When Did It All Start For You?

When Did It All Start For You?

We all had to start our love of comics and their characters at one point. There was a time we didn't know there were 6 Green Lanterns or that Peter Parker had been cloned. Time for a trip down memory lane...

Editorial Opinion
By TheIronStomach - Dec 04, 2013 11:12 AM EST
Filed Under: Other
Source: comicbookmovie.com



It might be hard to admit but there was a time you were, well...
A Noob.

Its a modern term but appropriate.
Comics and their characters have been a passion for millions but all of us at one point had to discover them for ourselves. Unless you had a sibling who had all of the comics in the house already, chances are you had to find out about comics yourself. Its not something that parents (except modern ones I suppose) would actively promote for their kids to read.

Chances are if you are over 30 it might have started like the picture of this kid above^.

The color, the print, the dynamic art was all meant for you to stop, look over the cover in awe and tear into the thing with eyes and mouth wide. You pick up the next issue and its even better. Then you notice the comic is surrounded by others with even weirder and different storylines. This isn't Dr. Seuss or the moral story picture books your mom gives you to read, this is exciting! The heroes are always there in time, the villains get more and more diabolical with each issue and every new character you find out about is more interesting than the last! As time goes on the awe effect wears off, but you have gotten something even more from these stories. These characters you follow; they develop, they have problems, they will struggle, and at times to our complete disbelief- they fail. You might not have your blood pumping like when you were younger but this world, this whole mythology that continues to build and build and you progressively understand more and more becomes a passion. One that lasts longer than your folks had hoped for. Then you see more and more of the real world in these characters' situations and as you become an adult you recognize that you see a bit of yourself in their problems.

Or maybe it started out like the picture at the top, especially if you were (like me) a product of the 90's and the Golden Age of Comic Book TV.
Spider-Man X-Men Batman Superman Justice League. Every Saturday morning like clockwork.

I didn't matter if you didn't understand the plot or dialogue in full, but you were getting older and wising up (You start to see that Power Rangers was the same thing in EVERY episode) and the action and characters in these shows were living breathing things that played out their stories and developed over time. These series gave us our first glimpse at famous storylines for each series like the Symbiote Saga, and Dark Pheonix. Even if we had seen a rerun episode a dozen times we would take that over whatever crap Nickelodeon was pandering.
TV series for Major heroes continued into the 2000's but these new incarnations (Batman Beyond, Justice League Unlimited, Teent Titans) were just...
It didn't feel like those older shows.

So we searched for the source material in our time and by way of graphic novels and collected works we came to appreciate our childhood heroes and their universes even more.



And we might not like it because it’s not accurate to the source and (average fan boy grumbling) but this


is where people are going to start getting into comics and while many of us diehard fans resent that fact, it is only us who can benefit.
We are in the middle of a Golden Age of CBM and the fan base is growing exponentially because of it.
Casual fans will see every movie and get most of what it’s trying to do, but us fans who come from those first 2 generations will be able to appreciate it most.
The world wants to bring every two-bit hero to the big screen, which is what we wanted all along (be honest with yourself).
Compromise is inevitable, but these CBMs are causing people to go out to wherever comics are still sold and check em out. DC/Marvel have the most to gain, but as Kick-Ass and Hellboy have shown, 3rd party series will benefit too.
Those kids who obsess over every minute of those movies will find out about the source material and devour it like nothing else, even more so than what we of the 2nd generation did.

I (and many I know) didn't get into actual comics until later in life. I mostly read the classic storylines by getting the graphic novels from the library. If I found out about a big one they didn't have, I found and bought it.



So if you are a CBM movie fan who is just getting into this crazy mad universe of ours and tearing through the gloried classics (Dark Knight Returns)of actual comics or are the most a-typical comic book shop frequenter who knew about it "Before Joss Whedon butchered it" we all need to recognize our passion and support each other.

"NERD" might be the highly acceptable trend right now, but in the future it might wane and we might be shelved with obscurity (again).

Even if the movies and shows stop getting made, we have the original thing that will ALWAYS be there. In time all true fans will return to that which made everything else possible.

So you 'Lifers' and 'Power Users' here on ComicBookMovie.com need to respect those who are immersing themselves in our collective passion and
DONT BE DISCOURAGING.

YOU

YOU at one time were right where that 'noob' is; you didn't know everything about everything comics.

So let them explore and experience and learn like we did and continue to do.

WE as a community have never been larger or more informed. But despite everything we think we know:

WE are still that wide eyed kid at heart who is picking up a new thing for the first time.


So now I ask you

YES. YOU.

I want to see where all of us started. Be honest!

What was the character/show/story that made you realize

YOU LOVE THESE THINGS AND ALWAYS WILL.

Comment Below!

