That two part Superboy story “The Road to Hell” that Ron Ely appeared in really stayed in my memory for years. Even when the series was not available anywhere.
That two part Superboy story “The Road to Hell” that Ron Ely appeared in really stayed in my memory for years. Even when the series was not available anywhere.
It’s interesting - Superman’s very popular Black suit was introduced when he was resurrected in 1993 at a time when the S symbol was not Kryptonian in the comics. But it has evolved to often representing Superman’s Kryptonian heritage and identity of Kal-El. Which obviously is different than his human identity of Clark Kent. But usually distinct from his Superman identity, which is the blue, red, and yellow suit which wears as Earth’s protector.
You are not even close. In John Byrne’s origin Clark was forced to use his powers in public to save a Space Plane crashing. He was wearing his normal civilian clothing. Lois Lane named him “mysterious superman”. To protect the secret of his powers Clark’s human parents helped him create a dual identity. At this point he started slouching and wearing glasses. The costume was first created and the S symbol was created by Clark and Jonathan inspired by the name Lois had given him.
John Byrne has been very vocal, well if you know him he is vocal about everything!!!, specifically that he avoided the Krypton of the Donner films. Even going to having having it’s environment dry and arid in its last days. As opposed to the ice and crystals of the movie.
Err no. It was Ma' Kent who designed the suit and the symbol.EDIT: But hold on, wasn't Byrne the guy who invented written Kryptonian--and in that a version of the S symbol means hope? Or am I misremembering that too?
Martha made the suit but it was Clark and Jonathan who designed the S.Err no. It was Ma' Kent who designed the suit and the symbol.
I think you're incorrect on that--it was Byrne that solidified its meaning as the Kryptonian symbol for hope, IIRC.
But hold on, wasn't Byrne the guy who invented written Kryptonian--and in that a version of the S symbol means hope? Or am I misremembering that too?
Right, I stand corrected.Martha made the suit but it was Clark and Jonathan who designed the S.
Considering in 'Superman & Lois" Clark's first Superman costume was based off the Fleischer cartoons, where the S appears to be more of an actual S, would it standing for the House of El, or even a Kryptonian symbol of hope still apply? Like many things with this series, they might be trying something different with the symbol as well.
No, as I said, it was Mark Waid in Birthright decades after that. In The Man of Steel, when Clark shows the S shield to Martha for the first time, he says, "It took a while, but Pa and I finally came up with this!" So clearly not a pre-existing symbol in Byrne's version.
Yes, you are. According to the DC Database:
- Kryptonese was developed by editor E. Nelson Bridwell, as a means of stumping fans who had annoyed him with attempts to make sense of the nonsense scribbles used in Superman stories to that point. What resulted was a 118 character "alphabet".[1] Since then, it was revamped again in 1986 for John Byrne's Man of Steel, and again in the 2000s as a syllabic "alphabet" which could be used in place of the language of publication, if deciphered. The film Man of Steel developed its own version of written Kryptonese as well.[2]
Ooh, good point. I was wondering if there was any precedent for Jor-El having another son, but if he's from another house, that would suggest something different. Anyone recognize the crest?
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