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Hi I just wanted to talk with you about ur rant and ur review of Amazing
spidey 39.
Before I get around to the Ditko/Romita thing I want to talk about ish
39. I love this issue and the issue that follows it they're two of my
favourite issues ever. Now you seemed to like it yourself but you think
that if Ditko was there it would have been better revelation yes? Upon
hours of research I have found the possible and most plausible reason
for Ditko leaving and that is the identity of the Green Goblin. As we
all know Stan Lee wanted to make it Norman Osborn, a man who'd been seen
in the background before and was shown as a somewhat shady character
even on Ditko's run. Apparently wanted to make the Green Goblin someone
we've never ever seen before. That's right the Crime Master all over
again, sure I loved the master planner issues and he was only it for 2
issues but the Goblin being nobody after being around since issue 14?
You said you were disappointed that it was Norman imagine the world wide
groan if it had been Joe from down the street?
You also said in your review that Ditko created better villains than
Stan Lee. I see your a fan of the infamous 'Lee conspiracy' which
believes that Lee slept while Ditko and Kirby created all the characters
and wrote all the story's and Lee just put his name on them at the end.
The point of this being what? It would make sense today because Lee's
name sells a comic but who was Stan Lee in the 60's? What would he have
to gain by not doing any work, he created the villains and Ditko brought
Stan's vision to life does that make Stan a worse creator than Ditko?
On the run with Romita, Lee did create his fair share of 'B' villains
true but the run also gave birth to the Kingpin (who you forgot to
mention isn't selective memory great?) and the shocker and before you
laugh and say 'shocker sucks' in those first issues with Lee/Romita the
shocker was dangerous it was well after Lee had gone he'd turned into a
lesser villian. Lee/Ditko was about getting charictors created in some
true classics and Lee/Romita created their own classics. Spider-man no
more/the tablet of time/the infamous drug issues and yes the unmasking
of your favourate and mine the Green Goblin. Maybe if Ditko himself
hadn't shown Norman holding a gun that was going to shoot Stromm from a
window 10 feet up then perhaps the fact that Norman Osborn was the Green
Goblin may have been a much harder pill to swallow.
Also in the previous issue Norman's put a bounty on Spider-man's head
(obviously not wanting to deal with him yet or maybe to soften him up
for his plan of finding out his identity). This is very similar to how
Norman still acts today manipulating people with his money and power to
suit himself and oh look the name on the inside is Lee/Ditko. Also
scripts that plot threads that Ditko and Lee worked on where used in
'Untold tales' which is in continuity and shows Osborn to be a threat
since near the start of Spidey's career before donning the mantle of the
Green Goblin.
Now onto this Romita vs Ditko nonsense. Ditko is great yes I didn't
really appreciate his art when I was young but he's great but he's not
and he will never be John Romita. Ditko was great at quirkiness and
drawing really fun villains but Romita is a legend he drew villains the
way they're still drawn today and despite not creating as many classic
villains with Lee he blows Ditko out of the water. Laugh or raise your
eyebrows if you wish but that's the simple truth, Ditko is great but
Romita is 100 times better on his worst day.
This is of course my opinion only as ur rant and review was yours. I'm
sure if you put 10 fans in a room together nobody would have the same
likes or dislikes. Their may even be someone who likes the majority of
Mackie's run it's doubtful but it's possible (ironically some of his
green goblin stuff like revelations and into the darkness I like but
there you go).
Anyway if you've made it this far good for you! I won't pretend to have
read every issue of Spider-man or know everything about him but I do
like to think my opinion is worth some salt. Then again your the one
who's name is at the end of the article and I'm sure you don't care less
what I say so there you go.
By Glenn Matchett
Glenn,
First of all, all opinions are welcome and respected here. So, I
absolutely care what you say even if I don't agree with everything you
are saying.
Second of all, we're really not all that far apart. I love Stan and
JR's run on Spidey, too. I love many things about this issue. I hope I
made clear how much I appreciate Romita's artwork and the suspense
generated throughout this issue. I did write these three sentences
after all: "Granted, I'm a huge Ditko fan but I think John Romita does
such an admirable job replacing him that I can't complain. (And Anne
Kong is right. Ditko's women are rather homely. JR changes that in a
hurry.) And Stan pulls out all the stops bringing us the most
suspenseful Spidey story since the Master Planner trilogy."
