______________________________________________________ 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 #56 - Early December 1998 ______________________________________________________ CONTENTS -------- Section 1: Superscripts: Notes from the Editor(s) Best Laid Plans... Ratings At A Glance Titles Shipped October 1998 The KC Newsroom More changes ahead for the Superman comics, another delay for the Superman videogame, a second wave of 80-Page Giants, and a BIG meeting with the Fantastic Four And Who Disguised As... Peace on Earth and a Piece of Crap By J.D. Rummel Superman: The Animated Series "Knight Time" Superman, the Dark Knight? Review by Scott Devarney Section 2: 1998 Superman Comics Index Part I: Triangle Titles, Superman Family Titles, Team Titles, and Superman Adventures Section 3: 1998 Superman Comics Index Part II: Limited Series, Specials, and Guest Appearances 1998 Kaycees Nominations The Mailbag Section 4: New Comic Reviews The Triangle Titles Action Comics #749, by Shane Travis Superman: The Man of Steel #84, by Mike Smith Superman #140, by Thomas Deja Section 5: New Comic Reviews The Triangle Titles (cont) Adventures of Superman #563, by Dan Radice Super-Family Titles Superboy #57, by Rene' Gobeyn Supergirl #27, by Thomas Deja Superman Adventures #26, by Cory Strode Section 6: New Comic Reviews Team Titles JLA #24, by Anatole Wilson Young Justice #3, by Gary Robinson Miniseries Superman for all Seasons #4, by Douglas Wolk Superman: The Dark Side #3, by Rene' Gobeyn Section 7: New Comic Reviews Miniseries (cont) Superman: The Doomsday Wars #1, by Gary Robinson Superman: Silver Banshee #1, by Josh Elder Specials Elseworld's Finest: Supergirl and Batgirl, by Thomas Deja Superman 3-D #1, by Mike Smith Section 8: New Comic Reviews Specials (cont) Superman: War of the Worlds, by Jeff Sykes The Phantom Zone When Supermen Meet Lou Mougin recounts the earliest meetings of the Earth-One and Earth-Two Supermen Superman #171 Scott Devarney looks at another classic Silver Age comic, featuring three tales of the Man of Steel Section 9: The Phantom Zone Tales of Earth-One Episode 7 - How They Got Their Jobs Bob Hughes' latest article turns to some of the most unbelievable coincidences in Superman comics... Section 10: After-Byrne Superman Stories Sean Hogan explores the tales which developed the current relationship between Superman and Batman STAFF: ------ Jeffery D. Sykes, Publisher and Co-Editor-in-Chief Shane Travis, Co-Editor-in-Chief and Executive Editor of Comic Reviews Neil Ottenstein, Executive Editor of STAS Reviews 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 1998 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(s) ------------------------------------------ By Jeff Sykes (sykes@ms.uky.edu) BEST LAID PLANS... Welcome, friends, to this belated issue. I'd like to say that this will be an isolated incident, but the odds are against it. My free time has recently become rather diminished due to having entered the final stages of my dissertation as well as having begun the mad job search for a position to begin next fall. This crush is not likely to ease up until after I *finally* earn my Ph.D. in May. I'm not the only one who's feeling the time-crunch either. Shane's still-rather-new son is time-consuming enough, but on top of that he's been working overtime in preparation for an extended business trip to Singapore in January and early February -- a trip which will make him unable to do much, if anything, for KC in those months. So for the immediate future, working on KC will be a matter of squeezing in a few hours whenever we can. This will almost certainly result in a more erratic publication schedule, though issues should still arrive on a roughly monthly basis. Just don't be surprised if we have to redate another issue. Subscription refunds will be available to those who can't live with this :) Before I turn you loose on the new issue, a couple of comments. Shane and I decided that delaying the second part of our response to _Wizard_ would be preferable to delaying this issue any further, so it will appear in our next issue. Also, in hopes of not dragging out the Kaycees results until spring, I'd be thrilled if someone would step up and help us tally the ballots beginning in January. Takers? Well, then. Get to reading, and we'll see you again next issue! ___________________________________________ RATINGS AT A GLANCE: Titles shipped October 1998 ----------------------------------------------------- Prepared by Shane Travis (travis@sedsystems.ca) A month full of specials -- nine 'regular' Superman and Superman-related titles, and seven specials of one sort of another. (Although, truth to tell, one of those is a hold-over from last month when things were just a bit too busy to give it the proper attention.) Most of these were received quite well, as they were of high quality. Unfortunately, the same cannot be said for either the quality or the reception of Ron Marz' month-long sideline sojourn into Kandor.... Key: ---- Issue -- Issue for which 'Current' Rating and Rank are calculated. The 'Previous' columns refer to the issue immediately prior to this. Rating -- Average Rating, in Shields (maximum rating is 5.0). The number in () indicates how many people submitted ratings. Rank -- The relative ranking of the book among the regularly-published Superman titles. Average -- Average of the ratings for this title over the indicated number of months, based on the book's cumulative average. Each month is weighted equally, regardless of the number of people rating the book that month. If this book is averaged over fewer months than the rest, the number of months is displayed in (). Current Previous Avg (6Mth) Title Issue Rating Rank Rating Rank Rating Rank ----- ----- ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ S. For All Seasons 4 4.4(8) - 4.2(9) - 4.38(4) - S: The Dark Side 3 4.1(6) - 3.9(6) - 4.00(3) - S: War/Worlds 1 4.0(6) - -- - -- - Superboy 57 3.6(8) 1 3.6(6) 2 3.45 2 SG/BG Elseworld 1 3.4(3) - -- - -- - JLA 24 3.2(10) 2(T) 3.0(8) 3 3.43 3 Supergirl 27 3.2(6) 2(T) 3.9(5) 1 3.62 1 S: Doomsday Wars 1 3.1(7) - -- - -- - S: Silver Banshee 1 3.1(5) - -- - -- - Young Justice 3 3.1(7) 4 2.8(7) 4 3.33(3) 4 Action Comics 749 2.6(11) 5 3.2(10) 5* 2.72 8 Man of Steel 84 2.6(9) 6 3.0(7) 7* 3.21 5 Superman Adv. 26 2.5(6) 7 3.6(6) && 3.12 6 Adv. of Superman 563 2.4(9) 8 2.6(7) 6 3.03 7 Superman 140 2.1(9) 9 2.3(10) 8 2.60 9 Superman 3-D 1 1.9(5) - -- - -- - * _Action_ #748 and _Man of Steel_ #83 have the relative rankings given to those books in the month that they were published (Sep 1998), despite that their ratings deserve higher ranks when compared against books the most recent titles of other books (Oct 1998). && No relative ranking is given for #25 of _Superman Adventures_ as it appeared during the _DC One Million_ month-long event. "Back where he belongs..." SUPERMAN FOR ALL SEASONS #4 (4.4 Shields, 4.38 shields series average) - This beautifully painted mini-series told a simple tale of Clark's beginnings and his road to becoming the superhero he s today, but it did it with style, panache, and a love not often seen in the regular triangle titles. Never dipping below 4.2 Shields in its ratings, this was one of the best-received (and best-done) Superman stories DC has published in a long, long time. "Just stick to two dimensions, okay?" SUPERMAN 3-D #1 (1.9 Shields, dead last) - In the worst showing for a one-shot special since the truly awful _Man of Steel Annual_ #6, DC took a story that only peripherally involved Superman and added state-of-the-art 3D effects to it, proving once again that just because you *can* do something doesn't mean you *should*. "That's one in a row, anyway..." SUPERMAN ADVENTURES (2.5 Shields, -1.1 Shields, 7th place) - In the only book to challenge the Triangle Titles supremacy at the bottom of the ratings, Mark Millar follows up a strong anniversary issue with a so-so tale about Mxyzptlk. Even the 5th-dimensional imp couldn't weave enough magic to save this one from mediocrity. Information for 'Ratings at a Glance' and the ratings accompanying the monthly reviews of Superman comics are obtained from KC readers. Anyone interested in contributing may contact Shane Travis and will be added to the monthly mailing-list to receive a Ratings Form. ___________________________________________ THE KC NEWSROOM ------------------- THE OVERHAUL CONTINUES We're beginning to need a scorecard for all the comings and goings on the Superman titles of late. As a recap, Louise Simonson and Jon Bogdanove have both left _Superman: The Man of Steel_, and their replacements, Mark Schultz and Doug Mahnke, take over with January's issue #87. Karl Kesel is stepping down from _Adventures of Superman_, and Jerry Ordway was set to take over that title. Ron Frenz ended his pencilling duties on _Superman_, with Steve Epting to take up that role in February's issue #143. Finally, as we announced last month, Joey Cavalieri is leaving his position as group editor, to be replaced by Eddie Berganza. And now, round 5... Despite the fact that Jerry Ordway had agreed to take over _Adventures of Superman_ from Karl Kesel, new Superman editor Eddie Berganza recently told Ordway that his services would no longer be required. Ordway was given the opportunity to write the title until around issue #571, when Berganza officially takes over, but Ordway decided to leave after dialoguing Kesel's final plot. Kesel and Ordway's final issue is #567, tentatively scheduled to arrive in stores in March 1999. After more than ten years of writing and/or pencilling Superman comics, Dan Jurgens has decided to leave his position as writer of _Superman_. Jurgens will not be abandoning the character completely, however, as he turns his attention to some Superman special projects such as _Doomsday Wars_ and the upcoming Superman/Fantastic Four crossover. Jurgens tells Newsarama (http://www.mania.com/newsarama/index.html), "I feel fortunate to have worked on a character I've loved for so long and would like to think Superman and I both benefited during my tenure. I also look forward to telling my own stories once more, without the weight of the 'chapter approach' that became more prevalent over the years." Replacements for Ordway and Jurgens have not yet been announced. SUPERMAN VIDEOGAME DELAYED Fastest Game News Online (http://www.fgnonline.com) is reporting that the Titus Software video game based upon the Superman animated series has been further delayed, despite the previously announced November release and the recent marketing blitz. Release is now scheduled for February 1999. Store pre-orders for the game have already exceeded one million units, but Titus prefers to release quality products rather than quantity. BITS AND BYTES * The Superman robots are coming... * 1998's series of 80-Page Giants were so successful that DC's going for a second round next year. Look for _Young Justice 80-Page Giant_ #1 in March and _Superman 80-Page Giant_ #2 in April. Also due in April is _DC One Million 80-Page Giant_ #1, helmed by Grant Morrison and including a Superman/Batman story by Mike Wieringo. A few other as-yet-unscheduled specials include _Elseworlds 80-Page Giant_ #1, _JLA 80-Page Giant_ #2, and _JLA Showcase 80-Page Giant_ #1. Currently, at least twelve Giants are scheduled for 1999. * Dave Taylor is the artist for the 10-issue _Batman & Superman: World's Finest_ maxi-series written by Karl Kesel. * Newsarama (http://www.mania.com/newsarama/index.html) and _Wizard_ have turned up some more information on the Superman/Fantastic Four team-up this spring. _Superman and the Fantastic Four: The Infinite Destruction_, written and pencilled by Dan Jurgens with inks by Art Thibert, is scheduled to arrive in stores in March 1999. And this is apparently a *big* deal, as