Superman's origin depending on a Green Lantern is a little problematic.
Actually there's a 1972 comics story that ties Tomar-Re into the Superman origin story, by having him
fail to prevent Krypton's destruction. You can read the whole story here:
http://superman.nu/tales2/greatestGL/
The two things I like best: the story treats GLC membership as a tour of duty, instead of a lifetime of service that only ends when Sinestro or Hal Jordan finally succeeds in killing you; and neat art! (My favorite panels are either Tomar-Re with blindness lines radiating out of his eyes, or the loving, almost fatherly look Dillin gave Brainiac 1 as he watches over Kandor, which is a weird but nice touch.)
The two things I like the least: its uncritical embrace of eugenics, evidently based on a complete lack of understanding of how sexual reproduction works; and Lara's portrayal as the worst parent in comics history, at least until David Cain showed up.
And really, it makes sense. The Green Lanterns patrol the universe and protect its inhabitants from danger, so it's reasonable to ask the question, why didn't they save Krypton?
Yeah, it does make sense, and it is cool to answer the question "where was the Corps?", but my only point was having Superman
specifically depend on a Green Lantern is weird.
Like, I think it's a real misstep to have either a Lantern or the Guardians shepherd Kal-El to Earth, which was what that story proposes and
Mistral's idea essentially demands.
Even ignoring the crossing-the-streams argument, it makes Tomar-Re, or in the Maggin story's case the Guardians, seem to be jerks. Who finds an infant whose parents and planet have been destroyed, and throws him at random strangers on some other planet? Why would Tomar-Re not take him to people he knows and trusts, perhaps on the planet of the Bipedal Beaked Lizard People? Hell, you can make a better argument for taking him to
Brainiac--at least then he could be with his own species--than sending him to Earth.
Of course, what's most interesting about the Maggin story, though, is that it raises the question of why Clark Kent didn't get Abin Sur's ring instead of Hal Jordan, and then fails to answer it.
Captaindemotion said:
Well, there is a Kru-El.
