_____________________________________________________________________________ T H E K R Y P T O N I A N C Y B E R N E T _______________________________________________ http://www.ms.uky.edu/~sykes/kc Issue #37 -- April 1997 _____________________________________________________________________________ CONTENTS -------- Section 1: Superscripts: Notes from the Editor So Here's What I Thought, Part 2 News and Notes Section 2: And Who Disguised As... The Comic Book Heroes -- A Review by J.D. Rummel Atom Man vs Superman Episodes 8-15, by Steven Younis Skip The Facts: Infrequently-Asked Questions About Super-Dude "Who Has Impersonated Superman Over the Years?" by David T. Chappell The Mailbag Section 3: New Comic Reviews The Superman Titles Superman: The Man of Steel #67, by Thomas Deja Superman #123, by Shane Furlong Adventures of Superman #546, by Anatole Wilson Action Comics #733, by Shane Travis Section 4: New Comic Reviews Super-Family Titles JLA #5 Steel #38, by Dick Sidbury Superboy and the Ravers #9, by Jeff Sykes Supergirl #9, by Jeff Sykes Superman Adventures #7, by Cory Strode Section 5: Lois and Clark: The New Adventures of Superman Put It In Writing, by Zoomway Superman: The Animated Series "The Way of All Flesh" Episode Review by Scott Devarney STAFF: ------ Jeffery D. Sykes, Editor-in-Chief Nancy Jones, Executive Editor: Lois and Clark section Neil Ottenstein, Executive Editor: S:TAS section Editors: Chip Chandler Steve Hanes D.M. Simms Joe Crowe Curtis Herink Shane Travis Trevor Gates William O'Hara Steven Younis LEGAL DISCLAIMERS: ----------------- Superman and all related characters, locations, and events are copyright and trademark DC Comics. Use of the aforementioned is not intended to challenge said ownership. We strongly suggest that each reader look to the media sources mentioned within for further information. All original material published in The Kryptonian Cybernet, including but not limited to reviews, articles, and editorials, are copyright 1997 by The Kryptonian Cybernet and the respective authors. Reprinting in any format is expressly forbidden without the permission of The Kryptonian Cybernet and the contributing author. Opinions presented within this issue belong to the authors of the articles which contain them. They should in no way be construed as those of any other particular member of the editorial or contributing staff, unless otherwise indicated. This magazine can be distributed, in whole, freely via e-mail. Should you desire to share this publication with other on-line services, please contact me at sykes@ms.uky.edu for permission. Feel free to advertise subscription information on other on-line services which have internet mail availability. THE KRYPTONIAN CYBERNET is available by e-mail -- to subscribe, send the commands subscribe kc end in the body of an e-mail message to "majordomo@novia.net" (without the quotation marks). The program ignores the subject line of the message. Back issues are available via ftp at oasis.novia.net. These archives can also be reached via the Kryptonian Cybernet Homepage: http://www.ms.uky.edu/~sykes/kc ______________________________________________________ SUPERSCRIPTS: Notes from the Editor ------------------------------------ SO HERE'S WHAT I THOUGHT, PART 2 Welcome back! Last month, I explained my votes for the Limited Series and LOIS AND CLARK awards in the 1996 Kaycees, and this month, I continue with my choices for the Ongoing Comic Series Awards. Without further ado... Ongoing Comic Series: -------------------- CS1: Best Writing -- Karl Kesel, ADVENTURES OF SUPERMAN Let me begin this category by stating that I think the two newest titles were off to very good starts at the end of 1996. Peter David turned in some nice work on SUPERGIRL, and Karl Kesel and Steve Mattsson brought us a wonderfully frantic tale of the coming together of SUPERBOY AND THE RAVERS. However, only the first four issues of these titles fell within the bounds of 1996 (by cover date), and I didn't think of just those four issues as good enough to bump the consistency of my two favorites from this past year. Also, Roger Stern's issues of SUPERMAN: THE MAN OF TOMORROW were well-told, but I'd prefer to reward the consistency of monthly issues if at all possible. This was a tough call this year. And had the year ended the month before the honeymoon, I'd have probably voted differently. Before that, Louise Simonson had flourished in the titles' decided shift back to using the supporting cast -- playing directly into her strengths. SUPERMAN: THE MAN OF STEEL had been the most consistent of the monthly titles. But the absolutely horrid honeymoon issue (Commando Lois Lane) shifted the advantage back to ADVENTURES OF SUPERMAN. Kesel has long been one of the Superman family's strongest assets. His ability to throw in such perfectly-timed humor, as well as his uncanny knack for fitting Silver Age references and tributes into his tales, make his books an absolute joy to read. Month after month, Kesel brings powerful drama, heroic action, and wonderful characterization to his work, rarely missing a beat. CS2: Worst Writing -- Ron Marz, SUPERBOY Don't get me wrong. I still don't care much for David Michelinie's writing on ACTION COMICS -- his tendency to become overly expository during action scenes can get pretty obnoxious -- but he does have flashes. Like Louise Simonson, he handles the more human side of stories well. Ron Marz, on the other hand, brought nothing but sludge to his issues of SUPERBOY in 1996. Part of the downfall of the title must be contributed to Karl Kesel, but Marz did nothing short of completing the disaster. What I've read from Marz so far seems to have little to do with Superboy -- the tales could just as easily have been about any teenage male hero in the DCU. On the optimistic side, at least the title has nowhere to go but up... CS3: Best Art -- Stuart Immonen and Jose Marzan Jr, ADVENTURES OF SUPERMAN Gary Frank and Cam Smith regularly adorned SUPERGIRL with art that was very pleasing to the eye, but they have a tendency towards so-called good girl art, a negative in my book. Ron Frenz and Josef Rubinstein work very well together on SUPERMAN, providing spectacular splash pages on a regular basis. But their smaller panels tend to suffer a bit, and Superman often looks a bit squat. Almost everything Tom Grummett has done in the past year has been very nice, and he remains one of my favorite pencillers, but only when he teams with Doug Hazlewood does he reach the top of my list, and that only happened a couple of times in 1996. That brings us to my choice. Stuart Immonen's style sparks either hate or adoration. There's not much middle ground. But it's a style criticism and not an ability criticism (at least that's the way I read it) which causes the difference of opinions. I'm firmly in the camp of folks who love his style -- his wonderful use of shadows adds an element of depth to the page which is sorely lacking in other books. And inker Jose Marzan, Jr. is truly one of the best in the business. I look forward to their work for years to come. CS4: Worst Art: Ramon Bernado and Doug Hazlewood, SUPERBOY Okay, I don't care for Jon Bogdanove and Dennis Janke's style on MAN OF STEEL. But that team regularly produces some of the most interesting covers in comics, and they are so good at portraying a dynamic Superman. And most importantly, how can you call someone the worst when his work often invokes the late, great Joe Shuster? I'll also admit that I don't like Ramon Bernado's style -- but with him it's more than that. Proportions are awful, the angular bodies are hideous, and there's *no* reason he should *always* have Tana and Roxy in such skimpy clothing. I won't even go into the broken appendages thing (see worst cover, below). CS5: Best Story: SUPERMAN: THE MAN OF STEEL #56 You know which one I'm talking about. The one where Mxyzptlk wreaks havoc in the lives of all the citizens of Metropolis for the sole purpose of getting Lois and Clark back together? Louise Simonson, Jon Bogdanove, and Dennis Janke fired on all cylinders on this one, easily the best single Superman comic since 1995's reunion of Lois and Clark in ADVENTURES OF SUPERMAN #525. Even Bog and Janke's art worked for me in this one, so you *know* this had to be something special. CS6: Worst Story: SUPERMAN: THE MAN OF STEEL #63 Okay, all together now. COMMANDO LOIS LANE!? What on Earth were you people thinking? Granted Lois was an army brat and does have many special skills, but this just stretched the old suspension of disbelief *way* past the breaking point. Easily the worst single Superman comic in continuity in recent memory (the AT EARTH'S END Elseworlds from last year is still the worst ever...). I know you were pressed into this, but puh-leeze. CS7: Best Cover: SUPERMAN: THE MAN OF STEEL #56 There are certain villains for which Bog and Janke's style work incredibly well: the grotesque figure of a pumped-up Parasite, Metallo with his fantastically fun new powers, and the cartoonish imp from the fifth dimension. Tack on the wonderful homage to Don Rosa's UNCLE SCROOGE, and this Mxyzptlk cover wins hands down. CS8: Worst Cover: SUPERBOY #33 This is as much for the content as the artwork. Here we have snow falling as the Earth freezes from The Final Night, a volcano erupting in the background, and panic in the streets below -- but all Superboy can do is make out with Tana in the skies above. And then the art -- Bernado, ugh. It's no wonder Superboy's flying them both: his ankles couldn't support his own weight as drawn, and Tana's ankles would have to be broken for her legs to rest the way they are on this cover. Bah. CS9: Best Ongoing Comic Series: ADVENTURES OF SUPERMAN If I liked Bog and Janke's art on a more regular basis, perhaps MAN OF STEEL would have received my vote. Certainly the writing and storytelling this past year were well above par. But when ADVENTURES has what I consider to be the best writer *and* the best art team, there really can't be any doubt about this one. CS10: Worst Ongoing Comic Series: ACTION COMICS Yes, Marz and Bernado made me really dislike SUPERBOY, but they only had the reigns for three months in 1996. Kesel and company were lackluster the rest of the year, but not *bad*. But ACTION spent the entire year with David Michelinie at the helm, and issue after issue we were *told* (through thought balloons and captions) what we were already seeing on the page. Michelinie simply struck me as not very confident in his art teams -- let *them* handle the action. And then we spent the first ten months watching Denis Rodier's inks mangle first Kieron Dwyer's and then Tom Morgan's pencils. True, he inexplicably clicked with Tom Grummett, but two months doesn't make up for ten. So, there you have it. Agree with me or disagree. No skin off my nose either way -- I've finally come to realize that most of our differences of opinions (especially in artwork) usually come to down to simple differences in tastes. And that's a good thing as long as we respect each other's opinions. Next month, the long wait is finally over! The results of the 1996 Kaycees and the winner of the original artwork by Stuart Immonen! See ya then! Jeff Sykes, Editor ______________________________________________________ NEWS AND NOTES -------------- QUESTIONS ANYONE? We tried to get this started quite some time ago, but my personal failures and distractions kept it from getting underway. But I'm happy to say that we're finally moving on our promised interview with Tom Grummett! Mr. Grummett has long been a fan-favorite artist on the Superman titles. His past work includes ADVENTURES OF SUPERMAN, SUPERBOY, and SUPERBOY/ROBIN: WORLD'S FINEST 3. He is currently the penciller on ACTION COMICS, but will soon be returning to ADVENTURES OF SUPERMAN. There has also been some discussion about his illustrating the next DC/Marvel miniseries, which will be written by Super-scribe Karl Kesel. If you have any questions that you'd like included in this interview, please send them as soon as possible to the magazine address, KryptonCN@aol.com -- we can't promise that *all* questions will be used, but we'll certainly end up with a better piece if we tell the fans what they want to know! DAYS OF OUR SUPERMAN LIVES Who knows exatly