the book will be a 64-page, treasury-sized volume (10" x 13", the same size as the recent _Superman: Peace on Earth_). ___________________________________________ AND WHO DISGUISED AS... --------------------------------------------------------- A Column of Opinion by J.D. Rummel (rummel@creighton.edu) Peace on Earth and a Piece of Crap By the time you read this, if you are any kind of Superman fan, you will have purchased or at least read _Peace on Earth_, the outsize special by Paul Dini and Alex Ross. Both of these talented men have put together a wonderful book. The story is good, not genius, but a solid super-narrative. Rather than the overblown, common-as-dirt super opponents of the weekly installments, we are given a Superman in our world. The story of a mighty being who attempts to address the serious issue of world hunger. Dini obviously took the well-intentioned failure, _Superman IV: the Quest for Peace_ and thought long and hard about it. He dropped the bad parts (95% of the film) and took the intelligent idea at its heart and explored it. This may be a luxury that comic book writers have over screenwriters. Comic book writers don't have the pressure of multiple agencies pressing them to produce a monster hit. In _Quest_, Superman sets out to change the world by removing all nuclear weapons. In _Peace on Earth_ he tackles the problem of world hunger. In both works Superman runs head long into his own limitations. In each, he learns there are things that even he cannot do. Also, Dini uses the nice approach of having Superman impart the details in the first person, with no word balloons to mar the art. The art. Oh baby! That Alex Ross is good. Like Neal Adams so many years before, he brings a realism to funny book images. Each panel just a few lines short of being a photograph. His Superman and Clark Kent conger fond memories of George Reeves and moments in other media where Superman would spring to life for just a few seconds and for an instant we could really believe. The artwork makes you want to point to filmmakers and say "This! Do this!" That is his triumph, he makes it look so easy, the rendering of a Superman. I can't imagine you need me to tell you to go get _Peace on Earth_. But please, spread the word. This is good stuff. On the other end of the spectrum is a bit of marketing flotsam called _Superman 3D_. I will be honest with you. I haven't been able to finish reading it. The first few pages left me very interested in other things. The art, while obviously colored and treated on certain pages to be conducive to the 3D process, is fit more for Archie comics. It is the visual equivalent of the Brady Bunch singing. The 3D seems to work, but my goggles were hard to assemble (not too complex, just too cheap to be done easily); in fact that's charitable. My *#$%! goggle lenses wouldn't separate from the cardboard, so I have white paper cataracts obscuring my vision. I can't see any reason to have produced this book other than to make money. Yeah, I know this is the comic business, but this thing smells badly of greed and gimmick. All parties associated with bringing this to the public should be forced to try to produce something worthwhile at gunpoint. Away! And Who Disguised As... is copyright 1998 by J. D. Rummel. Its contents may not be reproduced in any format without the written permission of the author ___________________________________________ SUPERMAN: THE ANIMATED SERIES ---------------------------------------- Episode #45: "Knight Time" ---------------------------------------------------- Reviewed by Scott Devarney (devarney@ll.mit.edu) October 10, 1998 Written by Robert Goodman Directed by Curt Geda Guest-Starring: Kevin Conroy as Batman/Bruce Wayne Matthew Valencia as Robin/Tim Drake Roddy McDowall as Mad Hatter John Glover as The Riddler Paul Williams as Penguin Henry Silva as Bane Bob Hastings as Commissioner James Gordon Charity James as Roxy Rocket Corey Burton as Brainiac RATINGS: Average: 3.9/5.0 Shields Scott Devarney: 5.0 Shields Nathan Bredfeldt: 4.3 Shields - A really fun episode, marred only by the complete and utter out-of-character behavior of Brainiac. Curtis Herink: 4.0 Shields - A nice change of pace -- at least for the first half. It would have been nice if the villain had not turned out to be one of Superman's old foes. Neil Ottenstein: 3.7 Shields - Superman's transformation from the Batman disguise in coming out the flames was very impressive. Also, nice that Robin got himself out of a trap without help. Karen Whitney: 2.5 Shields - This should have been classed as a Batman episode, guest-starring Superman, not a Superman episode. It constantly had that Batman darkness and feel to it, even before Superman left Metropolis for Gotham City. REVIEW Upon hearing that Batman is missing, Superman travels to Gotham City to find the missing hero. Without the Dark Knight, Gotham is falling apart; its criminals are getting more brazen as the police and Robin are overtaxed. To keep order, Superman teams up with Robin and impersonates Batman. Investigating Bruce Wayne's disappearance leads them to suspect the Mad Hatter's involvement, which leads to a confrontation with Mad Hatter, The Riddler, and Bane. Although this turns out to be a dead end, Mad Hatter does provide a clue which eventually leads Superman and Robin to the real villain -- Brainiac. This episode can be summed up in one word -- fun. Superman and Robin make a great team. A lot of it has to do with the chemistry between these two heroes. Superman treats Robin as an equal and Robin shines as a mentor to the Batman-disguised Superman. The two have great repartee as Robin is equally comfortable in Batman's dark world and Superman's brighter presence. Superman is clearly uncomfortable as Batman. It is amusing to watch him learn Batman's style of crime fighting, from his distaste for sneaking around, to his reluctance to intimidate Penguin for information, to his ignorance of where Batman's wire gun is located on his utility belt. This episode can be seen as a sequel to the story in _Superman Adventures_ #25. In that story, Superman teamed up with Batgirl and learned that his methods don't always work in Gotham; this episode furthers this idea as Superman tries to use Batman's tactics on Batman's enemies -- it isn't until he confronts his foe Brainiac that Superman is able to cut loose. Speaking of Brainiac, the Superman - Brainiac battle serves to nicely balance the episode between "Batman-style" action and "Superman-style" action. The clues to Bruce Wayne's abductor scream "Brainiac," which lessens the impact of his first appearance in the show, but his involvement with Wayne is logically explained and flows neatly from the "World's Finest" episode. Overall, this was another great crossover episode. Superman worked well with Robin and gained a greater understanding and respect of Batman's methods. So far, this new season of _Superman_ is shaping up nicely. ___________________________________________ 1998 SUPERMAN COMICS INDEX ------------------------------------------------------ Compiled by Jeffery D. Sykes (sykes@ms.uky.edu) ------------------------------------------------------ Part I: Triangle Titles, Superman Family Titles, Team Titles, and Superman Adventures THE TRIANGLE TITLES ------------------- 1 - SUPERMAN: THE MAN OF STEEL #75, "The Death of Mr. Mxyzptlk" Written by Jon Bogdanove and Louise Simonson Art and Cover by Jon Bogdanove and Dennis Janke Mxyptlk parody of Superman's death at the hands of Doomsday 2 - SUPERMAN #131, "Checkmate" Written by Dan Jurgens Art and Cover by Ron Frenz and Josef Rubinstein Lex's daughter is born, Mayor Berkowitz is assassinated 3 - ADVENTURES OF SUPERMAN #554, "Children and Monsters!" Written by Karl Kesel Art by Tom Grummett, Denis Rodier, and Scott Koblish Cover by Tom Grummett and Denis Rodier Superman and Burton Thompson pursue the Ripper 4 - ACTION COMICS #741, "A Cautionary Tale" Written by Stuart Immonen Art and Cover by Stuart Immonen and Jose Marzan, Jr. Superman aids the Legion against COMPUTO, Lex reads Lena a story 5 - SUPERMAN: THE MAN OF STEEL #76, "Synergy" Written by Louise Simonson Art and Cover by Jon Bogdanove and Dennis Janke Superman, Jimmy, and Misa battle Simyan and Mokkari's monsters 6 - SUPERMAN RED/SUPERMAN BLUE Written by Jurgens, Immonen, K. Kesel, and L. Simonson Art by Immonen, Frenz, Grummett, Ryan, Bogdanove, Marzan, Rubinstein, Rodier, Breeding, and Janke 3-D Cover by Jurgens and Breeding Standard Cover by Jurgens and Rubinstein Superman is split in two by the team of the Cyborg and the Toyman 7 - SUPERMAN #132, "Double Play" Written by Dan Jurgens Art and Cover by Ron Frenz and Josef Rubinstein The two Supermen finally learn of each other's existence 8 - ADVENTURES OF SUPERMAN #555, "Face-Off!" Written by Karl Kesel Art and Cover by Tom Grummett and Denis Rodier The two Supermen battle; Jimmy and Misa rescue Scorn and Ashbury 9 - SUPERMAN: THE MAN OF TOMORROW #10, "Who Do You Love?" Written by Roger Stern Art and Cover by Paul Ryan and Brett Breeding Obsession and Maxima battle over Supermen Red and Blue 10 - ACTION COMICS #742, "Devil May Care: A Thesis..." Written by Stuart Immonen Art and Cover by Stuart Immonen and Jose Marzan, Jr. Superman Blue faces Kirichitan, aka Dr. Noah Brazil 11 - SUPERMAN: THE MAN OF STEEL #77, "Triangles" Written by Louise Simonson Art by Paul Ryan and Dennis Janke Cover by Jon Bogdanove and Dennis Janke Superman Red deals with out-of-time anomalies popping up in Metropolis 12 - SUPERMAN #133 Written by Dan Jurgens Cover by Ron Frenz and Josef Rubinstein "To Summon The Guard" Art by Ron Frenz and Josef Rubinstein The Millennium Guard breaks loose at Cadmus "Heart of a Lion, Soul of a Lamb" Art by Tom Grummett and Denis Rodier Black Crucible attacks Jimmy and Misa 13 - ADVENTURES OF SUPERMAN #556 Written by Karl Kesel Cover by Tom Grummett and Denis Rodier "Superman Red--Outpowered and Outnumbered--Three to One!" Art by Tom Grummett and Denis Rodier Superman Red battles the Millennium Guard "I Was Alone Against Gargox, A Really Big Monster!" Art by Ron Frenz and Josef Rubinstein Superman Blue, Jimmy, and Misa battle a gargantuan pet 14 - ACTION COMICS #743 Written by Stuart Immonen Cover by Stuart Immonen and Jose Marzan, Jr. "Operation: Ink!" Art by Greg Land and Jose Marzan, Jr. Superman and Slam Bradley capture Inkling "A Persistence of You" Art by Stuart Immonen and Jose Marzan, Jr. Boss Moxie and company are captured by Superman Red 15 - SUPERMAN: THE MAN OF STEEL #78, "Earth Changes" (MILLENNIUM GIANTS) Written by Jon Bogdanove and Louise Simonson Art by Jon Bogdanove and Dennis Janke Cover by Ron Frenz, Jon Bogdanove, and Dennis Janke The three Millennium Giants arise to walk the Earth 16 - SUPERMAN #134, "Dual Purpose!" (MILLENNIUM GIANTS) Written by Dan Jurgens Art and Cover by Ron Frenz and Josef Rubinstein Red and Blue battle Cabraca in Mexico, Cerne in Mediterranean 17 - ADVENTURES OF SUPERMAN #557, "The End of the World As We Know It!" (MILLENNIUM GIANTS) Written by Karl and Barbara Kesel Art by Val Semeiks, Denis Rodier, and Scott Koblish Cover by Ron Frenz, Tom Grummett, and Denis Rodier Superboy and the JLA join the battle in Markovia 18 - ACTION COMICS #744, "Crossroads" (MILLENNIUM GIANTS) Written by Stuart Immonen Art by Anthony Williams, Scott Koblish, and Jose Marzan, Jr. Cover by Ron Frenz, Stuart Immonen, and Jose Marzan, Jr. Supermen Red and Blue battle Cabraca in Metropolis Harbor 19 - SUPERMAN: THE MAN OF STEEL #79, "End of the World!" (MILLENNIUM GIANTS) Written by Jon Bogdanove and Louise Simonson Art and Cover by Jon Bogdanove and Dennis Janke Supermen Red and Blue defeat the Giants, but at what price for Earth? 