Tag Archives: Geoff Johns

Flash @ DC Nation (San Diego) — Barry Allen: Rebirth

I’m in the DC Nation panel, and it looks like wifi is working. Dan Didio just walked up on stage and walked back off.

I won’t be trying to post everything as it happens, but any Flash-related stuff will go up as quickly as I can type it.

Dan Didio, Judd Winick, Keith Giffen.

It just hit me that I’m liveblogging something.

Geoff Johns & Ethan Van Sciver are working on Barry Allen: Rebirth. Bunch of applause.

More people on stage.

Talking about Trinity.

Someone in the audience said something like “Thanks for bringing back the best Flash.” So Didio responded, let’s settle this, and had the audience vote. About equal applause for Barry, Wally, Bart. Almost as much for Jay. Someone shouted out, “Flash Thompson!”

Polling panelists:

  • Bill Willingham – “The guy in the flower delivery hat”
  • Peter Tomasi – Flash Gordon
  • Barry
  • Greg Rucka? – Pass
  • Jay Garrick
  • Jann Jones – “I’m the coordinating editor, not the story editor”
  • Bob Wayne – Jay
  • Mike Carlin – Flash Flood
  • Keith Giffen – (didn’t catch his answer)
  • Judd Winick – Quicksilver
  • Johns & Van Sciver: All of them!

Barry Allen: Rebirth or Flash: Rebirth is due in January. [Note: Final Crisis and Alan Burnett’s arc on Flash, “This Was Your Life, Wally West,” both end in December.]

Talk about Batman: RIP.

Kevin Smith walks in — huge audience reaction. Doing a Batman mini, Cacophony. Joking about how it’ll take 6 years.

Turning over to questions.

“Does that mean ‘Crisis’ is done?…are we going to use ‘calamity’ next?”

Fan to GJ: Just read RR, loved it. “When are you and Kolins coming back? It’s been a mess.” GJ: “Ethan and I are doing Flash: Rebirth. So we are coming back.” [Note: This doesn’t say anything about whether they’re staying after Rebirth, or just coming in to fix it.]

Fan asks what went wrong with Countdown. DD wants to know what we thought was broken about it. “If we don’t know what the problems are, we can’t address them. We can’t fix them.”

DD: “One of the things we wanted to do with Countdown was to try to be completely different from 52. Obviously we succeeded.”

Elseworlds: Mike (Carlin?) & Cary Bates on one project.

Fan: “If I’m allowed one man-crush on a team, Geoff & Ethan.”

DD re: Justice League movie: “No plans at this time.”

Fan: Crisis books keep scaring people off by killing characters off. Will you bring Rainbow Raider back? Geoff: “Sure, I’ll bring him back.” (Not clear how serious.)

Fan: Really excited about Barry — how will you distinguish them? Geoff: Read the book. (Longer, but that’s basically what he said.)

Geoff JOhns will be staying on GL after “Blackest Night.”

OK, I’m off to dinner.

Related: Vaneta Rogers at Newsarama interviewed Johns & Van Sciver about Flash: Rebirth. (Thanks to Stormking at Comic Bloc.)

Review: Final Crisis: Rogues’ Revenge #1

When Geoff Johns and Scott Kolins took over The Flash in 2001, they set about redefining two things: Keystone City, and the Flash’s Rogues. Johns has a talent for taking a concept, finding the core of what makes it work, and refocusing on that without throwing everything else away. Suddenly, a guy who wears a parka and carries a cold gun, another who dresses in orange and green and carries trick mirrors, and another who wears bright green and controls the weather became credible threats and interesting characters — all without a world-shattering retcon*. Sadly, that aspect has been missing in the treatment of the characters for the last few years.

Johns and Kollins have reunited for Final Crisis: Rogues Revenge, and the book feels like they never left. Originally designed as a stand-alone miniseries that would resolve lingering plot threads from Full Throttle and Salvation Run, it’s been tied into Final Crisis.

