David Goyer hired to write Man of Steel

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Wtf? What do u mean red son? :rolleyes:

Anyways, its just a good explanation of why Superman`s ship wouldn`t be seen by other people.

Anyways, Smallville in Kansas is the best, IMO.

I mean as far as it landing in an isolated place where it would be unlikely to be found.

Moving Smallville to Kansas ultimately hurt Superman as it led to him being less cosmopolitan.
 
That's because Donner moved Smallville from being a Northeastern type farm town to Kansas, so the "midwestern values" (whatever the hell they are) got shoehorned into Superman. Another modern addition that doesn't fit.

The correct religious analogies should be Superman to Moses and the Golem, and Jor-El as a failed Noah.

Wait, Smallville was in New England? Even reading about it I always thought it was in, or at least near, Kansas.

New England or the Northeast in general, within driving distance of Metropolis at least.

Why? What's the difference? do you really think two Jewish guys from Cleveland would pick Kansas of all places for their character to grow up? It was a stupid idea when Donner did it and it sucks that the people after him followed with it..it's part of how Superman went from being an intelligent, confident hero to a Jethro Bodine half-******ed hick hayseed Colossus looking Big Blue Boy Scout. It's even insulting to Kansas considering what the implication is-that anyone from a Kansas farm is some kind of duh-huh moron.

Honestly? I grew up thinking that Metropolis was supposed to be NYC and that Smallville was Upstate NY. It made a lot of sense to me. I'm OK with it being Kansas but I'd rather it was Upstate NY. There are a lot of small town, rural type places there and proximatey to the 'Big Apricot' would make it seem more believable.
 
i thought smallville being placed in ks was something from the 50s/60s eras of the character. Where as the early 30s didnt really specifically place it in a state?
 
1)To me, the whole beauty is that Smallville should be a remote, distant, angelical place that doesn`t exist. It`s stupid to compare to Red Son. The rocket is supposed to fall in a farm in America and Kansas is known through the whole world for this mid-western look and feelings. Also, it makes the journey of Clark Kent to be much more symbolic and important if its from an distant place like Kansas to New York. If it`s something like an 1 hour away, it just diminishes the whole thing, IMO. It has to be a long journey.

2)Moreover, Kansas is known for its Tornados, great way for Superman to wake-up to his destiny. And Kansas is shown to the world as being this angelical place because of the movie Wizard of Oz. Middle-western values are in the subconscious of people. If you don`t know what is, you don`t know Superman. Go figure that out because i`m not going to answer this one for you.


3)Besides, states like Mississippi, Alabama, Kansas and others in the center/southern part of the united states are the foundations of the United States as an agricultural economy, everything that Superman stands for while Luthor stands for the coorporated/cold world...

Superman represents the country side/ Luthor the bad things of the city. It`s just ancient dynamics.

4)Moreover, I liked the idea that Superman lives so far away from civilization as we know that everything is a shock when he sees it for the first time. If Metropolis is 2 hours away, it`s just takes away a lot of that.

It`s the same reason we care for Greenbow, Alabama, in Forrest Gump.

5)I can say that because i lived that. I`m an immigrant, from Brazil and live in the US now.



All in all, Smallville should be far away from everything. A perfect place to raise a kid with superpowers.

And don`t give me this Russian Red Son nonsense, Kurosawa.

Learn to discuss things properly instead of going into one more whinny RANT over everything that is not a Siegel & Shuster creation.

Other authors improved the mythos in so many different ways and this is one of them.
 
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Honestly? I grew up thinking that Metropolis was supposed to be NYC and that Smallville was Upstate NY. It made a lot of sense to me. I'm OK with it being Kansas but I'd rather it was Upstate NY. There are a lot of small town, rural type places there and proximatey to the 'Big Apricot' would make it seem more believable.

They always say Metropolis is based upon Manhattan from Midtown north and Gotham is based upon Midtown on south. Here in NY many use the words NY and Gotham interchangeably.

As for the Smallville thing, it's not upstate. We are not in tornado alley here, nor are we in the country's bread basket. Nor are we known for our simple country values. That's not to say that upstate does not have farms (mostly vineyards for wine).

