Showing posts with label #superblogteamup. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #superblogteamup. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 17, 2022

Weird Comics History - Cable Eats a Bagel

 

Weird Comics History - Cable Eats a Bagel

Or... the de-Imagification of Nathan Dayspring Askani'son Summers

Should I start this piece by doing that sarky internet writer thing, by reminding you all that it's been thirty years since Image Comics launched? Ya know, to remind us all how dreadfully oooooooold we are? Nah, I won't put'cha through that...

Actually, rather than talk at all about the launch of Image Comics... which, I've already done... several times, and if I'm being completely honest -- I'm kinda "over" it, I want to discuss how the original "Image attitude" kinda fell out of the comics zeitgeist during the latter half of the decade, and in particular, the surprising "de-Imagification" of a character who I never thought I'd enjoy reading about.

If you're more interested in partying like it's 1992... well: pouches, advantageous, shoulder pads, no-feet. Cool? Cool.

For my bit, we're gonna hop to the other end of the decade. It's 1998, and I was newly back into the comics hobby after... a little while away. I've told this story before, though I'm not sure if I've ever actually written about it. Assuming I have (I do write and talk a lot), I'll spare you the deep dive and just share the quick 'n dirty of it. Basically, I found myself fed up with the gimmicks. I clearly had more sense at 15 than I do today, because back then I actually did walk away. For a bit. It was the week that X-Men (vol.2) #45 hit the shelves... and, as I did every month, I hobbled my way down to the comic shop with a couple'a bucks in my pocket to pick up my latest fix. Upon arrival, I was intensely annoyed that... rather than being a regular-sized/regular-covered $1.99 "X-Men Deluxe" issue... it was a $3.95 cardstock-n-foil gimmick cover issue -- one which I didn't have near enough repurposed lunch money to leave the store with! I asked the owner why this was a "special issue", as it wasn't a "divisible by 25" issue -- turns out, it was the 20th anniversary of Giant-Size... and, boy, it was like a veil was lifted.

I realized that, any given month... Marvel could decide to celebrate, ya know, anything -- and tart up and double the cost of our monthlies. See? I definitely had more sense back then. I put the ish back on the shelf -- proclaimed to anybody who'd listen that I was "done" with the hobby. I was leaving... and never coming back. The shop owner, Bob Nastasi of Amazing Comics in Sayville, New York assured me that I'd be back -- and that we always come back. Damned if he wasn't right.

A cross-country move, and the realization that I wasn't the most personable young fellow in the world, led me back to my comics comfort food. This move, ironically enough, almost resulted in me leaving my two longbox collection of comics behind! I thought I was done with 'em... and that phase in my life was over. I actually only took 'em with me as an afterthought... there just happened to be room on the truck!

This was mid-1997, and while I was enjoying revisiting the comics I had... ones I'd already read, seemingly dozens of times before already -- I wasn't quite prepared to venture into the wilds of my new stomping grounds in order to add to my collection. I still thought I was done. I figured that the industry would still be using the same gimmicks that ran me outta dodge in the first place... after all, it had only been a couple of years. This changed when I went to a nearby mall in order to apply for a job in every single store within it. There was a comic shop there... and, as I was already there to hand in an application... I decided to have a goo at the current offerings on the shelves. Picked up some X-Stuff... and, though it wasn't part of the "plan" -- I was back.

Not only was I back... but, I was completely back. Anyone who has the misfortune of knowing me, will know that I'm very much an "all or nothing" kinda idjit. If I'm in for one X-Book... then, dammit, I'm in for them all. Especially considering, this was around the time I became more active on USENET. When I first saw things like Paul O'Brien's X-Axis -- and sites like X-Fan being linked to. In seeing Paul's work, impressionable goof that I was, I found myself inspired... and decided that I wanted to do what he did. I wanted to share my thoughts on comics... though, likely in a far less enlightened and intelligent sort of way. Then as now, I wanted to be viewed as someone who had something worthwhile to say about the things I was passionate about. In order to do that (which, I never actually did -- even though I'm sure I was a far better writer back in the long ago than I am now), I'd definitely have to buy 'em all!