The setup is simple: The Rogues are tired. They’ve been through hell, and they’re ready to get out of the game. But there’s one thing they have to do first: Get back at the kid they feel is responsible for their current state: Inertia, who talked them into the caper on which they killed a Flash.

First-time Flash readers should have an easy time getting into the world. The book establishes who the Rogues are, what motivates them, and what their powers are right in the first few pages. Long-time readers will enjoy seeing characters like Iris Allen, or Keystone City’s Department of Metahuman Hostilities (basically, the cops’ Rogue specialists).

The book is dark. (Often literally, since most of it seems to take place either at night or in the rain.) It’s about villains. The only heroes who appear are in flashbacks, except for the Pied Piper, who’s ridden the line between hero and villain for years, and the police. There’s a truly chilling scene when the book picks up Inertia’s story. But it’s different from Secret Six or Villains United in that those were primarily action pieces. This reads more like a crime drama with costumes — say, an episode of The Sopranos with freeze guns instead of swearing.

In some ways this book seems like a course correction. Sort of a “I handed over these characters and you did what with them? Here, let me fix it.” But while most of the first issue is setup, it’s working as a story.

The only drawback is that it’s hard to tell when this takes place. It’s firmly fixed in terms of Final Crisis, with references galore to the events in that series, but it’s less clear how it fits into the monthly Flash book. Presumably the editors have been coordinating, and this simply takes place after the current storyline, though DC hasn’t had a great track record over the last year. It’s only a minor irritant, though, unless you consider continuity to be more important than any other aspect of comic-book storytelling.

*I’m using “retcon” here in the sense of replacing a character’s history, not in the sense of filling it in. Because filling it in is exactly what Johns did on his Flash run.

“Blood Will Run” Back In Print

Blood Will RunReaders trying to track down Geoff Johns’ run on The Flash frequently run into a problem: most of the trades are out of print, and the high demand drives up the prices on the secondhand market. Fortunately, it looks like DC is doing something about it. Earlier this year, DC re-issued Flash: Blood Will Run, collecting Johns’ first storyline as regular writer (his previous story, Wonderland — finally collected in paperback last fall — was essentially a try-out). The new edition added something else that had been hard to find: the one-shot graphic novel, Flash: Iron Heights. Now, according to this week’s DC Comics Direct Channel (a newsletter sent out to retailers), that new edition is getting a second printing.

Also in the newsletter: the upcoming hardcover of The Wild Wests, featuring the first arc of the Wally West relaunch and Mark Waid’s brief return to the book, is being delayed a week until August 6.

Rogues’ Revenge Preview

Newsarama has posted a 5-page preview of Final Crisis: Rogues’ Revenge #1, due in stores on Wednesday.

One of the best things about Geoff Johns’ run on The Flash was his handle on the Rogues. During his time on the book, he did five “Rogue Profile” issues, each with one of the villains as the viewpoint character. He’d get inside their heads, show how they thought, why they ran around with high-tech mirrors, or freeze guns, etc. When he left the book, I’d kind of hoped he’d drop in once a year or so to do another Rogue issue between the regular writers’ story arcs. Obviously, it didn’t happen

The preview pages show that Johns’ characterization is still spot-on, and the art by Scott Kolins shows a team of villains who have been through hell. (Actually, they have been through hell, but that was a while back, between Underworld Unleashed and “Hell to Pay.”)

(Thanks to Craig M.D. for pointing this one out.)

Flash Sales: 1996-2002

Following up on yesterday’s graph showing Flash Sales from 2001-2008, I did some more searching and found a site with figures going back to 1996. More importantly, this one also has relative rankings.

Sales — but not ranking — dropped heavily in 1996 and early 1997. Of course, this was in the middle of the speculator crash, so the entire comics industry was doing pretty badly at the time. (Also, the first issue in these stats might have been higher, since #119 was a Final Night tie-in.)

