Cartoonist James Sturm Boycotts THE AVENGERS

Cartoonist James Sturm Boycotts THE AVENGERS

A local to my Area, cartoonist by the name of James Sturm is boycotting the New Avengers Movie do to the Lack of credit to Jack Kirby.

Recently, renowned Cartoonist and Co-fonder of the center for Cartoon studies James Sturm, Began Advocating to boycot the New Marvel Studio's Film The Avengers. He is upset with the fact that Co-Creator and former artist for the Avengers comics is not being at all credited for his characters. He recently was interviewed for an article in my local News paper, The Valley News. He is native to my area as is the Center for Cartoon studies. The article in The Valley News is not currently available on online, in stead here is a similar article posted on the Comic Alliance Web-page

You can probably expect some very crowded theaters on the weekend of May 4, when The Avengers movie opens. One person you won't find among the crowds, however, is cartoonist James Sturm, an old-school Marvel fan who grew up to be a well-respected, critically acclaimed and highly influential comics creator of graphic novels like Market Day, Satchel Paige and The Golem's Mighty Swing, and the co-founder of the Center for Cartoon Studies. Despite his genuine excitement about the film, Sturm says he will be boycotting it over Disney and Marvel's treatment of Jack Kirby and his heirs, as he explained in a long opinion piece for Slate magazine headlined "Marvel Comics' Troubling Origin Story."

In the course of the article, Sturm offers a fairly succinct capsule history of the creation of Marvel Comics, from the creative relationship of Jack Kirby and Stan Lee that kept Timely/Atlas from folding and reinvented superheroes with The Fantastic Four, to the advent of the Marvel Method, to Kirby's long and contentious relationship with the publisher, to Disney's 2009 $4 billion purchase of Marvel... and the Kirby heirs' subsequent lawsuit.

That was shut down last summer, when a federal judge sided with Disney/Marvel over the heirs. "I'm no legal scholar, so second-guessing federal judge Colleen McMahon is beyond me," Sturm writes. "But I know that Jack Kirby got a raw deal." He goes on:
"McMahon herself noted the distinction between ethics and law in her decision, 'This case is not about whether Kirby (and other freelance artists who created culturally iconic comic book characters for Marvel and other publishers) were treated 'fairly' by companies that grew rich off the fruits of their labor. It is about whether Kirby's work qualifies as work-for-hire...'"


She ruled that it did, and while that might serve to settle legal issues in a court of law, that's quite a separate thing from the ethical issues, and how various comics industry players-from publishers to creators to Avengers comics readers and movie-viewers-intend to address them.

Sturm again:
"What makes this situation especially hard to stomach is that Marvel's media empire was built on the backs of characters whose defining trait as superheroes is the willingness to fight for what is right. It takes a lot of corporate moxie to put Thor and Captain America on the big screen and have them battle for honor and justice when behind the scenes the parent company acts like a cold-blooded supervillain. As Stan Lee famously wrote, "With great power comes great responsibility."


Sturm is pretty realistic about the chances for a boycott of any kind convincing Disney and Marvel to settle up with Kirby's heirs (or the heirs of other creators), not because they have to legally, but because it's the right thing to do. Nonetheless, he adds, "if Mitt Romney is right, and corporations are people, perhaps Marvel/Disney has the capacity to feel shame."



He also notes cartoonist, author and industry activist Stephen Bissette's call for a Marvel boycott following last summer's ruling, and the impassioned response from comics journalist Tom Spurgeon, who previously addressed this issue in a 2004 interview with Sturm. Here's a piece from Spurgeon's August 2011 essay:
"[W]e live in a world where lottery winners will sometimes give money to the people that did nothing other than print their tickets, where fans will give money to someone if they express a need and do so based on the fact they benefited not to the tune of billions of dollars and enduring wealth for generations of their families but based on a satisfying artistic experience or series of them, where people routinely share their good fortune with others without a court telling them to do so-and allwithout trafficking in some heroic ideal as their stock in trade. None of this makes sense. It needs to matter more than it does."


Sturm also quotes cartoonist Seth at some length, including his comment that "what the Marvel corporation is doing might be legal but it certainly isn't right." I won't quote Sturm's killer conclusion here, for fear of spoiling it, but it's sharp, pointy and poised to draw blood.

Sturm didn't always feel this strongly about Marvel's exploitation of Kirby's creations and their treatment of Kirby, his legacy and his heirs, which he openly acknowledges in the piece. In 2003, Sturm wrote and provided artwork for a four-issue miniseres entitled Fantastic Four: Unstable Molecules. "At the time I had little reservation about working for Marvel," Sturm says simply. "Since then, things have changed."

I suppose seeing $4 billion dollars change hands and then, a few years later, millions of people downloading a trailer for a $300 million movie based on Kirby creations and co-creations has a way of underscoring just how valuable "The House That Jack Built" is, and how insane it seems that Disney/Marvel would rather fight with the children of those characters' creations in court than voluntarily share any of it.