Now, the one book out of the entire X-Family of books circa 1997 that I was absolutely dreading having to buy, read, and think up clever things to say about was... Cable. In retrospect, that's saying something... since X-Men Unlimited, Howard Mackie's X-Factor, and Larry Hama's "pookafied" Generation X were still very much things. Cable to me was a relic, even in ye old 1997. He was the embodiment (or harbinger of) the Image Comics archetype. Big guns, shadowy past, constantly gritted teeth, nonsense "tough guy" talk, the whole thing. I held off on "committing" to Cable for as long as I could... mostly because, when I came back, his book was in the middle of a (then-rare) six-issue story arc, which I had no interest in jumping in on during its third or fourth chapter. At least that's what I told myself... I didn't seem to have any problem starting in the middle-issues of some of the other X-Books.

Cable, and by extension Image Comics, was emblematic to me of the ridiculous 90s comics excess that drove me outta the hobby to begin with. In hindsight, that might be an unfair conflation -- as Marvel was certainly no slouch when it came to "excess" (or x-cess, as the case may be). Perhaps, as I was just rediscovering my love of comics again, I wasn't quite ready to be reminded of all that? To me, I simply had to resign myself to the fact that... if I was going to go all-in, Cable was very much going to be a part of deal. Kind of a "You take the good, you take the bad..." situation.

And so I braced myself... and picked up my first issue of Cable since the series was in the single-digits, Cable #55 (June, 1998). I almost didn't... as, not only did this issue's cover prominently feature our man Nate... but also, Domino. Another "relic" from a time I didn't wanna revisit. Then... I sat down with the issue, which prompted a bit of an eyebrow raise. First off, the art in this book, by the... do we call him "underrated" (?), Jose Ladronn... wasn't like anything I'd seen on a "current-year" book -- especially not something out of Marvel and the X-Office. It was something of a modern take on classic Kirby... something that probably shouldn't have worked... and yet, did! The writer, Joe Casey, was another new name for me. Frankly, at this point in my collecting "career", most names would'a been. If you weren't one of the Image guys, the Pinis, Stan Lee, or Scott Lobdell, I wouldn't have a clue!

The title of this issue is "Wiser Times", and it couldn't be more appropriate... at least to the young Chris who was reading it. This was a Cable who, while still gristled... still battle-hardened -- felt more like a man who was learning from his future-past than being distilled down and defined by it. So many, if not all, of the early Cable stories were predicated on the fact that he was a mysterious man from the future... rather than being a character, Cable was a collection of mysteries given four-color flesh. And, ya know... great big guns. He was the archetypal early 90s (anti)hero. The more we seemed to learn about him... the less we actually knew. For every answer we got... five new questions sprang up. Add to that how "continuity copping" was becoming far less strict, and what we're left with is a recipe for disinterest.

Joe Casey came onto the title during the middle of that aforementioned six-issue arc, Hellfire Hunt. Between that and "Wiser Times" was a one-off in Wakanda with T'Challa. Straightforward and generic superheroics wherein Cable felt more like a placeholder than anything. The heroes teamed up to beat up Klaw... which, I feel like was the only thing anybody ever did when they hooked up with the Black Panther back then. It was with Wiser Times that Casey was able to try and give our Nate as fresh a start as possible.

Late in the James Robinson run on the title (which proceeded Casey), a character named Irene Merryweather was introduced. Irene was a reporter who would wind up traveling with Cable... acting as his chronicler and biographer. This addition gave me (and I'm sure at least a couple'a other readers) hope that... maybe we were working toward a "definitive" understanding of Cable. Not the soldier, not the messiah-figure, not the dude with the pointy-headed doppelganger... but Cable the man. Surely we're all affected by our life experiences in a multitude of ways. There's a lot to that nurture element that PSY101 students love to spend entire class periods debating. However, with this new addition to Cable's cast -- we may start taking those experiences and paying them forward... rather than stagnating within them.