what's going on in Warner Brother's heads. Amidst all of the discussion of whether or not Nicolas Cage is right for the part of Superman, the company has thrown us yet another curve in the form of Tim Burton. For the past week or two, word has leaked out that Burton (BATMAN, BATMAN RETURNS, BEETLEJUICE) is in negotiations to direct SUPERMAN LIVES (or REBORN, hard to tell these days). This would re-team Burton with Jon Peters, who produced Burton's Batman films. As of late Friday, April 18, negotiations were in their final stages. And what does this mean for the project? Turmoil, apparently. Before Burton was brought on board, screenwriter Kevin Smith had turned in his final draft of the script, and he reported that DC and Warner Brothers were excited about the script. Then Burton appeared and decided that he didn't care for Smith's script. Smith has now stated that they will be using his script, but that Burton would be bringing on another writer to "work on" that "final" draft. As for casting, Smith also has reported that Burton's not too thrilled with the idea of Cage as Superman, so we'll have to keep an eye on that situation. There have also been rumors that Burton wants Michael Keaton to reprise his role for the previously reported Batman cameo in the film. Sandra Bullock continues to be the rumored choice for Lois Lane (and Kevin Smith has stated that she is the studio's choice), and other rumors include Leonardo DiCaprio as Jimmy Olsen and John Mahoney (Martin Crane on FRASIER) as Perry White. A RIDE HERE, A SHOW THERE Last month, we told you about the opening of Superman: The Escape, the new roller coaster at Six Flags Magic Mountain. Well, for those of you more in the Texas region, Six Flags Fiesta Texas (San Antonio) has introduced "DC Comics Super Heroes Live," a new stunt show featuring many of your favorite DC heroes and villains. The Joker and Lex Luthor have hatched a new plot to dispose of the heroes, but Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman, Batgirl, and Green Lantern just might have something to say about that... High falls, vertical rappels, dynamic tumbling, and acrobatic routines. Incredible special effects such as indoor, low-smoke pyrotechnics and laser technology. And you *will* believe a Superman can fly! AND IF YOU NEED A PLACE TO STAY... The Man of Steel and the Dark Knight will be taking up residence in Best Western Hotels this summer. From mid-May through August, Best Western will be giving away reprint comics featuring Superman and Batman, as well as a "goodies" pack including a B:TAS-decorated Fuji disposable camera and more. Four reprint comics will be released exclusively for use by Best Western. MY HOW THEY'VE GROWN! In addition to the second wave of Superman animated series figures (which should be on the shelves soon, if not already), Kenner/Hasbro has produced a 12-inch Superman doll available exclusively at K-Mart. This 12-inch figure is patterned after the long-haired comic book version of the hero, and is on sale now. (Lexington has it at a retail price of $19.99.) A SUPER MAN ON THE WALK OF FAME Christopher Reeve recently received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, and he told fans that he hoped some day to walk again. The internationally known star of the SUPERMAN films, paralyzed as a result of a horse riding accident in 1995, commented to the crowd, "If we keep giving our scientists the funding they need for research, soon I will take my family by the hand and will stand here in front of the star." Reeve's star is located on Hollywood Boulevard outside the Galaxy Theater. Reeve recalled walking down the boulevard in 1976 as an out-of-work actor. In his words, "I'd look at these stars and think, 'That's a league I'll never be in.'" Reeve makes his directing debut this month with the HBO movie IN THE GLOAMING. Glenn Close and Jane Seymour, who star in the film, accompanied Reeve and his family at the ceremony. Close described Reeve as "the most human of humans, a man with great beauty ... and a man who refuses to let go of his dreams." UP AND COMING FOR THE REMAINING MAN OF STEEL Writer Christopher Priest recently tipped fans to some events coming in the next few months in STEEL, as well as an upcoming crossover event: Superman guest-stars in issue #43 (which is the GENESIS crossover, this summer's DCU event by John Byrne), along with Guy Gardner. Warrior will also appear semi-regularly from that point on. Steel becomes defender of Metropolis in issue #44. Superboy makes a cameo in #45, and then has a full guest-starring role in #46. The fiftieth issue will probably not be double-sized, but shortly thereafter (and after SUPERBOY #50), there are plans for a SUPERBOY/RAVERS/STEEL/SUPERGIRL crossover, tentatively titled "The Eradicator Proxy." AND THE WINNER IS... Not known at this time. But SUPERMAN, the animated series on the WB network, has been nominated for a Daytime Emmy Award. Joining SUPERMAN in the "Special Class, Animated Program" category are FREAKZOID! and THE NEW ADVENTURES OF MADELINE. CORPORATE HOLLYWOOD STRIKES AGAIN Panicked by the poor ratings from the debut of LOIS AND CLARK in its Saturday time slot on April 12, ABC has begun negotiations with Warner Brothers, seeking to find a way out of its earlier agreement. You'll recall that ABC had agreed to a fifth season of LOIS AND CLARK in exchange for the rights to air Rosie O'Donnell's talk show on its owned-and-operated stations. Now ABC is trying to back out of this deal by transferring the commitment to another WB program. A letter-writing campaign has begun, as LOIS AND CLARK fans want to let ABC know that they disapprove of their under-handed tactics, and to convince WB to not back down from the agreement. If you wish to support LOIS AND CLARK, visit the L&C SOS page at http://members.aol.com/LnCSOS/main.htm There you will find updates on the campaign, as well as addresses and phone numbers through which you can voice your displeasure. As well, here are some important addresses (snail mail is *much* more effective than e-mail): Ms. Jamie Tarses ABC, Inc. President, ABC Entertainment Audience Relations 2040 Avenue of the Stars, 5th Floor 77 W. 66th St. Century City, CA 90067 9th Floor New York, NY 10023 Warner Bros. TV ABC E-Mail Addresses: Attn: Lois & Clark ABCAUDR@abc.com or ABCAUD2@abc.com 4000 Warner Blvd ATTN: James Canning Burbank, CA 91522 ABC Television ______________________________________________________ AND WHO DISGUISED AS... --------------------------------------------------------- A Column of Opinion by J.D. Rummel (rummel@creighton.edu) The Comic Book Heroes -- A Review. For Christmas I got a gift certificate for the Borders bookstore (since my birthday is next month, that gives you folks an idea on what to get me). Not being in a big hurry, over the months I made several practice runs, checking out what the store had before settling in on a Saturday afternoon to hang out in the comic book section. I was frankly stunned by all the stuff on the shelves. I've written before how, as a kid, I dreamt of bookstores giving space to comics and there being all sorts of new and fantastic titles. Borders (and lots of other bookstores) brought my dream into the waking world. And like a dream, when the books are opened the sleeper wakes and reality washes over him: Sturgeon's dictum holds true, most of the stuff is crap. I kept waiting for some clerk to approach and ask me if I intended to buy, despite having full awareness of the chain's encouragement of browsing nigh unto loitering. For hours I slogged through the wares. There were the lame collections of stories that made for long, uninteresting serials (Death of Superman, Knightfall), entertaining collections that helped me get caught up with the competition (I think Aunt May is finally dead!), and some that appeared to be merely bold faced attempts at cashing in (_Superman versus Aliens_ -- 'Course I own a copy of _Superman vs. Muhammed Ali_ , so I can't hold my nose too high). And I found a new edition of _The Comic Book Heroes_. You know, I can remember a time (said Grandpa J.) when it didn't take a lot to have a solid comic book library _about_ comic books. All you needed were Feiffer's _The Great Comic Book Heroes_ , Lee's _Origin_ series, and _All in Color for a Dime_ (Maybe Les Daniels' _Comix_ too) and you were one well-read geek. Now, there's more out there, but I doubt how much of it is worth the investment. _The Comic Book Heroes_ by Will Jacobs and Gerard Jones is one that, I think, is. The first time I encountered the book was in the late eighties on the bargain table. The book covered comic history from the Silver Age to the then-present and was insightful, with lots of insider's dish (Silver Age inker Vince Colletta ran a "modeling" service! Wink, nudge, saynomore). That edition ended on a pretty optimistic note, somewhere in late '84 or '85 as the independents presaged new life and direction. The new book has lots of new info covering the years since the last book, also covering the Silver Age up to the now-present. It goes over the years with a keen eye, giving more of the insider's perspective on the collapse of the independent market and the evolution of the Image style of bursting, radiant pictures and negligible stories. The book is a great read on a rainy Saturday afternoon. Among its best gifts to readers is the examination of Jack Kirby. If anyone doubts the debt all comics have to the "King," one need only read this tome to get long, insightful overview of a visionary. I am only now coming to an appreciation of Kirby's use of language with his pictures. Readers of the KC will want to pay particular attention to the chapter on Superman. The extended examination of the world built by Mort Weisinger is essential reading for the uninitiated, the long time fan, and every shade in-between. Also, it covers the efforts of Mike Carlin, highlighting indirectly how the current Man of Steel is far less original, surviving, even thriving, via marketing gimmicks and pale imitations of the Marvel and Image styles. Oh, there is a lot wrong. I mean, a book on comic books with few illustrations and all of those in black and white? To quote a certain jug-eared, probably insane Texan: "that's just sad." And there are a few inaccuracies. For instance, the authors credit Lee and Kirby with the creation of Adam Warlock (it was Thomas and Kane). Probably the greatest failure of the book is the staggering number of typos. It deals the book's credibility an incredible blow, reminding one of some cheap, fan boy product. Still, for all it's faults, _The Comic Book Heroes_ belongs on the shelf beside Feiffer and the others. If you are serious about funny books, you need to spend the money and the time. Away! And Who Disguised As... is copyright 1997 by J.D. Rummel. Its contents may not be reproduced in any format without the written permission of the author. ______________________________________________________ ATOM MAN VS SUPERMAN ------------------------------------ by Steven Younis (younis@dot.net.au) Well this is definitely it! With this column, I conclude the ATOM MAN VS SUPERMAN serial and my stint of writing for the KC. Below you'll find the concluding summaries for chapters 8-15 of this exciting serial that sees Superman battle Lex Luthor in the guise of the Atom Man. 8 - Into The Empty Doom! Superman is dragged unconscious into the cave hideout, where the Atom Man has him placed in the arc and sent into the empty doom of space. With Clark missing, Perry tells a reluctant Lois to write a story saying Kent is Superman. Lois and Jimmy trick Perry by having Jimmy phone in and mimic Clark. Meanwhile, a ghostly Superman finds he cannot stop criminals. In the Daily Planet, Lois sees her newfangled electric typewriter type a message. Superman is concentrating to move the keys. His message tells where the cave hideout is and to throw a main switch so that Superman can return. Instead of telling the police, Lois and Jimmy go alone. They whack a guard and are looking for the proper switch when Atom Man appears. He challenges Lois to pull a switch saying one will save Superman, but another will seal his doom. Lois frantically pulls both, causing sparks. 