They stayed in the low-to-mid 40,000s for the next few years, during the Grant Morrison/Mark Millar run and the return of Mark Waid and Brian Augustyn. Highlights during this period include:

  • #130, the first Morrison/Millar issue.
  • #135, part of the “Three of a Kind” crossover with Green Lantern and Green Arrow.
  • #1,000,000, part of the DC One Million crossover. Oddly, it didn’t jump much the previous month, when Waid and Augustyn returned with #142.
  • Small spike for #150, conclusion of Chain Lightning and a milestone issue.
  • Larger spike for #152, start of the Dark Flash saga.
  • I’m not sure what made #157 catch on, unless it was the striking cover showing Linda’s grave.

Sales started dropping as soon as Waid and Augustyn wrapped up the main part of their run (#159), and the book went into a series of done-in-ones.

Geoff Johns took over for a 6-part arc, “Wonderland,” with #164. I was surprised to find that sales dropped through the whole arc, but DC decided to give him the regular gig anyway. They kept dropping through “Blood Will Run,” bottoming out with the conclusion in #174. Oddly enough, that was also the highest rated issue since he’d taken over. The next year and a half held steady around 30,000. And the post-2002 climb is shown in yesterday’s post.

This shows an interesting contrast to DC’s current tactic of changing the creative team every time sales come in lower than the month before.

Other Observations

These years also cover most of Impulse‘s 90-issue run. At the start of this period it was selling in the mid-to-low-30K range, dropped to around 20K in 1998, and down to 15K from 2000-2002.

This also includes the overlap period between regular Annuals and Secret Files.

For three months in 1999, there were four Flash-related books each month: Flash, Impulse, and the miniseries Flashpoint and Flash/Green Lantern: The Brave and the Bold. The latter miniseries outsold Flash for the first two months, then dropped below it for the next four issues.

The actual figures from CBGXtra appear after the cut. Continue reading

Flash Sales: 2001-2008

This week’s Permanent Damage at CBR brings up the issue of maximizing profits, and just what that means in today’s comic-book marketplace. At one point, Stephen Grant mentions:

As far as I know, Geoff Johns wasn’t thrown off The Flash. He left the book. There was no indication that Wally West… pardon me… had legs left, and it’s not like sales had been going up and up and up under Geoff either. Just not that many people are interested in The Flash.

While the first part is true, the second part is incorrect. Sales had been going up under Geoff Johns. When he came on board In the middle of his run, the series was selling in the 20,000-30,000 range. After a few years, around #200, it started climbing steadily until it actually broke 50,000 with his final issue, #225. [Edit: I’ve found some earlier sales figures that cover the Waid-to-Johns transition, and got some surprises.]

I’ve compiled the following sales chart from posts at The Beat over the last few years:

Some Highlights:

#200 is the conclusion of Blitz, and being a milestone issue, it’s not surprising to see a spike. Cameo guest spots by Hal Jordan and Barry Allen probably helped as well.

#209 guest-stars the Justice League and features a race with Superman.

#214-216 is the Identity Crisis tie-in, “The Secret of Barry Allen.” #217 is also billed as a tie-in, and features the funeral for Captain Boomerang.

#225 is the conclusion of “Rogue War” and Geoff Johns’ final issue on the series. Notice the brief dip for the following issue, which is a fill-in, then a hasty drop over the final 4-issue arc of the series.

Both relaunches show huge spikes followed by dramatic dives as people tried them out, then decided no, this wasn’t what they wanted to read. And the second spike was only half the height of the first. Interestingly, current numbers are actually higher that they were early in Geoff Johns’ run (though the precipitous slope suggests they won’t be for long, unless people have responded favorably to the middle issues of Tom Peyer’s arc).

I’ve been of the opinion that another relaunch would further damage the book — but it might be necessary just to get people to look at it. Sales charts for a healthy book do show attrition, with occasional jumps like those shown on the left side of this graph, but DC may want that quick injection of readers. The trick, of course, is going to be figuring out what will resonate with readers and get them to stay after they pick it up, instead of dropping it again once curiosity is satisfied.

The actual data, compiled from The Beat’s sales charts, follows after the cut. Continue reading