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Tuesday, July 1, 2025

REMEMBERING SHOOTER


Jim Shooter, longtime editor-in-chief of Marvel Comics, and a man who had a profound effect on my career, has passed away.

I broke into the business at DC in the late 1970s, writing for the various anthology books, working with superb editors like Paul Levitz, Jack Harris, and the late, great Len Wein—I think of them as the professors at my personal comic book college—learning the fundamentals of the craft. Under their tutelage I moved, slowly and carefully, from eight pagers to my first book-length stories; from horror tales with twist endings to stories featuring childhood icons like Batman, Aquaman, and Hawkman. I even created a couple of series of my own—"I…Vampire" for House of Mystery and "Creature Commandos" for Weird War Tales—but my creative bicycle still needed sturdy training wheels: I had so much to learn.

I’d sent some samples over to Marvel, which eventually landed in Shooter’s lap. Jim—who I’d also interviewed for a comics-centric piece I wrote for The Soho Weekly News (I was a journalist in those days, too; when you’re a freelancer, you’ve got to keep as many doors open as possible)—saw something in my work and was open and generous with feedback, insight, and encouragement. Shooter was an intimidating figure—unusually tall and very commanding—with a long resume in the business (he’d started writing comics professionally when he was 13!). He was also a superb editor with a deep understanding of story, who was able to communicate that understanding with force and clarity—and soon became the next professor in my comic book college experience.

Under Jim’s watchful eye, I worked on a few fill-in issues (I recall an Iron Man story that I later repurposed as a Captain America tale, an Avengers issue that vanished into oblivion, and a Doctor Strange story, featuring the obscure villain Tiboro, that eventually made it into print), hanging on Jim’s every word and incorporating his wisdom into my work. I had a very simple rule in those days: The editor is always right. I wanted to learn, wanted to grow, and I certainly wasn’t going to argue with someone who knew far more than me about the medium. As Paul Levitz once told me, “You can’t break the rules until you’ve learned the rules”—and if I was going to make comics a career that lasted, I had to learn them all.

Jim kept throwing me interesting side-gigs, too: I wrote plots for French Spider-Man stories, crafted detailed biographies of all the Marvel characters for…well, it’s been so long I’ve forgotten what the purpose was. I also spent a couple of weeks in Stan Lee’s office—Stan was in California—watching an animated television series and writing up notes on the lead character, a Spider-Man rip-off, to aid Marvel in a lawsuit. (And if you don’t think being paid to hang out in Stan Lee’s office and watch cartoons was a dream job, what are you doing reading this in the first place?) Shooter eventually offered me a freelance contract—steady work, solid page rate (for the times), royalties—shifting my career into high gear.

Jim’s greatest strength was that he had a clear vision of what Marvel should be, how a story should be told, and he pursued it wholeheartedly. I didn't always agree with that vision (and he didn’t always agree with mine!), but I always respected it. His impact on Marvel Comics, and the comic book business as a whole, was massive.

A final story: Once, around 1983 or ‘84, I was in the Marvel office, and I’d brought my son, Cody, who was three or four at the time, along with me. We were in, I think, Mark Gruenwald’s office, when Shooter entered, all six foot seven of him. Jim greeted Cody warmly and my son slowly looked up—and up and up and up—at what, to him, was the largest human he’d ever beheld, a giant straight out of “Jack and the Beanstalk,” and burst into tears. Jim instantly retreated: He didn’t want to be responsible for traumatizing a child. But Cody, of course, was right: Jim Shooter was a giant of our industry and I am forever grateful to him for bringing me aboard the Marvel ship.

Wherever in the multiverse you are, Jim: safe travels. And thank you.

