Mister Mxyzptlk is out witted?
a being who can see through time?
Two possibilities.
1. The imp is a twit.
2. Superman is his dog, and he gets bored of playing with his dog after half an hour.
A bit of both, I'd say.
Mister Mxyzptlk is out witted?
a being who can see through time?
Two possibilities.
1. The imp is a twit.
2. Superman is his dog, and he gets bored of playing with his dog after half an hour.
A bit of both, I'd say.
I agree. For me, Superman should be like, "The last thing I want to do is kill you...but it's still on the list."think should encourage our heroes to kill less often, to show that there are other ways to resolve situations than just killing people.
I honestly find it horrifying that there are actually people on here who want Superman to kill more often.
When we're talking about a character as powerful as Superman there are going to be very, very, very few situations where he is in true mortal danger, and then when you add on the amount of different powers he has, then that takes down the chances of him being in a situation where killing is absolutely necessary, down to pretty much zero.
That was what pissed me off so much about him killing Zod at the end of Man of Steel, there were a ton of other ways he could have resolved the situations that didn't involve killing Zod
You might as well say the same for every comic book character in existence. What is this need to specifically place Superman in some kind of character straight jacket?
I don't think she's powerful enough to kill any of those, with the possible exception of an unarmored or unaware Stark.
There will come a time when someone--or thing will not give a character like Superman the option to do anything other than kill him/it.
You can have him not kill, and still not take him to the extreme you're talking about.Superman as a character was not created to be Mickey Mouse, Porky Pig, Goofy, or Felix the Cat. I find the psychological gymnastics some perform in denying how Superman was created, the message of his behavior and sold to millions of eager readers at his start. He was never intended to be Daddy/Santa. He was never intended to be that den leader character from the Super Friends, either. So, to claim one is "horrified" by the real argument---that Superman killed when necessary, and how 1960s readers were ultimately fed up / rejecting the Daddy/Santa version, in favor of one more in line with the rest of his evolving published universe toward the end of the Silver Age--is again, performing psychological gymnastics.
Yes it is handcuffing the creative avenues, but by doing that it forces the creators to come up with more interesting solutions than just killing his enemies. The biggest problem is that even if you try to limit it to him killing "only when necessary" is that once you start that, you end up on a slippery slope, and before you know every arc will end with the creator coming up with a situation where it's necessary.Translated, that's handcuffing the creative avenues for a character. There will come a time when someone--or thing will not give a character like Superman the option to do anything other than kill him/it. No one here has made the argument that he's the Punisher and he must slaughter all enemies, but he's not Richie Rich, either, and--in consideration of the DC comic universe which formed out of the late 1960s--killing when necessary was not some forbidden idea handed down by anyone, as it reflected the realities of the readers' world and expectations of a maturing genre.
Well I think the biggest reason people aren't as bothered by Cap killing, is that he's basically a soldier, and soldiers kill. And then there's the fact that he's a lot more limited in his options, since he's basically just a slightly enhanced normal human, without Superman's invulnerability and with a lot less powers.This is one of the reasons I find it quite self-defeating for anyone to say Captain America (comics or MCU) is a "better" Superman, when the printed and filmed Cap has a jaw-dropping body count from conflicts where he realized certain enemies had to be killed. Well, if that's the "better" Superman, then few should take no issue with comic or say, the DCEU's Superman snapping Zod's neck. One being, not some "litter the streets with the corpses of my enemies" lie often suggested by the Daddy/Santa advocates.
He could have covered his eyes, he could have used his superspeed to block them, or he could have brought that part of roof down on Zod.No, there was not, otherwise the above statement would have listed those "ton of other ways" he could have resolved a situation where Superman was struggling to stop Zod, who was seconds away from incinerating innocent people. Superman did what was necessary, and was not getting his kicks from it either, if anyone actually watched and understood the scene.
The problem with trying to take the character back to what he was like in 1938, is that it's not 1938 now, and world, the character, and the way we tell stories has changed a lot in the last 84 years. I'd hate to see any character be forced to be the exact same character they were that long ago, and not be allowed to change with the times.Some need him to be "ho-ho-ho-ing" not as habit, but as the core of his being, otherwise its some shattering experience for a character who did not start off that way.
