When I was a kid it used to take me a at least twenty minutes to read a comic book. It was enjoyable, I got into the stories AND there was a lot to read.
In fact you might say that comics helped me learn how to read.
Well, back in the early nineties I stopped buying and reading comic books. Sure I was older, married, a bunch of children, house mortgage, bills. Something had to give and it was comic books. This was right about when Marvel went bankrupt, filed for chapter 11 or some such thing.
As the years went by I would occasionally pick up a comic and look it over. I was never really impressed, and had no desire to purchase.
I didn't know what it was but the new books just did not draw me into the stories.
It took a little time, but it finally dawned on me. The new comics were ALL about the art. I could "read" a modern comic in less than five minutes!
Pages and pages of art, with very little dialogue. I felt that this method of story telling was pretty boring.
This was years ago when I came to this conclusion. But just yesterday I found another difference between comic story telling from the past and in the present.
I stumbled upon a article online about the lack of use of thought balloons! No one used thought balloons anymore!!! You never know what is going on inside the peoples minds. The inner narrative has been lost!
The creators of the "new comics" of today are just trying to make the comics just like the movies! They reaso that you can not hear what a person is thinking.
Some of the best films of all time have voice over narration. One of the best films that uses this technique is the 1975 detective noir film "Farewell My Lovely" starring the great Robert Mitchum as Phillip Marlow, private eye. The film begins the camera pans up to him looking out into the night from his sleazy hotel room. There is a voice over has he narrates what is going on. They use this technique wonderfully throughout the film so you know what is going on inside his head.
Go on over to YouTube and watch the film, it is really, really good. Sylvester Stallone has a bit part. It is also introduces Jack O'Halloran for the first time, he of "Jaws" James Bond fame.
My conclusion would be that we have lost something really necessary for a person to enjoy and sympathize with characters in comic books today.
I mourn the loss of the inner narrative.
B.
http://thecomicforums.com/discussion/1279/thought-balloonshttp://www.denofgeek.us/books-comics/11405/in-defence-of-the-thought-bubble