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"The launch was so much about the heroes and their stories -- we had to turn it on its head and focus on the villains and have them in the spotlight. That's really where the idea that became
'Forever Evil' started," he said. And with villains in the forefront, there's no need to worry about any lines being crossed, giving Johns and DC's other writers great flexibility as they craft the stories in the coming months. "The great thing about villains is that they cross the line all the time. They don't know where the line even is. They're unpredictable," he said. "You're not sure which way they'll turn, which makes writing them always compelling and motivating." Rogues, Johns said, are more like regular people than the heroes they are in conflict with. "They're more conflicted and like us, they're real people. They have their own internal set of ethics and morals that change on a sliding scale, he said. "You don't, for example, know what Catwoman or Captain Cold or Sinestro are going to do in a given situation. It's a writer's dream to write villains for a while."
[Associated
Press;
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