©copyright 2025 J.M. DeMatteis

15 comments:

  1. We are all seeing good stories about Jim Shooter now. It restores my faith in humanity. I was shocked when a friend shared with me the news of his passing. Your comment about Jim's vision was to be respected is so important. Sometimes your vision clashed but you respected it. As a fan, I was worried about comments of his vision of the many stories that had circulated. Some good. Some bad. Yet, the memory of the man of what he did overall lives and sometimes we understand it now. Thanks for sharing JMD. RIP JIM.

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  2. You are always a gentleman and fun to read!
    Thanks for this

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  3. "People say that prostitution is the world's profession, Baloney! Men were making up outrageous lies long before any kind of commerce was invented. Storytelling is the world's oldest profession."
    -Jim Shooter 2/25/17
    Any man who describes his profession that way deserves to be remembered fondly.

    Everyone knows about Shooter's visionary at Marvel... marrying Pete and MJ off, giving creatives more residuals, pioneering mainstream graphic novels, having the basic conception of Vertigo a decade before DC (Epic), etc.. I am going going to use something I know little about to praise teh man... The Legion of Superheroes.

    I don't know a lot about the Legion, but i do know it has a strong and dedicated fanbase. Something that seems to be traced back, and almost exclusively connected to Jim Shooter. Much like Marv Wolfman on the Teen Titans, he came into a sort of c-list team, raised it to new heights, that it created a cult like love years after they left.

    Also, when he came to Marvel, he wrote the Avengers, which he completely restructured. The Avengers, had previously been a team where a bunch of reformed villains... or those thought to be villains... were trained to be heroes. Clearly inspired by The Legion of Superheroes, who work for the United Planets, Shooter made the Avengers work for the United Nations.

    The latter sounds a lot more like the version used to create The Ultimates, and thus The MCU version. While I may prefer the heroes teaching villains to be heroes version, there is no doubt Shooter's version had longer legs, and is in a very real way tied to the success the Marvel brand now experiences. All because of his time at the Legion of Superheroes.

    That is long shadow cast by his first work int he industry.

    Also, by most accounts, when he was working at VALIANT COMICS, he did a lot to try and take care of and prepare the creatives he brought in, during a less than ideal corporate atmosphere.

    The point is, like any person in charge, he made a lot of decisions, some I liked and some I don't. And everyone can have their own view on how it shook out, that is opinion an "Monday morning quarterbacking" s spurts say (that is what it is called, right? Spurts?).

    However, I would argue it is an objective fact that he was a man who truly loved comics, and what them to thrive. And also felt very lucky that they were his profession, even when it was hard. As Stan Lee would say, "a true believer."

    Jack

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    1. A true believer? Absolutely, Jack. Absolutely.

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    2. As for your point about clashing views of stroytelling, and respect.

      As my father said about his friend, and colleague, Kathy Jackson, "we did not always agree, but we always agreed that we respected each other."

      Jack

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    3. He also talks about how they bonded over the fact that he ate fried egg sandwiches and so did her brother, and as a result, her brother was a factory rat up in Flint, and my dad had done some of that while working his way through college.

      However, it seemed less relevant to Jim Shooter.

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  4. you seemed to have just glossed over the most impressive part of Jim Shooter.

    Apparently, he was able to distract your offspring from Mark Gruenwad's mustache. I did not even know that was possible.

    Of course, as someone who is 6 ft 7, I am not sure why that was so impressive or unnerving. Seems a perfectly natural height to me.

    But pulling focus form that magnificent mustache is a herculean feat.

    Jack.

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    1. I had a massive mustache at the time, so Cody was used to it.

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  5. Jim Shooter was one of my absolute heroes in comics, together with Stan Lee. The very first stories I read when I was a kid back in Italy were the ones where he was Editor in Chief. I loved all the characters, the very strict compliance with the history of Marvel, his attention to details, etc. He will be missed.

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  6. Thanks so much for this. As succinct a summary of Shooter's talents as I'm likely to read. So glad he recognized your talent and was able to encourage it. And I'm also glad you're not muckraking at the very mention of his name, as so many professionals often do. Great post.

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