Cable #55 was an issue that, when I was done reading it, I was kind of left flabbergasted (it doesn't take much). It wasn't at all what I expected from a Cable book. Judging from comments around USENET at the time, I wasn't alone. This issue was met with, ya know, mixed reviews. Some people (like me) loved it, and considered it a tremendous improvement on what had come before. Others, well... not so much. Here's a smattering of takes from the long ago:

We range from "It's a great read" to "Not Recommended". Good or bad, people are talking about it. And, after a couple thousand words of pre-ramble, maybe I ought to as well... in brief.

The issue is kind of a sandwich of the stuff you'd sorta-kinda expect on either end of the stuff you wouldn't. It's quite well done, and a fun way to set the tone for what the Casey/Ladronn Cable was going to be. It's the fluffy middle section of the book that I want to focus on. It'll be these (and subsequent) "fluffy" bits that the rest of this piece will be focusing on. Cable is now operating out of Daredevil's backyard, Hell's Kitchen... and stops in the Babel Diner for both a bite to eat and a respite from the rain. Speaking of DD, Matt Murdock's actually here grabbing a bite himself... but, our hero doesn't even acknowledge him.

Cable plops down at a booth... and, spends an entire page drinking a cup of coffee. This is the kind of page that has been used-to-abuse in the time since, but, back in 1998 -- it was kind of a novelty.

Cable #55 - (w) Joe Casey / (a) Jose Ladronn

This was my first indication that, this wasn't necessarily going to be the Cable I grew up with. This wasn't the early 90s Image Comics archetype. The pages that followed were equally bizarre... yet engaging. Cable and the waitress-soon-to-be-love-interest, Stacey Kramer share a little bit of small talk. Not through "lol, gritted teeth"... not staring down the barrel of a Mark-69 Liefeldian firearm... but, over a cuppa and (eventually) a bagel.

It's not often that Cable comes across as an actual human being. Used to be that scenes like this were few and far between... and when they would occur, they would be so tempered by angst and mystery that the conversation was rendered secondary (or tertiary). Here... it's small talk. Our hero still feels like Cable... but, some of the "Nate" is slipping in as well.

While these quiet scenes may define the Casey run for me, there is so much more to it. For those unaware, the X-Offices had been building to an epic confrontation between Cable and Apocalypse for... ever. It was earmarked for the turn of the century, and it was to be the battle to end all battles. "Was to be". Joe Casey would drop hints to this eventual clash throughout his run. While bebopping around the Marvel Universe having adventures with (and against) S.H.I.E.L.D., the dude who would become the M-Tech Deathlok, the Avengers, and... a crossover with X-Man that we don't need to talk about, there would be reminders that Cable's got a date with destiny on the millennial horizon.

Our man would battle the Harbinger of Apocalypse (a human jammed in a weird coffin by Poccy that had been infused with some sort of Celestial tech a century earlier)... he would prepare for the big dance by arming himself with, of all things, a traditional Askani spear called the Psimitar. Cable without great big guns? What gives, right? While we're at it... Cable was also without his Psi-Powers for a bit here, after the events of the Psi-War over in the flagship books... a story whose ramifications were forgotten about almost immediately after it ended!

Cable discovers the Psimitar
Cable #58 - (w) Joe Casey / (a) Ed McGuinness

All throughout these adventures, Cable would find himself returning to the Babel Diner... where he'd chat up and lay his troubles on Stacey. Their friendship would become a more romantic relationship... one that both grounded our hero as a much more relatable fellow... while at the same time, reminding us that he's not. Stacey wasn't the only member of the Kramer family to join Cable's cast of characters -- her younger brother, Kenny would also appear from time to time. Kenny had Down Syndrome... which Stacey hoped Cable might be able to use his "mind powers"... to cure!

