Jim Shooter



Jim Shooter (1951-) is a notorious American comic book personality, known both for his work as a writer and editor, and for the controversies surrounding him.

Shooter began his career at the age of 13 (!) after a script for Legion of Super-Heroes he sent to DC Comics was accepted. His run helped to modernize the series, bringing it out of its Silver Age status, most notably by causing the death of Ferro Lad, the first Legionnaire to be Killed Off for Real.

He eventually went to work for Marvel Comics, writing among other things The Avengers. One of his most notable stories there was "The Korvac Saga" in which a supervillain gains cosmic powers but decides to use them for the good of the universe; however, an attack by The Avengers (who were not aware of his motives) ruined his plans, leading him to commit suicide, a unusual Downer Ending for such stories at the time.

Shooter eventually rose to the position of Editor-In-Chief at Marvel. Some of his notable works in that position include:
 * Turn Marvel's very disorganized and frequently late talent into a tight ship. This helped the company, but made him a lot of enemies.
 * Ordering the death of Jean Grey at the end of the Dark Phoenix Saga on X-Men since he felt the character's murder of billions of alien beings (even though done while insane) needed to be properly punished (while Chris Claremont wrote the story, that was not the ending he had intended for it.) Although highly controversial at the time, this was later generally accepted as an appropriate ending and a classic storyline.
 * Starting the whole Crisis Crossover fad with the Secret Wars series (in which The Beyonder, an omnipotent being, tried To Become Human) which he wrote himself;
 * Starting The New Universe line of comics, in celebration of Marvel's 20th Anniversary. Shooter wrote the main series, Star Brand. The line was not successful, however.

Despite his writing talent, Shooter came to gain the enmity of some writers, artists and editors at Marvel, reportedly because of his authoritarian way of running things. It's notable how several of his stories were later deconstructed after he left the company: The Beyonder was revealed to not really have been an omnipotent being after all; Korvac was now evil all along; and the New Universe was reinvented in a Darker and Edgier form, with the hero of Star Brand being to blame for it. All of these seem to be a series of Take That!s aimed at Shooter, done regardless of their effects on the characters (or their fans). An overt one on the DC side (written and drawn by folks who defected from Marvel because of him) involves an Expy of Shooter (and Star Brand) getting his ass kicked six ways to Sunday by Guy Gardner, with the Expy almost-literally shooting himself in the foot, viewable here.

Shooter went on to head his own comics company, Valiant Comics, by modernizing several old existing characters, during the 1990s; it was successful for a time, but eventually closed down. Shooter tried a few more times, but without success.

Shooter was hired to write Legion Of Super-Heroes again- however, he was dismissed soon after, because (according to him) DC Comics did not like the direction he was taking the story.

Dark Horse Comics has hired Shooter to manage some old and abandoned properties they acquired...

All The Tropes articles where Shooter is mentioned include:

 * Armed with Canon
 * Author's Saving Throw
 * Comic Book Time
 * Dark Age
 * Executive Meddling
 * Executive Veto
 * Expansion Pack World
 * Flash Forward
 * Future Slang
 * Gay Panic
 * "Get Out of Jail Free" Card
 * Horde of Alien Locusts
 * JLA-Avengers
 * Joe Quesada
 * Organic Technology
 * Pardon My Klingon
 * Revised Ending
 * Running the Asylum
 * Take That - Comic Books
 * Legion of Super-Heroes
 * The New Universe
 * Valiant Comics