Monday, January 28, 2013

How Bill Mantlo Created A Universe


Ok one more posting before February is here. I want to share this which comes from the pages of Amazing Heroes magazine published in December 1981. I think this is really a special story so I posted the article as text so that those who don't speak English, or at least not as a first language can use the translation feature on this blog.

How Bill Mantlo created a universe
How did the Micronauts come to be? Unlike most such merchandising comic books, which are the product of business deals, Micronauts came straight from the creator of the book: Bill Mantlo. "My son had just reduced a mountain of X-Mas presents to disposable rubble," Mantlo wrote in an issue of Comics Journal a few months before the issue came out, "and sat, in the midst of this mess of paper, tearing a group of tiny shiny figurines out of their vacuum sealed packages. The figures seemed to catch the sparkle of the lights from my parents' Christmas tree. They were unlike any toys I had ever seen - and I've run the gamut in my time, from Dodge City to G.I. Joe to the Shogun Warriors. I asked Adam (that's my son's name) if I could see them before they went the way of all plastic and, when he handed them to me, I held in my palm the four basic figures of a new concept in toys called…The Micronauts." Standing there that Christmas morning, Mantlo began to fantasize, to make up the foundation for what would soon become one of Marvel's most popular series. "I envisioned them as small, microscopic even", Mantlo remembered, "inhabiting an other-verse apart from, but conjunctive with ours." Not only did Mantlo create the basic concept for the comic, but he began to consider the possibilities for characterization the characters possessed. "Space Glider seemed to suggest a Reed Richards nobility, an aspect of command, of dignity. Acroyear, faceless, his armor gleaming, a fantastic sword clenched in his coldly metallic hand, seemed to hearken back to a warrior Mr. Spock. For some reason Galactic Warrior seemed insect-like - I can almost hear clicks and whistles and strange scraping interjected into his speech. But Time Traveler…there was a mystery there, glimmerings of cosmic vastness, intimations of knowledge and space and time all having been broken down and reassembled to produce something entirely new… unexplainable…different." If this were you or I, we would just sit and indulge our fantasies for half an hour, perhaps, and then go on to our jobs. But Bill Mantlo's job consists in indulging his fantasies, and he knew he was onto something good. The following week, he walked into Marvel Editor-in-Chief Jim shooter's office and told him of his idea; Shooter, interested, got in touch with the manufacturer, Mego. "A month later," Mantlo went on, "we had preliminary photographs of the entire Micronauts line. I was, to say the least, floored. I had already begun extrapolating, based on just the four original figurines, a whole series of concepts. Now here, in front of me, were literally hundreds of additional figures, thousands of new suggested concepts…in effect, a whole world in need of a rationale for being." And thus, a Christmas present resulted in the creation of a whole fictional world- in a comic book that has now accumulated an impressive run of 40 issues and was, because of it's popularity, selected as one of three titles to be sold exclusively on the direct-sales market. Maybe Adam Mantlo deserves a co-creator credit on the book. After all, it was his toys that started it all. 


And lest we not forget that it was not too long after that Bill Mantlo would again create another universe that contained spaceknights, dire wraiths, a Golden Galaxy and a Dark Nebula. Sadly we never got a cross over of these two Mantlo inspired universes as scene in this awesome fan art.

6 comments:

  1. I've read this story before, but it makes me feel good every time. I believe it was told in the book, "Mantlo, a Life in Comics". The details which are new to me are the ones where his imagination goes to work in making the characters' identities. This really could've been the start of a whole universe of spin-offs and rich stories. I wonder if Marvel will ever decide to revisit this world. Honestly, I still am collecting more Micronauts issues before I start reading them (for the first time). I want to wait until I have more of the story before I invest myself into it. Saying that, I might go to eBay right now to get some! See ya!

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    1. well i hope other people who are fans of Mantlo's work from other countries now can have that same enjoyed experience it's hard to say how the translation feature will interpret the article's text into the available languages.

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  2. Very cool back story here. Just goes to show what types of things or occurrences transpire to inspire the imagination of others.

    Marvel's really missing the boat on not negotiating to get the rights back or joint publication of ROM.

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    1. interestingly enough NPR was having a segment on copy right laws. apparently, currently existing copy right laws have a lot of people kinda pissed off these days. there was some sort of motion to make a statute of limitations for unclaimed licensed properties. that is to say that if some sort of creative property that doesn't have some sort of owner come forward to say "hey i own this and i'm saying nobody can use it until i say so" within a certain amount of years (i think about 15?) it will automatically become public domain.

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  3. From what I understand after reading a but about the whole Shuster family vs. DC case, most copyright laws were intended to hold up copyrighted licences for at least 20 years and then go into the public domain. Marvel, Disney, and countless other major companies have lawyer-ed their asses off to keep the rights to their characters, and have basically abused the hell out of the system to keep their cash cows in house. Sad but true.

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  4. I own that Rom/Micronauts piece. Cool to see it here. J. K. Woodward did it for me.

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