DrCosmic
Professor of Power
- Joined
- Jun 17, 2011
- Messages
- 8,743
- Reaction score
- 50
- Points
- 33
Take the S off his chest just for a second, take away the cape and the curl in the hair. Take away everything, even his powers. Start from there. Humanize him. He's Clark Kent, a guy who was raised on Earth by a farmer and his wife in Smallville. He's a regular dude. He works at the Daily Planet. He loves Lois Lane, he hates criminals and crime, he laughs with Jimmy Olsen, he cries when the people he loves are in pain, especially his family. He has an apartment in Metropolis and he normally pays his rent and other bills on time, but sometimes he's late and gets hit with the $50 late charge. He has to commute to work and sometimes the buses run a little behind, so he's late there too. He likes his boss, but Perry can get on his nerves sometimes. He dreams one day he will settle down and raise a family with 2 kids, a dog and a parakeet. He is just like us.
Don't make him anything outside of that. He's a wholly good guy, a guy just like you and me, with regular flaws and daily problems like everyone else.
I'm sorry my friend, but having powers invalidates the bolded statements. People suck. Like REALLY suck. Much of the rule following and good peopling we see is because of fear of consequences and met needs. Most people don't view themselves as wholly good, with regular problems, and they certainly don't view most other people as such. Give a regular guy powers and there's a slight chance you'll get a naive idealist that sees the good in people and really believes and holds on to that no matter the evidence to the contrary. But chances are, a person with the power to ensure that his loved ones aren't hurt, or that those that hurt them are made an example of will do so. A person who has the power to make endless money 100 different ways, and that's without hurting anyone... that person just doesn't have normal guy problems. The audience is that smart, that savvy, and yes, that cynical. I DO consider myself a naive idealist, but I promsie you, if I have superman's powers, I'm set for life by the end of the month. It's just too easy and too helpful not to do. There is no late for work with Superman's powers. There is no struggling to win over a girl.
Superman, from the ground up is not designed to be relatable the way Spider-Man is, as a normal everyday guy. His powers will constantly befuddle attempts to limit his ability to affect the world around him, to be where he wants to be when he wants to be there and to know everything that's happening for miles around, and virtually all of our everday problems come from having these limitations.
He's Super Man. Above, not on par with.
Superman is only tough to write if:
A) you're lazy
B) you're only here to *********e over 'Grim n' Gritty' books from the '90's
C) you really just don't like Superman
D) All of he above (Hi Mister Snyder!)
Superman's pretty much always tough to write well. Dozens of great writers have taken cracks at Superman, very few have come up with a All Star Superman, and most of those who have have done so by doing either his origin, or the end of his career/life. Superman is easy to write if you're killing him off, and that's the only time.
If you try to take the Captain America route by challenging the grey areas of his morality, you have to take a moral stance. You have to call something about our society wrong. Even if you like Superman, are super dilligent and don't want to be grim and gritty, you have to end something large to make a moral statement worthy of a superhero movie. For Cap it was SHIELD one time, then the Avengers the second time. If you run out of meaningful things to destroy, or simply haven't built one up yet, then your morality tale lacks bite, meaning and value. It's not laziness that prevents people from doing a Winter Soldier or Civil War with Superman, it's the lack of an established universe to break to underline whatever Superman's moral point is.
It's a perception that Superman is boring...and that comes in part because most heroes, in some fashion or another, were inspired by his core character elements (powers, the mission, the secret identity, etc), so now he himself seems somewhat generic in comparison.
This is huge. The fact that when people say that Superman is a generic superhero they are 100% historically correct is a huge point that has to be addressed, and embraced, if a good Superman story is going to happen.
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