9 - Superman Crashes Through The short circuit doesn't bring Superman back. Atom Man has Lois and Jimmy dumped outside and flees. Two power repair people come, having traced a power surge. At the Planet, Perry says nothing was found. Superman types a new plan: a newsreel is televised, making it appear Superman is back. This causes Luthor to send an aide into the channel of the empty doom to check if Superman is still trapped. Superman flings the man aside and forces his way down the open beam and back to the cave hideout. A crook shows the kryptonite, making Superman temporarily collapse, but it turns out that this synthetic version loses potency when exposed to air. Atom Man appears, but Superman finds it is a robot copy. Back at the Planet, Clark plots with Perry to prove respectable television executive Luthor is Atom Man. Perry complains to Lois about a story, and she quits. She gets hired by Luthor, and Clark and Jimmy see her interview people on the street. Crooks rob a store, and when they flee, Lois pursues in a Daily Planet coupe. The crooks shoot the tires, so Superman stops the car, keeping it from crashing. Jimmy chases the crooks to a railyard where he gets his foot stuck in a rail as a train approaches. 10 - Atom Man's Heat Ray Superman saves Jimmy, but the two crooks teleport away. Luthor plans to again use Lois as a diversion, but this time he'll stop the crooks to boost his respectability. At the Daily Planet, Clark and Lois reveal to Jimmy that Lois quitting was planned so she could check on Luthor. A crook overhears them and threatens to tell Luthor. After Clark is locked in Perry's office, Superman appears to stop the crook. When Lois does another street interview, two hired crooks rob a payroll truck. But hidden in the TV truck, Luthor's men use a heat ray to trap the robbers. The robbers are delayed enough for Clark, Lois, and Jimmy to see them arrested, but Lois has seen another run away. He is working with Luthor, and he leads them into a building and teleports away. Luthor triggers a release of gas in the room, making the reporters collapse. 11 - Luthor's Strategy Clark recovers, and Superman inhales the gas, exhales it through a punched hole, and then drags the others out. Lois decides the arrest of the two robbers clears Luthor and returns to her new television job. Clark, however, is still suspicious. At a press conference, Luthor shows threats he has received from Atom Man. Clark and Lois separately go and cover a great flood upstate, where Superman saves two people by providing a raft. The nearby dam collapses and a wall of water rushes towards where Lois has insisted in staying filming the flood. 12 - Atom Man Strikes! Superman saves Lois by grabbing the TV truck she is in. Superman shows Lois a secret compartment in the truck. Later, Lois becomes suspicious when she discovers that three stores had been robbed where she had done TV interviews. She phones the Planet, and Jimmy passes her message to Clark. Later Lois steals a notepad from Luthor's office. Aides in a hidden elevator have spotted her theft, and Luthor has her chased since the notepad has impressions of a list of stores he plans to have robbed. Lois runs and eventually escapes by getting into the Planet building. Luthor orders a thermal gun be used to destroy the building. When Superman appears, the crooks turn the heat ray on him. 13 - Atom Man's Flying Saucers Superman survives the attack, and the recoil destroys the gun. Superman points out the truck where the ray originated, and Lois and Jimmy go with the police to pursue the truck. Luthor teleports from his office to his hideout and views Superman arriving in his office too late. When the truck is found abandoned, Superman warns Lois and Jimmy that Luthor has triggered a remote beam to destroy the truck. The two crooks from the truck teleport away. Superman traces the remains of the beam back to the area of Luthor's hideout. He tells Perry to have the area scouted, so Clark and Lois fly over the area searching for the hideout. Luthor has a flying saucer launched to destroy their plane. 14 - Rocket Of Vengeance Luckily, Lois faints when seeing the saucer, so Superman can save her before the plane is destroyed. As the police are circling the area, Luthor twice broadcasts warnings to stop or he'll continue using a sonic beam to cause earthquakes in Metropolis. When Superman can't stop the second beam from threatening the Planet building, the police agree to withdraw. Superman goes back to the hills area to search, followed by Lois and Jimmy. Luthor has two crooks launch an atomic projectile to stop Superman, but Superman catches it and flings it back. Luthor broadcasts that because the search for him hasn't stopped, he'll launch a rocket to destroy Metropolis. Back at the Daily Planet, Lois and Jimmy abandon Perry when they spot the incoming rocket. Superman rides the rocket as it approaches the Planet building, while Luthor prepares to escape in a spaceship. 15 - Superman Saves The Universe Superman manages to deflect the atomic missile into the sea, and Luthor's identity as Atom Man is publicly exposed. Luthor repeats his ploy of placing a token in a gift to teleport Lois to his hideout. He shows her a directional cyclotron which will allow him to make earthquakes that could destroy the Earth. Two aides launch his spaceship, to which he plans to teleport and escape. Luthor has the cyclotron aimed at part of Metropolis. Superman helps save people in the earthquake, then flies to the hill the police believe has Luthor's hideout. When his men refuse, Luthor triggers a quake outside the hideout and teleports with Lois to the spaceship. Superman breaks into the hideout where the men try to stop him with the now useless synthetic kryptonite. Then Superman flies up to get in the spaceship. He rescues Lois and captures Luthor, then flies off leaving the ship to explode. Superman leaves Luthor at the Daily Planet to be arrested. Later, Lois exposes Clark to the synthetic kryptonite thinking it will show whether or not he is Superman, but of course it has no effect. -- Well, that's it! All done! Thanks again to Jeff for allowing me to write my column over the past months. I think you'll all agree he does a great job with the KC. Please don't hesitate to e-mail me at any time with your thoughts and reactions to my column. You'll find the SUPERMAN: THE SERIAL Theme Music and other Superman related sounds (in both RealAudio and .wav formats) in the Images and Sounds section of the Superman Homepage at http://www.geocities.com/Area51/Vault/7771/ While there, you'll also find a wealth of Superman information, TV and Cartoon Episode Guides, Comic Reviews, FAQs, Comic Book Index List, Who's Who, Icons, and so much more! I've also designed a puzzle called "Mr. Mxyzptlk's Mix-Up Puzzle" that's updated weekly. You'll find it in the GAMES & PUZZLES section of my Web of Wonders at http://www.geocities.com/EnchantedForest/5071/ Thanks again to you all! Steven Younis younis@dot.net.au The ATOM MAN VS SUPERMAN summaries and column are Copyright (C) 1997, Steven Younis. All rights reserved. Making copies in any format is expressly forbidden without the written permission of the author. ______________________________________________________ Considering the current foolish month and, more importantly, my lack of time for writing about Superman, I think it is time to SKIP THE FACTS Infrequently-Asked Questions about Super-Dude by David T. Chappell With the real Superman missing from current comics, I decided to compile a list by asking, "Who Has Impersonated Superman Over the Years?" Here's a quick list I threw together of characters (post-Crisis, of course) who have impersonated Superman or in some way worn the "S"-shield so as to possibly be mistaken for the Man of Steel. Five gold stars go to anyone who can identify all these appearances; hint: they're sort of arranged chronologically by order of first appearance. The chalk-skinned guy who talks funny (Bizarro) Young Superman from a world that sort-of didn't exist (Superboy from PU) The ghost of Superman that wasn't real (Martian Manhunter) The lump of protomatter that possesses a dead Satanist (Matrix/Supergirl) The alien who Superman defeated on Warworld (Draaga) The artifact that thinks it's a Kryptonian (Krypton Man/Eradicator) The green Superman clone made by Cadmus rejects (Kryptonite Man) The lucky bum with a good heart (Bibbo) The Starman who could shape-shift (Starman) The sand-golem that appeared in a "Special" (Sandy?) The Reed Richards clone who went mad (Hank Henshaw/Cyborg) The engineer with a big hammer (Steel) The kid who moved to Hawaii (Superboy) The Superman body that wasn't real (Brainiac's fake Superman body) The smart alien who took over Kal-El's body (Brainiac) The horny blue alien who escaped the bottle (Ceritak) The electric guy who wears a blue cape-less suit (The Man Beyond Tomorrow) Then there are the real-world impersonators of note: George Reeves Christopher Reeve Dean "I'm not a Reeve" Cain Kids who wear Superman Halloween costumes Young David Chappell substituting for Superboy Copyright (C) 1997 David T. Chappell. All rights reserved. ______________________________________________________ THE MAILBAG ------------------------------------- (sykes@ms.uky.edu, KryptonCN@aol.com) KC Responses are indented and begun with **** ==================================== From: David Joseph Young, Jr. (dayoung@luna.cas.usf.edu) This message is not about a particular KC issue. It's not even directly Superman-related. I was hoping the mag could post this so all the readers could see it and if they have any information e-mail me directly. **** Well, sure it's Superman related! There are several Superman stories in your list below... I've recently gotten a large number of DC's LIMITED COLLECTOR'S EDITION tabloid/treasury specials. They have great reprints in them, but I'm irritated that they don't cite which issues they come from. Some of them I've been able to find, others I have not. I know there have to be some fans out there who know the sources for these stories. If you do, like I said, please e-mail me directly at dayoung@luna.cas.usf.edu. #C-23--All House of Mystery stories in edition #C-25--Batman story "Hate of the Hooded Hangman" (1966) Batman story "Hot Time in Gotham Town Tonight" (1970) Batman story "Ghost of the Killer Skies" (Adams, 1970) #C-27--All Shazam! stories in edition #C-34--Batman story "Silent Night, Deadly Night" (1971) Shazam story "Billy Batson's Xmas" (1946) Teen Titans story "A Swingin' Christmas Caper" (1967) #C-38--Superman story "Superman's Day of Doom!" (1962) #C-43--Untitled Superman Christmas story (1940) Batman "Silent Night of the Batman" (Adams, 1969) House/Mystery "Night Prowler" (Wrightson, 1971) #C-44--Batman story "Castle with Wall-to-Wall Danger! (1964) Batman story "Paint a Picture of Peril" (Adams, 1970) #C-47--"Superman Salutes Bicentennial"--Tomahawk reprints #C-52--Batman story "Night of the Reaper" (1971) House/Mystery "The Demon Within" (1972) Flash story "Doorway Into the Unknown" (1964) "Dirty Job" (Alex Toth, 1971) "Firehair" (Joe Kubert, 1971) Superman story "Last Days of Superman" (1962) Thanks to KC (and Jeff) and KC readers. **** I know some of you out there are walking encyclopedias about this kind of thing, so howsabout lending David a hand? I'd love the magazine to be as much an information source as it is an opinion source, so I have absolutely no problem running these kind of requests -- as long as there's some Superman info as part of the request. -- Jeff Sykes ______________________________________________________ NEW COMIC REVIEWS ----------------- Ratings Panelists: AW: Anatole Wilson JG: Jack Grimes SF: Shane Furlong CS: Cory Strode JS: Jeff Sykes ST: Shane Travis DC: David Chappell MC: Matt Combes VV: Vic Vitek DS: Dick Sidbury PS: Patrick Stout WN: William J Nixon RG: Rene' Gobeyn As always, the first rating given after the average is that of the reviewer. The average rating given for each book may correspond to a larger sample of ratings than what is printed following the average. ========================================== THE SUPERMAN TITLES: ------------------- 18. SUPERMAN: THE MAN OF STEEL #67 Story by Louise Simonson Pencils by Jon Bogdanove Inks by Dennis Janke Letters by Ken Lopez Colors by Glenn Whitmore Separations by Digital