Cable #64 - (w) Joe Casey / (a) Jose Ladronn

This is a powerful scene. Stacey, who was established early on as working on her nursing degree, is desperate see her brother living a "normal life". Hoping Cable's nebulous "mind powers" might do the trick... while choosing to ignore the common sense or ethics of the situation. Even more interesting, this scene occurs during the brief time where Cable no longer had those nebulous "mind powers", so we never find out whether or not he'd have given it a try. Later on in the issue, he attempts to explain this to Stacey -- but, a) she's not interested in hearing his excuse, and b) they happen across a dying Santa Claus laying in an alley (it's Christmastime). Even this Santa scene is important, as it shows that -- even without powers (and big ol' guns), Cable's first instinct is to act the hero.

These Christmastime scenes are scattered throughout Cable #64... fitting neatly between pages out of Irene Merryweather's Cable Chronicle Biography. In it, we see where he's come from... where he's been... along with plenty of the how's and why's of his current mission, and a reminder of his pressing date with Apocalypse. It always comes back to Apocalypse. Who else is getting all psyched up for this final battle?!

Well, readers of Cable's solo book weren't the only ones getting jazzed about seeing Nate and En Sabah slappin' meat -- because, the epic barnburner of a final battle... sorta-kinda... get usurped by the X-Offices to payoff the long danglin' and lingerin' Twelve storyline. Rather than allow Casey's build and prep to pay off in dramatic fashion... the X-Offices did what they do best. The story Cable had been building toward since forever, was taken away... and handed off to:

Oh dear.

In the two years that led up to this barnburner of an issue, the readers really got to know Nathan Summers. We saw him grounded in a more mundane setting, surrounded by a non-mutant cast of characters who he'd formed bonds at attachments to. Cable, as a series, for the first time ever, had a reason to exist (creatively). The payoff? Marvel ditches the direction, brings back the "classic" look and feel -- and delivers us an issue that was so tragic and pointless, that to this very day, I'm fairly certain nobody's accepted the credit or blame for writing the thing!

The quick of it is... the issue opens with Cable strapped to a great big "X" while Apocalypse talks at him... then, 750 pages later, it ends with... Cable strapped to a great big "X" while Apocalypse talks at him. During the middle of the issue, our man breaks free... spends most of his time fighting off Wolverine (who was then the Horseman Death) -- before the big showdown. The blowoff is a handful of full-page pinup spreads of Cable and Apocalypse bouncing off each other.

A terrible issue. Though, it's hard to even blame anybody involved in it for the let down! The event that this series had been building to for years was relegated into being just "Part Two" of the wider X-Men The Twelve storyline. The story couldn't be anything more than what it was. A circular, pointless disappointment. More important than all that, around the time of this issue's production, Rob Liefeld did suffer the loss of his father.

All that having been said... I feel that the impact of Casey and Ladronn's time on the title cannot (and should not) be understated. Joe Casey took a character who was basically deep-fried and pickled 1991... and made him "matured him" for a post-2000 audience. Ironically enough, writing the sort of stories that Image Comics themselves would be putting out not too long after!

--

For more Image-centric chatter both from back in the long ago to today -- please check out the rest of the #SBTU crew!

Between The Pages Blog
Killer Walking Dead Cakes
https://www.betweenthepagesblog.com/2022/05/killer-walking-dead-cakes.html

Comics, Comics, Blog: 
Image Comics: Remembering my early days
https://comicscomicscomics.blog/?p=1845

In My Not So Humble Opinion
Astro City: That Was Then…

Jesse Starcher - Source Material
Darker Image!!!
https://www.spreaker.com/episode/49802624

Asterisk 51
Better Late Than Never: Spawn #1
https://asterisk51.blogspot.com/2022/05/better-late-than-never-spawn-1.html

Superhero Satellite
Dawn Of Image: Inking The Deal, The Dave Olbrich Tapes
https://charltonhero.wordpress.com/2022/05/18/super-blog-team-up-image-comics-the-road-to-revolution-shs-episode-3/

Comic Stripped
Term Life
https://t.co/i2jS0h6oyS

Dave's Comics Heroes Blog
Big Bang Comics
https://davescomicheroes.blogspot.com/2022/05/images-big-bang-comics.html

Chris is on Infinite Earths
Cable Eats a Bagel: the de-imagification of Nathan Dayspring Askani’Son Summers
https://www.chrisisoninfiniteearths.com/?p=37220 - You're already here!

