S
Stone_Cold_Sisko
Guest
Can anyone tell me what issues he wrote? and also if there's a trade of this stuff?
Millar's outlines his ideas for Superman previously with a proposed reboot of the comic-book series. For your approval or disapproval:
http://www.bluetights.net/theplanet/showpost.php?p=8918&postcount=1
There's a lot of things in there that I think Millar is way off the mark on. And based upon this and other comments his made over the years, I don't think that he has a good understanding of the Man of Steel nor does he get the nuanced complexities of the dual identity of Clark Kent and Superman.
Millar's outlines his ideas for Superman previously with a proposed reboot of the comic-book series. For your approval or disapproval:
http://www.bluetights.net/theplanet/showpost.php?p=8918&postcount=1
There's a lot of things in there that I think Millar is way off the mark on. And based upon this and other comments his made over the years, I don't think that he has a good understanding of the Man of Steel nor does he get the nuanced complexities of the dual identity of Clark Kent and Superman.
Well, it depends on what era's Clark and Superman you're talking about. What Millar's describing is essentially the return of the Silver/Bronze Age Superman, and particularly the return of Elliot S! Maggin's fascinating take on Superman in the '70s comics and the two utterly brilliant, long out-of-print Superman novels that Maggin wrote (both of which are online along with a couple of other Maggin prose stories here).
Byrne took a very different approach to Clark and Superman, one that's valid and interesting in its own way, but the Maggin version was quite intriguing as well and just as valid. Byrne was more interested in humanizing Superman, but Maggin embraced the idea of him as, essentially, a god among men and explored what that meant. Maybe that made him a little less accessible, but no less interesting in the right hands.
I've always thought that the relationship of Clark to Superman and Superman to Clark, over the years through all the various interpretations from Shuster and Siegal to Elloit S! Maggin to Byrne, is a much more nuanced and complicated relationship that I don't think can be just one or the other anymore in terms of Clark Kent being just a disguise. Something that I feel Geoff Johns is portraying well in his current comic-book run. And I think it's something that can be better explored in a new movie because the Donnor films already gave us the Maggin/Silver-Bronze age version. Going forward, I'd like to see a different take on the secret identity that takes into consideration the way that Clark-Superman relationship has changed and been altered over the years. Perhaps, something of what Mark Waid tried to do in Birthright. Better yet, what Morrison has done in All-Star Superman. As Pete Ross once quoted in a 1970s The Private Life of Clark Kent, "We must be careful what we pretend to be because some day we may wake up to find that's what we are."
Not familiar with All-Star, but I quite liked Birthright. I thought it did a good job of balancing elements from both Maggin-era and Byrne-era Superman. I might like to see something like that.
I guess I have mixed feelings about the idea of a Silver Age Superman in the movies. On the one hand, that would be too much like the Reeve movies and SR, and a reboot for the franchise should go in a different direction. On the other hand, we've had decades of the "Clark is real, Superman is a disguise" approach in Lois and Clark and Smallville -- the latter having taken it to an extreme that's become quite tiresome at this point. After seven or eight seasons of an angsty, self-absorbed farmboy Clark who shows no interest or proclivity for becoming the world's greatest hero, a story focusing on Superman as a benevolent godlike or Christlike figure might be a refreshing change of pace.
Oh, I agree completely. I am so done with Smallville Clark who is too self-centered to be the Man of Steel.
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