Chameleon Associate Editor Mike McAvennie Editor Joey Cavalieri Cover by Jon Bogdanove, Dennis Janke, and Patrick Martin May 1997 $1.95 US/$2.75 CAN RATINGS: Average: 3.2/5.0 Shields TD: 4.0 Shields JG: 2.8 Shields - Too much exposition, too many slugfests. JS: 3.5 Shields - While a lot of fighting filled this issue, Simonson uses it to show an adapting Man of Steel. Superman is relearning what he can and can't do. There are several spots in this issue where Bog's work looks very similar to Joe Shuster's (eg, p.14, 15, 20). VV: 2.5 Shields - Okay story, sort of like an unended "heroes meet, heroes fight, heroes team up." I like Ceritak, and I hope he doesn't end up "buying the farm" at the end of his story arc. The opening scene of this issue pretty much sets the tone: Lois and Clark are getting ready for work. The coffee's on, they're both in pajamas. Clark reaches for his handy-dandy mirror, preparing to shave-- --and ZZZZZAKKKKK!! An energy beam goes flying all over the apartment, magnetizing all the metal and leaving Clark befuddled, explaining it's all out of habit.... And that's pretty much what we get in this, to date the goofiest of all the 'Man of Sparks' stories to date. While doing some serious work to advance the plot, Simonson and Bogdanove kick back and have some fun with the concept, creating one wild ride. After the scene described above, we switch to Ceritak as he disembarks from that helicopter (even a simple scene like this has a 'comedy' kicker with Ceritak being bonked on the head by the helicopter rotors). Lois is alerted to Goat Boy's presence while she's fighting with Simone and Dirk Armstrong over whether the Planet should run a column accusing Supes of being a menace. Lois contacts Clark, and he's off--to a bad start, as Ceritak tries to make a gentler form of contact and gets shocked for his troubles. What follows is the battle interspersed with subplots--Jimmy being chewed out for helping an old woman during last issue, Whitty Banter interviewing Bibbo on his upcoming fight--and the effects the battle has on Metropolis. You see, every time Supes and Goat Boy trade blows, it sets off sparks that, among other things, shorts out the electronics on every car on the Queensland Bridge, causes a severe static cling problem at The Planet and, in a grand finale, blacks out Metropolis. Is it any wonder that Franklin Stern ends up approving the negative editorial in the last panel? While not as good as ACTION COMICS #732's treatment of the new powers, Simonson and Bogdanove do a good job working with them; in this case, showing the down side of these new abilities. It seems like there's nothing Supes can do right, and he's so caught up in his battle with Ceritak that he's unaware of the havoc he's causing around him. In Simonson's hands Ceritak becomes something of a sympathetic character--he's still an example of Youth Out of Control, but his initial attempts at making nice with Supes are at odds with the way the character has been portrayed prior to this. Less effective is the handling of Dirk Armstrong, who actually showed promise of growing into an intriguing character in the last couple of issues. Here, he reverts back to his ol' "I'm a scary Republican Pig! OOOOoooh!" Rush-Limbaugh persona that's really grating. And I don't know where the Team Super is heading with making Jimmy into an insensitive, selfish clod, but I hope it's worth it. Now I like Bogdanove's artwork; it's blocky, sure, but in the kinetic, exciting way Louise's husband Walt Simonson is. But his work here is on the lazy side. There's some poor linework (his Lois on page 13 is damn near unrecognizable) and characters that are practically stick figures, like on pages 14 through 16. On the other hand, Bog has developed some cool effects to depict the Man of Sparks, particularly a stunning sequence on page 11 that makes it look like Supes is glowing from within. But this is the most fun a Superman book's been in a while. From the first scene to the sight of Jerry Seinfeld transformed into Kramer, it's obvious Simonson and Bogdanove are going to enjoy themselves with this plot line. And that's not so bad a'tall. Thomas Deja (manciniman@rocketmail.com) ==================================== 19. SUPERMAN #123, "Superman... Reborn!" Story by Dan Jurgens Art by Ron Frenz and Joe Rubinstein Letters by John Costanza Colors by Glenn Whitmore Separations by Digital Chameleon Associate Editor Mike McAvennie Editor Joey Cavalieri Collector's Cover by Ron Frenz, Joe Rubinstein, and Patrick Martin Standard Cover by Dan Jurgens, Joe Rubinstein, and Patrick Martin May 1997 $1.95 US/$2.75 CAN RATINGS: Average: 2.5/5.0 Shields SF: 3.5 Shields - Really a pretty good story with some weird errors. I do believe this changing powers story has potential and this issue did a good job of maintaining the same Superman while changing the look. JG: 2.8 Shields - Again with the painful exposition. And what the heck was wrong with Clark and the Kents at the end? JS: 2.7 Shields - Actually, that may be a bit harsh. This was a well-done issue up until the new costume appears. And I'm not complaining about the costume, but rather the characterization -- Superman takes off without a thought about those who had saved his life, and he and his parents are *way* too accepting of the change. VV: 1.0 Shield - Okay, I don't like it. Okay, Supes behaves completely out of character. Okay, his parents accept the fact that the son they raised is now made of energy. Okay, I don't like the whole thing. Summary: This issue is both an ending and a beginning. First an ending to the changing powers story, as Superman seems fully changed to a Man of Energy, as well as an ending, for now, to the familiar costume, but also a beginning to a new chapter in his life as evidenced by the title applied to it. Superman is literally reborn after this issue with a new costume and new powers. As the issue opens, Superman is continuing the battle with Ceritak, the bottle city prince who Jimmy mistakenly dubs Scorn. Lois is frantically trying to enlist Professor Hamilton in helping Superman without giving away the reason for her extreme interest. Superman is having a hard time maintaining a solid form, and after sending Ceritak to the harbor with an energy blast, he makes it to STAR Labs. Professor Hamilton and his assistant realize that without some sort of containment suit Superman will lose all physical form. One of the Kryptonian robots from the Fortress offers his micro-circuits but it takes a gift from Lex and the Contessa to supply a high-tech fabric capable of holding Superman's energy form intact. The Professor and Lois relent and accept the gift, despite misgivings about Lex's motives, since there is no alternative for Superman to survive. The suit does the trick. Superman zips from the lab to look for Ceritak, who has left the harbor to take a man he frightened into a heart attack to the Emergency Room. After not finding him, Superman heads West and shows Ma and Pa Kent his new look and powers. They help him add an "S" to the suit and the look is complete as Superman heads away in a beautifully drawn 2 page splash page of the New Superman in flight. The story ends with Ceritak leaving the ER after everyone treats him as a monster, and happening upon an edition of The Daily Planet with a picture of a familiar columnist in it, his wheels start turning. Story: 3.0 shields The story opens with a simplified synopsis for all of the thousands who'll pick up this issue without having read any of the Superman titles previous to this. It does a good job of summarizing without being either too detailed or overly simplistic. Some nice little touches here and there abound. Jurgens realizes he can't just have Lois there at STAR Labs without dealing with the questions from Professor Hamilton over why she's concerned. This is the second time recently that Hamilton has shown interest in the personal life of Superman. I wonder if he's on to something. The deal with Lex over the fabric is also handled well. Dealing with Lex Luthor takes on almost a "bargain with the Devil" sort of feel here. Now that Superman has taken the suit, where are the strings? Lex and the Contessa both seem pleased that he has the suit, so there must be an angle for him. The character of Ceritak is getting fleshed out as well. He is really being judged by his appearance here. Everyone that sees him is calling him a monster. I like that Jurgens has him not yet speaking English, which adds a level of realism in an unreal world. He really is not a bad guy -- just misunderstood. The only scenes that I didn't enjoy were the ones visiting the Kents. It seems that Ma and Pa are unconcerned that their son is now a living bolt of blue lightning instead of flesh and blood. Another weird thing is that when Superman reverts to Clark, he is shown falling naked through the air. Where is the blue suit? Where does it go when he's flesh? Otherwise a good story, even if nobody seems particularly concerned about how Superman got that way. Art: 4.0 shields Frenz and Rubinstein shine. Their art is the best of the current Super-Books bar none. I love the splash page on 20-21 and their interpretation of Lois is once again the best there is around. The Glow-In-The-Dark on the enhanced edition was subdued but nice. I had read that the design of the new look came from Frenz, and it shows here. Also deserving credit this issue are the colors of Glenn Whitmore which are particularly nice in the electrically charged Superman still in his regular suit. Shane Furlong (Shane.Furlong@evolving.com) ==================================== 20. ADVENTURES OF SUPERMAN #546, "Blood & Thunder" Written by Karl Kesel Pencils by Stuart Immonen Inks by Jose Marzan, Jr. Letters by Albert De Guzman Colors by Glenn Whitmore Separations by Digital Chameleon Associate Editor Mike McAvennie Editor Joey Cavalieri Cover by Stuart Immonen, Jose Marzan Jr, and Patrick Martin May 1997 $1.95 US/$2.75 CAN RATINGS: Average: 3.5/5.0 Shields AW: 3.5 Shields - Some interesting (and unexpected) plot developments; I liked. Artwork was particularly cartoonish; I didn't like. The new costume? Eh. Does it matter? JG: 3.9 Shields - Much better than the previous week, yet still not captivating. I slept through the issue until the brilliant "Metallo - Man with the Superman Heart". JS: 4.5 Shields - Not much to not like in this issue. Kesel is dead on in characterization and in developing Ceritak/Scorn, and Immonen and Marzan have never looked better! Some nice misdirections on Kesel's part, and major kudos to the brilliant person who suggested Metallo for this first arc! VV: 2.0 Shields - I think the first time I saw Metallo was in the "Death of Clark Kent" storyline. This story seems to continue my opinion on him: he can figure out an immediate action to help himself, but doesn't seem to recognize any shortfalls with the plan. So this story kinda works for me, but kinda does not. Just how much can Superman do now? Control all energy and radiation? Well, the Super costume has changed and the "Big Red S" is now the "Big Blue S." Let's not get all over-excited at once--someone needs to remain calm. Seriously, though, things could be worse. While I think the power-transformation plotline has had little energy, twists and turns in what have been otherwise dull sub-plots sparked my interest this month. The action begins with Superman showing off his new containment suit to Lois. She's handling his transformation well, worried more about what kind of sparks will fly when she kisses him than the fact that he's blue and made of pure energy. Meanwhile in Kandor, with the perceived death of Ceritak, tensions are running high. The only thing keeping them in check is the fear that the old wizard Tolos will punish anyone who gets too far out of hand. (They don't know Superman vanquished him sometime ago.) When Elder Mooren is killed by the rioters, however, Tolos' hand of vengeance fails to appear. Unaware of Tolos' defeat, the Kandorians are only now realizing that their oppressor--and only enforcer of the law--is gone, and chaos breaks out. This is an unexpected--but very logical-- turn of events. Back at the Daily Planet, Perry White is furious that Dirk Armstrong wrote a blistering front page article, branding Superman