Wednesday, January 22, 2020

Adventures of Superman #500 (1993)


Adventures of Superman #500 (Early June, 1993)
"Life After Death!"
Writer - Jerry Ordway
Pencils - Tom Grummett
Inks & Tones - Doug Hazlewood
Letters - Albert DeGuzman
Colors - Glenn Whitmore
Assistant Editor - Jennifer Frank
Editor - Mike Carlin
Cover Price: $2.95 (Deluxe) / $2.50 (Newsstand)

Welcome, friends to Super-Blog Team-Up: Chromium... where the gang has all come together in order to celebrate... and maybe, just maybe, denigrate the various "eras of excess" within in the industry we all love so much.

This time out, I've made a multi-media mess out of myself.  We've got this post you're currently reading... for which, I made a video to introduce the whole thing:



I've also released, for those interested, an episode of the Chris is on Infinite Earths Podcast (Episode 33), wherein I spend the better part of an hour discussing... my first choice for this Chromium outing, if I hadn't already discussed it here: the five-variant covers/stories that appeared in Team Titans #1 (1992)!



And, if that ain't enough... the end of this very blog post contains a list of links to other great bloggers and content creators that I highly recommend checking out!  Heck, I can take credit for nominating a few of 'em into the SBTU fold!  What I can't take credit for, is their work, which is great!  So, check 'em out!

But first... here at these Infinite Earths... we've got us quite the issue of Superman to discuss.  So, pour yourself a second (or third) cup... and let's do this.

--


Picking up right where the story left off… ya know, three months ago, Jonathan Kent has just flatlined… however, in the “afterlife” he has just clasped hands with his son Clark.  He’s not there to join his Super son, however… he’s there to stop him from going toward the light.  The Superman ghost compels Jonathan to return to the land of the living


Superman turns his back to Jonathan… and joins a pair of cloaked individuals… Though, it’s worth noting, that it would appear that Jonathan sees them as Byrne-Man of Steel-style Kryptonians.  Clark walks into the light… but that’s not going to stop Pa!  He too flies toward the light!


Back in Smallville, Jonathan has been injected with Lydocaine... which breaks the flatline into intermittent blip-blips.  A nurse is able to pull Martha away for a cup of coffee so the doctors can work their magic.  Outside the examination room, she is surprised to see that Lois has arrived to check in.


In Metropolis, Gangbuster breaks up a drug deal… or does he?  Well, actually he breaks up an undercover cop attempting to bust a big-time dealer.  Such is life for Jose Delgado.  Never one to quit while he’s behind, Gangbuster then starts… Copbusting.


He judo throws an officer to the ground… and hops onto a fire escape to, well… escape firing guns!  Being as though this is still Jose Delgado, he takes a bullet to the bicep during the escape.  An officer gives chase… which forces Jose to leap off the building, and into the conveniently-located Metropolis Harbor.  Eesh, just think of all the bacteria getting into that bullet wound!


Back in… Heaven?  Pa is dressed like Sgt. Rock’s grandfather… stomping through a war zone, bayonet in hand.  He stumbles onto a battlefield where his entire unit lay dead.  Jonathan makes his way through the battlefield… and into some brush.  Passing into the clearing, he spots a burning hut.  He rushes inside to find a young man… who looks like his brother Harry.  Probably because… it is!  Well, a near-death manifestation of him anyway…


As, Jonathan lifts his brother up… a wild Commie approaches!  The ol’ man punches the Red’s head clean off!


