
First was the announcement that Marvel’s Epic imprint titles would debut in February, then was the announcement that imprint was closing the doors for submissions. Now, Newsarama has learned that all of the Epic titles (four, total) will be collected into a single anthology issue that will be quarterly.
In a memo, obtained by Newsarama, which was sent to Epic contributors, Epic editor Stephanie Moore informed the creators of the change, indicating that the first issues of
Phantom Jack, Young Ancient One, Strange Magic and
Sleepwalker will all be combined into one anthology issue to be released in February. The second issues of the respective series would be included in the second issue of the anthology, which would follow #1 on a quarterly basis – if sales warrant.
The move by Marvel appears to lend more credence to the idea that the company is distancing itself from policies and initiatives started by former President of Publishing Bill Jemas, who was
moved out of publishing and editorial completely to a non-executive position in October. Epic was created with the intent to allow new creators to land their own Marvel books, but had suffered from mixed signals from virtually the first day it was announced in regards to rights held by the creators, and the possibility of publishing creator-owned work through it.
As originally conceived, third parties would completely package books for the imprint, which would itself be based on a financial model that would allow survival on lower sales. Given its model, sales would constantly be weighed against the survival of the series.
To date, three projects have shipped under the Epic imprint – the debut title, Mark Millar and Terry Dodson’s
Trouble; and
Crimson Dynamo, written by John Miller, who parlayed the gig into landing the writer’s spot on
Iron Man, his current Marvel assignment; and Danile Way and John Proctor's
Gun Theory.
In the memo, Moore also asked creators to stop work on their respective second issues, until it is known that the anthology will continue. If the anthology does not continue past issue #1, creative teams will be paid for work performed on issue #2, but not for any further work.
The memo did not mention
Crimson Dynamo, however, the creative team had already announced that the series would be going on hiatus following issue #6. Also notmentioned was
The Northwood Saga or the Spider-Man What-If style story - neither of which were solicited.
update 11/10 6:28 am
Young Ancient One writer Rob Worley sent this statement to Newsarama:
As reported by Newsarama, myself and the rest of the
Young Ancient One creative team received an e-mail on Friday informing us of Marvel's intention to combine the four unpublished Epic comics into one anthology title.
The news came as a shock and disappointment. A shock, because I had been assured just weeks earlier that the three-issue series would be published as promised. A disappointment, because the chances of the anthology succeeding seem miniscule.
It's a real shame. My team has been doing fantastic work on the book and we're all proud of how things are working out. Everyone who has seen Andy and Bill's artwork so far agrees that it is of extremely high quality. Andy's rendering of 15th century Asian architecture and weaponry, his cool character designs, his Ditko riffs have got everybody drooling.
There's still hope, I suppose, that the entire three issues of
Young Ancient One will be published, as promised. If not, I'll certainly be disappointed. At the same time, I have to look at the positives:
I've made a good friend in Andy Kuhn, who I can't wait to work with on whatever's next.
The strength of the three completed scripts has opened doors for me both inside and outside the comic industry. I'm presently attached to write a screenplay (a comic adaptation, naturally), which was a direct result of the
YAO scripts serving as writing samples.
And, I can say with certainty that the Epic struggle has been a learning experience.
While I certainly wish the four Epic books would be published in their intended form, there's little to do about it now but hope for the best.
Sincerely,
Rob Worley
And this from
Northwood Saga's Marc Campbell:
I'm confirming that
Northwood Saga will not be published by Marvel Epic. The reason I received from Marvel is that, in light of recent changes, this is not the type of story that Marvel wants to do under the Epic imprint.
Northwood Saga is an epic fantasy, featuring a rotating cast of elves, dwarfs, trolls, wizards, and tragic heroes and heroines. The villains of the story are the humans, who wage neverending war against what they call "monsters," and the book explores some of the consequences of this. It's a creator-owned project with all-original characters, and it was not set to take place in the Marvel Universe.
Northwood Saga was originally announced by Marvel at this year's Wizard World Chicago. The book was never officially scheduled, but there was talk of it coming out in 2004.
With regard to Marvel's decision, I'm disappointed, obviously, but this sort of thing has been known to happen in the publishing world. It has happened to me before in computer books, and I'm sure it will happen again. It just comes with the territory. On the whole, I think Epic was a good experience, and I'm grateful for the time and energy that Marvel invested in my work.
As for the future of
Northwood Saga, I don't have anything to announce at present, but I'm not out of tricks just yet.
Phantom Jack creator Mike Sangiacomo's thoughts on the reduction can be found
here.