But allow me to discuss a few of the points you mention.
No one has ever truly determined why Ditko left ASM. Stan has
frequently been quoted saying he never did know why it happened. Ditko
himself won't talk. In a recent issue of Alter Ego (#50), Roy Thomas
says he ran into Ditko a few weeks after he quit and asked him why he
did it. "All I remember from Steve's vague response is a sentence
fragment: 'Well, you know, when a guy's working against you...' I doubt
if he meant Stan was consciously working against him, just that he felt
Stan should leave things to him since he was plotting the book.", says
Roy. So, while many people boil it down to a disagreement about who the
Green Goblin would be, I think it's probably a bit more complicated than
that. Steve, as the plotter, felt that Spider-Man was his book to do
with as he would and he didn't want his boss going in afterwards and
changing things. (This is not just with the Goblin but with every aspect
of Peter's life.) That's not to say that Stan didn't have every right
to do that but that didn't mean that Steve had to like it.
As to the Goblin, while it is generally believed that Ditko wanted to
make the Goblin a nobody, I find it hard to believe that he would do it
with the Crime-Master and AGAIN with the Goblin. He would know what
kind of uproar that would cause. In fact, the only quote I've ever seen
from Ditko about the Goblin refutes this rumor. It is included in the
article "Spider Time" by Will Murray in "Starlog and Comics Scene
present Spider-Man and other Comics Heroes" (July 2002). First of all,
Steve claims that the character of the Goblin was entirely created by
him. "Stan's synopsis for the Green Goblin had a movie crew, on
location, finding an Egyptian-like sarcophagus. Inside was an ancient,
mythological demon, the Green Goblin. He naturally came to life. On my
own, I changed Stan's mythological demon into a human villain." Then he
goes on to say, "So I had to have some definite ideas: who he was, his
profession and how he fit into the Spider-Man story world. I was even
going to use an earlier, planted character associated with J. Jonah
Jameson: he [was to] be [revealed as] the Green Goblin. It was like a
subplot working its way until it was ready to play an active role." So,
if Steve is to be believed, he was definitely NOT going to repeat the
Crime-Master "nobody" idea and he had someone in mind. (Perhaps,
Merriweather, another JJJ club member.)
I agree that there would have been a groan if the Goblin had been "Joe
from down the street". But that's just my point. Norman Osborn
essentially WAS "Joe from down the street". Yes, you can argue that he
was around as early as ASM #23, in the background at JJJ's club but, for
all intents and purposes, Norman didn't show up until ASM #37. Only two
issues before he's revealed to be the Goblin. And, as you put it, he
"was shown as a somewhat shady character even on Ditko's run". But
that's just what Ditko was doing. He was setting Norman up as the
obvious answer and then planned to turn it on its head later. Having
Norman be the Goblin after the obviously nasty things he does in ASM
#37-38 is like reading a mystery and finding out that the killer is the
most obvious candidate. You don't think that's disappointing? That's
the kind of disappointment that took place here.
It seems to me that most people who love this issue unconditionally are
people who did not read it at the time in the original sequence. If you
started reading Spidey post-ASM #39, then Norman Osborn is and always
has been the Goblin to you. You go back and read his appearances in ASM
#14, 17, 23, 26, 27 and visualize Norman under the mask. When you read
#39-40, they are powerful and satisfying. But I'm trying to convey the
feeling of someone who read them at the time and who spent two years
trying to guess the Goblin's identity, only to find out that they never
had a chance to guess it. Not until ASM #37 anyway. And that's not
much better than "Joe from down the street".