In writing on the subject again today, Spurgeon also quoted Stan Lee's most famous fortune cookie of a line, the one he put in Uncle Ben's mouth: "With great power comes great responsibility, and I'm not sure how you define great power in our culture better than four billion dollars."


Read More: http://www.comicsalliance.com/2012/02/08/cartoonist-james-sturm-boycotts-the-avengers-movie-over-marvel/

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TheGambitFreak
TheGambitFreak - 3/4/2012, 3:21 PM
Wow. I wonder if Greg Capullo will boycott TDKR for lack of recognition towards Bob Kane? Oh well $10 dollars less to the colossus of a movie.
superotherside
superotherside - 3/4/2012, 4:01 PM
Okay, I'm sorry for them but I'm still seeing the Avengers. Weather they got a raw deal or not, I'm not going to miss characters like this on the big screen and they if they truly love these characters, shouldn't want me to.

And in Stan Lee's famous quote: NUFF SAID!
LP4
LP4 - 3/4/2012, 4:41 PM
@Xenix- VERY TRUE. Bill Finger created Batman, NOT bob [frick]ing kane. Bob Kane created a bird type superhero very different from what Bill Finger created which is..."get this" BATMAN.

Bob Kane was a [frick]ing theif. Bill Finger created the Batman we all know and love but he died a very poor and penniless man.

TheGambitFreak
TheGambitFreak - 3/4/2012, 4:50 PM
@Xenix I mean the movies. i.e, BB, TDK, TDKR.
m1312020
m1312020 - 3/4/2012, 5:04 PM
@TheGambitFreak Bob Kane's name appears on every movie
cartoon and comic that has batman in it.His family
gets a good amount of royalties from every production
as well.

dancingmonkey08
dancingmonkey08 - 3/4/2012, 5:18 PM
And we should all give a flying [frick], why?????????

Millions of people will go see this movie, I dont care if some prick is not going
TheGambitFreak
TheGambitFreak - 3/4/2012, 5:33 PM
m1312020 Exactly my point, he gets no more credit than Kirby, watch CA:TFA, and Thor. They all give him credit, when credit is due. This cartoonist's protest is vapid and ignorant. It's like saying, "Well is Capullo gonna boycott TDKR for lack of recognition," It's absolutely asinine.
NightForce
NightForce - 3/4/2012, 5:36 PM
Too bad millions of other people will see this movie Jack Sturm. Plus like @GambitFreak said, In the credits of CA, Thor, and IM, its says "Created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby." This guys argument is invalid.
m1312020
m1312020 - 3/4/2012, 5:49 PM
@TheGambitFreak I believe the argument is more on the
royalties side of the argument.From somethings I've
read Steve Bissette made more on Constantine then
Kirby's estate made on any of the Marvels productions.

But with all that said I'm still watching Avengers.
I don't believe boycott is the right way to go.Its
better to try and embarrass Marvel to at least say
"Yeah we believe the guy who was the artist on
Avengers should get more then the guy who did
Constantine."
m1312020
m1312020 - 3/4/2012, 6:16 PM
I also believe the credits part of the argument goes
more to the trial where Stan Lee and the Marvel lawyers
stated that the artists had noting to do with the
creation of the Marvel characters.By there statements
they where noting,but work for hire that put down Lee's
ideas.

Gary8264
Gary8264 - 3/4/2012, 6:26 PM
I thin' it's sad that the heirs are the ones who thin' they deserve the fruits of Kirby's work and other artist's who have passed on. Kirby knew he was workin' for a company and that his work would belong to that company. He spent his life doin' what he loved, and was paid to do it. How many other people can say that?
As far as the rights to Kirby's work, does an engineer get the rights to a engine he designs for GM or Ford?
I'd just as soon James Sturm doesn't go see The Avengers, I for one wouldn't want him in a theater with me bringin' down the High this movie will give me.
m1312020
m1312020 - 3/4/2012, 6:42 PM
@Gary8264 I have to agree with you these families
seem to want to sue for far more then they should
get.If Kirby family just sued for better royalties
instead of almost full ownership of the characters
I feel this would have been settled along time ago
in there favor.
deanwilkins
deanwilkins - 3/4/2012, 7:11 PM
That just leaves one more seat available for someone who wants to be in that theater.
ScionStorm
ScionStorm - 3/5/2012, 12:46 AM
I'll scream "Jack Kirby did it!" in the theater before the movie starts if that helps any.
DukeAcureds
DukeAcureds - 3/8/2012, 2:58 PM
As far as financial credit? Too late. It's in the past. As far as getting an actual credit in the movie? Too early. The things not out, yet. And he did get credit, in both Thor and Captain America, if I remember correctly. Along with Walt Simonson, Bryan Hitch, Brian Micheal Bendis, etc.
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