Times Colonist

Comic book boom rippling into television

Sophistica­ted computer graphics and more channels provide platform for success

- FRAZIER MOORE

When Marvel’s The Punisher debuted on Netflix last month, it was greeted with great interest and high anticipati­on.

But it arrived as just one of many comic-book adaptation­s. The Punisher is only the latest in a flood now comprising some 28 shows across nine broadcast, cable and streaming platforms, with no end in sight.

Granted, all comic-book shows aren’t created equal.

AMC’s The Walking Dead, beset by zombies, differs markedly from the teen adventures of Archie Andrews on the CW’s Riverdale and from Amazon’s superhero spoof The Tick.

But the majority exists within either of two expansive brands, not dissimilar to Pepsi and Coke.

One is DC, which (with the midseason arrival of Black Lightning on the CW) will be represente­d by nine shows on three networks. The other is Marvel, with 13 shows arrayed on six outlets, chiefly Netflix, which currently hosts a half-dozen of its own.

That all adds up to more spandex getups than you’d find in an aerobics class. But before concluding that superheroe­s have taken over the small screen, it’s worth noting a few things.

First, TV has always chased trends. Think: cop shows, doctor shows, lawyer shows. Way back in Fall 1959, more than two dozen Westerns were airing on just three broadcast networks. That would dwarf the current slate of comic book shows as a percentage of the 500-odd scripted original prime-time series airing in 2017.

“Comics-related television series have always been a mainstay of television,” says Paul Levinson, professor of communicat­ions and media studies at Fordham University in New York. “Now it may seem like they’re all over the place. But that’s because there’s television all over the place.”

Even so, an upsurge of comic-based shows the past few years is unmistakab­le. Consider the CW, where, without Smallville after a decade’s run, no such shows were in its lineup in Fall 2011. But after a subsequent year-by-year buildup, it will boast seven this season.

Along the way, comics-related movies proliferat­ed, while in October 2010, The Walking Dead made clear from its explosive arrival that a comic-book property could be a TV smash.

By then, the computer graphics imagery that any superhero show requires had become more sophistica­ted, yet sufficient­ly affordable for weekly TV production­s. Conversely, superhero series were a perfect TV showcase for those ever-more-eye-popping special effects in a way that more realistic cop dramas or sitcoms could never be.

The launch of more and more channels, especially streaming platforms with their limitless capacity, signalled an ever-escalating need to create content.

“With this extraordin­ary appetite for source material, decades of comic books offered material just waiting to be plucked,” says Robert Thompson, director of Syracuse University’s Bleier Center for Television & Popular Culture in New York state. Even better, they’re perfectly formatted for turning into TV.

“A comic book is like a TV storyboard — visual dialogue in frames,” Thompson says. “It’s so perfectly transferab­le. Comic books make the life of a network developmen­t executive really, really easy.”

But none of this accounts for the apparently insatiable hunger for these shows with which the audience receives them.

“All of it, one some level, is escapism,” says Brett Rogers, classics professor at the University of Puget Sound in Tacoma.

“If I’m watching Jessica Jones for an hour, I’m not dealing with some real thing in my life. But the flipside is that comicbook-inspired shows can be spaces for thinking through some serious questions: Jessica Jones is an opportunit­y to explore sexual violence and post-traumatic stress disorder.

“The comic book industry famously has had to fight the stigma of being for just for children and idiots,” he says. But as gifted “kids and idiots” such as Joss Whedon and Kevin Smith came of age and made waves by nurturing a comics ethos across multiple media including TV, comics gained new gravitas, respect and urgency.

“It’s now being normalized as shared myth of mainstream culture,” Rogers says. “It’s a common myth shared between readers and viewers, adolescent­s and adults, comics and film buffs alike — not just kids’ culture.”

Such shows, like the comics that spawned them, can offer welcome moral clarity in an ever-more-confoundin­g world.

“It’s much easier to identify the heroes and villains, the good guys versus the bad guys, than it is on other television shows,” Levinson says. “And, by and large, the good characters and heroes endure and triumph over adversity.”

“These characters were created as morality tales. They have a primal appeal, a simple appeal,” says Glen Weldon, a panelist on NPR’s Pop Culture Happy Hour podcast and author of Superman: The Unauthoriz­ed Biography.

“They represent our best selves. We are meant to look at them and strive to be more like them.”

Thanks to the internet, the appreciati­on of these comic-book heroes, whether they exist on the page or the screen, can now be enjoyed as a communal experience.

“In the past, if you grew up a nerd, you thought you were alone,” Weldon says. “Now you can go online and find people just like you who share your passion.”

 ??  ?? Jon Bernthal plays Frank Castle in The Punisher, which is streaming on Netflix.
Jon Bernthal plays Frank Castle in The Punisher, which is streaming on Netflix.

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