20 - SUPERMAN #135, "Shattered Worlds" (MILLENNIUM GIANTS) Written by Dan Jurgens Art and Cover by Ron Frenz and Josef Rubinstein Supermen Red and Blue sacrifice themselves to save Earth 21 - SUPERMAN FOREVER #1 Written and Illustrated by just about everyone Covers by Alex Ross His traditional powers restored, Superman searches for kidnapped Lena 22 - ADVENTURES OF SUPERMAN #558, "Another Typical Day" Written by Karl Kesel and Jerry Ordway Art by Steve Yeowell and Denis Rodier Cover by Tom Grummett Super-baseball; Jimmy turns into an alien? (Silver Age) 23 - ACTION COMICS #745, "Polyesteryear, Part 1: Ready, Fire, Aim" Written by Stuart Immonen Art by Anthony Williams, Jose Marzan, Jr., and Jimmy Palmiotti Cover by Stuart Immonen and Jose Marzan, Jr. Prankster sells a bridge, hijacks a cruise ship (Seventies) 24 - SUPERMAN: THE MAN OF STEEL #80 Written by Jon Bogdanove and Louise Simonson Art and Cover by Jon Bogdanove and Dennis Janke Superman battles the rise of Nazis in Metropolis (Golden Age) 25 - SUPERMAN #136, "Shattered Worlds" Written by Dan Jurgens Art by Paul Ryan and Josef Rubinstein Cover by Dan Jurgens and Josef Rubinstein Superman XIX makes his Metropolis debut (Year 2999) 26 - ADVENTURES OF SUPERMAN #559, "The Day of the Super-Comet" Written by Karl Kesel and Jerry Ordway Art and Cover by Tom Grummett and Denis Rodier A strange comet gives everyone in Metropolis super-powers (Silver Age) 27 - ACTION COMICS #746, "Polyesteryear, Part 2: Love, Supervillain Style" Written by Stuart Immonen Art and Cover by Stuart Immonen and Jose Marzan, Jr. Superman and Lois rescue Lana from marrying the Prankster (Seventies) 28 - SUPERMAN: THE MAN OF STEEL #81 Written by Jon Bogdanove and Louise Simonson Art and Cover by Jon Bogdanove and Dennis Janke Superman battles Nazis in the Warsaw Ghetto (Golden Age) 29 - SUPERMAN #137, "The Mutation War" Written by Dan Jurgens Art by Paul Ryan and Josef Rubinstein Cover by Dan Jurgens and Josef Rubinstein Superman XIX and the JLA of 2999 face Muto (Year 2999) 30 - ADVENTURES OF SUPERMAN #560, "The Super-Rivalry That Rocked Metropolis" Written by Karl Kesel and Jerry Ordway Art by Tom Grummett and Denis Rodier Cover by Tom Grummett Superman is jealous when Lois begins dating Batman (Silver Age) 31 - ACTION COMICS #747, "Eye of the Storm" Written by Stuart Immonen Art and Cover by Stuart Immonen and Jose Marzan, Jr. Lois teams up with the Prankster to destroy Superman (Seventies) 32 - SUPERMAN: THE MAN OF STEEL #82 Written by Jon Bogdanove and Louise Simonson Art and Cover by Jon Bogdanove and Dennis Janke Superman continues to fight Nazis, Dominus reveals himself (Golden Age) 33 - SUPERMAN #138, "Dominus" Written by Dan Jurgens Art by Paul Ryan and Josef Rubinstein Cover by Dan Jurgens and Josef Rubinstein Dominus attacks Kismet after drawing her into the open 34 - ADVENTURES OF SUPERMAN #561, "Waves of Deception" Written by Karl Kesel and Jerry Ordway Art and Cover by Tom Grummett and Denis Rodier Superman and "Waverider" search for Kismet 35 - ACTION COMICS #748, "Chasing the Ancient of Days" Written by Stuart Immonen Art and Cover by Stuart Immonen and Jose Marzan, Jr. Superman and Dominus continue to search for Kismet 36 - SUPERMAN: THE MAN OF STEEL #83, "Shattered Illusions" Written by Louise Simonson Art by Scot Eaton and Dennis Janke Cover by Jon Bogdanove and Dennis Janke Superman and the Linear Men form a plan to stop Dominus 37 - SUPERMAN #139, "A Matter of Time" Written by Dan Jurgens Art and Cover by Jim Starlin and Josef Rubinstein Waverider helps Superman protect Kismet from Dominus... for now 38 - SUPERMAN: THE MAN OF TOMORROW #11, "Anomaly" Written by Louise Simonson Art by Paul Ryan and Dennis Janke Cover by Paul Ryan and Brett Breeding Kaleb (from MOS Annual #5) arrives from the future to kill Luthor 39 - SUPERMAN: SAVE THE PLANET #1 Written by Louise Simonson Art by Scot Eaton, Denis Rodier, and Jimmy Palmiotti Direct Edition Cover by Kevin Nowlan Newsstand Edition Cover by Scot Eaton and Denis Rodier Superman battles a meteor storm, Luthor buys the Daily Planet 40 - ADVENTURES OF SUPERMAN #562, "End of an Era" Written by Karl Kesel and Jerry Ordway Art and Cover by Tom Grummett and Denis Rodier Torcher breaks Gunn from prison, Luthor closes down the Planet DC1M Issues take place here. See below. 41 - ACTION COMICS #749, "City of the Future" Written by Ron Marz Art by Tom Grindberg and Tom Palmer Cover by Paul Rivoche Part of Kandor suddenly appears in Metropolis 42 - SUPERMAN: THE MAN OF STEEL #84, "The City Within" Written by Ron Marz Art by Tom Grindberg and Tom Palmer Cover by Paul Rivoche Superman, Scorn, and Ashbury travel to Kandor, meet the Inventor 43 - SUPERMAN #140, "A City Against Them" Written by Ron Marz Art by Tom Grindberg and Tom Palmer Cover by Paul Rivoche Superman is framed for Cerimul's death, the Inventor is revealed 44 - ADVENTURES OF SUPERMAN #563, "Imprisoned in the Bottle!" Written by Ron Marz Art by Tom Grindberg and Tom Palmer Cover by Paul Rivoche Superman and Scorn defeat the Inventor, all return to Metropolis SUPERMAN TITLES, DC ONE MILLION (No Triangles) ---------------------------------------------- ACTION COMICS #1,000,000, "Brave New Hero" Written by Mark Schultz Art by Ron Lim and Jose Marzan, Jr. Cover by Gene Ha The people of the 853rd Century believe Superman to be a Bizarro SUPERMAN: THE MAN OF STEEL #1,000,000, "Fear and Loathing" Written by Karl Kesel and Jerry Ordway Art by Anthony Williams and Dennis Janke Cover by Gene Ha The future Superman battles the virus-affected Metal Men SUPERMAN #1,000,000, "Down to Earth" Written by Dan Abnett and Andy Lanning Art by Norm Breyfogle and Scott Koblish Cover by Gene Ha The future Superman enlists Luthor's aid in entering the Fortress ADVENTURES OF SUPERMAN #1,000,000, "Keepers of Solitude" Written by Dan Abnett and Andy Lanning Art by Will Rosado and Larry Mahlstedt Cover by Gene Ha Superman and Resurrection Man meet resistance in the future Fortress SUPERMAN: THE MAN OF TOMORROW #1,000,000, "Future Story" Written by Mark Schultz Art by Georges Jeanty, Denis Rodier, and Dennis Janke Cover by Gene Ha Platinum recounts the 853 century history of the Superman dynasty STEEL ----- 46 - "Bori" Written by Priest Art and Cover by Denys Cowan and Tom Palmer Superboy visits Jersey City and attempts to court Natasha 47 - "The Message" Written by Priest Art by Denys Cowan and Sal Buscema Cover by Denys Cowan and Tom Palmer Nat visits home for Christmas, Steel makes a decision about Amanda 48 - "Invasion" Written by Priest Art by Denys Cowan and Bill Sienkiewicz Cover by Denys Cowan and Tom Palmer Crash reveals his origin, Steel is "recruited" by the government 49 - "Heart" Written by Priest Art and Cover by Denys Cowan and Tom Palmer Steel must deliver a heart for a transplant patient 50 - "Among Giants" (MILLENNIUM GIANTS) Written by Priest Art by Denys Cowan and Tom Palmer Cover by Ron Frenz, Denys Cowan, and Tom Palmer Steel devises a way to stop the Giants, but chooses not to use it 51 - "Quest" Written by Priest Art by Denys Cowan, Eric Battle, Tom Palmer, and Vince Giarrano Cover by Denys Cowan and Tom Palmer Steel and Glenn Gammeron hunt an alien, Skorpio approaches Crash 52 - "Requiem" Written by Priest Art by Denys Cowan and Tom Palmer Cover by Tom Palmer Natasha lies gravely ill, Steel confronts Crash and Skorpio **SERIES CONCLUDES** SUPERBOY -------- 47 - "Idol Worship: Part 2" Written by Ron Marz Art by Georges Jeanty and Doug Hazlewood Cover by Tom Grummett and Doug Hazlewood Cont. from GREEN LANTERN #94: Superboy and GL team up against Pele 48 - "Superboy: The Event" Written by Barbara Kesel Art by Georges Jeanty, Doug Hazlewood, and Ray Kryssing Cover by Tom Grummett and Doug Hazlewood Superboy's name is attached to a shady amusement park ride 49 - "Searching..." Written by Barbara Kesel Art by Georges Jeanty, Doug Hazlewood, and John Stanisci Cover by Tom Grummett and Doug Hazlewood Roxy searches for the missing Kid, cast says their good-byes 50 - "Survival of the Fittest!" (THE LAST BOY ON EARTH: PART 1) Written by Karl Kesel Art and Cover by Tom Grummett and Karl Kesel A mute and amnesiac Superboy finds himself in a land of animal-men 51 - "The Test!" (THE LAST BOY ON EARTH: PART 2) Written by Karl Kesel Art and Cover by Tom Grummett and Karl Kesel Superboy undergoes a test of prophecy, remembers his identity 52 - "Destination: Unknown!" (THE LAST BOY ON EARTH: PART 3) Written by Karl Kesel Art and Cover by Tom Grummett and Karl Kesel Superboy and the Wild Men leave Roam and find their way to Hawaii 53 - "Pearl Harbor 2!" (THE LAST BOY ON EARTH: PART 4) Written by Karl Kesel Art and Cover by Tom Grummett and Karl Kesel Superboy and the Wild Men defend Hawaii from Nosferata's invasion 54 - "Darkness & Light" Written by Karl Kesel Art by Scott Kolins and Tom Ryder Cover by Tom Grummett and Karl Kesel Tuftan marries Nosferata; Superboy, Guardian, and Dubbilex visit Paris 55 - "Hexed!" Written by Karl Kesel Art by Scott Kolins and Norm Rapmund Cover by Tom Grummett and Karl Kesel Superboy, Guardian, and Hex battle Grok and the Agenda 56 - "Here There Be... Monsters!" Written by Karl Kesel Art and Cover by Tom Grummett and Karl Kesel Mickey Cannon, the Mechanic, is placed in charge of Cadmus 1M - "OMAC: One Million and Counting!" Written by Karl Kesel Art and Cover by Tom Grummett and Karl Kesel Superboy gets a peek at his future during the DC1M crossover 57 - "Demolition Run, Part 1: Dangerous Curves" Written by Karl Kesel Art and Cover by Tom Grummett and Karl Kesel A strangely familiar girl steals the Whiz Wagon at the Demolition Run SUPERBOY AND THE RAVERS ----------------------- 17 - "No Weddings and a Funeral" (LOVE IS ALL THAT ANTI-MATTERS: PART 1) Written by Steve Mattsson and Karl Kesel Art by Josh Hood and Dan Davis Cover by Paul Pelletier and Dan Davis The Ravers follow Kaliber to Qward, where Grim has laid a trap 18 - "The Deadliest of the Species" (LOVE IS ALL THAT ANTI-MATTERS: PART 2) Written by Steve Mattsson and Karl Kesel Art and Cover by Josh Hood and Dan Davis Superboy and the Ravers battle the forces of Qward 19 - "Last Dance" (LOVE IS ALL THAT ANTI-MATTERS: PART 3) Written by Steve Mattsson and Karl Kesel Art by Josh Hood, Todd Nauck, and Dan Davis Cover by Josh Hood and Dan Davis Final battle between the Ravers and an army of Predators **SERIES CONCLUDES** SUPERGIRL --------- 17 - "Teetering on Oblivion" Written by Peter David Art by Leonard Kirk and Cam Smith Cover by Gary Frank and Cam Smith The Kents come to visit Linda, Despero arrives in Leesburg 18 - "Divine Inspiration" Written by Peter David Art by Leonard Kirk and Cam Smith Cover by Gary Frank and Cam Smith Supergirl uses her new wings of flame to battle Despero 19 - "Middle-Aged Crisis" Written by Peter David Art by Leonard Kirk and Cam Smith Cover by Leonard Kirk and Jose Marzan, Jr. Supergirl and Comet keep Leesburg from being sucked away 20 - "Things Best Left Forgotten" (MILLENNIUM GIANTS) Written by Peter David Art by Leonard Kirk and Cam Smith Cover by Ron Frenz, Leonard Kirk, and Cam Smith Supergirl tries to stop Cerne, Linda's mom is an alcoholic 21 - "Through a Fractured Prism" Written by Peter David Art by Leonard Kirk and Prentis Rollins Cover by Gary Frank and Cam Smith Fracture comes looking for Comet, Andy hits on Linda 22 - "Comet's Tale" Written by Peter David Art by Leonard Kirk and Prentis Rollins Cover by Leonard Kirk and Robin Riggs Comet reveals his story, he and Supergirl search for buried treasure 23 - "Double-Edged Sword" Written by Peter David Art and Cover by Leonard Kirk and Robin Riggs Supergirl and Steel debate racism and free speech at a college protest 24 - "Avenging Angels Part 2: Die and Let Live" Written by Peter David Art and Cover by Leonard Kirk and Robin Riggs Supergirl and Resurrection Man battle the Rider at the Chaos Stream (Cont. from RESURRECTION MAN #16, Conc. in RESURRECTION MAN #17) 25 - "Desperate Times" Written by Peter David Art and Cover by Leonard Kirk and Robin Riggs Wally talks with Linda's mom, Supergirl learns Comet's identity 26 - "The Flying Game" Written by Peter David Art and Cover by Leonard Kirk and Robin Riggs Supergirl learns Comet's complete origin, Linda's parents reconcile 1M - "When She Was Good..." Written by Peter David Art and Cover by Dusty Abell and Norman Lee 8-year old Supergirl (in 853rd century) terrorizes two planets 27 - "Space World" Written by Peter David Art and Cover by Leonard Kirk and Robin Riggs The Female Furies come looking for Twilight JLA --- 14 - "Twilight of the Gods" ROCK OF AGES: Part 5 of 6 Written by Grant Morrison Art and Cover by Howard Porter and John Dell The future version of the League battles Darkseid to save Earth 15 - "Stone of Destiny" ROCK OF AGES: Part 6 of 6 Written by Grant Morrison Art by Howard Porter, Gary Frank, Greg Land, John Dell, and Bob McLeod Cover by Howard Porter and John Dell The League defeats Luthor and the Injustice Gang, then disbands 16 - "Camelot" Written by Grant Morrison Art and Cover by Howard Porter and John Dell The new members of the League are introduced, Prometheus attacks 17 - "Prometheus Unbound" Written by Grant Morrison Art by Arnie Jorgensen, David Meikis, and Mark Pennington Cover by Howard Porter and John Dell With a little help from Catwoman, the JLA defeats Prometheus 18 - "Synchronicity" Written by Mark Waid Art and Cover by Howard Porter and John Dell Dr. Julian September's "Engine of Chance" makes luck go haywire 19 - "Seven Soldiers of Probability" Written by Mark Waid Art by Howard Porter, John Dell, and Walden Wong Cover by Howard Porter and John Dell The Atom helps the remaining Leaguers restore probabilistic order 20 - "Mystery in Space" Written by Mark Waid Art by Arnie Jorgensen and David Meikis Cover by Howard Porter and John Dell Adam Strange takes the League as prisoners for slave labor on Rann 21 - "Strange New World" Written by Mark Waid Art by Arnie Jorgensen, Dave Meikis, and Doug Hazlewood Cover by Howard Porter and John Dell Adam Strange and the League must defeat the En'Tarans 22 - "It" Written by Grant Morrison Art and Cover by Howard Porter and John Dell North America is trapped in a dream state, JLA gets help from Sandman 23 - "Conquerors" Written by Grant Morrison Art and Cover by Howard Porter and John Dell The JLA battles the Star Conqueror 1M - "Prisoners of the Twentieth Century" Written by Grant Morrison Art and Cover by Howard Porter and John Dell The future JL-A breaks into the Watchtower to create Solaris 24 - "Executive Action" Written by Grant Morrison Art and Cover by Howard Porter and John Dell The newly revealed Ultra-Marines lay a trap for the JLA YOUNG JUSTICE ------------- 1 - "Young, Just Us" Written by Peter David Art and Cover by Todd Nauck and Lary Stucker The team forms, awakens Red Tornado, finds the super-cycle 2 - "Sheik, Rattle and Roll" Written by Peter David Art and Cover by Todd Nauck and Lary Stucker The boys face the super-cycle's original owner, Rip Roar 1M - "Just Ice, Cubed" Written by Peter David Art by Todd Nauck, Lary Stucker, and various Cover by Todd Nauck and Lary Stucker The future Young Justice Legion S discusses 20th Century heroes 3 - "The Issue Before the One Where the Girls Show Up" Written by Peter David Art and Cover by Todd Nauck and Lary Stucker A young Mr. Mxyzptlk vows never to cause mischief, YJ must change that SUPERMAN ADVENTURES ------------------- 15 - "Maximum Effort!" Written by Mark Evanier Art and Cover by Rick Burchett and Terry Austin Bibbo helps out the Man of Steel against a group of bank robbers 16 - "Clark Kent, You're A Nobody!" Written by Mark Millar Art by Aluir Amancio and Terry Austin Cover by Rick Burchett and Terry Austin Clark Kent finds he has no powers and then is rescued by Superman 17 - "Superman's Pal's Pal" Written by Chris Duffy Art by Neil Vokes and Terry Austin Cover by Rick Burchett and Terry Austin Jimmy Olsen escorts a "new Planet intern" around in search of a scoop 18 - "It's a Super Life!" Written by Devin K. Grayson Art by Aluir Amancio and Terry Austin Cover by Rick Burchett and Terry Austin Superman seems to be interfering with Clark Kent's job 19 - "The Bodyguard of Steel" Written by Mark Millar Art by Aluir Amancio and Terry Austin Cover by Rick Burchett and Terry Austin Superman protects the President from a threat of assassins 20 - "Hide 'N' Seek" Written by Jordan B. Gorfinkle Art by Neil Vokes and Stan Woch Cover by Rick Burchett and Terry Austin Superman and friends try to solve the mystery of MasterTrax 21 - "Last Daughter of Argo" Written by Evan Dorkin and Sarah Dyer Art by Bret Blevins and Terry Austin Cover by Bruce Timm Supergirl's origin, battle against Phantom Zone villains 22 - "War Games: Part 1" Written by Mark Millar Art by Aluir Amancio and Terry Austin Cover by Rick Burchett and Terry Austin Superman must discover what's causing so many technical problems 23 - "War Games: Part 2" Written by Mark Millar Art by Aluir Amancio and Terry Austin Cover by Rick Burchett and Terry Austin Superman and Livewire prevent Brainiac from destroying the Earth 24 - "Power Corrupts, Super Power Corrupts Absolutely" Written by Mark Millar Art by Aluir Amancio and Terry Austin Cover by Rick Burchett and Terry Austin Parasite steals Superman's powers, reveals his motivation 25 - "(Almost) The World's Finest Team" Written by Mark Millar Art by Mike Manley and Terry Austin Cover by Rick Burchett and Terry Austin Superman teams with batgirl to rescue Bruce Wayne from the Mad Hatter 26 - "Yesterday's Man of Tomorrow" Written by Mark Millar Art by Aluir Amancio and Terry Austin Cover by Rick Burchett and Terry Austin Mxyzptlk goes back in time to convince Clark never to become Superman ___________________________________________ 1998 SUPERMAN COMICS INDEX -------------------------------------------------------- Compiled by Jeffery D. Sykes (sykes@ms.uky.edu) -------------------------------------------------------- Part II: Limited Series, Specials, and Guest Appearances LIMITED SERIES AND GRAPHIC NOVELS --------------------------------- DC ONE MILLION (4 issues, Nov) Written by Grant Morrison Art and Covers by Val Semeiks and Prentis Rollins The JLA travels to the 853rd century for Superman's return from the Sun ELSEWORLD'S FINEST: SUPERGIRL AND BATGIRL (Nov) Written by Barbara Kesel, Matt Haley, and Tom Simmons Art and Cover by Matt Haley and Tom Simmons ELSEWORLDS: Supergirl and Batgirl reluctantly join forces to save Luthor JLA: THE NAIL (3 issues, Aug - Oct) Written by Alan Davis Art and Covers Alan Davis and Mark Farmer ELSEWORLDS: Because of a flat tire, Kal-El isn't found by the Kents JLA: PARADISE LOST (3 issues, Jan - Mar) Written by Mark Millar Art and Covers by Ariel Olivetti Zauriel and the Martian Manhunter battle Neron and Asmodel's forces JLA/TITANS (#1 of 3, Dec) Written by Devin Grayson and Phil Jimenez Art by Phil Jimenez and Andy Lanning Cover by Phil Jimenez The JLA discovers that all former Titans are being abducted JLA: WORLD WITHOUT-GROWN-UPS (2 issues, Aug - Sep) Written by Todd Dezago Art and Covers by Mike McKone, Humberto Ramos, Mark McKenna, and Wayne Faucher Superboy, Robin, and Impulse team up when all the adults disappear THE KENTS (Issues #6-12, Jan - Jul) Written by John Ostrander Art by Timothy Truman, Michael Bair, and Tom Mandrake Covers by Truman and Mandrake The Wild West Saga of Superman's adopted ancestors SUPERMAN: THE DARK SIDE (3 issues, Oct - Dec) Written by John Francis Moore and Kieron Dwyer Art and Covers by Kieron Dwyer and Hilary Barta ELSEWORLDS: Infant Kal-El lands on Apokolips, becomes Darkseid's pawn SUPERMAN: DISTANT FIRES (Feb) Written by Howard Chaykin Art and Cover by Gil Kane and Kevin Nowlan ELSEWORLDS: Superman leads other survivors of a nuclear holocaust SUPERMAN: THE DOOMSDAY WARS (#1 of 3, Dec) Written by Dan Jurgens Art and Covers by Dan Jurgens and Norm Rapmund While Superman tries to save Lana's baby, Doomsday returns SUPERMAN FOR ALL SEASONS (4 issues, Sep - Dec) Written by Jeph Loeb Art and Covers by Tim Sale and Bjarne Hansen Miniseries about Clark's earliest days as a super-hero SUPERMAN: SILVER BANSHEE (#1 of 2, Dec) Written by Dan Brereton Art by Joyce Chin and Andy Lanning Covers by Brereton Superman and Lois become involved when Banshee tries to end her curse SUPERMAN: WAR OF THE WORLDS (Dec) Written by Roy Thomas Art and Cover by Michael Lark ELSEWORLDS: Golden Age Superman as part of H.G. Wells' classic SPECIALS/FEATURES ----------------- ADVENTURE COMICS 80-PAGE GIANT #1 (Oct) Written by various Art by various Cover by Steve Lightle Superboy, Supergirl, and Bizarro stories ADVENTURES IN THE DC UNIVERSE #12 (Mar) Written by Steve Vance Art and Cover by John Delaney and Ron Boyd The JLA is forced to surrender to Cipher ADVENTURES IN THE DC UNIVERSE #14 (May) Written by Steve Vance Art by John Delaney, Ron Boyd, and Ray Kryssing Cover by John Delaney and Ron Boyd Superboy races the Flash, Nightwing backup story ADVENTURES IN THE DC UNIVERSE #18 (Sep) Written by Steve Vance Art and Cover by John Delaney and Ron Boyd The JLA battles Professor Ivo's Amazo 2000 android GIANT SUPERMAN ANNUAL #1 REPLICA EDITION (Oct) Written by Otto Binder and various Art by Wayne Boring, Curt Swan, and various Cover by Curt Swan and Stan Kaye Reprint of 1960's Giant Superman Annual #1 JLA 80-PAGE GIANT #1 (Jul) Written by John Ostrander and various Art by Ken Lashley and Ron Boyd, and various Cover by Kevin Maguire and Karl Story Superman is framed for murder in Gotham, other stories JLA ANNUAL #2 (Oct) Written by Ty Templeton Art by Mark Pajarillo and Walden Wong Cover by Bernie Wrightson The "Ghosts" annuals conclude, as the League discovers the culprit JLA IN CRISIS SECRET FILES #1 (Nov) Written by Tom Peyer and various Art by Rags Morales, Dave Meikus, and various Cover by Rodolfo Damaggio and Robert Campanella Recounts all the crossover events beginning with Crisis JLA SECRET FILES #2 (Aug) Written by Christopher Priest and various Art by Yanick Paquette, Mark Lipka, and various Cover by Eric Battle and Prentis Rollins How the JLA expanded its membership to include Steel and the rest JLA: TOMORROW WOMAN #1 (Jun) Written by Tom Peyer Art by Yanick Paquette and Mark Lipka Cover by Leonard Kirk and Karl Story GIRLFRENZY: Tomorrow Woman earns the JLA's trust (during JLA #5) LEGENDS OF THE DC UNIVERSE #1-3 (Feb-Apr) Written by James Robinson Art by Val Semeiks and Paul Neary Painted Covers by Glen Orbik Early in his career, Superman battles the U.L.T.R.A.