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#781 | |
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The Man
Location: Defying Gravity
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Re: DC's New 52: Reviews and Discussion (Spoilers welcolme and likely)
You know, one thing that building her emergence around a battle scene accomplishes for the character is that she's motivated to discover immediately what her new abilities are. I have to admit that I was paying a lot more attention to her internal monologue than to the details of the fight. And having this as her first experience on Earth is likely to bias her quite a bit. I'm also curious about her father, and hope that her memories of him have some ongoing relevance to her character and that he was a character in the fullest sense. Her parents in previous versions are pretty much standard-issue Krytonian futuroids, aren't they? I mean, back when I was paying attention (I admit again, it was a while ago) the main way you could tell one Authoritative Kryptonian Male Scientist from another was by the symbol the artist drew on their shirts and whatever the colorist did with their hair. Evidently succession to leadership on the Science Council or whatever is based on a pattern-baldness-and-beard-growing competition that's only open to men of seventy years or older.
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I had steak and a loaded baked potato for dinner on Sunday. As a steak I enjoyed it a lot, but as macaroni and cheese I thought it was disappointing. |
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#782 | |
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Rear Admiral
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Re: DC's New 52: Reviews and Discussion (Spoilers welcolme and likely)
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#783 |
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Rear Admiral
Location: America after the rain
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Re: DC's New 52: Reviews and Discussion (Spoilers welcolme and likely)
![]() It depends on the continuity for Zor-El. His earliest appearances had him as a "scientist," like his bro, which of course at the time meant "capable of doing any damn thing the plot required, and lots of stuff that it didn't." I think in the newer stuff he was an artist. Which I thought was a cool idea, in that it was a counterpoint to Jor-El being a scientist, although 1)they put him in the ugliest super-person related costume ever (including, including, 90s Superboy and Electric Superman which I actually liked but anyway) and 2)the stories involving him were fucked up beyond all recognition. Oh, until he came back. Then he was fine. Then he died again when Reactron or possibly Metallo shot him while making jokes about raping Supergirl. Hey, that's something else good about this: none of the antagonists suggest raping Kara! One of them does call her "honey" which is dismissive and sort of a weird thing to say, and would ring truer from 11Bs than the hardened killdozers these men (and maybe also women) must be to be entrusted with highly advanced Roman numeral suits, but at least they don't talk about having sex with her beaten-unconscious body, which happened a lot back in the old universe because where would a a mid-oughties superhero comic be without implied or actual rape? Nowhere, that's where. Oh, and the painted nails are still bothering me. That's lazy. Kryptonians wear gloves anyway. John Byrne said so. Anyway, my guess is that Zor-El's still an artist, one that deals in the creation of virtual reality experiences. This is a fine idea. I know, because when I was brainstorming "How would I reboot Supergirl?" that's what I came up with. Except my version had more talking. Lots and lots more talking because that's what makes superhero comics great; the talking. Also, Brainiac. Brainiac makes superhero comics great, so he'd be there and very square. |
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#784 |
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The Man
Location: Defying Gravity
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Re: DC's New 52: Reviews and Discussion (Spoilers welcolme and likely)
What Kara needs next is to meet up with Willow and Giles and Cordelia. Xander is optional; he annoyed me. ![]() It is rather specific, but of course just about everything that distinguishes women from men in the way we present ourselves is a matter of culture and there's no reason that any of it should be replicated even on a world where the folks look completely human. Kara wears her hair long; Kara wears a skirt; Kara colors her nails. It's all just conventionalization to make the character attractively "feminine" to the average reader, in the same way that Superman is big and ripped despite not having been physically challenged by gravity since he was a kid.
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I had steak and a loaded baked potato for dinner on Sunday. As a steak I enjoyed it a lot, but as macaroni and cheese I thought it was disappointing. |
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#785 | |
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Rear Admiral
Location: America after the rain
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Re: DC's New 52: Reviews and Discussion (Spoilers welcolme and likely)
One of the things I'm curious about is that the Mikes said Supergirl would have a supporting cast. I sort of think that's a mistake, but nothing to be done about it; you need people for the talking. The problem here is that--and I'll have to read it to know for sure--Clark doesn't seem to have a supporting cast. So the obvious support structure for his cousin is entirely missing. I guess Lana Lang could be in it, but that always struck me as sort of odd--"Hey, girl I fooled around with in high school, how would you like to be a mother/older sister figure to my weird alien cousin?"