Thanks for doing so and making it to the end of this editorial!
(I know my articles tend to be wordy... I will work on that)
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fortycals
fortycals - 12/4/2013, 1:04 PM
I actually learned to read from comics, thanks to my parents. My dad gave me a long box filled with silver age and golden age books. it was a bunch of random books that I had destroyed at that young age(4/6), wish I knew better. I was hooked by 6, and then got my mom's to buy me a Marvel box of 100 comics from a Sears catalog(back when they used to be thicker than the Bible). Been collecting for most of my life since.
Pasto
Pasto - 12/4/2013, 1:15 PM
I was 3 and my parents had left my life. When child services found me, they left me in the care of an old chinese couple in harlem. They raised me in respect...and dignity. When I was 16...my world was shattered again. The old chinese man...my father, was gunned down in brooklyn while delivering an important package to his boss, Mr. Fisk. Me and my chinese mother had to survive on our own. We had to find work which was rather difficult. When i was 23 my mother was killed by an oncoming semi whilst coming to pick me up form high-school. That to shattered my world. I then was on my own. Moving form place to place...looking for knowledge...looking for respect. Then...in cold night on december in 1974...I found it in the form..of an old chinese monastery. They took me in as one of their own. They raised me....they taught me. I learned the ways of Wang-Chi. I soon left the monastery when I was 28. I took on the guise of Red Rekon. I stood for justice an hope. I went after those who ruined my life. I fought them...I killed them. I soon became and outlaw. I send you this message from a hidden location...telling you all to love each other.

jlabatman
jlabatman - 12/4/2013, 1:23 PM
Man, I remember going to the 7-11 and buying comics for like 60-75 cents! Those were the days! You actually read the comics and kept them in a stack under your bed or in a box, but never bagged and boarded.
Pasto
Pasto - 12/4/2013, 1:38 PM
Excuse JLA, he is really old.
DeathstrokeTerminator
DeathstrokeTerminator - 12/4/2013, 2:02 PM
It started with BTAS, from there I was really into the superhero genre and always wanted to get into comics but there were no comic shops within 50 miles of where I lived (at least not any that I knew of) and the local libraries never carried any comics. It was not until I moved to another city when I read my first comic from the local public library, the Knightfall series.
sikwon
sikwon - 12/4/2013, 2:12 PM
Moving from ft Bragg to ft Hood with my oarents. Stopped in a store and grabbed a Silver Surfer, Wolverine and an Uncanny Xmen to read and copy pictures from on the ride. That was like 5th grade and havent looked back since.
NovaCorpsFan
NovaCorpsFan - 12/4/2013, 3:07 PM
Bare in mind, I'm only sixteen.

I was a fan of superheroes from an early age but never really got that invested in them. I was more into Star Wars. Anyway, the Marvel Classic Figurine Collection staryed out when I was about 8 in 2005. I gathered up every issue of thay ove h years that followed.

In 2007 I was physically assaulted, so I became somewhat of a recluse and rarely left my room except for school and mealtimes. The figurines had come with these magazines so I figured if I was gonna be in my room all the time, I might as well make good use of it. So I got completely invested in Marvel lore.

My cousin (who was around 19 at the time), came round one day with a pirated copy of Ghost Rider. I was young so naturally, I thought the movie was great. My cousin looked at all the figurines I had and all these magazines and he just went, "You don't have any actual comics!" Which I didn't. He ran home (he lived just up the street, funnily enough his neighbour was the guy eho assaulted me). When he got back he put this tattered copy of Ultimate X-Men Volume 1: The Tomorrow People on my bed.

I read it and that was my first ever comic. Then we moved to Ireland in the Summer of 2007. Needless to say, I hated it (had a nervous breakdown on my first day of school). I remember getting home that day and just re-reading that X-Men book. It wasn't until Iron Man came out that I started to really get into comics.

Nowadays I get the odd trade paperback here and there, I rarely buy single issues.

And yes, my cousin did put that guy in hospital.
relentless1
relentless1 - 12/4/2013, 6:04 PM
for me it started with Batman Returns, i was 6 and my dad took me to see it in the theatre when it came out in 1992 and I've been a huge batfan ever since. I watched BTAS religiously, I had all of the Returns toy line, even the Wayne Manor playset lol.
PewPewMcgee
PewPewMcgee - 12/4/2013, 11:21 PM
I got a shirt freshman year with some Marvel heroes on it and i didn't know like half of them so I started to research them and I fell in love with them. Originally I was a strictly Marvel guy and I hated DC but after I saw the Dark Knight I found Batman and then I just became completely in love with comics
NovaCorpsFan
NovaCorpsFan - 12/4/2013, 11:25 PM
cipher

And he'd certainly accept it.
TheOneAboveAll
TheOneAboveAll - 12/4/2013, 11:29 PM
Calvin and Hobbes and Captain Underpants were my first comic books per say then I saw Star Wars and from there Batman and Superman movies... and now I have 2 cloest fulls of comics dating from 1950-modern day... I have around 700-900 comic books give or take... Spidey's 130's-615. Detective Comics... a bunch, a bunch of journey into mystery... and all the crisis... and Action Comics 100... and a few X-Men... and a lot of independant comics like Atomic Robo and Invincible.
MightyZeus
MightyZeus - 12/5/2013, 4:12 AM
Good editorial. Amazing write up, well done. If anyone cares to read this my love for comic books started after i watched the movie Spider-man on VHS when i was a kid. I didnt know it was based on a comic book until my older brother told me. So i found a local comic book shop and bought a tonne of Spider-man comics and from there my love and hobby for comic books grew. I have a whole room filled with comic books now.
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