In Metropolis, Cat Grant gets her butt pinched by Vincent Edge.  Vincent Edge is the father of Morgan Edge… he’s also tied up with Darkseid and Apokolips, so… he’s a pretty bad dude.  We learn he’s sweet-talking Ms. Grant because he needs a favor.  Ya see, Jimmy Olsen hasn’t shown up for the last two-weeks worth of Turtle Boy tapings!


He also asks about her love life.  Who does this guy think he is, Tommy Wiseau?


Anyhoo, she reveals that she and Jose are on the outs… and starts sobbing.  Smelling blood… well, I hope that’s blood… Vinnie decides to ask Cat out on a date.  Annnnd, she accepts?!  The lesson here, I guess is… pinching butts is a way to get dates?  Nah, nevermind… I didn’t say that.


Speaking of Turtle Boy… over at the prison, the Trickster’s cellmate is watching a rerun on his teeny tiny television.  And laughing like an “addled-brained, methane gas-producing jackass”.  That Trickster, he sure paints with words!  The Jackass is enjoying his program… and refers to it as being “very nineties”.  Okey dokey, then.  The Trickster pours water into the teeny tiny television to put an end to the Turtling (don't Google that).


Speaking of Turtle Boy… again!  We next join Jimmy Olsen at the Daily Planet Building where he is given an assignment.  While there, he’s approached by Ron Troupe, who has some Turtle-Boy related phone messages for Jim… who makes it pretty clear that his days on the half-shell are behind him.


Back in Smallville, Lois comforts Ma… by telling her that she doesn’t believe in the afterlife.  That… hmm, that might be a little tone-deaf there, Ms. Lane.  There’s a time and place for that kinda debate, Lois… and I don’t think this is it.


Though, while speaking of the afterlife… Jonathan Kent is still trudging through Korea.  He steps on a rotten plank and falls into a pit.  A man approaches the hole and tosses him a rope.  A man Jon believes to be his own Pa!  Well… that’s not Pa’s Pa at all… instead it’s a demonic monster!  In the background, we see Blaze sitting on a throne made of skulls.


She offers him… a deal.  Devil’s always do that kinda thing.  If you’re wondering if she’s going to offer him a return to the living in exchange for his and Martha’s marriage… you’ve probably been reading other comics in the interim.  This is a much more “boilerplate” arrangement being presented, she just wants his soul.  Sorry, Aunt May!


Jonathan decides he’ll try his luck in the pit… and lets go of the line.  He continues to fall… until everything goes white.  He suddenly finds himself floating before Kismet.  Kismet is like Marvel’s Eternity… only, with boobs.  She sets him on the right path… to perhaps save “the airman”… which is to say, she send him to… The World of Krypton!


When Pa gets his bearings, he sees his boy being carried by a gaggle of Kryptonians in a sedan.  He rushes over in attempt to “wake” Superman… but he is cut off by the Krypton Clerics.


Back in Metropolis, Gangbuster pulls himself out of the drink… well, a fella named Highpockets pulls him out.  He suggests they head over to Bibbo’s, but Jose’s gotta stop by the bus station first.


Back in the afterlife, Pa continues to shout at Superman… and it finally seems to get through.  Superman looks at his Kryptonian compatriots… and sees them for what they truly are… monsters!  Demons, even!  Superman pummels the baddies pretty quickly.  Pa suggests that maybe Superman can’t really die… and the only reason he’s “going through the motions” is due to his being raised by mortals… with the concept of mortality.  Wow, there’s some food for thought!  Anyhoo, the pair approach a black hole amid the light… and go to fly into it.


But first… Jor-El!  Kal’s bio-Pop shows up to stop the pair from skidooin’.  And so, Pa manifests a shovel… and smashes Jor-El in the face with it!  I always say, let the punishment fit the crime!  Anyhoo, Clark and Jonathan head into the black hole.


