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Green Arrow is one of DC’s most storied characters. He began his life as Batman in Robin Hood drag in the Golden Age, disappeared with the vast majority of Golden Age DC heroes in the early ’50s, and would return in the Silver Age. He became popular again because of Justice League of America and “Hard-Traveling Heroes”, fade away again, get another chance in the ’80s with Green Arrow: The Longbow Hunters, and soldiered on until the ’90s, when the character was killed so he could replaced by his son Connor (the most ’90s DC thing to happen to a character). He stayed dead through the rest of the decade and then something happened that no one could have predicted: an acclaimed film director wanted to make Oliver Queen the bestselling comic and it all started, strangely enough, at Marvel.
Kevin Smith Said He Would Make Green Arrow the Bestselling Comic and He Did It Perfectly

Kevin Smith made being a nerd cool in the ’90s. His indie film Clerks starred two Gen X slackers trying to figure out what to do with their life while talking about the pop culture they grew up on. His second movie, Mallrats, had a main character who was a comic nerd, and his third film Chasing Amy was about comic creators. He loved comics, and in 1998 was announced as the new writer of Daredevil (Vol. 2), helping launch the Marvel Knights line and paving the way for Joe Quesada to become editor in chief at Marvel.
Smith could have worked on any book in the industry, but he chose Daredevil because he wanted the challenge of making the character popular again. He spoke with Wizard magazine a lot in 1998 and 1999, and talked about how much he loved Oliver Queen and that if he had the chance to write the character, he would make it the bestselling comic in the land. DC Comics, seeing his success at Marvel and on the View Askewniverse comics at Oni Press, decided to call his bluff.









