Okay, fine then. Last Son, Legion, and Brainiac are still vastly superior to All-Star Superman, based not on issues of continuity, but rather, these: 1-superior art that doesn't feature often ugly faces and odd proportions 2-writing that isn't attempting to be "hip" or "cutting edge" by using "high-concepts" that will "elevate" the material "above the comic book medium" 3-writing that is strong, character-driven, and respectful of the legacy of Superman himself, not one version from one time period, but instead, the unities of the character himself. 4-a writer who has stated in interviews that he doesn't seek to make Superman "cool," but rather, to showcase what is cool about Superman. 5-art that has already been compared to the master, Curt Swan^^I don't get the idea that a story has less blah blah etc.
^ But then that brings up another point. Would Superman do things by a devious nature? I would argue that he wouldn't.
Uhh, he pretends to be a bespectacled human named Clark Kent. He conceals his true identity and lies to his friends and colleagues about his frequent disappearances. That's devious by definition. We know that Superman is not above using secretive methods for benevolent purposes. I'm not proposing that he'd break the law or hurt anyone, just that he'd use his wits to accumulate actionable evidence against a criminal. Secrecy isn't automatically corruption. It's more like strategy. Luthor plays a complex game to conceal his criminal actions, so it's a matter of Superman using his own strategy to cancel out Luthor's.
^ But then that brings up another point. Would Superman do things by a devious nature? I would argue that he wouldn't.
Uhh, he pretends to be a bespectacled human named Clark Kent. He conceals his true identity and lies to his friends and colleagues about his frequent disappearances. That's devious by definition. We know that Superman is not above using secretive methods for benevolent purposes. I'm not proposing that he'd break the law or hurt anyone, just that he'd use his wits to accumulate actionable evidence against a criminal. Secrecy isn't automatically corruption. It's more like strategy. Luthor plays a complex game to conceal his criminal actions, so it's a matter of Superman using his own strategy to cancel out Luthor's.
As to whether Clark or Superman is the "real" identity, that depends on who's writing him and what era we're discussing. I don't see it as a matter to debate about, since there's no real answer; both have been true in different iterations of the character.
No, he just takes the Obi-Wan stance, "What he said is true, from a certain point of view."Anyway, the point is the same either way: either he pretends to be someone he's not, or he pretends not to be someone he is. It's still artifice. And it's still deception when he makes an excuse to Lois about where he disappeared to, or when Superman says "Clark's fine, I caught him after he fell out the window."
As to whether Clark or Superman is the "real" identity, that depends on who's writing him and what era we're discussing. I don't see it as a matter to debate about, since there's no real answer; both have been true in different iterations of the character. Though I think that either way, the public persona of Clark Kent and the public persona of Superman are both going to be different from the true personality of the man born as Kal-El. Even if he does think of himself as Clark, his identity would still be shaped by the knowledge of his powers and his alien origin, and that means he's not going to be the exact same person as the purely mortal Clark Kent he pretends to be. And even if he does think of himself as Kal-El first and foremost, the public persona of Superman is still going to require a certain degree of artifice and won't be exactly the same person he is when he lets his guard down and is just Kal-El. But then, that's true of everyone to some extent. (I don't think for a minute that he'd ever actually think of himself as "Superman." That's way too self-aggrandizing.)
But, hey, it's much better than All Star Batman.
But, hey, it's much better than All Star Batman.
What isn't?
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