At which time, back in Smallville… Pa sits up!


We join Lois on her return flight to Metropolis… when suddenly, a blue and red blur buzzes the plane!  When the plane touches down… it seems everywhere Lois goes, all anyone can talk about is… Superman.  As in, he’s back!


On the news, various eyewitnesses are interviewed.  A young girl named Cindy has drawn a picture of the “Sooperman” who rescued her kitty from a tree.


But, there’s more… In Centennial Park, a jogger describes Superman saving her from being hit by a stolen cab.  A family in Suicide Slum claims that Superman rescued their baby from their burning tenement.  The foreman at the Northpoint Nuclear Power Plant has a similar tale to tell.  And finally, a woman states that Superman not only saved her from an attacker… but actually killed her attacker!


We wrap up with Lois at the Centennial Park Memorial with Inspector Henderson.  With all the sightings… she’s got to know.  They enter, and… the casket… she be empty!


That might be the end of the story… but not the end of the issue!  Our first “sighting” vignette opens with a pair of gangs fighting over some over-sized guns called “Toastmasters”.  The woman known as the White Rabbit looks on, pleased that with Superman out of the way… Metropolis is hers for the taking.


The police drive up, and the gangs disperse.  From the rubble of one of the buildings destroyed during the Doomsday massacre, a man rises…


This is a very large bald, black man… but I'm not telling you anything that you don’t already know.  He doesn’t look like him, but he sure sounds a lot like… Superman?!


Our second “sighting” opens with a would-be carjacker being stopped… by a man in a cape, and visor.  The dude opens fire into the caped-man’s chest… illuminating it just enough to make out a familiar logo.


The bum attempts to flee, but our mystery man gives chase… finally descending on him, looking very much like… Superman?!


Sighting, the Third takes place at Cadmus Labs, as the Guardian rushes toward Lab 13 where an explosion just jammed the doors shut.  A soldier named Silvestri arrives to “gently” nudge the door… with a bazooka.  Like I always say, the right tool for the right job!  Once inside, they find… an empty pod, with what looks like Superman’s torn cape caught in the broken glass.


Guardian notices a Dr. Packard hanging from the ceiling wrapped in piping.  He reveals that the Newsboys and this… Number 13 escaped through the air ducts.  At that moment, the five Newsboys… and a guest, pop out of the other end of the air ducts… and hey look, it’s (don’t ever call him) Superboy!


Sighting, the Final.  It’s morning in Metropolis… and the Sun rises over the shimmery skyline.  A family of tourists is walking down Broadway… or whatever block the Daily Planet Building is on, when their son notices the Superman memorial plaque, commemorating the spot he died on while saving the city.  This mustn’t be the original plaque, because that one read: “In Memoriam - Superman - Killed on this spot while defending the city”, while this one reads: “In Memory of Superman - Killed on this spot while defending Metropolis”.



Anyway… as this family stops to admire the plaque… Superman arrives?!  He picks up the plaque… and incinerates it.  In fairness… if he ain’t dead, I guess they don’t need it!  Worth noting, these early panels are kinda “Austin Powering” the left side of Superman’s face… and when we get a good look at him… well, sonuvagun… he’s a cyborg!



--

The Extra Pages:

The "Deluxe"/White-Bagged Edition came packed with an additional eight pages of story.  They're all splash pages, and don't really add all that much... but, here they are, in all their glory!




Man... two whole "exclusive" pages wasted on Jose frickin' Delgado?  Yeesh!  Anyhoo, in case you were interested/unaware (I know I was)... these extra pages were just slotted in instead of Ads:



--

Got a lot of irons in the fire of late... and one of them has me revisiting the post-Claremont X-Men books.  In re-reading X-Men (vol.2) #1, I mentioned just how iconic nearly every single panel in that thing has become... at least to me.  These images have been burned... heck, imprinted into my memory... and will always be definitive "comics" to me.  I didn't think there were any other comics, barring maybe Superman (vol.2) #75, that evoked that same reaction in me.  Then... I opened this one.