Plus Smallville being in Kansas makes him more of a fish out of water. In college I had friends from Kansas, Missouri and Oklahoma, and I visited those places with them and I could totally understand a person like CK growing up there.
 
Kansas as the setting for Smallville works beautifully. It deepens some of the elements of the American experience that are woven into the fabric of Superman. You have the rural/urban divide and the rural to urban migration that have played such a big role in American life. Because of the dominant cultural language and imagery, Kansas provides a more evocative setting to explore these elements of Americana than, say, a small town in upstate New York.
 
Kansas as the setting for Smallville works beautifully. It deepens some of the elements of the American experience that are woven into the fabric of Superman. You have the rural/urban divide and the rural to urban migration that have played such a big role in American life. Because of the dominant cultural language and imagery, Kansas provides a more evocative setting to explore these elements of Americana than, say, a small town in upstate New York.

:up:

why are people even complaining that Smallville is et in Kansas? its not gonna change.
 
True. And New England is absolutely not a a type of 'Farmland' area. It's much more like Metropolis, but barely like Smalliville. It varies between endless buildings and mile, after mile, after mile of just trees. And trees. And more trees.
 
Come on Superdaniel, your posts are so aggressive. I followed the discussion since 3 pages and it was clever talk and exchange, for once, but you are really aggressive, you "should learn to discuss things properly" too. And I disagree with every point you made previously.

I agree with Kurosawa a lot, but not completely. Superman, like most superheroes, was created by several persons, and I think containing Superman into just what Siegel and Shuster did, is not good. I suffer the same problem with Batman, Kurosawa. I hate what the character is or has become, but it seems the character evolves without me, so to speak. I prefer Dick by far right now.

I think Byrne brought a lot of good things on the table. To me, Clark is the real person because he has been educated this way. Period. What makes the character interesting to me, is that he is Kal El and Superman too. He is related to the three sides.
I preferred Superman as he was before, not the american son. Especially since he became the embodiment of the US spirit.
I did not know Smallville in the Kansas was from the Donner universe, I thought that was from the comics, in the 50es. The big debate, I think, is that some people want Superman to be a US symbol. I do not give a **** if Smallville is in the Kansas or not. I think we should like the character through what he did to become Superman, not through what he did to embody US values. At the beginning the talk was about Smallville place and the growth of a man, it seems that people are getting fast excited if Smallville does not represent US might. I find this sad.
Both places are fine for me. But as a matter of fact, I like the idea of Smallville being in the north east, it always appeared odd to me that a guy from the a** of the world, lost in the small small village in the middle of the US would directly go to the big city and be Superman. I suppose it attracts the US readers who see a american way to succeed in life.
I think, with all due respect Kurosawa, that your way of thinking goes too far, I think what you see is beyond the character. I think your talk is about a general problem. People use the fictional characters according to the era they live in, so Superman went through a lot of different changes. I like Byrne version because it is the basis of the mythos.
From there, you can choose if Clark become more Superman, more Clark or more Kal El. I mean that your thinking may be far bigger than just Superman. You see what I mean?
I think one of the weakness of Superman today, is the lack of direction of the character, that, plus the Überbat everywhere. I think that Superman not "selling" so good, is partly due to what people expect from a super-man. Right now, I think batman embodies what people want from a super man. Not my taste anyway. Just in general. Positivity in not the fashion these days anyway.
I agree that golden age Superman had a lot of excellent concept, but I definitively defend the ideas, some at least, of John Byrne.
Anyway, I learn few things reading you and D.Tyler. I just find there are good things in what you both say. Oddly, I found your views are complementary.
 
The thing is, if something fell from the sky, ANYWHERE in New England, someone would notice it.

We get snowstorms in MAY, for god's sake. We can notice a giant metal piece of crap falling from the sky.

Kansas, however, is much better.
 
The thing is, if something fell from the sky, ANYWHERE in New England, someone would notice it.

We get snowstorms in MAY, for god's sake. We can notice a giant metal piece of crap falling from the sky.

Kansas, however, is much better.