a menace. Superman takes the surprising high road, thanking Armstrong and the Planet for keeping an eye on him. That was a very Superman thing to do. Their meeting is broken up by the news that Dirk Armstrong's daughter, Ashbury, has been kidnapped by, we discover, a disgruntled Superman fan. Perry, meanwhile, receives an ominous call from his doctor--I guess we can assume his health is taking a turn for the worse. (Minor note: With all the treatments Perry's been going through, shouldn't he be as bald as Luthor by now?) Superman's search for Armstrong's daughter is interrupted by Metallo, who's out to destroy Superman because...well...because he's a bad guy, I guess, and that's what bad guys do. Superman becomes too engaged in battle to realize that he's just spoken with Ashbury's kidnapper. The save is left up to Ceritak, who is apparently attracted to the Superman 'S' on the kidnapper's shirt. At first, I thought, "Oh good, Ceritak's not going to be a bad guy after all." That would be an unexpected turn I could appreciate. On second reading, however, there's a suggestion that he might be making an association between "Superman" and "bad man." I'm still hoping that maybe Ceritak will don the 'S' and try to be a hero, maybe even saving Kandor from its current crisis. Finally, Superman's battle with Metallo doesn't go so well. Metallo now has the same powers as former foe Cyborg had, and proves pretty hard to bring down. By the end of the issue, he absorbs a battleship and uses Superman as his power source. Superman realizes the only way to stop Metallo is to cut his power supply by turning back into powerless--and all-too vulnerable--Clark Kent. Metallo's giant body collapses. He quickly makes another, smaller body for himself, but poor Clark is left unconscious and bleeding in the rubble. Is Clark really dead this time? I don't think so. You may remember that last month I complained about the number of sub-plots. The issue jumped around so much that nothing actually happened. This month, I think the various plots were better balanced and more integrated. More importantly, they *moved*; Kandor breaks out in riots, some good Superman characterization squeezes into his scene with Dirk Armstrong, a kidnapping, enough of a scene with Ceritak to see what might happen in the future without stalling the rest of the story, and then a brief but fairly interesting battle with Metallo. No wasted pages this time. And I have to say I didn't miss Boss Moxie at all. I have to admit that I can never quite figure out what's going on with the art. Sometimes Kesel and Marzan's panels are models of craftsmanship. Other times, they're overly cartoonish and lacking in detail. There's just no consistency there anymore. Now I might as well join the rest of Super-fandom and second-guess the choice of the new costume, especially since they showed us the costumes the other artists designed on the "Watch This Space" column on page 21. My personal preference would have been Tom Grummett's or Paul Ryan's versions--at least they look like containment suits. It's not that the new costume is ugly, it's just that it lacks any sort of dynamic energy--it doesn't look "Super". Look at the cover of this issue and you'll see what I mean. Well, it's easy to second-guess, and we just have to live with the choice they made. For now. Anatole Wilson (awilson@us.oracle.com) ==================================== 21. ACTION COMICS #733, "The Sins of Change" Written by David Michelinie Art by Tom Grummett and Denis Rodier Letters by Bill Oakley Colors by Glenn Whitmore Color Separations by Digital Chameleon Associate Editor Mike McAvennie Editor Joey Cavalieri Cover by Tom Grummett, Denis Rodier, and Patrick Martin May 1997 $1.95 US/$2.75 CAN RATINGS: Average: 3.2/5.0 Shields ST: 3.7 Shields - (Story 3.5 Shields; Art 4.0 Shields) JG: 3.0 Shields - Three pages?! That's the big cross-over with Ray? JS: 4.0 Shields - The cover on this one is quite misleading, as The Ray shows up basically to say, "Go with it." Other than that, Grummett and Rodier continue to work very well together, and Michelinie turns in a solid writing performance. Have I mentioned how cool Metallo has become? VV: 1.5 Shields - Ho-hum. "Hey Ray, can you give me some advice on my being an energy construct now, like you?" "Yeah, Supes, go with it." Okay, so it took a few more panels than that to get this point across. AW: 4.0 Shields - The conversations between the Ray and Superman made this story stand out. Nice twist--veteran learning from one of the "new guys." However, it does point out a nagging problem--does the DC Universe really need two heroes with almost exactly the same powers? I don't think so. Open on: An injured Clark who sustained serious damage after switching out of electric form to escape Metallo. In a two-page spread, we see that changing back to electrical form doesn't help matters much! Fortunately for him, Lois comes across Electri-Kal and convinces him that his injuries are all in his head. Cut to: Metallo -- jubilant after killing Superman, he decides to go have fun at Oceanside, Metropolis' version of Coney Island. Cut to: The Ray -- Superman has called him in for a little help figuring out his new powers. The Ray provides about as little help as you can imagine. Cut to: Bottle City -- Chaos reigns as the inhabitants realize Tolos is dead. Cut to: Ceritak/Scorn -- acting like a troglodyte again, smashing trees and throwing a tantrum when Superman zaps away before Ceritak can get there. Cut to: Metallo -- tearing up Oceanside. Cut to: Ron Troupe -- Acting as Clark's personal Greek Chorus, he fills Kent in on what has been happening while he's been AWOL for the past several days. Clark throws himself out a window and zaps into Big Blue when he hears about... Cut to: Metallo -- still tearing up Oceanside. The SCU arrives just as Metallo decides that maybe he'd rather play with the Nuclear Reactor. Cut to: Perry White -- "Alice, I think you'd better sit down...." Cut to: SCU -- trying to get its battlesuits on-line to fight Metallo. Metallo is surprised to see Superman again, as he thought he had killed him, but takes it in stride. After dispersing the Electric Blue Superman, Metallo absorbs the battlesuits and once again heads towards the reactor. Too big for a tractor beam now, Superman instead uses 'geomagnetic energy' to increase Metallo's weight, causing him to sink into the earth and stopping his rampage. Cut to: Jimmy Olson -- While covering the happenings at Oceanside, he spots Emil Hamilton. Jimmy glad-hands the professor in an effort to get a scoop on Superman's costume/power/identity change. Cut to: Superman -- pulling Metallo back to the surface, but where's the head?! Cut to: Metallo's Head -- detached from the battlesuits, it now crawls away from the scene. He vows to wreck Metropolis as an act of revenge.... I read somewhere once: Nobody is totally useless -- if nothing else they can stand as a bad example. The same can apply to comics. Two years ago, we the readers were subjected to the Dead Again story arc. It was a perfect example of how _not_ to tell a story if ever there was one; take a two-issue idea and stretch it out over 13 issues, all the while trying to hold the reader's attention with a single, paper-thin plot. Well folks, it's two years later and the pendulum has swung back in the other direction. I cannot remember the last time that there were so many sub-plots going on in the Superman titles. Superman trying to adjust to new powers as well as a brand-new marriage, Ceritak trying to track down Superman, the Bottle City -- what will happen and how superman will deal with the results, Perry's cancer, Jimmy's driving ambition and how it is changing him... and all of that's just what's happening in this issue! Left on the back-burner are Simone DeNeige and her influence at the Daily Planet, Dirk Armstrong and his views, the whole Intergang/clone subplot, Luthor's arrest, marriage and upcoming child, the mysterious history of the Contessa, plus more I'm sure I've forgotten. The Superman writers are at this moment akin to jugglers trying to keep 15 balls in the air at once. So far, they are managing... but barely. Once in a while, one of the balls gets away. Dropped ball #1: Superman Blue 'willing' his injuries. The writer's theory, delivered through Lois' mouth, of, "That energy is still you! You control it!" doesn't cut it for me: my red-cells are still me, but that doesn't stop them from flowing all over when I gash myself open. I would have liked to see more long-term effects of any injuries to Clark so that he had to be more careful while human. As it stands, anything which does not kill him can be healed by a quick switch to Electri-Kal for a patch-up and then back to Kent again. Pfaugh. Dropped ball #2: Metallo goes to take out a Nuclear Reactor which is situated _right next to_ an amusement park? Surely that has to violate _some_ sort of zoning bylaws... :-) Dropped ball #3: _Another_ new power for Superman? Where will it all end? Already he can effectively teleport, read information from computers, absorb radiation, turn intangible, manifest force-shapes, and hold things in a tractor beam... now he can affect _gravity_ too? Come on guys... Superman isn't about the funky powers; it's about the man who wields the powers. Not dropped, but wobbling: The whole scene with The Ray resolved nothing. The kid seems to know less about his powers than Superman knows about his, and he was not able to offer much in the way of insights. Superman sounded really whiney during the whole dialog, and The Ray came off looking even more clueless than usual. Certainly not worthy of the gorgeous cover. Enough nit-picking though. This issue had me hanging on for dear life, ripped from one scene to the next, bursting with subplots which were, for the main part, character-driven -- and those are the best kind. I'm looking forward to when things slow down and we can examine some things in a little more detail, but for now I'm content to enjoy the ride. It sure beats being bored to tears. In closing, I have to say a word about the art. I can with some confidence say that I have been a fan of Grummett's artwork longer than anyone else out there, and after seeing this issue and WF3 I hereby declare him the Metallo artist to end all Metallo-artists. Since his power-boost in Underworld Unleashed, Metallo has been far more interesting (and dangerous) and was a great choice as a villain for this arc. Grummett renders him beautifully: Inside each form can be seen the components of the source materials making every shape unique not only in looks, but in motion and articulation. Also, Grummett doesn't fall into the 'Iron Man' or 'Steel' trap of giving Metallo an expressive metal face -- yet he still manages to convey emotions. Final note: It's nice to read a multi-issue story which doesn't have the story-arc's name screaming at me from the top of every issue. Shane Travis (travis@sedsystems.ca) -- 30 -- ______________________________________________________ SUPER-FAMILY TITLES: ------------------- JLA #5, "Woman of Tomorrow" Written by Grant Morrison Pencils by Howard Porter Inks by John Dell Colors by Pat Garrahy Color Separations by Heroic Age Letters by Ken Lopez Edited by Ruben Diaz Cover by Howard Porter and John Dell May 1997 $1.95 US/$2.75 CAN RATINGS: Average: 4.0/5.0 Shields JG: 3.8 Shields - Nice story, if a bit rushed. Excellent characterization, as always. JS: 3.8 Shields - Morrison provides a story with a real "Silver Age" kind of feel to it, and I'm actually sorry to see that Tomorrow Woman won't be around permanently. I'm not wild about Porter's art in any case, but his Blue Superman just doesn't work for me. AW: 4.5 Shields - This was extremely similar to an old JLA story from the '70s, when T.O. Morrow created the Red Tornado. Still, the storytelling is top-notch and artwork is definitely above average. ==================================== STEEL #38, "The Gambler" Written by Priest Pencils by Denys Cowan Inks by Tom Palmer Letters by Pat Brosseau Computer Colors by Stu Chaifetz Associate Editor Ruben Diaz Editor Frank Pittarese Cover by Dave Johnson May 1997 $1.95 US/$2.75 CAN RATINGS: Average: 2.8/5.0 Shields DS: 3.0 Shields - I'm not sure how to rate this. The trouble