That's actually a brilliant analogy. I can't believe I never really thought of that.Of course, he's interesting enough... He's the Torchbearer.
Kyle is kind of like the Luke Skywalker to Hal's Anakin/Vader.
Whether you like him or not, he's HUGELY important to GL mythology. I'm not saying he should be in the first few movies, but if he's not in the series AT ALL, then it's not really Green Lantern, is it?
It's just... I dunno, "The Hal Jordan's awesome" series.
That's actually a brilliant analogy. I can't believe I never really thought of that.
That's actually a brilliant analogy. I can't believe I never really thought of that.
The ring defeated by pee.
I want a combination of Blade Runner and Fifth Element.
I'm open to anything as long as Green Lantern doesn't have a weakness to the color yellow. And maybe lose that oath too. It's a bit post officy.
well, Hal Jordan is currently the Green Lantern.
Have you read anything from Geoff John's run? It seems like you're pulling arcs from years past. I mean, nothing against what you said, but sometimes when I hear things like this, and if I'm guessing right, it's all from hardcore purists. But I'm also sure when Frank Miller (or O' Neil) changed Batman back to his darker detective roots, I'm sure people complained back then too.
The problem with the "hardcore purists" who hate Hal Jordan is, there's just no way to make them happy. If Hal is portrayed in fearless, cocky, carefree Silver Age style, he's a bland, obnoxious Mary-Sue. If writers try and add more nuance to him, make him have more doubts or anger issues, then he's an emo whiner. They complain when he plays too much of a central, pivotal role in Green Lantern, or now Blackest Night, as if the main character being of crucial importance to a story is somehow an unconventional narrative ploy. Someone actually said "He's like the Norman Osborn of DC, being shoved down our throat everywhere", when at that point he was literally appearing in only 1 book a month. He gets singled out as "the boring guy", when he acts exactly like a whole other bunch of superheroes who somehow have way more fanboy cred.
I may be making a sweeping generalisation here, and if I am I apologise, but it would seem that the big, unforgivable flaw of Hal Jordan in the eyes of these people, the flaw that informs everything else and will always work against him no matter how he is written.... is that he's not Kyle Rayner.
You hit the nail right on the head.
I do have to say that, while I don't understand the arguments against Hal, I do see it with Barry Allen (though I've accepted his character). Wally as The Flash has been beloved by many, so I can see why people are very protective of that character.
When people bring up Kyle as the Green Lantern, my problem is this: He came in to be the 'new modern' Green Lantern. He's not a bad character but he came in a bad situation where's the only Green Lantern out there and the Corps was gone. Because of that, it takes away a lot from the mythos when he was the MAIN Green Lantern.
Maybe if they brought the Corps back, along with Sinestro, and kept Kyle, it COULD work but I can't shake the feeling that Kyle was a little lightweight. To me, he never achieved the success of Wally West.
Have you read anything from Geoff John's run? It seems like you're pulling arcs from years past. I mean, nothing against what you said, but sometimes when I hear things like this, and if I'm guessing right, it's all from hardcore purists. But I'm also sure when Frank Miller (or O' Neil) changed Batman back to his darker detective roots, I'm sure people complained back then too.
The problem with the "hardcore purists" who hate Hal Jordan is, there's just no way to make them happy. If Hal is portrayed in fearless, cocky, carefree Silver Age style, he's a bland, obnoxious Mary-Sue. If writers try and add more nuance to him, make him have more doubts or anger issues, then he's an emo whiner. They complain when he plays too much of a central, pivotal role in Green Lantern, or now Blackest Night, as if the main character being of crucial importance to a story is somehow an unconventional narrative ploy. Someone actually said "He's like the Norman Osborn of DC, being shoved down our throat everywhere", when at that point he was literally appearing in only 1 book a month. He gets singled out as "the boring guy", when he acts exactly like a whole other bunch of superheroes who somehow have way more fanboy cred.
I may be making a sweeping generalisation here, and if I am I apologise, but it would seem that the big, unforgivable flaw of Hal Jordan in the eyes of these people, the flaw that informs everything else and will always work against him no matter how he is written.... is that he's not Kyle Rayner.
When people bring up Kyle as the Green Lantern, my problem is this: He came in to be the 'new modern' Green Lantern. He's not a bad character but he came in a bad situation where's the only Green Lantern out there and the Corps was gone. Because of that, it takes away a lot from the mythos when he was the MAIN Green Lantern.
Maybe if they brought the Corps back, along with Sinestro, and kept Kyle, it COULD work but I can't shake the feeling that Kyle was a little lightweight. To me, he never achieved the success of Wally West.
I read Rebirth and hated it--thought the retcon with Parallax was very cheap. I'm currently reading all the Blackest Night stuff and now planning on getting the rest of the GL trades, and going to try very hard to read with a more open mind.
I would KILL for a more nuanced take on the character. Now that I think about it, New Frontier was pretty close in doing that, adding the traumas of seeing his father die in a failed stunt and having to kill a child soldier during the Korean War.
See, I think this is where you not reading comes in.
We're buds JRK (nice to see you back on the Hype, BTW - planning an RPG comeback?), so I know from our conversations that you refused to read any of GL Volume 4 out of principle, being so angry over the nature of Hal's resurrection. But in Volume 4, much character exploration is done revolving around his relationship with his father, and the impact his death had on Hal and his family.