To be honest I don't think a rocket ship could land anywhere now and get away with it :D
 
You could simply explain it as a cloaking device, it works all the time in science fiction. How else do you explain his ship not running into any hostility as it flew thru the costmos. Just show it cloaked as it enter our atmoshere then uncloak when it lands or crash lands. heck do you guys watch the new V show on ABC? Or Independence day? How do you explain those huge football field size ships coming out of space undetected?
 
You could simply explain it as a cloaking device, it works all the time in science fiction. How else do you explain his ship not running into any hostility as it flew thru the costmos. Just show it cloaked as it enter our atmoshere then uncloak when it lands or crash lands. heck do you guys watch the new V show on ABC? Or Independence day? How do you explain those huge football field size ships coming out of space undetected?

To be honest they wouldn't have to explain it for me wouldn't be too fussed was just saying that in real life it'd never get through undetected.
 
True. And New England is absolutely not a a type of 'Farmland' area. It's much more like Metropolis, but barely like Smalliville. It varies between endless buildings and mile, after mile, after mile of just trees. And trees. And more trees.

I would like to point out that that's a misinterpretation of New England. Many people think of NE as NYC, Jersey City, Hartford, Providence and Boston. People forget that New York alone is a huge state in which the city takes up a very small part. There is quite a bit of farming (mostly wine vineyards though), mountains, rivers, heck, 20 mins out of the city you would not believe you are still in NY. My friends and I go camping and rafting in the Catskill Mountains every summer. Don't believe TV, it's not endless city like some sci-fi movie, most of the state is actually still very much pristine.

There's a reason why Thomas Cole and so many other artists formed the Hudson River School based upon paintings of the natural beauty and rural areas of NY. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hudson_River_School
 
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So is anyone esle intriugued by the story bit that the Daily Planet would be struggling because of the internet. I think this could lead to some great Planet interaction and give the characters some zeal to break a story only the Planet writers could.

I'm really hoping we see some good investigastive skills from Lois and Clark.
 
So is anyone esle intriugued by the story bit that the Daily Planet would be struggling because of the internet. I think this could lead to some great Planet interaction and give the characters some zeal to break a story only the Planet writers could.

I'm really hoping we see some good investigastive skills from Lois and Clark.

Yeah thats interesting its obviously Superman is going to be the solution to the Dialy Planets problems.

Yeah would be good to see them do some good reporting. I hope they are like they are in STAS.
 
i thought smallville being placed in ks was something from the 50s/60s eras of the character. Where as the early 30s didnt really specifically place it in a state?
Believe it or not, in the early stories Superman grew up in an orphanage. I wonder how different the history of the character would have been in comics if they had stuck with that.
 
Believe it or not, in the early stories Superman grew up in an orphanage. I wonder how different the history of the character would have been in comics if they had stuck with that.

Yeah would have been strange wouldn't it then again it wouldn't have cause its whats we'd have been used to :D

I remember in the Fleischer cartoons he was taken to an orphanage aswell.
 
Believe it or not, in the early stories Superman grew up in an orphanage. I wonder how different the history of the character would have been in comics if they had stuck with that.
Getting rid of the orphanage aspect is another good change that was subsequently made. Did Siegel and Shuster make the change or someone else?
 
I'd like to know that aswell, I think they might have give him parents but they were Jonathan and Martha until much later.
 
Getting rid of the orphanage aspect is another good change that was subsequently made. Did Siegel and Shuster make the change or someone else?

I don´t know that for sure. I know that in their early stories Supes was more of a social crusader than fighting supervillains and so on.
 
Well.....one thing they better NOT change in Superman's origin/mythos is that he was raised in Smallville, Kansas.

For one, I'm from Kansas. So, I take great pride in the fact that the world's most iconic superhero is "from" Kansas. That's one of the main reasons why Superman is my favorite superhero.

Plus, being raised by the Kents on a small farm in Kansas instills the old-fashioned, down-to-earth "Midwest values" that shapes who Clark/Superman is.

Smallville, KS is an integral part of Superman's mythos AND character. Just read the graphic novel "For All Seasons" ( a story I hope they draw inspiration from ).
 
Yeah For All Seasons is great, I'd hope they will draw some inspiration from it.
 
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