-Humanite LEGENDS OF THE DC UNIVERSE #6 (Jul) Written by Kelley Puckett Art by Dave Taylor and Kevin Nowlan Painted Cover by Christopher Moeller Robin (Dick Grayson's) first meeting with the Man of Steel NEW YEAR'S EVIL: GOG #1 (Feb) Written by Mark Waid Art by Jerry Ordway and Dennis Janke Cover by Jason Pearson 20 years after KINGDOM COME, Gog is created to prevent those events NEW YEAR'S EVIL: MR. MXYZPTLK #1 (Feb) Written by Alan Grant Art by Tom Morgan and Scott Koblish Cover by Jason Pearson Mxyzptlk uses his comic book collection to stop an invasion NEW YEAR'S EVIL: PROMETHEUS #1 (Feb) Written by Grant Morrison Art by Arnie Jorgensen and David Meikis Cover by Jason Pearson The origin of Prometheus, who plans to destroy the JLA SECRET ORIGINS 80-PAGE GIANT #1 (Dec) Written by various Art by various Cover by Jeff Matsuda and Jon Sibal Young Justice member origins, including Superboy SUPERBOY/RISK DOUBLE-SHOT #1 (Feb) Written by Dan Jurgens and Karl Kesel Art and Cover by Joe Phillips and Jasen Rodriguez Superboy goes undercover in a high school to apprehend Risk SUPERGIRL/PRYSM DOUBLE-SHOT #1 (Feb) Written by Dan Jurgens Art by Tom Grindberg and Chris Ivy Cover by Tom Grindberg Prysm and Supergirl team-up to rescue Fringe from Jugular SUPERMAN 3-D #1 (Dec) Written by Louise Simonson Art by Neil Vokes and Scott Koblish Cover by Scot Eaton and Jimmy Palmiotti Superman, Misa, Jimmy, and the Hairies versus Mainframe SUPERMAN ADVENTURES SPECIAL: SUPERMAN VS LOBO #1 (Feb) Written by David Michelinie Art and Cover by John Delaney and Mike Manley Superman and Lobo both search for the Nirvana Crystal SUPERMAN ANNUAL #10 (Oct) Written by Dan Jurgens Art by Paul Ryan and Chris Ivy Cover by Bernie Wrightson Superman is haunted by the ghosts of the Phantom Zone villains SUPERMAN: LOIS LANE #1 (Jun) Written by Barbara Kesel Art by Amanda Conner and Jimmy Palmiotti Cover by Leonard Kirk and Karl Story GIRLFRENZY: Lois and Sarge Steel investigate a genetic research lab SUPERMAN SECRET FILES #1 (Jan) Written by Dan Jurgens, Karl Kesel, and various Art by Dan Jurgens, Jerry Ordway, Todd Nauck, Ron Frenz, and various Cover by Tom Grummett and Denis Rodier Secret Origin, tour of the Fortress, miscellaneous features and pin-ups SUPERMAN VILLAINS SECRET FILES #1 (Jun) Written by Stuart Immonen and various Art by Stuart Immonen, Jose Marzan, Jr., and various Cover by Dan Jurgens and Norm Rapmund Origins of Superman's Rogues Gallery, plus other misc items TEAM SUPERMAN SECRET FILES #1 (May) Written by Karl and Barbara Kesel, Priest, and various Art by Bob McLeod, Eric Battle, Georges Jeanty, and various Cover by Dave Johnson Origins of Superboy, Steel, and Supergirl, plus other misc items YOUNG JUSTICE: THE SECRET #1 (Jun) Written by Todd Dezago Art by Todd Nauck and Lary Stucker Cover by Leonard Kirk and Karl Story GIRLFRENZY: Superboy, Robin, and Impulse help a girl on the run GUEST APPEARANCES ----------------- AQUAMAN #43 (Apr) (MILLENNIUM GIANTS) Written by Peter David Art by J. Calafiore and P.L. Palmiotti Cover by Ron Frenz, J. Calafiore, and M. McKenna Superman Red and Aquaman try to stop Cerne CHALLENGERS OF THE UNKNOWN #15 (Apr) (MILLENNIUM GIANTS) Written by Steven Grant Art by Ryan Sook and Bill Reinhold Cover by Ron Frenz, John Paul Leon, and Shawn Martinbrough The Challs study Cerne as he tromps across England THE FLASH #142 (Oct) Written by Mark Waid and Brian Augustyn Art by Pop Mhan and Chris Ivy Cover by Steve Lightle The JLA makes an appearance at Wally West's wedding GREEN LANTERN #94, "Idol Worship: Part 1" (Jan) Written by Ron Marz Art by Paul Pelletier and Terry Austin Cover by Tom Grummett and Terry Austin Superboy and Green Lantern meet in Hawaii; cont. in SUPERBOY #47 GREEN LANTERN #103 (Sep) Written by Ron Marz Art by Jeff Johnson, Anthony Williams, Bob Wiacek, and Andy Lanning Cover by Jeff Johnson and Bob Wiacek Kyle introduces the time-lost Hal Jordan to the JLA HARDCORE STATION #5-6 (Nov-Dec) Written by Jim Starlin Art and Cover by Jim Starlin and Josef Rubinstein JLA guest-stars in final two issues of miniseries JLA: YEAR ONE #7, 11-12 (Jul, Nov-Dec) Written by Mark Waid and Brian Augustyn Art by Barry Kitson and Michael Bair Covers by Kitson Superman assists during the League's first year LEGION OF SUPER-HEROES #100 (Jan) Written by Tom Peyer and Tom McCraw, and various Art by Lee Moder, Derec Aucoin, Ray Kryssing, and Drew Geraci, and various Cover by Alan Davis and Mark Farmer Superman and Superboy assist the Legion, other Legion-only stories LEGIONNAIRES #61 (Jun) Written by Roger Stern Art and Cover by Jeffrey Moy and W.C.Carani Believe it or not, a tie-in to 1991's "Time and Time Again" story LOBO #50 (Apr) Written by Alan Grant Art and Cover by Carl Critchlow and Mark Propst Lobo kills Superman and the rest of the DC Universe heroes MARTIAN MANHUNTER #0 (Oct) Written by John Ostrander Art and Cover by Tom Mandrake Retelling of Martian Manhunter's origin, JLA cameo RESURRECTION MAN #16-17 (Aug - Sep) Written by Dan Abnett and Andy Lanning Art and Covers by Butch Guice "Avenging Angels" crossover with SUPERGIRL #24 TEEN TITANS #17 (Feb) Written by Dan Jurgens Art and Cover by Dan Jurgens and Phil Jimenez Superboy, Supergirl, and Scorn all show up at the Titans try-outs TEEN TITANS #18 (Mar) Written by Dan Jurgens Art and Cover by Dan Jurgens and Phil Jimenez JLA cameo appearance at The Atom's birthday party TEEN TITANS #19 (Apr) (MILLENNIUM GIANTS) Written by Dan Jurgens Art by Dan Jurgens and Norm Rapmund Cover by Ron Frenz, Dan Jurgens, and Phil Jimenez Superman Red and the Titans battle Sekhmet in Egypt TEEN TITANS #21-24 (Jun - Sep) Written by Dan Jurgens Art and Covers by Dan Jurgens and Norm Rapmund Clark Kent/Superman becomes involved in the "Titans Hunt" UNLIMITED ACCESS #3-4 (Feb-Mar) Written by Karl Kesel Art (and Covers?) by Pat Oliffe and Al Williamson Superman and Superboy become involved in the multi-universe miniseries ___________________________________________ 1998 KAYCEES NOMINATIONS ---------------------------- As I'm sure many of you have already noticed, November's comics sported a 1999 cover date. This of course means that it's once again time for the Kryptonian Cybernet Readers' Choice Awards! Based on its success in streamlining the process last year, we're going to once again use a two-step voting procedure. In the categories listed below, we are asking you, the readers, to put forth worthy nominees. Nominees will be ranked according to the number of nominations received, and the top eight (or more, in the case of ties) will appear on the 1998 Kaycees ballot, to appear in the next issue of the Kryptonian Cybernet. Nominations for any of the awards below (multiple nominations are acceptable) must be E-MAILED to me at sykes@ms.uky.edu no later than Wednesday, December 16. Only the final voting will be facilitated by a web-based ballot. With these niceties out of the way, let's get to the awards for which we are now accepting nominations. Accompanying the awards below are lists of books eligible for those awards. For further information about specific issues and their contents, see our 1998 Superman Comics Index. SUPERMAN TRIANGLE TITLES: ------------------------ TT1: Best Story/Story-arc in the Superman Triangle Titles TT2: Worst Story/Story-arc in the Superman Triangle Titles TT3: Best Cover from a Superman Triangle Title TT4: Worst Cover from a Superman Triangle Title TT1 and TT2 are "total package" awards; both writing and art should be taken into account when deciding on nominees. Also note that one may nominate either single-issue stories or multiple-issue arcs. Eligible for the TT awards are the five core Superman titles and specials with a 1998 triangle number: Action Comics #741-749, 1M Adventures of Superman #554-563, 1M Superman #131-140, 1M Superman: The Man of Steel #75-84, 1M Superman: The Man of Tomorrow #10-11, 1M Superman Red/Superman Blue #1 Superman Forever #1 Superman: Save the Planet #1 SUPERMAN FAMILY TITLES: ---------------------- SF1: Best Story/Story-arc in a Superman Family Title SF2: Worst Story/Story-arc in a Superman Family Title SF3: Best Cover from a Superman Family Title SF4: Worst Cover from a Superman Family Title SF1 and SF2 are also "total package" awards; both writing and art should be taken into account when deciding on nominees. Also note that one may nominate either single-issue stories or multiple-issue arcs. Eligible for the SF awards are the seven Superman Family titles. The specific issues published in 1998 are: JLA #14-24, 1M Steel #46-52 Superboy #47-57, 1M Superboy and the Ravers #17-19 Supergirl #17-27, 1M Superman Adventures #15-26 Young Justice #1-3, 1M LIMITED SERIES AWARDS: --------------------- LS1: Best Writing in a Special or Limited Series LS2: Worst Writing in a Special or Limited Series LS3: Best Art in a Special or Limited Series LS4: Worst Art in a Special or Limited Series LS5: Best Special or Limited Series LS6: Worst Special or Limited Series Note that we're taking nominations on these awards simply because of the large number of specials and limited series published by DC this year. Titles eligible for nomination include everything listed in our 1998 Superman Comics Index *except* for the three limited series not concluded in the cover year 1998 (JLA/Titans, Superman: The Doomsday Wars, and Superman: Silver Banshee) and Giant Superman Annual #1 Replica Edition, because it is not new material. Again, nominations for any of these categories should be e-mailed to sykes@ms.uky.edu no later than Wednesday, December 16. Next issue: the ballots! ___________________________________________ THE MAILBAG ------------------------------------- (sykes@ms.uky.edu, KryptonCN@aol.com) KC Responses are indented and begun with **** ========================================= From: Neil A. Hansen (Neil4161@aol.com) Hi. As usual, a very informative issue. I'm writing this letter to address the downward state of the Superman titles on which Jeff Sykes has commented. Jeff, you are very correct about the events being pushed to promote the title. While material like this can be an editorial nightmare, it is a great deal easier to write by filling in the pieces. When you can stretch out a one or two part tale into four and eight parts, you just do it. That alone provides an artificial feeling to the books. A long time ago, I did an interview in _Comics Values Monthly_ with the Super-Creators for the Superman Memorial Special. One thing that was mentioned was that each title had its own individual framework. _Superman_ would focus on the Man; _Action Comics_ would focus on the Action; _Adventures of Superman_ would focus on the adventure, a human book featuring Clark and the supporting cast. I think if the individual themes of the titles were brought back on a general basis (not super rigid in presentation), the material would be more palatable. _Action_ could again focus on Action; _Superman_ focuses on the Man and his struggles; _Adventures_ focuses on "Lois and Clark" and "Adventures of Superman" TV-type storylines (more human); and _Man of Steel_ focuses on the alien, hence Silver Age type storylines. Imagine each book in a grid: Action -- Superman has a real tussle with the mad Evilman. Subplots include: the murder of a high ranking political candidate (which is subtly mentioned in a Daily Planet Newsroom scene before Evilman attacks); and Ma and Pa Kent discuss worrying about Clark's latest troubles driving him over the brink (setting up for another storyline). The tussle with Superman leaves some people hurt in the hospital, maybe costing the city a few hundred thousand. Superman -- Superman is depressed about the injuries caused in the battle. He remembers one of his biggest supporters was the candidate that was killed, and also remembers the guy originally from Smallville. He visits a few of the people in the hospital, some of whom are pissed at him. Just then, a few fancy thugs decide to use some fancy illegal weapons (setting up possibly for some future storyline or connecting it to Luthor). Being very, very aware of the previous attack from Evilman, he tries to be as careful as he can, taking more abuse than he would like. He defeats the villains. The people at the hospital seeing the news realize Superman is still the best hero around. Adventures of Superman -- Lois and Jimmy investigate the candidate's murder and learn it is linked to a home-grown terrorist organization. Clark finishes up on the story with the thugs and asks about their story. Lois says no time, she'll handle it. She and Jimmy snoop around the HQ of the organization, but are of course caught. While waiting, Clark looks through Lois' notes on the computer. Changing into Superman, he saves them in the nick of time. Superman: Man of Steel -- Ma and Pa Kent warn Superman that some alien being is in Smallville. He's bashing up the town. Supes flies to Smallville and learns that the alien is looking for Superman because he wants to go back home to Krypton. The alien is actually from another planet, but passed by Krypton in his