GL1 said:
Theodore Rosevelt is a great American Icon, sometimes credited with winning WWII, and thus, saving us from a very bleak world history.
But he's not as popular as Eminem.
Right but this is not American History, it is pop culture. However Abraham Lincoln is more popular than Enimen, since like Superman, he has transcended American History. You know who Lincoln and Superman are before you hear about Enimem.
Batman is known throughout the world, I recal, for instance, an Arabian or African comic book (which of course I couldn't read) where Batman was used to teach children the dangers of land mines.
It was Africa I believe. Either way it is not those countries that create those things, we export such characters. Spider-Man is popular in Arab countries. However Batman is still not as far reaching as Superman, who as I said is the second "highest American Icon" second only to Jesus (it is actually quiet true).
While I can't speak for 'values' in other countries, I do know that here, Batman is thought of as much cooler and Superman, as iconic as he is, is "played out" "corny" "too... cheesy" too simple, too bland, too typical superhero... too powerful... but Batman, oh Batman, he's brilliant, he's a genious, he gets by on his own wits and not on superpowers... he must be better!
I've had American friends ask me "what are Batman's powers". You seem to forget that, again most people don't read comics. I.e. you are projecting again. Superman is far more well known since his powers and abilities (faster than a speeding bullet, more powerful than a...) were immortalized years ago in a radio broadcast and then made into a household phrase which almost everyone knows (it is a bird, no it's a plane, it's Superman!). Batman has had no such exposure. Sure he has been on TV and in movies however that is what people think he is, a movie and TV character. For Superman he is an icon, he is a symbol, much like Lincoln, Jesus, etc. Superman was woven into American and later Worldwide culture long before Batman had a somewhat popular show starring Adam West.
Also because someone has no superpowers they are better. Remember movie adaptions have yet to show Batman as a super genius with incredible fighting ability. They have shown him as a glorified Ninja who apparently doesn't "understand any of that" which Lucius Fox tells him about biology and medicine and who needs Gordon as a detective. Something the comic version would have no problem with. So if anything no powers make him lame to a general public just based on that. Remember the most popular "character" for humans is still probably "God" who is insanely powerful.
In fact the Batman you mention from the comics is foreign to anyone else. The best Batman we have had so far, ability wise, may be slightly less capable than DareDevil in comics.
It's not necessarily my opinion, but it is prevalent. Superman's light has faded, and nothing secures that more heartily than fan reactions to SR, where Superman tried to be peaceful and have a family and stuff and everyone just wanted him to fight Doomsday...
Again you are projecting "fans" as if they are somehow representative of the rest of the world, they aren't. Superman could make a million bad movies and shows like Smallville, The TWO new Superman cartoons coming out, Kryto the superdog and be placed virtually everywhere that is superhero related and he'd still be popular.
Batman is more popular on this board for example, but this board is all comic fans who know Batman's full history and can recite it verbatum. Most people can't do that, in fact most people still though Batman was SUPPOSE to be goofy when BB came out. A lot of people still think Burton's movies are superior, hence how HBO replays them these days (even B&R).
SR actually stands more as a testement to Superman than a hit against him. Years ago, even today, generally audiences don't cry foul when shows like The Batman make a mockery of the mainstream Batman Universe. However the poor reception of Superman, and the complaints that followed (about the kid for example) showed the general public had a much deeper knowledge of how Superman acts.
If Superman's light has faded he better stop racking in over 2 million dollars a year without movies for Warner Brothers then. And then Batman's first appearance better rise in price another 100,000 dollars (worth 300,000 currently to Action Comics 1 400,000+)