with this crossover is that even after reading it, I still have no clue about the Question. JS: 2.6 Shields - This one didn't do much for me, but I suspect it was because I felt out of the loop -- the Question is unfamiliar to me, and Priest doesn't bother to tell us much about him. On the other hand, more twists about Dr. Villain. Why does Steel have his hammer on the cover, when he's currently not using one? Story: Our story opens with John Henry Irons standing in a seedy bar in Casablanca, definitely several steps below "Rick's Cafe Americain". He is showing a photograph of Arthur Villain and seeking information on his whereabouts. He gets a lead that Arthur has been taken by Alawi Sharif, apparently a local strong man whom it is wise not to cross. John Henry is wearing his "casual" Steel outfit -- black fabric tights and shirt, his "Steel" rocket boots, and an S-Shield (his new version), possibly made of pewter, on his shirt at the top of the neck opening. As we will later learn, the black fabric has all kinds of high tech circuitry built in. He is also wearing a jacket and carrying a bag over his shoulder similar to a camera or laptop bag. One of the natives spots the S-shield and everyone starts calling him "Superman", unaware that even though Superman is now a man of color, his color is blue and not black. A white bearded horseman rides up discharging his shotgun into the air to disperse the crowd. John Henry thanks him, just before being hit with the gun butt and being knocked out. John Henry regains consciousness and finds himself in a room resembling a cell with another man, Vic Sage. Vic is a gambler who was trying to make enough money to buy an airline ticket back to Hub City. Unfortunately he got into a card game with Mawlay Ismail, the current leader of the Alawi Sharif dynasty, a local enforcer and compulsive gambler. Mawlay is a man of great honor when it comes to gambling debts, as well he should be since he uses marked cards to ensure that he doesn't lose. Vic decides to help John Henry find Villain and free him. Vic puts on a wide brimmed hat and a faceless mask and becomes The Question, a DC Universe character whom I know absolutely nothing about. The scene changes to Alawi Sharif's lair, and we see him trying to make a bet with the bearded man who captured John Henry that Steel is really Superman. Although the bearded man, who is referred to as Colonel Metcalfe, knows that he isn't Superman, he refuses to take the bet, apparently realizing that either the Alawi Sharif has an angle that will allow him to win or the colonel will suffer the fate of all gamblers who have the misfortune to win a bet against Mawlay. Meanwhile Steel and the Question are moving along through the sewers headed toward Mawlay's headquarters. Steel explains how Arthur was captured: apparently he was summoned to operate on Ismail's daughter and was subsequently kept by him after the operation was unsuccessful. Steel goes up to create a diversion while the Question attempts to find and release Villain. When he finds Villain, a fist fight ensues between the Question and half a dozen or so mercenaries paid to guard Arthur. Steel finds Mawlay and demands Arthur's release. Ismail has kept Arthur because Arthur owed him a debt. Since Arthur failed to cure Ismail's daughter, the debt remained unpaid and Arthur was held prisoner. When Steel makes a further demand for Villain's release, Ismail relents but promises to kill Vic, who has been subdued by nerve gas after incapacitating 20 of the mercenaries. Steel agrees to a wager to free The Question. He will fight the Colonel. If he wins, all go free. If not, Vic and Arthur go free and John Henry remains behind as Ismail's servant while he constructs 1000 suits of armor. So Steel and Metcalfe fight while Vic is in a tank filling with water to drown him. First Steel removes his uniform for the fight much to the consternation of Col. Metcalfe and Mawlay. After about three pages, Steel defeats Metcalfe by use of ultrasonic sound from modifying his flight boots, which also breaks the glass of the tank where the Question was drowning. It turned out to be the case that Ismail had magnetic resonance scanners in the room where the fight took place, and he had planned to use them to determine the makeup of Steel's costume. With this plan thwarted, Mawlay Ismail was a big loser. The final scene revealed that he was an even bigger loser. He lost 2.7 million dollars to Villain, who had bet him that Steel would successfully save him. Art: There is a lot of variety in Cowan and Palmer's art in this issue. Many of the panels are very clean with virtually no background but nice color fades from Chaifetz, while other panels contain large amounts of what I have previously termed "Cowan's scribbling." For example, all of the panels on page seven seem very busy while page ten is very clean. I have been looking for the cinematic art style that I alluded to in last month's review and found two examples: on page nine, Steel's journey via rocket boots was effectively captured by quickly cutting from one view to another among several small panels; on pages five and six, the introduction of Vic and his alter-ego the Question was handled nicely by switching between close-ups and panorama scenes, although the detail here was not clear enough for me to determine precisely how Vic Sage transformed into the Question -- does he wear a mask, or is the change caused by taking a potion? Dave Johnson's cover is problematical. It is brown with a picture of Mawlay Ismail in the background. He is sort of reminiscent of a maniacal George Washington with the pupils of his eyes represented by skulls. The foreground shows Steel fighting with Col. Metcalfe, although Steel is wearing his usual uniform and Metcalfe looks nothing like he does in the story. Summary: This is a difficult issue to rate. I am unfamiliar with the Question, and he remained pretty much a mystery to me throughout the book. The ending of the story was somewhat surprising and also enigmatic. It wasn't clear whether Villain's bet was planned and he was in no real danger (my opinion) or whether he made the bet knowing that if he lost it he would not be around to pay it off in the first place. Overall, John Henry is a more interesting character under Priest's hands than he was during the end of Simonson's tenure. I'm getting used to Priest's style because as I read the book, I notice his clever dialogue and appreciate it and its context -- it no longer sticks out as a deliberate attempt to be clever. But I still miss Natasha and Paul. Dick Sidbury (sidbury@cs.uofs.edu) ==================================== SUPERBOY AND THE RAVERS #9, "The Road Not Taken" ROAD TRIP: THIRD STOP Written by Steve Mattsson and Karl Kesel Pencils by Paul Pelletier Inks by Dan Davis Colors by John Kalisz Letters by Kevin Cunningham Associate Editor Ruben Diaz Editor Frank Pittarese Cover by Paul Pelletier and Dan Davis May 1997 $1.95 US/$2.75 CAN RATINGS: Average: 4.1/5.0 Shields JS: 4.0 Shields - The book continues to be great fun as Kesel and Mattsson further develop the members of this team. Very nice moments with Kaliber and the Man of St...Energy, and we peek into Aura's head a bit, discovering she's not exactly what she might appear. JG: 3.8 Shields - Glad to see Aura developing into a true character. AW: 4.5 Shields - The scene between Superman and the Qwardian made it for me. This final issue of the Ravers' road trip is told from Aura's perspective. She's not too happy with the team's choice to stop in Suicide Slum upon their arrival in Metropolis, but that is where Superman was last seen in all of his new, blue glory. The crux of the tale is that Superboy feels it's now his time to take over the original suit, and the remainder of the story goes to show that while he's on his way to that destination, he's not quite ready yet. Superman agrees he could use a backup for the moment, and so Superboy is "officially promoted." Before things get underway, Superboy attempts to introduce Kaliber to Superman, but Kaliber had shrunk in fear -- the Man of Energy's new powers are reminiscent of a Qwa-archangel (what do they tell their kids on Qward?)! The gang overhears on the police band that the SCU needs help against a criminal -- and it turns out that Loophole's young assistant, Ariel, has uses of her own for the molecular disruption technology (see last issue). Hero tries out a new spin on the H-Dial, resulting in the appearance of the Feathered Serpent. Superboy tries to stop Ariel, but he gets a molecularly disrupted kick to the groin, which I shouldn't need to explain is quite painful. The team splits up to find Ariel, and when Aura decides to duck out for a while, she stumbles across the villain, who promptly pulls her halfway through a wall. Superboy shows back up, only to be disrupted a couple more times, putting him in a really bad way. Finally, though, Superman arrives, providing the team with the element of intimidation. While Ariel is distracted, Superboy shatters her technology and then Aura wraps her up in a steel lamppost. Need I explain the two's powers again? Finally, with the crisis over, Kaliber gets to meet Superman, and is duly stunned that the Man of Energy knows who Kaliber is. An immediately classic scene, once again rising directly from Kaliber's hero-worship. We have just a little bit of advance on the Rave front, as Hardrock continually reminds us that he thinks the Rave needs to be cleaned up. And this story will apparently come to blows in the next few months. Superboy also realizes that he's not quite ready for the prime time yet, and he and Superman agree that Superboy should switch back to his old costume. But perhaps the most interesting development in this book was the way Aura seemed to have a personality swing. At the beginning of the issue, Aura is still in her "I'm in hell" mode, complaining to herself about how she was forced to accompany the rest of the team. When Superboy makes his first appearance in the Superman costume, Aura's thoughts reveal an overwhelming cynicism about the Kid: "I'm sure he had it stuffed in his shorts just waiting for the real Superman to drop dead again." But we immediately begin to find some motivation for her cynicism. She complains that the hero-types are in the business for the "quick fix and glory" but could care less for the "real work and responsibility." Later, as they are traveling to help the SCU, she thinks that it's "too bad the law always gets in the way of justice." At this point, I'm thinking there's something traumatic in her background that has turned her off on heroes -- the distaste is just a bit strong to be much of anything else. At the end of the issue, she and the Suicide Slum community salvage the battleship Metallo had run aground in his fight with Superman, turning it into the "Metallo Arms Apartments and Homeless Shelter." And then Aura shows absolutely no ill will for Superman receiving the credit -- it appears that she wants to use her powers for true good, and not for any kind of reward or notoriety. And then the telling comments to Superboy, where she admits that she had been impressed by the Kid: "You fought someone who you couldn't touch and caused you nothing but pain... but you never gave up. I didn't do that when I could have... when I should have." Again, a possible allusion to some incident in her past which has colored her opinions. This exploration into Aura was quite interesting, and we managed to learn quite a bit more about her than we have in the first eight issues combined. I'm looking forward to hearing the rest of her story. To close, a quick word about the art. Pelletier and Davis are quite a bit stronger than they were in the previous issue, producing some of their best work to date. It's a shame we'll be plagued with the scourge of Super-art when SUPERBOY's Ramon Bernado guest-pencils next month... Jeff Sykes (sykes@ms.uky.edu) ==================================== SUPERGIRL #9, "Tempus Fugit" Written by Peter David Pencils by Gary Frank Inks by Cam Smith Letters by Pat Prentice Colors by Gene D'Angelo Color Separations by Digital Chameleon Edited by Frank Pittarese Cover by Gary Frank, Cam Kennedy, and Patrick Martin May 1997 $1.95 US/$2.75 CAN RATINGS: Average: 2.4/5.0 Shields