travels. Superman and the alien reprogram the computers and then Supes pushes the ship back into space. What I've presented is very basic. It can be ignored or modified for those multipart storylines. However, the subplots could be presented in a much less artificial way with one book not necessarily affecting the flow of the others. You can have each story stand more on its own, giving the writers a bit more creativity. In terms of villains, not every comic book needs a slam bang super-villain, just a solid story. You can make a story with just disasters and tension just as exciting. Space sagas you can stretch out occasionally with all four of the titles. In terms of supporting cast, you could use them as needed. However, I think the casts of the cartoon are a great deal more entertaining than the casts of the comic book. There is too much focus on bad soap opera with Troupe and Lucy and Perry's cancer running too damn long. The way they are presented and stretched out bore the hell out of me. It was more interesting with Perry's kid, Jerry, early in the series. Anyway, this is my commentary. Sorry to take so long with this e-mail. Continued success with you. ========================================= From: Rich Morrissey (RMorris306@aol.com) [Last month, Drew J. asked a question about a classic Superman story in which the Man of Steel temporarily stopped the Earth's orbit to prevent the impact of a deadly seed pod from outer space.] That would be "Who Stole My Super-Powers?" in _Superman_ #220. Curt Swan did indeed draw the story, with inks by (I think) Mike Esposito and a script by (he's confirmed it) Jim Shooter. What's interesting is that [Drew] never mentions the fact that this story guest-starred The Flash (Barry Allen), with whom Superman switched identities and, at the end, exchanged the secrets of their identities with each other! ========================================= From: Kumanan Wilson (kumanan.wilson@sympatico.ca) I think the biggest problem with Superman today is that he is too hard to identify with for most of the readers. If you look at the comics that sell well they usually involve teenagers or "misfits". The majority of the comic book buying population would fall into one of these categories. The present Clark Kent is a successful, married, good looking, well built guy. Who can identify with that? I liked it much better when Clark Kent was a clutz. That represented to me, and I believe most of the readers, that even if on the surface we may not appear to be much, there was the potential for us to be much more than we appeared. I also feel they should turn Superman back into more of a "Romantic figure" in the classical sense. In the pre-crisis days he was a hero who had lost two sets of parents who was not popular and was pretty much alone. But despite this he continued to sacrifice of himself to make the world better. I think a lot of readers could identify with this. The editors need to recognize who buys comics. It's not middle aged, married professionals. **** Actually, I think it increasingly is. Anecdotal evidence suggests that the people frequenting comic chops are not kids or even teenagers, but adults. I don't know how many are buying from the newsstand, but I know that I find it harder and harder to locate newsstands even stocking comics. Why do people need to identify with Clark Kent to enjoy Superman comics? This is an argument I've heard before, and I don't see it. Besides, it doesn't explain why there were so many people reading and enjoying the post-Crisis Superman comics before the industry crashed. The real problem, according to those who have stopped reading, is the event-driven and episodic nature of the Superman titles, along with a perception of bad writing and art. At the very least, the mass of creative changes on the books in the coming months provides an opportunity to change those perceptions. ========================================= From: J.C. Ferguson (twin715@aol.com) I had a comic book (late 70's to early 80's I think) which featured a dead Superman brought back by a space jewel and a pirate of sorts. Superman had a twin brother that he had imprisoned in kryptonite, and the story ran for at least two issues. I do not recall the title but would love to know so that I could buy it back. **** Looks like another assignment for our resident know-it-alls. Anyone know this one off the top of their head? -- Jeff Sykes ___________________________________________ NEW COMIC REVIEWS ------------------------------------------ Comics Arriving In Stores October 1998 Quite a few reviews for you this month, but still three books that completists should be aware of. _Secret Origins 80-Page Giant_ #1 featured origin stories of the members of Young Justice, including Superboy; Superman made a cameo appearance in _JLA: Year One_ #12, as he and most of Earth's heroes joined the Justice League in their fight against the Appellaxians; and Superman, Steel, and Supergirl made brief appearances in the pages of _JLA/Titans_ #1. Ratings Panelists: ----------------- AW: Anatole Wilson EM: Edward Mathews RG: Rene' Gobeyn CoS: Cory Strode GN: G.M. Nelson ST: Shane Travis DR: Daniel Radice GR: Gary Robinson SDM: Simon DelMonte DWd: Darrin Wood JE: Josh Elder TD: Thomas Deja DWk: Douglas Wolk JSy: Jeff Sykes VV: Vic Vitek EJ: Enola Jones MS: Mike Smith 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 TRIANGLE TITLES: ------------------- 41. ACTION COMICS #749 Dec 1998 $1.99 US/$2.95 CAN "City of the Future" Writer: Ron Marz Pencils: Tom Grindberg Inks: Tom Palmer Colors: Glenn Whitmore Letters: Gaspar Seps: Digital Chameleon Assistant: Maureen McTigue Leviathan: Joey Cavalieri Cover: Paul Rivoche RATINGS Average: 2.6/5.0 Shields ST: 3.0 Shields EJ: 2.3 Shields - The plot is a good lead-in to the series, but the art wasn't up to caliber. I did like the bit with Professor Hamilton, though; he never fails to make me laugh. EM: 3.2 Shields - Who knew? Ron Marz does a good Superman. GN: 1.5 Shields - Could someone tell me who this whiner is in the first few pages of this book? 'Cause it sure isn't Clark Kent. Marz' characterization is way off. JSy: 2.8 Shields - Some occasionally inspired art, but generally kind of murky. Not a bad set-up, but the issue felt really drawn out. SDM: 2.5 Shields - About as good a job as we can expect from such limited talents as Ron Marz and Tom Grindberg. Some good moments but not enough to justify buying the other three pasts of the story. TD: 3.7 Shields - Oddly enough, because it spends time advancing the subplots, this is the best segment of this execrable storyline. Grindberg and Palmer are woefully mismatched as an art team. VV: 3.0 Shields - Good lead-in story for the arc, nice to see Scorn again after a long absence. (At least, it seemed long.) Well, folks, we're back from the 853rd century. After that one-month hiatus from the regular storyline, let's waste no time in getting straight to... another one-month hiatus in the storyline? Seems like the Super-team renegotiated their contracts, and they get *two* months off this year. Ron Marz and Toms Grindberg and Palmer step in to pinch-hit for four weeks with a story about... well... let's just get into that, shall we? Synopsis: Lois and Clark enjoy a rare treat -- an movie matinee together. Now that Clark's been pink-slipped, they'll have all sorts of time for these little 'afternoon delights'. It seems that they'd better stick to chick-flicks instead of monster movies; all that senseless destruction really gets Clark down. They leave the movie and decide to go for a walk instead, where they can discuss their angst over the Planet's demise. Said walk is interrupted by the appearance of a very strange piece of architecture in the Hypersector. Switching suits to investigate, Superman runs into a foul-tempered alien tearing up the joint. After going a few rounds with tall, clawed, and incomprehensible (guess who wins?), Clark notices that the new structure looks to have been designed by a Kandorian Frank Lloyd Wright and goes off in search of Scorn for some explanations. Scorn quizzes the prisoner -- a Gnarnite who is indeed from Kandor -- and learns that someone called The Inventor has claimed he can free the city, sending one building outside the 'bottle' as a test. A quick trip to Emil Hamilton's and a peek through his new and improved Kandor-scope verifies the story, and shows that all is not well in Kandor. Ham's TV doesn't get sound, though, so the only way to really know what's happening is to go in and investigate. And so, one trip to the Antarctic later, Superman, Scorn and Ashbury (who managed to bully her way onto the team) stand at the business-end of the Professor's phase-transporter and are whisked away into Kandor, and part two of our story. Ashbury, you may want to phone your dad and tell him you're going to be late for dinner.... Opinions: Let's be charitable and write off the first five pages, shall we? The self-centered, self-pitying, dreary schmuck wearing Clark Kent's shoes is not the boy we know and love and pay good money to see. You want to write? So write! You're a famous, award-winning columnist/novelist, and nearly any reputable paper in the world would like to have you on their staff. Or you could work on your latest book. Or *something*. So the world's not handing itself to you on a platter -- you're Superman, for Pete's sake! Snap out of it already! If self-pity isn't in character, and I don't think it is, then why have things like this been getting through the editors? Moving along, things start to pick up. We get our first glimmer of the mystery that drives this arc, and Superman deals with things in a fairly straightforward and intelligent manner. The fight is mercifully brief (sure, this guy's just a plot-device, but I've seen these things drag on twice as long) and we pick up Ashbury and Scorn at Bibbo's, then head over to Emil's. Sidebar: Bibbo doesn't say much here, and what he does say isn't exactly poetry, but I appreciate scenes like this in the super-titles; vignettes that let us know that the background characters are still there, in the background, living their lives. Informative, but not obtrusive, and Marz handles Bibbo (and later Emil) quite well. Speaking of Emil... it is once the trio arrives in Ham's lab that the book really takes off. Character moments abound both here and in the Fortress of Solitude -- the sorts of little things that can make a routine story more memorable. Emil's exaggerated manners towards Ashbury and Scorn's reaction, Superman's comments muttered under his breath -- these are the little things that make a story come alive. The most telling (and unusual) of these, however, was Clark's sadness when discussing with Ashbury his use of the Kryptonian language. This was a very Silver-Age sentiment, and not at all in keeping with Byrne's revamp. The modern Clark never learned of his heritage until his late teens, and hardly seemed to care once he did. Personally, I like it better that he feels some sense of loss, and applaud Marz for displaying it. In fact, Marz deserves a general round of applause for his work on part one of this arc; not a foot-stomping rebel-yell sort of reaction, but certainly more than a golf-clap. After his rather horrendous stretch on _Superboy_ where the title was often all-but-unreadable, I came into this fully prepared to hate it. While it wasn't a masterpiece -- there were certainly some pacing problems, and those first five pages... -- and the artwork was only so-so (Clark looks emaciated at times, and the inks are too heavy with too many shading-lines) the overall effort was laudable. It certainly made me want to read the rest of the arc, and that's what any good Part One should do. Final Thought: Two minor nit-picks this month: - Given that Kandor has a