Archive for the 'Superman' Tag

The K-Metal from Krypton

Wednesday, June 6th, 2007

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In 1940, Superman creators Siegel and Schuster came up with a story that would have changed Superman mythology and chronology - if its publishers had not banned it from publication. In The K-Metal From Krypton, much of the story elements that would take decades to slowly develop over many different books by many different authors, are already present. Superman learns that he is from another planet, Kryptonite is introduced some 10 years before it was used in the radio show and, most importantly, Lois Lane finds out that Superman and Clark Kent are one and the same. This possibly would have had consequences for the complete superhero genre.

The original story is currently being reconstructed by the wonderful people at Superman Through The Ages. It’s a collective work of an impressive size, with a whole legion of artists contributing. At the moment they are at page 15, with eleven more in the making.

Calling this story the most important story fo all time may be a bit hyperbolic. However, in a way it does embody the question that every adult comic fan asks himself now and then, namely what would have happened to comics if they had been allowed to mature into a full fledged medium, like film, instead of being stuck in a hero-vs-baddie rut, and branded an infantile medium. Alex Ross is quoted from Alter Ego, saying :

Only two years into the development of the character, this story would have ended the love triangle that has been considered fundamental to the Superman legend for 60 years.

This would have been a turning point in super-hero reality. It’s not only the simple idea that Superman shared his identity with Lois. It’s that Jerry Siegel was taking steps to evolve the archetypal super-hero story beyond the repetitive dramas created by this personal obstacle, which kept the characters’ relationship from maturing.

It certainly would have freed us from newspaper articles about “Zam-pooweeh, comics are not for kids anymore”…

40 Part 29 - Don’t vote Cliche

Tuesday, May 22nd, 2007

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These images are from a Flemish Government awareness campaign that was set up to coincide with one election or other (we have so many of them, it’s hard to keep count). The general idea is clear : don’t just vote for white men - other people may be just as qualified for the job. But the use of superheros made it stand out. For a while.

40 Part 14 - US Superhero Stamps

Monday, May 21st, 2007

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Used to be a time when you could find stamps with US comic characters from countries all over the world, except from the US themselves. Since 2005, the US Post Office is finally catching on. Brilliant move, although I think the choice of characters is a bit too much driven by marketing, and the art is not that representative. Personnaly, I would have had one artist doing all the portraits (Darwyn Cooke, or Alex Ross). Still, it beats licking the back of a president…

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40 Part 13 - Vintage Superman

Monday, May 21st, 2007

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Just compare these posters for episodes of 1940’s Superman movie serials. It would seem that trademark and styleguide enforcement was a new concept back then…

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Subliminal or just plain juvenile

Monday, May 14th, 2007

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Poster placement from 13gb.com.

(via Movie Marketing Madness)

Superheroes and Valentine’s day…

Saturday, January 20th, 2007

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Sometimes licencing just goes too far. As far as I know, Valentine’s Day is a celebration of romantic love (albeit a commercialised one). This, I fear, is not expressed by DC’s Batman and Superman Valentine’s Day Cards…

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Superhero Nursing Home

Thursday, January 18th, 2007

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This one was sent to me today, and I like it ! However, I haven’t got the faintest idea where it’s from. If you know, tell me !

!! Update !! Apparently, this is an artwork by the French artist Gilles Barbier, about whom Kim Levin writes in The Village Voice (july 28, 2003) :

“Or look left, at Gilles Barbier’s equally ambivalent and hilariously deadpan take on the American hero. In this French artist’s life-size tableau, Nursing Home, our beloved comic-book superheroes have been aged since the year of their tabloid births, as if fictional archetypes of invincibility were subject to mortality, too. The Incredible Hulk, flabby and in tatters, vegetates in a wheelchair. Catwoman dozes. Superman leans on a walker. Mr. Fantastic dangles his overstretched limbs. And Captain America lies comatose on a gurney, attended by a decrepit Wonder Woman. The TV plays, but the sound is pure golden oldies from the Platters. This piece isn’t subtle. But it’s deserved: An artist from “Old Europe” has succeeded in suggesting (tempus fugit, sic transit gloria mundi, gotcha!) that others may have a more sophisticated understanding of superpowerdom than we have ourselves.”

(Thanks, you-know-who)

Alex Ross on Smallville

Wednesday, January 17th, 2007

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Time for another repost from the Comics Ephemerist, the Yahoo group I’ve been involved in for a couple of years.

These are the four interconnecting covers that Alex Ross did for the issue of TV Guide that showcased the new Smallville show in 2001. Scans by Svlyn. Enjoy..