Cain
Gentlebane
- Joined
- Aug 29, 2005
- Messages
- 6,174
- Reaction score
- 143
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- 48
Nope nope nope and a huge spoonful of more nope.
"Ponder this no longer, as Waid himself admits that "Superman: Birthright" is the new official origin of Superman and a "calculated" reboot. "If by 'calculated' we mean 'thought out in great detail to the Nth degree by creators who love the character,' then yes. Accept no substitutes-'Birthright' is officially the DC Comics Origin of Superman. I wish we could have simply said that up front nine months ago when the series began, but overall plans for Superman in 2003 were still somewhat in flux, so DC decided to be a little more circumspect about it and instead surprise fans with the building falllout to 'Birthright' as it pops up in the regular ongoing Superman monthlies. Readers seem very surprised, in a very good way. 'Birthright' is very much the foundation of everything DC's planning for Superman in the future. It was our job to pave the way, it is essential Superman reading, and it's an honor to present it."
http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page=article&id=3256
Birthright was the canon. You can't have two origin stories and say that they are both correct. Man of Steel and Birthright tell radically different portrayals of Superman's origin, including how Clark revealed himself to the world. It may upset you some how as a Superman fan, but the reality is Man of Steel hasn't been canon for seven years now, nor will it be canon. Even now, Secret Origin replaces Infinite Crisis, which replaced Birthright, which replaced Man of Steel.
Sorry my friend but I will believe DC themselves over any fellow fan any day and they themselves stated back then and maintained up until IC that both stories were the origins. Again I know it seems confusing because indeed they are dramatically different takes on the mythos (I enjoyed both BTW) but DC editorial said it themselves that Birthright did not remove Man Of Steel at all, google it if you want cause I'm sure this info would have to be online as it's not just something I'm pulling out of my ass here.
That being said post-IC (Secret Origin) uses elements of both stories which in turn is really just a big amalgamation of pre and post-crisis while also adding it's own things as well. It's like how with Batman Son of the Demon did indeed still happen but not in the way Mike Barr once told us.
Oh and part of the reason BATMAN is so reflective of the Englehart/Rogers comics is because Englehart himself wrote a script that the movie eventually used elements from except boss Thorne was turned into Carl Grissom and things like that once Sam Hamm rewrote the movie.
			
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