cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/23650167

Marvel Comics recently told the New York Times that they have “no new books forthcoming” from Neil Gaiman. Gaiman had written a number of comic book series for Marvel over the years, including Eternals and 1602. But most recently, that was just the republication, recreation and continuance of the series he had written for Eclipse Comics back in the nineties, Miracleman, and which had been tied up in legal problems for thirty years. After first republishing Alan Moore’s original run, Marvel Comics then published Miracleman The Golden Age by Neil Gaiman and Mark Buckingham, as they had originally created it back then, followed by The Silver Age, which had been partially completed. Only for artist Mark Buckingham to radically redraw the entire arc from scratch, and take over more of the writing duties for its conclusion, to much acclaim. This was then to have been followed by the unpublished The Dark Age. Mark Buckingham would take the creative lead on the project, though based on discussions, deliberation and collaboration with Gaiman. But that seems no longer to be the case. I understand Buckingham ceased work on The Dark Age last summer and asked to be reassigned. He has recently been working on Amazing Spider-Man at Marvel Comics instead.

In his new Substack newsletter, Marvel’s X-Men Group Editor, Executive Editor and Senior Vice President Tom Brevoort, when asked by Bleeding Cool regular Ray Cornwall, “What is the status of Miracleman: The Dark Age? Has the script been delivered? If so, is Mark currently working on it?” replied “At the moment, Ray, nothing is going on with THE DARK AGE. If something changes in that regard, I’m sure you’ll hear about it.” But that seems very unlikely right now.

  • jordanlund@lemmy.worldM
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    It’s like that book is cursed or something…

    TBH though, as nice as it was seeing Silver Age completed, it wasn’t that great.

    • themeatbridge@lemmy.world
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      It’s weird how some creators are so closely knit with their work. Gaiman was someone who made me curious what lateral ideas he would have. You’d see his name as the author, and it meant you’d be in for some thought-provoking shit. Knowing that he’s a sex predator makes me less interested in whatever he’s got to say. And that’s what we mourn. It’s not that he’s suddenly a bad writer, or that he was a good person before we knew. We’ve lost the idea of a person that never really existed, and his creations have different meaning now. And our loss is nothing compared to the effect of his crimes on his victims.

    • ᴇᴍᴘᴇʀᴏʀ 帝@feddit.ukOP
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      Yeah, it peaked early, mainly when it was still Marvelman.

      I’d have picked up The Dark Age hardcover to complete the set (I’ve been reading it since 1982, I have got considerable sunk costs, also the art is gorgeous) but wasn’t expecting the story to take an upswing at this point.

      I suspect Marvel are happy to get this loose now.

  • simple@lemm.ee
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    It wasn’t good anyways. I read the first 2-3 issues a while back and it felt like a waste of time.

  • mindbleach
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    Nothing any human being put effort into deserves to be lost forever.