While it certainly wasn't every image that "got" me... there were definitely a fair-share that will always remain with me.  I'm talking specifically about the early panel in the afterlife where Pa is grabbing Clark by the shirt... and the four Reign of the Supermen reveals.  Perhaps it was the fact that I read this during my formative years... or, heck, maybe I'm actually right... and these are iconic to everybody!

Anyhoo, whatta we got here, anyway?  This is the beginning of the return of Superman.  On that, we can all agree.  I remember being very excited for this back in the long ago... but, after the initial shock to my system, I kinda fell off the Super-books.  Even this issue, in and of itself, is... I dunno, a bit uneven?  Don't get me wrong, there are some great bits here... but, there are also sections where it kind of drags.  I can't really get mad at it... it's almost like a "necessary evil" situation.

I'll admit, back when I was a wee lad of thirteen, I couldn't care less about Jimmy Olsen's Turtle Boy career, Cat Grant being sexually harassed by the elder Edge, and Jose frickin' Delgado bumbling his way through his vigilante life.  I wanted Superman... and not much else.  As an adult, I can't help but to appreciate the, for lack of a better term, "world building" employed here.  We get to catch up with the wider cast... which helps to reinforce the fact to the reader that, even though Superman's story ended... life went on for the citizens of Metropolis, and beyond.  There's something, I dunno, kind of sobering about that.  A real feeling of mortality starts to creep into the corner of my mind when I allow myself to think about it.

We get a sorta-kinda reunion with the Man of Steel... but, that's almost secondary here.  When we look at the afterlife scenes, really and truly, they belong to Pa.  Superman gets a few punches in (a few more in the Deluxe Version than the Newsstand), but this is Pa Kent's journey... and I think that was a wise decision on the part of the creative team!

The issue wraps up by sweeping us right into the new "status quo"... leading to a quartet of comics with die-cut covers!  Gimmicks galore, y'all!  We meet our new stand-in Supermen... and, I still remember being kind of blown away by this when I first read it.  I was almost positive that the Eradicator would be eventually revealed as being the Real Steel Deal... though, I gotta admit, I was holding out hope for the Cyborg!  What a dumb kid I was...

Overall... I almost feel silly reviewing (if that's in fact what I'm doing) this issue, with the assumption that most everybody checking out this site has very likely already read this story.  Though, perhaps I'm just projecting.  Wouldn't be the first time!  If you've made it this far, feel free to lemme know in the comments who you thought the "Real Steel Deal" was going to wind up being?

I wanna thank everyone, old and (potentially) new, for stopping by the humble blog today... perhaps during your trip through the Super-Blog Team-Up chain.  I hope you enjoyed what you saw... and hope to see you back again real soon!

--

Letters Page:


 

--

Otha Covuhs:







--

The Card (worth the price of admission on it's own)!



--

Interesting Ads:




--

Super-Hero Satellite: 70s-80s Photo Covers
Chris is on Infinite Earths: Adventures of Superman #500 (1993)
Chris is on Infinite Earths (Podcast): Team Titans #1's (1992)
Comic Reviews by Walt: The 90's Revisited - Shiny Covers!
Source Material Podcast: Spider-Man: Torment
ComicsComicsComics: Daredevil: Fall From Grace
The Telltale Mind: Worlds Collide: The Inter-Company Crossover
Between the Pages: Guerilla Marketing
DC in the 80s: Top Five Most Memorable DC "Gimmicks"
Comics in the Golden Age: Fawcett's Mighty Midget Comics
Unspoken Issues: Darkhawk #25
Dave's Comic Heroes Blog: New Teen Titans #37/Batman and the Outsiders #5
When it Was Cool: Polybag it!
Pop Culture Retrorama: Glow in the Dark Covers!
In My Not So Humble Opinion: Force Works #1
Black & White and Bronze: Spectacular Spider-Man Magazine (1968)
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...