very unexpectedly in late 1982 of a heart attack at the age of 31.

Byrne and Austin were such a great art team during X-MEN (1977-1981), but even when Austin came back just a year later to ink FURTHER ADVENTURES OF INDIANA JONES, issues 1 and 2, you could see the two had diverged in style to the point that the same magic was no longer there.
Likewise in 1986, when Austin inked the first issue of Byrne's new SUPERMAN series.




I recall Byrne saying that he didn't feel Day's death was all that unexpected given that, even though rather young, Day was very much overweight and a *heavy* smoker.

Also, you're right about the Byrne/Austin work on INDIANA JONES...but they still produced quality, competent work.


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I'll bump this, just to get the discussion going on John's DOOM PATROL 1 which was released last week.

Thoughts?


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I just flipped through it tonight at my local comic shop, Jim.

It was pretty icky, art-wise.

I can't vouch for the story, since I didn't find it appealing enought to buy. The art is extremely loose, and in some spots actually reminded me of japanamation, on pages with female characters.

I'm just amazed that anyone is still buying Byrne's work, as sub-standard as it is to his prior work.

What a jolt, compared to Byrne's work on the 1987 SECRET ORIGINS ANNUAL. Which I think was clearly much more inspired.





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I thought Byrne's art on DP 1 was functional. It conveyed the story, nothing more. I no longer expect JB's work to be anything more than competent.

The story...well, for a first issue, it's very weak. It's a direct continuation from the JLA "Tenth Circle" storyarc. And I mean direct...to have any semblance of what's going on in DP1, you have to read the JLA issues. And for a #1, I think that's not a good tack to take. There's no amount of substantive character introductions, nada. It's "Tenth Circle,"part 7.

I'm in favor of rebooting the DP, but if the series doesn't get any better than what's indicated in the first issue, it won't last. You can't compare this book to say, ASTONISHING X-MEN. Byrne's whole approach seems to be to tell a story reminscent in style and dialog to a 70s DC comic.

--Jim

Last edited by Jim Jackson; 2004-07-09 8:22 AM.

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To me, Byrne's work started going downhill when he started using Duo-Tone paper (a chemically-treated paper that's supposed to produce two graphic "screen tones") instead of Zip-A-Tone self-adhesive screen tone sheets.

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