A few years ago, Brian Bendis made a big splash by having Superman reveal his secret identity to the public. Upcoming Action Comics #1050 will reverse this.
He could have covered his eyes, he could have used his superspeed to block them, or he could have brought that part of roof down on Zod.
In the end, all we are left with is the option to like or dislike (to whatever degree of intensity one wishes) any work of art--commercial, non-commercial, film, music, sculpture, painting, literature, etc. We can debate the merits of artistic choices made by people in any of the arts. But what we cannot do, at least not with any degree of fairness, is a priori dismiss a particular storytelling choice by declaring "rules" about The Way Things Ought To Be (patent pending). Let the storyteller/artist present the work and pass judgement AFTER it is out for public consumption.
I'm gonna assume you're talking about the movies.
Black Widow was only on the team to kill her team mates (Stark, Hulk and Thor.) when they spun out of control and tried to rule the world.
Hemlut is concerned about a Eugenics War that will destroy the planet, or worse a genocide where only one side of the war has super soldiers, and the aftermath where an authoritarian takes his castle away. A nonreplicatable prototype boyscout is a tomorrow problem. A factory that can churn out a thousand super soldiers a day is a right now problem. I'm going on a limb and say that Zemo is anti Nazi because he saw what a bag of dicks who thought they were the master race did when then only thought they were chosen by God and perfect.
Although IRL the British and the Germans did both create supersoldiers using meth.
Stay awake for 5 days, fearless, can't feel pain, twice as strong as they should be, and intensely loyal to whosoever is handing out the meth.
All I can say is I agree. Expectations are fine and good and wonderful. They are not the only way something can be done.Yep. I've long maintained that the biggest problems with fandoms in general is people take a prescriptive approach to the work. They have an expectation of how it's "supposed" to be and judge it by how much it matches those expectations, instead of treating the work on its own terms. I've heard some people rebut this with "But if I ordered a burger and I get a salad, it doesn't matter how good the salad is. It's not what I ordered!" Me, I think comparing a food order (something custom-made for you) to a film or book (made for a mass audience) speaks of entitlement. Unless you commissioned the work with your own money, it's not your friggin' burger.
A Superman story can be light, dark, all-ages, adult, whatever. The only thing it *needs* to be is good. That said, of course it's fine and normal to express one's preference and why. You prefer a Superman who kills? Cool. You insist a Superman who kills is the only way to do a successful modern take on the character and anything else couldn't work? Get over yourself.
it.Yes it is handcuffing the creative avenues, but by doing that it forces the creators to come up with more interesting solutions than just killing his enemies.
The biggest problem is that even if you try to limit it to him killing "only when necessary" is that once you start that, you end up on a slippery slope, and before you know every arc will end with the creator coming up with a situation where it's necessary.
Well I think the biggest reason people aren't as bothered by Cap killing, is that he's basically a soldier, and soldiers kill. And then there's the fact that he's a lot more limited in his options, since he's basically just a slightly enhanced normal human, without Superman's invulnerability and with a lot less powers.
He could have covered his eyes, he could have used his superspeed to block them, or he could have brought that part of roof down on Zod.
The problem with trying to take the character back to what he was like in 1938, is that it's not 1938 now, and world, the character, and the way we tell stories has changed a lot in the last 84 years.
I'd hate to see any character be forced to be the exact same character they were that long ago, and not be allowed to change with the times.
I hope it involves flying really fast around the earth.A few years ago, Brian Bendis made a big splash by having Superman reveal his secret identity to the public. Upcoming Action Comics #1050 will reverse this.
Works for Black Adam.It will involve magic. Because, a wizard did it is fun.
Pretending there are situations where a villain had to be killed do not exist is handcuffing the creative avenues, for no other reason than to revert the character back to that infantile Daddy/Santa period, which is not in line with the way comics and audiences have evolved over the decades. No one is going to accept a superhero who conveniently finds himself only in situations where he can simply pluck an equally convenient easy-to-defeat villain out of the air and drop him off in The City Jail. That kind of villain and conflict gives no feeling of risk or danger not only to regular humans, but in the grand scheme of things, no threat to the hero, either. In other words, it is an episode of the Super Friends.
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