JS: 2.8 Shields - Well. Simply a bit too far out there for my tastes, and even Frank's art is a touch over the top, especially when Supergirl's doing her "fallen angel" thing towards the end of the story. What's with the kid with the bat? VV: 2.5 Shields - Good story and ending, except for the total wimp-out of the ending which, in effect, makes it all a dream sequence for Supergirl. Now that Buzz is out of the picture, and the reason for the Linda/Matrix amalgam (sorry) is gone, will the "real" Matrix emerge as dominant? Will they separate? AW: 2.0 Shields - Gruesome cover. I'm still waiting for this comic to get a real direction. Let's see. What really happens in this issue? Who knows? Maybe nothing. Just keep following along, and you'll eventually understand. After Tempus blasts into the Danvers' home, Linda knocks him away with a psi-blast. After getting her dad's blessing for seeking help, she leaves through the front door, only to have the house explode behind her, presumably killing her parents. We now discover that Buzz is actually working for someone else, and that he has promised them a fallen angel. Apparently, Supergirl is the intended angel. Wally, the weird kid with the bat (still no clue), goes to help Linda, and we discover that he's got a few abilities of his own. Linda morphs into Supergirl after searching the blazing house and takes off for the hospital, where Tempus is now after Mattie. The two battle, and Tempus actually manages to wound Supergirl. Through the entire ordeal, Supergirl grows darker and darker, succumbing to what Buzz has laid forth in her life. Even the pleas of Linda's soul can't extinguish her hatred and thirst for vengeance. But just when it looks like things have gone exactly Buzz's way, he steps in and somehow draws her back from the abyss. It's unclear why Buzz saves Supergirl from the fate that he had arranged, but his "partners" are none too happy and remove him from this plane for his impending punishment. And as Buzz disappears in a thunderclap, all lose consciousness, and the shadow of weird Wally hovers above... And then Linda is awakened in her apartment by a phone call from her parents, wondering why she hasn't yet shown up for dinner. And Dick Malverne, who had been transformed into Tempus by Buzz, is now resting in Linda's bed. All I really got out of this was a bunch of questions. Why did Buzz send Tempus after Mattie? Who is Wally, and what is his role in Linda/Supergirl's life? Why did Buzz change his mind? And why did everything essentially get reset? I sincerely hope this will be our last stroll through the darkness Mr. David has given us for the first nine months of this title. Maybe we can now get down to some "normal life" for Linda/Supergirl and discover exactly what makes her tick. This issue also marks the final Gary Frank-pencilled issue. Next month's guest-penciller, Leonard Kirk, becomes the regular penciller as of July's issue #13. While I will miss Frank's dynamic illustrations and expressive facial features, I certainly will not miss his tendency to stoop to the so-called "good girl" art that he apparently loves so much. And I could go another hundred issues before I see more of the flaming, bleeding, demonic Supergirl which showed up in the last half of this book. I respect Mr. David's choice to take this character in his own direction, but so far his direction seems to include very little of the heroic nature of Supergirl. What happened to the Supergirl who fought so hard to prove herself and to avenge the loss of her friend in "Panic In The Sky"? What happened to the woman who confronted Superboy over his wearing the "S" while mixed up with Knockout? This Supergirl has simply become an ambiguous "hero" with telekinetic powers who rarely resembles the "ideal" of Supergirl. Byrne's Matrix/Supergirl may not have been the Kara that fans wanted back so dearly, but I'd pay good money in a heartbeat to have the optimism and joy in either of those incarnations find its way into Linda/Supergirl. Jeff Sykes (sykes@ms.uky.edu) ==================================== SUPERMAN ADVENTURES #7, "All Creatures Great and Small: Part 1" Big Words by Scott McCloud Petite Pencils by Rick Burchett Immense Inks by Terry Austin Li'l Letters by Lois Buhalis Colossal Colors by Marie Severin Half-Pint: Mike McAvennie Cover by Rick Burchett, Terry Austin, and Marie Severin May 1997 $1.75 US/$2.50 CAN RATINGS: Average: 3.8/5.0 Shields CS: 4.0 Shields - Once again, solid art and writing to give you more than your money's worth, but forces the reader to be familiar with the Animated Series to sort out the characters and suffers because of it. JS: 3.6 Shields - Felt a bit padded, and I think Turpin's characterization is a bit more extreme than in the continuity titles. The art is solid, though, and there are some wonderful size gags -- the opening page to splash page sequence, and especially the bug spray, for examples. Any comic book that starts with a cover of heroes fighting on oversize items is a must-have for me. This one has Superman fighting General Jax-Ur and Mala on what looks like an oversized computer. The background is blurred by a computerized effect in a very trendy way; I usually find this effect distracting but it works on this cover. The story starts with General Jax-Ur (who isn't identified by name until later in the story) ranting about how he will soon break free and exact his revenge. Despite the use of moving perspective and nice coloring effects, the page did nothing to draw me into the story. We don't notice anything strange about the scene until the splash page, where we see that he's been miniaturized and placed in a very small glass case with his assistant (? Cohort? Girlfriend? Secretary?) Mala. This brings me to the problem I have with this issue of this comic. THE BATMAN ADVENTURES worked very well as a completely stand-alone comic, introducing all the major characters as if this were the first time they had been encountered. SUPERMAN ADVENTURES seems to rely on the reader watching the SUPERMAN Animated series (which I am unable to as I do not get a WB station). Not having seen the series, I would have to assume that these characters were introduced there and have been left in this state. One of the few things Jim Shooter ever said that I agree with is "You have to treat every comic as if it's someone's first." Without having seen the episode to which this comics seems to be a sequel, I felt as if I was missing information. [Actually, you're in the same boat as everyone else with regard to this issue. The Kryptonian villains have yet to appear on the series. --Jeff] Professor Hamilton has perfected a miniaturization ray that will help in keeping these Phantom Zone criminals in conditions that would be considered humane. Superman makes a nice point that the "Phantom Zone" would be considered cruel and unusual punishment. Never having thought about it, I would have to agree, but it is safer, as we find out later in the story. During an Intergang breakout a few weeks later, the glass prison is bathed in sunlight, giving the Kryptonian criminals the power to escape. Before Superman can react, however, he is miniaturized to their size. From here, the story starts going at full steam and doesn't let up. Superman's first battle with General Jax-Ur and Mala is fun, playing with the fact that they are so much smaller than everyone else around them. The criminals get away and look for Professor Hamilton's device to restore them to their normal size. Superman enlists Lois' aid in restoring him to his rightful size. This leads to a fight in Lois' apartment. While the battle sequence is well done, the best part, in my opinion, are the scenes showing Lois' reactions to what's going on around her. Twice she tells Superman to be careful not to break something, and we see her reaction to the damage, instead of the damage occurring. The story ends with General Jax-Ur using Professor Hamilton's device. Of course, he doesn't use it to restore himself to his original size, but rather to become a giant and cause more property damage. How will a tiny Superman battle a foe ten times the size of a normal human? We'll have to wait for next issue. As with every issue of Superman Adventures, the good points far outweighed the bad. The story plays with the whole Land of the Giants/Ant-Man premise in a creative way. The fight scenes don't intrude into the story, but keep things moving toward the cliffhanger. As a longtime comic reader, cliffhangers don't do much for me; I know the hero will get out of the trap, and many times it just feels like an artificial story point. This cliffhanger, however, did what they are all supposed to do -- it made me want to read the next issue RIGHT NOW!! Burchett's art never fails to amaze, in that he is able to give Lois more personality in one panel through body language than many other creators have done in entire issues. A minor complaint I have could have been cleared up by tighter editing. When Lois hides Superman in her desk to wait for their meeting with Professor Hamilton to restore Superman's size, the panel shows Lois yawning and the caption reads, "Quitting time." On the next page, she tells a coworker that she's leaving early to deal with a family emergency. Which is it? I also don't like that Dan "Terrible" Turpin (a Kirby Kreation) is shown here as a blustery cop. This doesn't really jibe with his characterization in the current Superman comics or in Kirby's old "Fourth World" stories, so I can only assume that he acts like this on the cartoon. This is too bad, since his 'Law and Order' persona is better than the one used here. I still look forward to this book more than any of the other Superman comics, and recommend it to anyone who says, "They don't make 'em like that anymore." Cory Strode (c.strode@genie.com) ______________________________________________________ LOIS AND CLARK: THE NEW ADVENTURES OF SUPERMAN ------------------------------------------------------ PUT IT IN WRITING --------------------------------- by Zoomway (Zoomway@aol.com) AT&T long distance service has had some of the most annoying ads I've ever suffered through. Paramount among these was an extremely high strung man who kept saying "put it in writing." I think he went on to play Fox Mulder on THE X-FILES. I bring this up because I have had my first and last foray into the not so wonderful world of advertising. I speak, of course, of the FoLC ad that appeared in The USA Today on April 11. This very expensive, and very small ad (4" x 7") started as a project spun from a joke. On October 31 (yes, Halloween and the same date Orson Welles got into trouble with his "War of the Worlds" broadcast), I posted on AOL that I would like to see a billboard with Dean and Teri on it, and preferably a steamy, traffic-stopping billboard. However, the next day, Judi Mair wondered if perhaps a FoLC sponsored ad might not be possible in earnest, and so a never-ending project began. The ad idea immediately attracted supporters and naysayers. We were warned that we needed lawyers, an ad agency, an accounting firm, and so on. Regardless of the good advice, we plodded on optimistically, and maybe a bit too idealistically. The ad's heart and soul came from Beth Guide, a Texas resident with newspaper experience. She immediately started shaping the chaos into a committee, and was on the phone constantly to publications retrieving ad rate information. This became a daunting reality to the committee. Publications with huge circulation and national coverage, such as TV Guide and USA Today, had ad rates so high that even a half page ad cost more than a 3 bedroom house. Needless to say, the big circulation publications were out. Trade papers for the entertainment industry, like Daily Variety and The Hollywood Reporter, had ad rates so much lower that a full page ad cost 3 times less than the 4x7 ad in USA Today. The circulation of these trade papers is quite low, and with most trade publications, the readership outside of the industry is lower still. In other words, the ad, even at a full page, would be seen by few who could do LOIS AND CLARK much good in the ratings. However, since the intent of the ad originally was merely to be a "thank you" to the cast, writers, producers, and crew at