Yes, I did say that Ditko created better villains than Stan and I stick
by that. If "the infamous Lee conspiracy" is believing that "Lee slept
while Ditko and Kirby created all the characters and wrote all the
story's and Lee just put his name on them at the end", then I am NOT a
fan of that. I think Stan was very important. Clearly, he wrote the
dialogue and was responsible for the whole feel of the Marvel Age. He
successfully wrote comics with Gene Colan, Don Heck, Dick Ayers, John
Romita, etc, etc, so obviously he didn't "sleep" while others were
working. But the very amount of work he had to do moved him into the
direction of writing in the now-called "Marvel style" which involved
Stan only coming up with brief outlines and having the artist work it
all out. With Kirby and Ditko, he knew he had two brilliant comics
creators and he allowed even more leeway (no pun intended). There is no
doubt that Jack Kirby created much if not most of the FF and Thor
mythos. You have only to look at New Gods and Jack's other solo work to
see that that is so. But Stan certainly shaped it all in ways that Jack
could not. Ditko was given the job of plotting Spider-Man. This isn't
conjecture. This is fact. By the time we get to ASM #25, Steve is
given the plotting credit and he keeps it for the rest of his run. We
can presume that Steve was doing plenty of the plotting before that, if
we can use the time it took for Kirby's efforts to get an equal credit
in FF to bear fruit as any indication, but of course we don't know for
sure. But again look at the new villains during Ditko's run and compare
them to the new villains during JR's run. Then look at Ditko's villains
in his later work in the Question, the Creeper, Shade the Changing Man,
etc. It's pretty clear that the Spidey villains are more Steve's work
than Stan's.
This doesn't mean that I don't like Stan and John's run. Yeah,
selective memory may be great but it doesn't apply in this case since I
mentioned the Kingpin not once, but twice in the Ditko vs. Romita rave.
1. "MJ's first appearance would have never had that knockout quality it
had if Ditko had done it and characters like the Kingpin would have
never shown up". 2. "compared to how many new villains appear in the
rest of Stan's run (Rhino, Shocker, Kingpin)". I agree with you that
Stan and John created their own classics. I love Spider-Man No More,
the death of Foswell, the Ock story from ASM #53-56, the death of
Captain Stacy, the Goblin drug stories and others. In fact, if you look
again at my rave, I don't think Ditko would have allowed Peter to become
sympathetic to the counter-culture, which is crucial to the development
of the character. All in all, in order for Spidey to blossom into what
he becomes, Ditko had to go. But that doesn't mean his Goblin story
wouldn't have been much better.
Your argument that Norman was set up by Ditko to be the Goblin doesn't
really hold any water because Ditko has said that Norman wasn't going to
be HIS Green Goblin. Therefore, whatever Steve had in mind with the
rifle and the window 10 feet up will probably never be known. But he
certainly had something in mind. Same with Norman putting a bounty on
Spidey's head. Yes, Steve made Norman out to be a bad guy but that
doesn't make him the Goblin. And besides, as I said already, these
should have been red herrings (what JR called Ditko "setting Osborn up
as a straw dog") to throw us off. Not obvious clues to an obvious
solution. As for your Untold Tales argument, come on. Stories written
after the fact use Lee/Ditko stories as a foundation. Just because you
can later retcon things in doesn't mean Steve had any intention of doing
such things. You can shoehorn anything in if you really want to.
As for your opinion that Romita is better than Ditko... well, I just can't
agree with you. I love JR too and no one drew MJ and Gwen like he did
but Ditko is the total package from which everything stems. A lot of
this is a matter of taste (or what you were exposed to when you first
encountered Spider-Man) and I'll leave it at that.
And, really, Glenn, do you think there IS someone out there who likes
the majority of Mackie's run? Eww.
So, if I don't like Norman as the Goblin, who would I prefer him to be?
I would have loved him to be someone like Dr. Bromwell or Mister Warren
or even Professor Warren (before Gerry Conway made the Prof into the
Jackal, of course.) But, really, I'd just like to see the story that
Ditko wanted to write and I'd go along with whomever he chose as the
Goblin. The fact that we'll never see that story frustrates me to no
end.
As I said at the start, your opinion IS appreciated. Thanks for taking
the time to write it to me. When I started writing the Lookback of ASM
#39, I was pretty sure I was going to give it five webs. I'm as
surprised as you are that I didn't. I just couldn't ignore what I feel
was a botched job with the Goblin's identity. But I DID give it four
webs, you know. That's pretty damn good, too.
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