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- Newsgroups: alt.callahans
- Path: sparky!uunet!cis.ohio-state.edu!pacific.mps.ohio-state.edu!linac!uchinews!quads!mss2
- From: mss2@quads.uchicago.edu (Michael S. Schiffer)
- Subject: Re: superman
- Message-ID: <1992Nov20.165743.6530@midway.uchicago.edu>
- Sender: news@uchinews.uchicago.edu (News System)
- Reply-To: mss2@midway.uchicago.edu
- Organization: University of Chicago Computing Organizations
- References: <By0JyL.7vE@news.cso.uiuc.edu>
- Date: Fri, 20 Nov 1992 16:57:43 GMT
- Lines: 81
-
- In article <By0JyL.7vE@news.cso.uiuc.edu> trumpins@alexia.lis.uiuc.edu (Barbara Trumpinski) writes:
-
- >"NOBODY has mentioned a very important death which occurred earlier
- >this week...superman has met his match...he died in lois's arms.
-
- >rest in peace, superman...
-
- >you gave me many hours of joy when i was younger."
-
- ><crash> her glass hits the fireplace.
-
- "Um, Kitten... I don't think you need say your final goodbyes
- to Kal-El of Krypton just yet. Yes, DC Comics has pulled off a fairly
- impressive publicity coup, but I this being comic books I suspect
- (read `am certain') that his death ain't in no ways permanent. Rumor
- hath it he'll be up and about in six months. Even if that's just
- rumor, if he isn't alive and kicking within the year I'll eat my
- fedora and have my walking stick for dessert. :-) (DC Comics may not
- be the brightest company in the world, but I suspect that the chances
- that they'll permanently kill off a marketing property literally worth
- millions to them are, well, slim.)
-
- "As a comics reader, I'm rather disgruntled at DC Comics for
- the whole Superman thing-- if you're _going_ to kill off Superman, you
- do it with some _style_ for goodness sake. You _don't_ just have him
- beaten to death in the course of stopping some big, strong guy who no
- one's ever seen before. You have him die fighting Lex Luthor, or
- someone of equal stature and/or saving something that's critical to
- him: the universe, the Earth, Lois... He's killed either by a real
- overwhelming force or by a reasonably clever plan-- _not_ by someone
- who's just somewhat bigger and stronger than he is.
-
- "And if anyone wants to see the end of Superman done well, I
- recommend saving the money which would have gone to this Doomsday
- thing and digging out the storyline called "Whatever Happened to the
- Man of Tomorrow" by Alan Moore, published in 1985 (Superman #423 and
- Action Comics #583). I'll quote from the opening:
-
- "`This is an imaginary story (which may never happen, but
- then again may) about a perfect man who came from the sky and did only
- good. It tells of his twilight, when the great battles were over and
- the great miracles long since performed; of how his enemies conspired
- against him and of that final war in the snowblind wastes beneath the
- Northern Lights; of the women he loved and of the choice he made
- between them; of how he broke his most sacred oath, and how finally
- all the things he had were taken from him save for one. It ends with
- a wink. It begins in a quiet midwestern town, one summer afternoon in
- the quiet midwestern future. Away in the big city, people still
- sometimes glance up hopefully from the sidewalks, glimpsing a distant
- speck in the sky... but no: it's only a bird, only a plane. Superman
- died ten years ago. This is an imaginary story...
-
- "`Aren't they all?'"
-
- Michael puts down the comic. "Right after they published
- that, they reworked Superman significantly, at least from the
- perspective of someone who reads these things. As a result, after
- some attempt to like their `new' Superman, I realized that the
- prologue to `Whatever Happened to the Man of Tomorrow' was correct--
- Superman died there after all. The death of his replacement might
- have affected me if it had been well done. And I'm a sucker for these
- sorts of stories. I have the comics in which Supergirl was killed
- back in '85 (and she actually didn't get better, but was written out
- of the history and later replaced with a character who had
- significantly different powers and origin), and in which Superboy was
- killed in '87 (turned out, as part of the rewriting mentioned earlier,
- he wasn't Superman as a boy after all, and he died saving his parallel
- universe's Earth) and I can still actually get choked up reading
- either of them. It's costumed heroes and melodrama, but the writers
- are able to make me care about these people. But they couldn't
- conjure up anything of the sort this time-- I suspect, in the end,
- that that's why I'm disappointed in them."
-
- Michael
-
-
- --
- Michael S. Schiffer, LHN, FCS "Indeed I tremble for my country
- mss2@midway.uchicago.edu when I reflect that God is just."
- mike.schiffer@um.cc.umich.edu -- Thomas Jefferson, Notes on
- mschiffer@aal.itd.umich.edu Virginia (1784)
-