Saturday, December 27, 2014

My Marvel Timeline

In setting ground rules for the My52 DC rewrite, I solidified the standard DC premise of the sliding timeline, codifying that everything since Superman's first appearance happened '15 years ago'.

Marvel Comics never had an explicit framework for how their timeline worked, instead just sort of choosing to ignore historical contradictions.  It didn't matter that Mr. Fantastic once served in WWII.  They just never mention it again and it sort of goes away.  I'm afraid I'm a lot more anal than that, though, and just had to put some thought into how I would explain these contradictions in Make My Marvel.

I think I've hit on the idea, something I'm calling 'Compressed Time.'

The basic (and only) idea is that the only way to rationalize 50 years of monthly comics is to instead consider them 10 years of weekly comics.  How's this work?  Well, in very broad brush strokes, we'll assume that each successive issue of a comic takes place the week following the previous issue rather than the next month.  For example, 
the Fantastic Four debuted November 1, 1961 facing off against the Mole Man in 'Fantastic Four #1.'  Their first encounter with the Skrulls in 'Fantastic Four #2' would then occur about a week later, on or around November 8, 1961.

Sure many comics are continuations of the issue that came before, requiring only minutes or hours to have passed, but enough comics have vague spacings that I'm sure could even things out over time.

The big kicker of this whole concept is that, with Make My Marvel having a soft kick-off at roughly the end of Secret Invasion (January, 2009), that means only 567 weeks of Compressed Time have passed since the debut of the Fantastic Four.  In other words, the adventures we're reading about now are actually taking place in September of 1972.

There are a few anachronisms that come with this concept, such as the number of presidents our heroes have encountered, or the tri-monthly Christmas adventure, but these are no less jarring than the actual number of presidents Captain America has met since thawing out (or the number of Christmases he's celebrated since appearing in the "modern day.")  Technological advances, in comparison, are much easier to accept.  With minds like Tony Stark and Reed Richards pushing the envelope, the development of the iPod in 1971 is pretty easy.

But once you accept the plausibility of Compressed Time, a few interesting alignments start to appear:

After their heroic debut in November of 1961, Reed Richards and Sue Storm would get married less than a year later in September 1962. Exactly nine months later, Franklin would be born (June 1963).  Per this timeline, Franklin is only about 9 years old now, which seems in keeping with his apparent age in the comics.







Peter Parker received his spider-powers during a school field trip January 1962 and graduated high school in September of that year (so, either I adjust the calendar back a couple months, or Peter went to a year-round high school).  Gwen Stacy would be killed in July of 1964 (when they were both 20 years old), and Peter would graduate college in September 1965 (okay, maybe I should back up all these dates by three months).  Peter and Mary Jane would've gotten married in 1967 and have been married for 5 years.  Peter Parker is currently 28 years old.



An interesting Spider-extrapolation is to notice that, even if Pete and MJ had a baby tomorrow, the earliest they could have a 15-year-old daughter is 1987-ish, creating a soft start time for Spider-Girl and the MC2 universe.








The members of Power Pack got their powers in January of 1967.  At the time, Julie Power was 10 years old and would later be shown to have her 11th birthday in issue #45, which, according to Compressed Time, occurs February of 1968.  That's close enough to a year to fudge. When Julie joins the Loners in October, 1971, she's 14. I've never read Loners, though.  Hope that makes sense with the series... If memory serves, the other Powers kids were about 2 years apart from each other, so youngest Katie would now be 11 years old, Jack would be 13, Julie would now be 15, and the oldest brother, Alex, would be 17. -ish.



There are probably a lot more fun timepoints to plant in Compressed Time, but those will do for now.
Admittedly, there are some current second gen characters which might cause some hiccups, though.  Wiccan and Speed of the Young Avengers get a pass for the bizarre nature of their recreation.  Fellow teammate Hulkling was supposedly conceived only 8 years ago, but we can call that an accelerated Skrull development.  Likewise, Reed and Sue's second child, Valeria, was only born a year ago according to Compressed Time, and she's depicted as obviously older than that.  I wasn't reading FF when she was written, but Wikipedia tells me there were some cosmic, Franklin-related shenanigans to her birth that might serve as an explanation to her advanced aging.



Sunday, December 21, 2014

Greatest Heroes on Earth...3

Crime Syndicate

There are a few reasons why this title should be written.

1)  Stories where the villain gets to win can be very entertaining, and Earth 3 is based around the idea of villains winning.

2)  Mirror universe stories are equally entertaining, and Earth 3 has hundreds of stories that can be told about the mirror duplicates of popular mainstream DC characters.

3)  With My52 Justice League shying away from having a Big 3 team of Superman, Batman and Wonder Woman, the Crime Syndicate is a place to showcase stories that are, more or less, about those three.

As you can tell by that last point, I'm not going to make the Crime Syndicate a simple dark carbon copy of my Justice League.  While there are dark opposites at play here, I don't want this series to feel beholden to what's happening in other titles.  Plus, in a survival of the fittest world like Earth 3, I can't imagine anybody less than Ultraman, Owlman and Superwoman leading the pack.  The CSA also typically includes not-Flash Johnny Quick and Green Lantern expy Power Ring.

That they're currently on the third person to wear the power ring makes me smile and sets up a nice running story a la the drummer from Spinal Tap.

Earth 2 had some weird metaphysics about how good always has to win on our Earth
and evil always wins on their world.  Quietly ignored...
In my pitch for the My52 Justice League, I hinted that Earth 3 would be the origin point for the villain Dr. Impossible and possibly hint at a Final Crisis-like event over there where whatever passes for the good version of Darkseid attacked the Earth.  Although I'm not going to mirror Earth 1 history here too closely, that seems as good a starting point as any, as we can pick up our villainous protagonists trying as they try to reclaim their control of the Earth.  For the first time ever, we get to start on the ground floor(-ish) of the Crime Syndicate take over and watch how they go about it.

Sounds like fun.