LOIS AND CLARK, then it was hoped that the ad would at least be seen by them. That gave the ad committee a goal of $4500 to raise. My function with the ad committee was to post about the ad to as many LOIS AND CLARK forums as possible asking for fans who were interested to send in their donations. This ran smoothly everywhere but on America Online. A LOIS AND CLARK fan there felt it necessary to turn in the ad committee for violating the "terms of service" prohibiting the solicitation of funds. Around the time the ad committee was bailed out of AOL jail, ABC entered the picture. The network representative asked the committee why it chose a paper with such low, and esoteric readership for the ad when something like USA Today would mean so much more publicity for the show. ABC was told that the ad rates were just too high. ABC then made its offer. The network representative said that ABC would match fan contribution dollar for dollar if the committee would shoot for an ad in USA Today or TV Guide. This would mean a smaller ad, and at the time *how* much smaller was unclear. Even at this, it meant fans would have to come up with almost twice as much money just to pay for half of the ad, but LOIS AND CLARK fans are pretty amazing when they mobilize. While the money was being collected, the committee worked on creating the physical ad itself. There were three LOIS AND CLARK publicity photos requested from ABC for the ad, and they agreed to these photo choices, though they would not allow them to appear at the ad website. So, three blank picture frames were placed there instead. Early drafts of the ad were much too "wordy", and so the ad went though many stages of development. One aspect of the ad was to be that anyone who contributed, would get his, or her name listed in the ad. This ABC did not like because of the technical problems it created and so they asked that the names be removed. The ad committee stood firm on keeping the names since it was the understanding of those who contributed that their names would appear. Keeping the names became a miniature battle in itself. ABC decided to do the names as a background wallpaper in the ad, but even this could not be worked out logistically, and so the names just ended up as a unit block in the ad. At last, the fans had come through, and their half of the money had been raised, and then the programming end of ABC caused a problem. The ad committee was ready for the ad to appear in December, and told everyone that is when it would appear, but the ABC representative told the committee to wait, because LOIS AND CLARK would be moving to an earlier Sunday time slot in January. So the committee had to post again and tell fans to be patient, and that the ad would appear in January so that the new time could be mentioned. Well, January came, but the committee once again had to tell fans that the ad would not be appearing because LOIS AND CLARK would be put on hiatus for the whole month of February, and so there was no sense in advertising something that would be missing from the ABC lineup. With March came the hope the ad would finally see print, and everyone at this point was just happy it was nearly over, but then the programming department stepped in again, and said that in April LOIS AND CLARK would be moving to Saturday, and yet again the ad was put on hold. There was also a lot of backstage maneuvering from ABC's end of the deal. They were not going to "signoff" on the ad until it was something they were satisfied with, and so an ad that ABC had promised would belong to the fans all the way, was rapidly becoming anything but. Even a short line, "We know a secret." was refused by ABC in that it seemed to infer that the network was responsible for LOIS AND CLARK being underpublicized. They sent *their* version of the ad to the committee, which looked something like a missing child update on a milk carton, with a rather unflattering photo of Dean and Teri. Of the three photos the committee had been told they could use in the ad, not one was used in ABC's version. Finally a flattering photo of Dean and Teri was agree upon, but aside from the names of contributors, and the small print at the bottom (even "sponsored by Fans of Lois & Clark" was a line that had to be fought for in order to keep) the ad is mainly ABC's. Am I surprised by this? Not really. Am I angry? Surprisingly, no, I am not. Initially sure, but without ABC the ad would not have had a prayer of appearing in USA Today, nor would there have been any guarantee it would have appeared around the country in each regional edition on the same day (USA Today has over 20 regional editions). There is also the fact that while it may need a valve job, ABC does have a hype engine that fans do not. Even before the ad appeared in USA Today, an article mentioning the fan effort appeared (also in USA Today) April 9th, and best of all, a great story about the FoLC ad was featured on the syndicated entertainment news magazine show ACCESS HOLLYWOOD. Beth Guide, the prime mover and shaker behind the ad, gave a great accounting of fan desires for their favorite program. When the ad finally appeared on April 11th, it was treated to something of a cyberspace "Cheers" and "Jeers" reaction. Most were very happy, but there were those who were disappointed by how small the ad was, and those who didn't think the ad was very clever, and one of the most amusing "jeers" came from a fan whose name appeared in the ad -- that fan never paid a dime in contributions, and yet seemed crushed the ad was so small. Fortunately, the cheers outnumbered the jeers, and in the end, the ad produced the type of publicity that no amount of money can buy. It also proved that when fans of LOIS AND CLARK set their mind to something, they are hard to discourage and impossible to stop. Will the ad bring up the ratings? Probably not. That is, Saturday has traditionally been an ultra-weak night for ABC, and it has chronically lost that night to the competition all year long. So, you might rightfully ask, what good is the ad? The answer of course, is that the fans accomplished it in the first place. This was no small feat, and so fans, united by their affection for LOIS AND CLARK THE NEW ADVENTURES OF SUPERMAN told the world, not so much about their favorite show, but a great deal about themselves, and their determination to present an unstoppable force. In closing, I want to thank all fans for their support, Judi Mair for getting it started, Demi, for long writes and rewrites, Les Stratford for his artistic patience, Moreen Romans working behind the scenes and tirelessly negotiating with ABC, Jen Eagan for setting up the bank account and doing clever folc ad progress reports, and mostly thanks to Beth Guide who made it real, or more accurately, as the co-host of ACCESS HOLLYWOOD dubbed her, "The woman of steel." ______________________________________________________ SUPERMAN: THE ANIMATED SERIES --------------------------------------- Ratings Panelists: CH: Curtis Herink NO: Neil Ottenstein DS: Dick Sidbury SD: Scott Devarney The first rating given after the average is that of the reviewer. The average rating given for a particular episode may correspond to a larger sample of ratings than what is printed following the average. Given airdates correspond to the date of first US airing as regularly scheduled on the Warner Brothers Television Network. ====================================================== Episode #6: "The Way of All Flesh" ---------------------------------------------------- Reviewed by Scott Devarney (devarney@ll.mit.edu) October 19, 1996 Written by Stan Berkowitz Directed by Kenji Hachizaki Featuring: Clark Kent/Superman -- Tim Daly Lois Lane -- Dana Delany Lex Luthor -- Clancy Brown John Corben/Metallo -- Malcolm McDowell Angela Chen -- Lauren Tom Dr. Vale -- John Rubinow Young Doctor -- Jeff Glenn Bennett Male Anchor -- Neil Ross Young Woman -- Jennifer Richards RATINGS: Average: 3.8/5.0 Shields SD: 3.0 Shields CH: 3.8 Shields - An undercurrent of menace is sustained from the title to the closing shot. NO: 4.5 Shields - Good origin of Metallo. I liked the manipulation of Luthor and use of Corben. Lois coming to the rescue was great. His reactions on learning about his lack of senses were very good. Final scene - great! DS: 3.8 Shields - Nice continuity. I didn't remember that John Corben was the guy in the pilot ep. I like the ending and can't wait to see how Lex will handle him the next time. This was one of those episodes that, as Dick Sidbury noted in his LOIS AND CLARK review in KC #36, works on the initial viewing but, upon further analysis, tends to fall apart. The initial scenes of Luthor maneuvering Corben into becoming Metallo really showed off Lex's devious mind. These scenes were the best part of the plot. Luthor buys Corben's loyalty by apparently secretly providing Corben with enough cash to live in the lap of luxury while in prison and then engineering a jailbreak. When Luthor offers a far-fetched and drastic "cure" to Corben's disease, Corben's agreement to become Metallo is believable; it is a hasty reaction to a desperate solution offered by a man Corben has no reason to distrust. Luthor's reaction to Corben's agreement is full of foreshadowing that Corben may have sold his soul to the devil. It is the following action scenes that cause the episode to fall apart. Writer Stan Berkowitz shows an excessive amount of violence but doesn't really follow up on it. A prime example is Metallo's derailment of a commuter train. All of the cars are lifted from the track with the end car dangling off of the elevated track. This is clearly a job for Superman yet we never see Superman save the dangling car; he arrives and immediately tackles Metallo. We never see an ambulance at the scene although presumably many people would be injured in an accident of that magnitude. Another similar situation occurs when Metallo invades Luthor's yacht and throws Lex's date into the drink; we see her get tossed overboard but we never see her surface. We should have seen people being rescued. Younger viewers in particular need to be reassured that the victims are being cared for and that help is being rendered. Another problem with this episode is that Superman acts stupidly. During the final showdown on Luthor's yacht, Superman ignites the yacht's gasoline with his heat vision, causing it to explode. Now, Superman and Metallo were in no danger, but Luthor could have been killed. Seeing as Superman was trying to stop Metallo from killing Luthor, this gives new meaning to "out of the frying pan and into the fire". Granted, this is early in Superman's career and he has yet to develop his code against killing (at least we've yet to see it mentioned), but it is still unnerving to see Superman display such disregard for people's safety. What probably happened was that the end of the show was near and Berkowitz needed to quickly wrap up the battle. Still, the way chosen displays a dangerous recklessness on Superman's part. There were several things to recommend this episode. Metallo is a great foe, and the one-on-one battles between him and Superman were a lot of fun. Malcolm McDowell's portrayal of Metallo's anguish was quite convincing. In fact, this idea of Corben's inability to feel is a great concept that has been previously unexplored; it adds a nice humanizing touch that the character lacked. Another great bit was Lois Lane's rescue of Superman during the first Metallo duel. This scene showed her courage and feelings for Superman. This Lois is much closer to the comics' version than Teri Hatcher's portrayal on LOIS AND CLARK. The artwork was wonderful with nice consistent shading, particularly on the characters and the background scenery, and the ending shot of Metallo walking on the ocean bottom was appropriately eerie. In summary, not a bad episode, although the violence was a little over the top, and Superman wasn't the brightest bulb on the tree. Luthor and Metallo helped overcome many of those flaws. An animated rematch should be a lot of fun. (For another battle between Superman and Metallo, check out SUPERMAN ADVENTURES #2.) ______________________________________________________ ************************************************************ End of Section 5/Issue #37