Dynamite’s ‘Lone Ranger’ to End with Issue #25
Here’s the release and the details. A shame, really, since Brett Matthews and Sergio Cariello have been doing a pretty terrific job with the masked rider.
November 15, 2010, Runnemede, NJ – Dynamite Entertainment and Classic Media, a global media company with a portfolio of the world’s leading family entertainment brands, today announced that Brett Matthew’s critically acclaimed run on The Lone Ranger® series will comes its historic end when issue #25 lands this January. Expertly drawn by Sergio Cariello and with a cover by the amazing John Cassaday, this issue will be a must-read for long-time fans of this “Eisner Nominated” series and America’s favorite hero of the Wild West!
Is it the end of the line for The Lone Ranger when he and Butch Cavendish meet and do battle for the first and final time? Will The Lone Ranger destroy Cavendish and himself, or will he find a way to save both?
“Bringing this unique and personal version of The Lone Ranger to life has been an incredibly satisfying experience for me on a lot of levels,” says writer Brett Matthews. “To collaborate with talents like John Cassaday, Sergio Cariello, Simon Bowland and Marcello Pinto over the last couple years has been a pleasure, and is a testament to both the character and their craft. I’m glad to call them my friends. My thanks to Dynamite Entertainment and especially the fans — old and new — for their support along the way. I’m proud of the story we told and the men John Reid and Tonto became while we rode along with them. Hi-Yo!”
“This is a bitter sweet moment for all of us at Dynamite Entertainment,” says Dynamite President Nick Barrucci. “The Lone Ranger helped define Dynamite as a publisher who could produce commercially successful titles to one who could publish a comic with critical acclaim. We knew that this day would come, and it’s almost upon us. I cannot express enough the appreciation and respect that I have for Brett, John, Sergio, Dean (White), Marcello and Simon. They helped make this great story the best it could be. From the moment I first read Brett’s script, to when the pages started coming in and seeing John’s first covers, success or fail, this series would be a series to be proud of. It surpassed all expectations. All good things come to an end, and the journey to this great ending has been one of the proudest parts of our publishing history. Issue #25 will be the end of this great series. There will be more stories, but the creators who come next will have big boots to fill. Hi-O Silver!”
“Dynamite Entertainment has been a fantastic partner and together we are excited to present the conclusion to this very successful story arc in The Lone Ranger series,” said Karyn Schneider, VP, Licensing, Classic Media. “As America’s favorite hero of the Wild West, The Lone Ranger has captured fans’ hearts and imaginations for generations, and this dramatic conclusion will be sure to inspire readers and new stories for many more years to come.”
The Lone Ranger premiered as a last-ditch effort to save a depression-wracked Detroit radio station. Since the show’s premiere broadcast in 1933, no other fictional Western hero has proved so enduring. More than 2,900 Lone Ranger radio programs were produced, as well as many movie serials, short stories, novels, feature films, phonograph records, newspaper strips and an astounding three million comic books. The Lone Ranger television series, begun in the late 1940’s, consists of over 500 episodes. A new live-action feature film is currently in development with producer Jerry Bruckheimer and Walt Disney Pictures.
Just curious: where the does the “3 million comic books” figure come from? That must be total issues sold over the course of the franchise, and even so would be a bit misleading to people without an understanding of comics.
Well, considering that the passage in question begins “Since the show’s premiere broadcast in 1933…”, at it lists a bunch of other huge numbers (like “…more than 2,900 Lone Ranger radio programs…”), i think that the implication that the number is from all sources is fairly clear.
It’s misleading, as I said, to the uninitiated because 2900 radio programs, 500 TV shows…3 million comic books, makes it seem as if they produced 3 million different comic books as they did 2900 radio shows and 500 tv episodes. I just think it’s a poor choice of words to represent the data.
Well, yeah. I can see your point.
But if you say “Steven King has sold seventy million {or whatever} books…”, you generally don’t find people believing that King (as prolific as he is) has *written* seventy million books, which is sort of the angle i was looking at it from.
Well that’s my point exactly; it doesn’t say they sold three million comic books, it says they produced x number of this, x number of that and 3 million comic books. It’s either weaselspeak, as they say on wikipedia, or someone who just wasn’t thinking about how it would sound when they wrote the press release.
Just curious: where the does the "3 million comic books" figure come from? That must be total issues sold over the course of the franchise, and even so would be a bit misleading to people without an understanding of comics.
Well, considering that the passage in question begins "Since the show's premiere broadcast in 1933…", at it lists a bunch of other huge numbers (like "…more than 2,900 Lone Ranger radio programs…"), i think that the implication that the number is from all sources is fairly clear.
It's misleading, as I said, to the uninitiated because 2900 radio programs, 500 TV shows…3 million comic books, makes it seem as if they produced 3 million different comic books as they did 2900 radio shows and 500 tv episodes. I just think it's a poor choice of words to represent the data.
Well, yeah. I can see your point.But if you say "Steven King has sold seventy million {or whatever} books…", you generally don't find people believing that King (as prolific as he is) has *written* seventy million books, which is sort of the angle i was looking at it from.
Well that's my point exactly; it doesn't say they sold three million comic books, it says they produced x number of this, x number of that and 3 million comic books. It's either weaselspeak, as they say on wikipedia, or someone who just wasn't thinking about how it would sound when they wrote the press release.
The smart money is on weaselspeak.
The smart money is on weaselspeak.
I read the first dozen issues, but the delays killed it for me. I’m not surprised that there have only been another 12 or so issues since I stopped reading like three years ago. I’d like to get the trades but by the time they come out I’ll probably have forgotten.
I read the first dozen issues, but the delays killed it for me. I’m not surprised that there have only been another 12 or so issues since I stopped reading like three years ago. I’d like to get the trades but by the time they come out I’ll probably have forgotten.
I read the first dozen issues, but the delays killed it for me. I'm not surprised that there have only been another 12 or so issues since I stopped reading like three years ago. I'd like to get the trades but by the time they come out I'll probably have forgotten.
I like it but wasn’t crazy about John Reid being much younger than Tonto, instead of them being about the same age. The budding romance between(spoiler warning)Tonto and Dan Reid’s mom is weird.
I like it but wasn't crazy about John Reid being much younger than Tonto, instead of them being about the same age. The budding romance between(spoiler warning)Tonto and Dan Reid's mom is weird.