Kurosawa
Superhero
- Joined
- Jan 25, 2003
- Messages
- 9,485
- Reaction score
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- 31
They didn't lose him. They improved him. Pre-Crisis Clark was a personalityless schmuck who I couldn't care less about. Superman was the perfect God who had super strength and super speed and super intelligence and was the most handsome man on the planet. And you are telling me that a Clark Kent who acts competently at work and played football is more soul crushing than Superman being Mr. Perfect and only using his human connection to Earth as a klutzy disguise?
That Clark was already a god before he even got his powers. It would be like Donald Trump winning the lottery. There is nothing, NOTHING there that is sympathetic or vulnerable. I don't feel Clark needs to be a klutz (there you are projecting ignorant assumptions on a character you know next to nothing about), but he does need to be meek and he does need to be nerdy. Clark Kent is Woody Allen. When they eliminated his character (the Post-Crisis version is basically the same person in and out of costume), they destroyed Superman's dual identity and they also took Jerry Siegel out of the character.
Oh, and I love this part:
Yes, its not like I haven't actually gone back and read those pre-Crisis Golden and Silver age stories. Its not like I haven't given those stories their fair shake. And to be honest, I do enjoy the Superman who throws wife beaters through the wall. That was some fun stuff. But if you would ask me if I was invested in the characters? Not at all I would say. Superman was dull. Clark Kent was a block of wood. Lois Lane was *****y as all hell. Now things did get better in the Bronze age, but it wasn't until the Modern age that things really took off and these people got actual personalities that weren't one note. And no, DC did not tell me that. That came from my own personal reading and experience.
Well, you've made your decision and are pretty much opposed to anything else, and that is your right. To me it's a wrongheaded division, but suit yourself. All I can say is when Superman was written in a way that he was originally meant to be written, he was hugely popular. Since they stopped letting him be himself, he has become irrelevant.
I think your problem is that you just don't like the new stories and you are looking for some sinister purpose behind them, a reason why an entire generation of Superman fans sees the character differently than you do. I think its very simple. We grew up with post-Crisis Superman. It makes sense to us that Clark is the real person, that Superman is what he does. And I don't find the old stories dull because of the differences to modern Superman. I find them dull because they're just...dull. Its the exact problem I try to overcome when getting new people into Superman. They find him to be the invulnerable God who is the stupid Clark Kent in the glasses that everybody should see through. They think of super knitting and Beppo the Super Monkey and Turtle Boy and all the other numerous silly Superman stories of that era. And I can't make them forget that. But if things were so grand back then, why does that hold them back now? Why is everything you like about Superman what, in my experience, holds new people back from getting into the character?
People dislike Superman because he is now portrayed as incredibly naive and ignorant, the "Big Blue Boy Scout" depiction that mocks Superman's decency and compassion as ignorance. Leaving the Kents alive was another of Byrne's mistakes as it took away from Superman's vulnerability, plus it effectively kept Superman Superboy forever. It was another well-meant but wrongheaded idea. Byrne meant well and tried hard, but he had bought too much into Stan's anti-DC, anti-Superman stances and since he neither knew or cared to understand the Jewish-American experience of the 20th Century, he failed to feel any of the themes that made Superman so great.
I hate to say this, but it seems that there's no reason to even discuss this even further-you come off as a hopeless case as far as learning and understanding Superman is concerned. Anyone who thinks Silver Age Superman was nothing but Turtle Boy and Beppo is totally ignorant about Superman and comics history in general. I'll take the opinions and tastes of people like Neil Gaiman, Jules Feiffer, Alan Moore and Grant Morrison over the era which saw Superman move from being the greatest superhero of all time to being Batman's *****. I feel sorry for people who grew up with Superman in the time that he's been portrayed as a loser.
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