ComicBook.com: When Marc Guggenheim takes over the "Adjectiveless" X-Men next month, he'll follow in the footsteps of original series writer Brian Wood, for whom the team seemed to have been perfect.
As part of the change, Guggenheim -- who is also a writer and Executive Producer on The CW's Arrow and author of the recently-released thriller Overwatch -- will take the team to space, dramatically pulling the X-Men (and their readers) out of the comfort zone of Upstate New York.
Guggenheim joined us to talk about the series, which will debut on August
One of the best-reviewed new Marvel titles in a while is Cyclops -- and you're coming on board and saying, "Okay! We're going to space!" Is it nice to have an opening act like Greg Rucka?
Marc Guggenheim: Yeah, there must be something in the water. What sort of got me thinking about the idea of what became this X-Men arc is the old Claremont/Dave Cockrum/Paul Smith "Brood Saga."
I found myself jonesing a bit for a fun, X-Men in space story. You get to see a little bit of the Shi'Ar, a little bit of outer space...there's definitely something in the water that has people thinking about this. Hopefully I'm tapping into some kind of still-in-formation zeitgeist.
I wonder if part of it is that everyone is re-reading Claremont with Days of Future Past in theaters.
Guggenheim: I grew up on all the old Claremont books and they're very near and dear to my heart. They're remarkable pieces of writing and just a remarkable run in terms of working with artists who are just titans and all operating at the height of their powers.
I don't even think you can really point to one aspect of Claremont's run and say that was the best part. There's so many different segments of that hugely long run where you go, "That was incredible. That was a high water mark," and reasonable people can differ on what was the best. I think that's really a testament to how amazing Claremont's writing was.
I think it speaks really well of him, too, that it's 25 years later and we're still mining elements of his mythology for things like the Trial of Jean Grey and what-have-you. It's a lot like Geoff Johns expanding on Alan Moore's ideas for something like Blackest Night.
Guggenheim: Completely. It's funny -- I'm a little, as a comic book fan, conflicted about it. On the one hand I love the fact that we're still mining things out of these stories.
At the same time, are we losing our way a little bit in terms of not putting new toys into the toy box and not replenishing our set of ideas?
In my mind, the best solution is a hybrid. The best solution is that we're having elements of stories that are being driven by ideas from two decades ago that are near and dear to all of our hearts but at the same time other ideas, other elements of arcs being wholly new and original so that we're always moving our art form forward.
I feel like both Johns and Bendis are really good at that. When you look at Johns's Green Lantern run, it's just full of that.
Guggenheim: Absolutely. I think it's remarkable what Geoff has done. And Green Lantern is probably the best example of it but that's what he does with all of his books.
I always describe Geoff as the modern-day John Byrne. The way in the '80s, John was able to come onto a book that was considered either too boring or too old or not commercially successful and reach down and find the essence of the idea and the essence of what made that character cool and reinvent it -- I feel that Geoff has that same talent.
And like Byrne, he has a few where he was there for a long, long time and then a great many where he just came in as a fixer and left.
Guggenheim: Exactly. And by the way, I admire Bendis's long runs on Avengers and Ultimate Spider-Man and Daredevil. The truth is, Bendis is the poster child for nice, long runs on books. I think all the stuff that Bendis did for Daredevil was amazing. Truth be told, he introduced the biggest change to Daredevil's character probably since the inception, which is the notion of the semi-public identity.
Those used to be much more common and I think that now a lot of writers shy away from it because it's difficult to pull off in a world where the are cameras everywhere and people with a suspicion can just take it from semi- to fully public.
Guggenheim: I think that what helps Daredevil is that because he's blind and because the things Daredevil does is so impossible to contemplate if someone is blind, it always gives Matt this plausible deniability that other characters wouldn't be able to take advantage of.
And when you look to Bruce Wayne being a spoiled rich kid and Clark Kent being a bumbling farm boy, it's the same kind of mask that Matt has, but because at the end of it all they're still strong, handsome men without a really obvious flaw they can't fake, I think people look past Matt on the list of suspects where they might not those other characters.
Guggenheim: Absolutely.
With X-Men, this book rolled out to a ton of fanfare and in no small part because it was such a Brian Wood book. How do you take a book like that and make it yours in such a way that you're not totally reinventing it?
Guggenheim: Well, I tell you, it ain't easy. For a number or reasons, not the least of which is that Brian set a very high bar on the book itself. I guess sort of my approach for better or for worse is that I always try to put all that stuff aside and just write the best story that I can.
I sort of feel like everything else is kind of a distraction and at the end of the day I feel that if I do a good job by writing just a really great X-Men story, that will meet all the challenges. Maybe that's naive but at the end of the day, I'm a big believer in just buckle down and do the work.
That's one of those things that I feel like X-Men offers you some cover for. There are so many characters and such a wide variety of great stories that I feel people self-identify as an X-Men reader or not, and an idea like this has the potential to entice people who don't ordinarily consider themselves X-Men readers.
Guggenheim: Yeah, I think both Cyclops and All-New X-Men prove that the good idea wins out. I pitched the X-office a number of ideas for this arc and they happened to gravitate toward the outer space one the most but with all of the ideas that I pitched them, I was going for a list of criteria that I was trying to meet for myself. It had to be interesting, it had to not retread old territory or old story ideas, it had to provide fodder for something emotional -- there had to be an emotional connection.