'Course, I find it bizarre as hell in Star Trek too. It's just off-putting to me. Women still look different (and attractive women still look attractive, if that's important) without makeup. It's pandering, I guess. Fun fact: Evey Hammond didn't wear makeup for the largest part of V For Vendetta. It's considered a seminal work, and has sold jillions of copies. Just saying. ETA: It also helps that I'm probably permanently stuck in a Byrne Krypton mindset, where no one fucks, and thus has no use for sexualizing themselves (but who knows? those overcomplicated headdresses might be like clear plastic heels on Krypton). An affirmatively asexual protagonist? Well, I find the concept interesting. Last edited by Myasishchev; September 22 2011 at 03:19 PM. |
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#786 | |
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Rear Admiral
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Re: DC's New 52: Reviews and Discussion (Spoilers welcolme and likely)
Supporting characters: "Please we don't live in cages!" Supergirl: "what sort of owner would I be if I let you monkeys wander around uncared for?" Or maybe an issue where Superman had to explain to a baffled Supergirl why eating human flesh is prohibited. Sadly I doubt they will go that way.... |
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#787 | ||
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Rear Admiral
Location: America after the rain
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Re: DC's New 52: Reviews and Discussion (Spoilers welcolme and likely)
Supergirl: Fucks up the World would be a fun comic. Limited potential, but I'd buy it. P.S.: upon review even Byrne drew Lara with lipstick (tasteful, not too flashy, but still). |
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#788 | |
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The Man
Location: Defying Gravity
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Re: DC's New 52: Reviews and Discussion (Spoilers welcolme and likely)
"Pandering" is one way to look at it, but of course the presentation of people in just about all popular art is pandering to the wish-fulfillment fantasies of the audience. The heroes and villains of superhero comics in particular have no more direct relationship to what we might expect such creatures to be like "in reality" than characters in pornographic fiction do to human beings. Tight inter-title character continuity is probably a lot to ask here, given how this relaunch is being handled, but when I saw Supes hovering over Supergirl there, speaking Kryptonian it struck me that he's looking at a mirror image of himself from the era that Morrison's depicting right now in Action - and that's only five or six years in his past. Supergirl is impulsive and undisciplined, discovering what she can do, and is real unlikely to immediately see the point of any human institutions or customs that don't satisfy her personal prejudices. The difference is that he at least had the understanding of his surroundings and identification with us that comes with growing up here, and she doesn't. I'd love to see Superman's interaction with her reflect his eventual awareness of what he's gone through and where she's at. Superboy, now that I think of it, is sort of the third angle in this triangle - he knows no other creatures than human beings (and is seeing us at our most unpleasantly manipulative and amoral if not our absolute worst), has grown up nowhere (and N.O.W.H.E.R.E., interestingly enough) because attempts to trick him with a virtual reality life as Kara (presumably, at this point) was have been failures, and he so far seems to lack a native capacity for empathy at all.
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I had steak and a loaded baked potato for dinner on Sunday. As a steak I enjoyed it a lot, but as macaroni and cheese I thought it was disappointing. Last edited by Admiral Buzzkill; September 22 2011 at 03:56 PM. |
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#789 |
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Vice Admiral
Location: Sac, Ca
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Re: DC's New 52: Reviews and Discussion (Spoilers welcolme and likely)
And of course the art was just fantastic. Wasn't sure about the costume at first, but now that I've seen it in action it totally works. It's girly, but unlike the last one doesn't make her look like some bimbo cheerleader. lol Batman I liked. Wonder Woman seemed promising, but it's too early to get a good read on. SHE seems fairly interesting and badass, but all that crap with the gods and amazonians never interested me before, and this looks like it'll probably go down that same road. |
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#790 |
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The Man
Location: Defying Gravity
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Re: DC's New 52: Reviews and Discussion (Spoilers welcolme and likely)
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I had steak and a loaded baked potato for dinner on Sunday. As a steak I enjoyed it a lot, but as macaroni and cheese I thought it was disappointing. |
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#791 |
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Rear Admiral
Location: Dar70
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Re: DC's New 52: Reviews and Discussion (Spoilers welcolme and likely)
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"I've got a fever, and the only prescription is more cowbell." RIP, Red Ranger |
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#792 | |
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Admiral
Location: House of Kang, now with ridges
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Re: DC's New 52: Reviews and Discussion (Spoilers welcolme and likely)
Even the books that are moving forward with out any obvious "rebooting" are free to ignore what they want of the past. Its not that hard not to mention "Big Event X" or Issue #xxx ever again.
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Nerys Myk's Midnight In Never Land A novel of Dark Fantasy @ Amazon.com |
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#793 |
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The Man
Location: Defying Gravity
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Re: DC's New 52: Reviews and Discussion (Spoilers welcolme and likely)
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I had steak and a loaded baked potato for dinner on Sunday. As a steak I enjoyed it a lot, but as macaroni and cheese I thought it was disappointing. |
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#794 |
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Fleet Admiral
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Re: DC's New 52: Reviews and Discussion (Spoilers welcolme and likely)
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Admiral Young Chief of Operations Ignoring the The Last Stand since 2011. |
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#795 |
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Rear Admiral
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Re: DC's New 52: Reviews and Discussion (Spoilers welcolme and likely)
The Andy Diggle Adam Strange story was the best reboot of the character since the horrible Kubert stuff. |
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