Each of the ideas that I pitched had an emotional hook in for each of the different members of the team. I had a Jubilee story, I had a Monet story. In the space story, Rachel is kind of the fulcrum given her history with the Shi'Ar. It was important to me that it not just be bombastic or plot-driven but that there be some character development and character exploration going on in the story as well.
Did you feel pressure to leave the lineup intact because not only did you have the all-female hook but also Brian built it as such a character piece? It felt much less "plotty" than most comics on the stands right now and that's really refreshing.
Guggenheim: You know, I didn't feel an overwhelming desire to change it up, to be honest. In terms of female X-Men, the only one that I'm desperate to write and haven't had a chance to write is Kitty Pryde. Which is not to say that I don't find the other X-Men interesting but I like all the ones that are on Brian's lineup.
It's like, if it's not broke, don't fix it. I'm a big fan of Rachel and Monet and Psylocke and Jubilee. These are characters I love -- and Storm, who I've been reading, I feel like, my whole life. I didn't see any need to swap anyone out. I did add, from my run, Cecilia Reyes. For two reasons: I had a story need of her medical expertise, but also I do happen to really love that character. I think my impulses were additive rather than subtractive.
I have to say, I’ve done other interviews and much has been made of the all-female X-Men team and what I kind of love about Brian's idea of an all-female X-Men team is that the X-Men have grown over the decades to be such a diverse and deep bench in terms of characters, you basically just have a team of really great X-Men characters a lo! and behold they all happen to be women. There again I think you have to give a lot of credit to Chris Claremont who I want to kind of call the first feminist writer in comics. He really set the bar and set the tone with all of these really strong, female characters.
Is that a little unique to the X-Men? Once you get past Canary, Fire, Ice and Wonder Woman, do you think you could do this with JLA?
Guggenheim: I get what you're saying, but truth be told, I'd love to see a book where it was Gypsy and Fire and Ice and Black Canary and Wonder Woman. I'd buy that book -- Vixen! I think that would be kind of cool. You could even throw in Supergirl there if you were so inclined.
But I think for me, the key is, how do you do it in a way that isn't a gimmick? What I loved about Brian's run since the first issue is the fact that it never felt like a gimmick.
And it's easy in these books to have the premise stated in dialogue by some guy being a jerk about it, and Brian has not really made much in story of the fact that it's a female team. I don't get that feeling that we're being reminded of it.
Guggenheim: Yeah, that's exactly right and I think that's the great fun of Brian's idea. It is just a group of X-Men doing their thing. They even sort of addressed the fact in dialogue that this is sort of an ad hoc team and arranged in an ad hoc way and then it became sort of formalized over the course of Brian's run.
I think the ad hoc of it all was that these were just people who had a friendship -- who had a relationship together. And I think that you're right that Brian's run is so relationship and character driven -- much more so than is typical of most comics these days -- and I think that's one of his strengths.
9 comments:
Glad Dr. Reyes is coming back!
I love this team, I only miss Tessa.
All the three team psychics combining their powers in the scenes below?
It's nice to know that he will keep the team members, only adding Cecilia Reyes (who's a cool character herself). Can we presume, in this case, that Kymera won't permanently join the team?
Anyway, since Guggenheim plans to keep some of the things Wood did in the book, if he stays as the writer for longer than the space arc, I hope he will eventually bring the Sisterhood back. Sorry for my language, but it sucks how every Marvel writer always ignores the past incarnations of the Brotherhood/Sisterhood and completely remodels the group every time they reappear... how can we consider the Brotherhood/Sisterhood a real threat if after one arc it just disbands? We already know that the Enchantress will appear in AXIS and Lady Deathstrike will be featured in the "Logan Legacy" miniseries - and I bet neither women will even mention that they were supposed to be in the Sisterhood.
And yes, it seems Psylocke, Rachel and Monet are combining their powers.
FSaker,
You're totally right about the Brotherhood and Sisterhood. We still don't even know if the Red Queen was Madelyne or not. Such bad writing.. the first Sisterhood arc. Well, at least Maddy seemed realistic versus maniacal and cartoonish this time. I still prefer her as a hood character. She was awesome before Marvel forced Claremont to have to sacrifice her soul to redeem Scott from
being a deadbeat husband and father.
By the way, I hate when Jubilee is drawn with blue eyes!
I hope he can improve the trajectory of this book. Im kinda over it at this point. All these arcs start out interesting only to crash and burn by the end of the arc. The pacing for each arch has dragged a bit for me too. I fee like the artist and writers are worn out by the end and just phone it in. So disappointing thus far
Rahsaan Chisolm,
I agree. And it sucks how Marvel seems to think that you have to ruin a character's reputation to redeem another's. Cyclops was a victim of this himself, with him killing Xavier in AvX ruining his reputation to establish Xavier as the best man that ever existed (of course, we must remember that the opposite happened some years before, with Charles pictured as someone who turned Danger into a slave and would always erase other people's memories, so that the X-Men would stop respecting him to follow Scott as an unquestionable leader).
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MellyMel,
I completely agree with what you said. Hopefully Guggenheim will be able to improve the trajectory of this book (although his history with Young X-Men doesn't make me much optimistic... damn, that book was terrible).
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