universal translation system (as shown in _Man of Steel_ #84), what possible motive (or opportunity) would there be for Scorn to learn the Gnarnite's language? (p. 14) - Why is Emil wearing a protective glove over his metal hand? (p. 16) -- 30 -- Shane Travis ============================================== 42. SUPERMAN: THE MAN OF STEEL #84 Dec 1998 $1.99 US/$2.95 CAN "The City Within" Writer: Ron Marz Pencils: Tom Grindberg Inks: Tom Palmer Color: Glenn Whitmore Separations: Digital Chameleon Letterer: Gaspar Assistant: Maureen McTigue Tour Guide: Joey Cavalieri Cover: Paul Rivoche RATINGS Average: 2.6/5.0 Shields MS: 1.8 Shields EM: 3.3 Shields - Ron Marz does something interesting; he makes me like Scorn! GN: 1.4 Shields - Gee, the Inventor knows Superman and Ashbury. I wonder WHO he could be? JE: 3.4 Shields - I enjoyed this issue for the simple fact that I got to see Kandor again. I love the concept of beings from all over the universe forced to live together without any real hope of escape. JSy: 2.5 Shields - The premise behind this story isn't bad, but the hints at the Inventor's identity were *way* too heavy-handed, and this issue dragged along even more than part one. ST: 2.9 Shields - Grindberg did a good job on Kandor, Marz told a nice story (with no fights!) and it was good to see Scorn back in his more eloquent element. TD: 2.0 Shields - This story becomes cliche-ville the second it enters Kandor. There is nothing here or in the other three parts that justify it being made a month-long event. VV: 3.5 Shields - No big fight scenes, just some nice storytelling. So let's talk about where this book is going? Everywhere? Yes. In the last six months _Man of Steel_ has gone from 1938 to 85,271, and from the edge of reality to the inside of a shrunken city. Great. Nowhere? Yes again. In the last six months _Man of Steel_ has had *five* different creative teams, and more on the way. (And let's not forget that one of those months had no issue at all.) Supporting characters wander in and out apparently at random, and the quality of each issue is as unpredictable as the weather. Books like that get cancelled in today's market. People lose interest in series that can't keep a stable creative presence from month to month. Look at Marvel Comics' _Ka-zar_: three writers in twenty issues. Maybe that didn't cause the book to get cancelled but it sure didn't help things any. As for _Man of Steel_, I'd say the only thing keeping this book alive is Superman himself. While he may not need it, I think the big guy deserves more support than that. Which brings me to Ron Marz. The very name stirs up controversy. My only real trouble with him is that many of his stories fail to live up to their hype. Marz can grab me with an interesting set-up (i.e. a time-displaced Hal Jordan joins the present-day JLA) but then I find myself on page 22 wondering, "Is that all?" (The bulk of that issue focused on Kyle Rayner's reaction, instead of say, a time-displaced Hal Jordan joining the JLA. That's fine, since it's Kyle's book, but Ron could have gone a lot further with the concept than he did). "City of the Future" is no exception. Marz is supposed to be writing another Kandor four-parter and it took him all of part one to get Superman into the bottle city of Kandor. Now that he, Scorn and Ashbury Armstrong have arrived, they spend a great deal of time taking in the scenery. After checking out the new Superman statue, Scorn reunites with his sister Cerizah and his father Cerimul, the top official of the city. Superman learns that a mysterious man called the Inventor is responsible for transporting parts of Kandor into Metropolis, as well as creating political unrest such as a monorail bombing. Superman meets up with the Inventor, who claims to be working on a way to free Kandor from the magical bottle, and he says the transport into Metropolis was an accident. He also offers to improve Ashbury's vision goggles. Of course, once he's alone, the Inventor gloats to himself about how he'll destroy Superman and Metropolis. Hmmm.... There you go. Normally, it takes me several paragraphs to describe one of Louise Simonson's involved plots, but Marz makes things extremely simple, perhaps obvious. Do you wonder who the Inventor is? No, because the next issue box in _Adventures of Superman_ #1,000,000 showed the Cyborg on the cover. Now it's pretty clear that Ron wants to keep this plot point under wraps, but since we already knew the Cyborg was in the story, maybe he could have at least been a little more subtle about his disguise. The Inventor? A guy who's really good with machines wants to destroy Superman? He offers to do a favor for Ashbury, the only person who ever befriended... the Cyborg? Remember when the Cyborg could actually surprise people? Now he's a Grade-F supervillain, complete with evil "Destroy Superman" banter. It's pathetic. Of course, maybe if he didn't die and come back to life so many times, we'd have a harder time believing he was back. There was a time when he was actually my favorite Superman villain. Was. And what's the rest of this story? Ashbury meets Scorn's family and is greeted with... total acceptance? Scorn and his dad resolve their differences in one panel? Conflict is the essence of drama, Marz, and this story doesn't have any. The only action in this issue was Superman stopping a train, which may as well be the comic book equivalent to stock footage. And Scorn's family compared the political scene in Kandor to that of Superman's last visit. So where are the rioters? Back in "Krisis in Kandor" Superman and the Atom couldn't make a move without getting swarmed by crowds of raving maniacs. Based on this issue, Kandor seems to have population of four! That leaves a lot of pretty pictures of "the City of the Future" -- which is primarily onion-domed buildings, monorails and blimps. Wow. Monorails. I almost expect the next part of the story to take place in a 3-D movie theater. Of course, next week actually looks promising, since Cerimul is supposed to die and Cyborg will probably try to make his move. The problem is that Marz has spent half of his story arc getting to the action, where another writer could have done it in half an issue (say, Karl Kesel, who pulled it off in _AOS_ #547). Somehow I expect to be let down, no matter what the solicitations say. The only real suspense? Well Tolos was mentioned in this story and I realized that both the Cyborg and Tolos have a knack for appearing in the same stories ("Trial of Superman", and the New Powers storyline). Could there be a secret relationship between the two? Probably not, but this is the only thing holding my interest in the "City of the Future", and I had to come up with that myself. The art is blah. Kandor is a city of four colors, while Superman hasn't looked this static since his death. After the last few issues of this comic, I'm really hoping that Mark Schultz and Doug Mahnke can turn this thing around. _Man of Steel_ can't take another fill-in issue like this one. Mike Smith ============================================== 43. SUPERMAN #140 Dec 1998 $1.99 US/$2.95 CAN "A City Against Them" Writers: Ron Marz Pencils: Tom Grindberg Inks: Tom Palmer Colors: Glenn Whitmore Letters: Gaspar Seps: Digital Chameleon Assistant: Maureen McTigue Editor: Joey Cavalieri Cover: Paul Rivoche RATINGS Average: 2.1/5.0 Shields TD: 1.0 Shields DWd: 1.5 Shields - Whatever happened to the Cyborg being this all powerful villain on the same power level as Superman? EJ: 3.2 Shields - I had *no* idea it was Cyborg! The ending took me completely off-guard! The art was incredible in this one, especially in the transformation scene. EM: 3.0 Shields - The Cyborg must die. God, I can't stand the Cyborg. GN: 1.4 Shields - Anyone else wondering why the Kandorians didn't even look into Scorn's defense of Superman? Anyone else tired of the Cyborg? Anyone else want to know what the heck Marz was thinking? JSy: 2.0 Shields - Though a bit faster paced than the first two issues, the story continues to plod along. I'm not yet convinced that this couldn't have been told in a single issue. MS: 0.2 Shields - Superman framed for a crime he didn't commit? Superman is losing his powers? The suspicious looking guy is the Cyborg? Where *em* they come up with these fresh and innovative ideas every month? VV: 2.5 Shields - Scorn was with Superman all morning, yet nobody believes him? And why does it always have to be the Cyborg? There are months when I feel like I'm the sole sour voice in the whole magazine. Of course, I may be wrong in feeling that way. Judging by how cliched, listless and predictable this story has shaped up to be, maybe I won't be the only sour voice this time.... For those not looking at the other reviews, the story goes like this: a mysterious figure called The Inventor has appeared in Kandor, claiming he can transport the city into the real world. He can do it too -- he's already plopped a large chunk of Kandor into the Hypersector, which is why Supes, Scorn and Ashbury have come to Kandor to see what's up. Of course, The Inventor reminds Ashbury of a certain art teacher... and when she figures it out, she is captured. Now anyone who's been following the triangle titles for a while can figure out who The Inventor is, but before we get the revelation, we see Supes and Scorn heading off to look for the missing Ashbury, and discovering that the Inventor is behind it. Unfortunately, while they're busy finding Ashbury's goggles in The Inventor's lair, a Superman lookalike shows up in the chambers of Scorn's dad, Cerimul, and publicly murders him. This prompts Kandorian police to arrest the Man of Steel and imprison him with Ashbury, while The Inventor to be revealed as... THE CYBORG!!! ...and a yawn erupts throughout fandom. I'm so sorry, but The Cyborg is the *most* boring, most overused character in the Supes Pantheon right now. How a character can go from the most fearsome threat the titles have known (during the Reign of Supermen arc) to a goofball who shows up every six freaking months to get his lights punched out is beyond me. The identity of The Inventor is *so* transparent that I can't see anyone thinking the last sequence was going to be a shock ending. This is a dull little story, with dull little plot developments and not even a touch of originality. Then there's the art. I am not a big Tom Grindberg fan under the best of conditions, but he is simply mismatched with Tom Palmer's inks. Palmer is an excellent inker who has spent so much time inking the great Gene Colan that he tends to make every artist look like Colan, and Grindberg's pencils are just not strong enough to support such an impressionistic inking job. There are some characters here who look dorky and out of proportion (especially Scorn and Ashbury, whose facial features change from page to page). Palmer's inks are particularly painful when it comes to Superman himself; with gawky positions and ill-proportioned anatomy, this Man of Steel looks more like a Man of Aluminum. Also worth demerits this time out are Glenn Whitmore's colors. They seem weak and listless. It looks like somebody was using watercolors in lieu of inks, which only served to make Kal-El look even more ineffectual. I look at this four-parter for what it was -- a fill-in plugging the hole between big storylines. This time, unlike Mark Waid's Brainiac four-parter which at least tried to do something interesting, this fill-in was not worth the month's space it took up. Given what I've heard of the next big story line -- from the sound of it, the *worst* they've come up with (I mean, Superman the Psychic Friend? Pul-eeeze!!), I am feeling very, very sad. Almost sad enough to yearn for Dan Jurgens' return. Tom Deja ___________________________________________ THE TRIANGLE TITLES (cont): -------------------------- 44. THE ADVENTURES OF SUPERMAN #563 Dec 1998 $1.99 US/$2.95 CAN "Imprisoned in the Bottle!" Writer: Ron Marz Penciller: Tom Grindberg Inker: Tom Palmer Colorist: Glenn Whitmore Separations: Digital Chameleon Letters: Gaspar Assistant Editor: Maureen McTigue Mayor of Kandor: Joey Cavalieri Cover: Paul Rivoche RATINGS Average: 2.4/5.0 Shields DR: 4.0 Shields EM: 3.2 Shields - At least it didn't say "Final fate of the Cyborg!" like the last 3 times... GN: 1.6 Shields - Yet another ho-hum battle with the Cyborg. I hope there's a moratorium on his appearances for a while. JSy: 2.1 Shields - A story which did not need four weeks to tell. At least we finally have some confirmation that Superman's first trip to Kandor was to blame for his energy powers. MS: 0.1 Shields - How many times do we have to cram "two cities" into this story? The worst story in two cities plods to a halt as the Cyborg is trapped between two cities "forever". Two cities, two cities, two cities... TD: 2.0 Shields - A predictable, uninteresting ending to a predictable, DREADFULLY boring storyline (with even more dreadful art.) Please, someone stop the Super-team from using the Cyborg ever again! VV: 4.0 Shields - I liked where the Cyborg's gloating did himself in; very well-executed. I'm surprised Scorn didn't stay in Kandor and Asbury stay with him; she doesn't appear to have that much going for her in Metropolis. What an amazing surprise last issue's revelation was! The villain behind it was none other than the Cyborg! Oh, it's been so long since we've seen him last, and I for one am glad that Ron Marz chose to throw this totally unexpected curve our way! Kudos to Ron for a stellar story marred only by the choice to use Superman as a major character in this tale as opposed to the current (perfect) system of The Superman Soap-Opera Hour. Good thing we're going back to that with our next issue! Now, if you agree with that you and I should have a *serious* discussion out back... What happened in this issue? Other than Superman escaping from prison and defeating the Cyborg at Cerimul's funeral, promising to find a way to free the city, and the return of Ceritak/Scorn to Metropolis, not much. Honestly, I like it that way. A simple, straightforward tale that didn't leap from subplot to subplot to subplot, ad infinitum, ad nauseum. The current writers should take a page from the book of Marz and try something like this: Focus on Superman -- the guy the book is named after! Deeper investigations into this issue reveal some interesting things. Done in a wonderful Silver-Age style -- including a great opening splash page that would make any long time reader nostalgic for days gone by -- this issue has many high points. Superman's escape from his cell was creative, and his attack on the Cyborg is done in a wonderfully dramatic fashion. Superman's plan to gain the upper hand on the Cyborg was quite crafty, and the final moments of the story, while low-key, made for a very nice closer. Unfortunately, Marz gets a few details wrong that serve to irk me. For one, the Cyborg isn't a shapeshifter. He didn't have the ability to disguise himself in his earlier appearances, so I don't particularly like this additional power. That is just a personal preference, however, and since it was Jurgens, not Marz, who originated the shapeshifting ability, I'll let it pass. The fact that Marz conveniently forgets that the Cyborg's human portion is made from Kryptonian DNA -- namely Superman's -- is a bit of an oversight. When Superman bathes in the rays of the yellow sun, the Cyborg should have been energized as well. Finally, Superman's means of disposal was weak, allowing for the Cyborg to return again in a few months. The art, however, was delightful, done in an excellent mix of Silver and Modern age styles. Tom Grindberg manages to capture some of the essence of Curt Swan in his Superman interpretation, and it couldn't be any more appropriate than in this story. His scene of Metropolis as the Cyborg opens the portal was beautifully rendered. The only thing I really didn't like was the Cyborg's electronic eye -- too googly, and as such, not menacing at all. A small price to pay though, I suppose. The biggest problem with this entire storyline, and not just this issue, is the choice to use the Cyborg as the main villain. He's been used far too often to have any real impact, and his motivation is so horribly boring. He blames Superman for the loss of his humanity. He's blamed him for 5 long years now. This is as stupid as blaming someone for, say, the loss of your hair. We're told that the Hank Henshaw consciousness has gone insane, which is the reason why he hasn't let up his unrelenting desire to kill Superman, but it's pretty darn silly. Having *no* motivation is better than this motivation, because it's misplaced. He's not a tragic villain, or a menacing villain, but a stupid villain. Add to that the fact that it was *painfully* obvious that he was "The Inventor" and I'm disgruntled. I don't think, however, that Marz could have used anyone else to make the story work, so I guess we have to take the good with the bad. Dan Radice ___________________________________________ SUPER-FAMILY TITLES: ------------------- SUPERBOY #57 Dec 1998 $1.99 US/$2.95 CAN "Demolition Run" Writer: Karl Kesel Penciller: Tom Grummett Inker: Ray Kryssing Colorist: Buzz Setzer Letterer: Comicraft Asst. Ed.: Frank Berrios Editor: Mike McAvennie Cover: Tom Grummett, Karl Kesel, and Patrick Martin RATINGS Average: 3.6/5.0 Shields RG: 4.5 Shields DWd: 4.0 Shields - I was unaware the Doc was the same age as Superboy, and what happened to Roxy being in the Hawaii SCU? Still, I enjoyed it. EJ: 2.0 Shields - Formulaic plot. While I love the continuing nods to Jack Kirby's art and am intrigued by Doctor Roquette and the rest of it was a snoozer. EM: 3.4 Shields - Kirby-rific once again. GN: 3.0 Shields - Nice to see S-Boy and the Mechanic getting off to a non-adversarial start. Grummett could cut down on the Kirby a bit. JSy: 4.1 Shields - As much happens in this issue as does in the entire month of triangle titles. Plots advance, characters develop, and the art is clean and detailed. What more could one ask for? SDM: 3.2 Shields - Not much to say other than: Good job as usual. Quickly becoming the most consistently entertaining comic on the market. ST: 3.9 Shields - I'm glad Roxy's back, but her 'plan' is so improbable and unworkable as to be laughable. She's smarter and more level- headed than that. Other than that, thoroughly enjoyable. More adventure in the tradition of Jack Kirby. Mickey "the Mechanic" continues to re-staff and lead Cadmus into the public eye. He seems to be getting a little support from the outside, which will complicate things in the near future. Meanwhile Superboy is busy training with The Guardian and trying to get to know the only remaining person at Cadmus close to his age - Dr. Serling Roquette. Serling is trying to help the new Head of Genetics (Dubbilex) when he finds that she is lying about the some part of the physical exam she just performed on him. He has been very worried about the state of his powers of late so this does little to ease his mind. The real fun begins When Mickey (suffering from cabin fever) takes Superboy out for a spin in the Whiz Wagon. They make a short stop at the Habitat where they run into Yango and find out about the Demolition Run. Mickey is surprised to find out that it isn't a myth, and even more surprised when somebody steals the Whiz Wagon. Superboy gives chase and finds out that it's Roxy who's the thief. She stole the Wagon to enter the Demolition Run and bail out her dad with the prize money. He tries to offer her Cadmus' help, only to have the idea shot down by Mickey. (Maybe we'll find out why next issue.) Mickey orders them all into the Whiz Wagon... and sets out to win the Run! Well, it's official, _Superboy_ is (once again) my favorite DC Universe title. When I read in Previews that _Superboy_ was going to start doing more with Jack Kirby's creations I didn't want to get my hopes up. Jack's pre-crisis DC stories have always been some of my favorites. It seems my reservations were groundless. Of all the tributes and follow-ups that DC has done with Kirby's characters over the years, Kesel and Grummett demonstrate a view that is the closest I've seen to the originals. These stories are just plain fun. I find myself eagerly awaiting the new issue each month -- a far cry from how I felt just over a year ago. My biggest complaint about the new setting has been that it seemed that most of Superboy's original supporting cast had been forgotten. Kesel and Grummett have now brought back Roxy, and mention was made of Tana and the Wild Men. Can actual appearances be far behind? I hope not. I'm trying to give the new cast a chance, but so far it hasn't jelled the way that the originals did. I'll be patient, though; the direction the title is taking agrees with me. I was beginning to think that they were running out of Kirby creations to bring into these stories. I shouldn't have worried. Yango and the Habitat are only tip of the iceberg if I'm right about what I suspect is going to happen next issue. The art is nothing short of fantastic. It's a very nice blend of Kirby's original style with some of Tom Grummett's own. I (really!) hate to say this, but I actually think I may like it better than the originals. My only complaint is that there are too many panels with no backgrounds. Most of Kirby's panels had some kind of background, even if it was only some unlikely looking machine or a sketchy building. It gave your eyes something to use as a reference point. It's a very minor thing, though, and doesn't detract from the story at all. If you gave up this title last year, you should give it another try. This is the start of a new story line, and would make a good jump-on point. Rene Gobeyn ============================================== SUPERGIRL #27 Dec 1998 $1.99 US/$2.95 CAN "Spaceworld" Writer: Peter David Pencils: Leonard Kirk Inks: Robin Riggs Letters: Pat Prentice Colors: Gene D'Angelo Seps: Digital Chameleon Assists: Frank Berrios Edits: Mike McAvennie Cover: Leonard Kirk, Robin Riggs, and Patrick Martin RATINGS Average: 3.2/5.0 Shields TD: 2.5 Shields DWd: 3.5 Shields - Not as good as usual but I've never been a big fan of the Fourth World or its inhabitants. Mattie just cracks me up with her comments.... EM: 4.0 Shields - This is still the best of the on-going titles, IMHO. Much better than last month's 1 Million issue. GN: 3.2 Shields - Nice bit with the Space Girls. Can't wait to see how this deal with Cutter turns out. JSy: 3.5 Shields - I'm probably being a nitpick, but I would have expected better art from Kirk and Riggs after their having a month off. Was it just me, or were the Space Girls about the most irritating thing we've seen in this book? VV: 2.5 Shields - This just didn't seem as strong as previous issues, maybe because I don't know enough about Jack Kirby's New Gods, Furies, etc. Still, some nice building and I do want to see what Cutter's next idea is going to be. I don't quite know what to make of this story. It seems that a lot of the storylines that have made this book interesting the previous few months have disappeared almost entirely. In their place we've got a very lame satire of one of the most overexposed rock acts in the world, a perfunctory appearance by the Female Furies, and the unexpected appearance of an old foe with a story that -- surprise, surprise -- seems to contradict the origin previously told. The story primarily revolves around Wendell Sharpe, who gets Supergirl to hire him as her PR man. After all, argues Wendell, since the Maid of Might is associated with disasters and the appearance of super-villains, she needs someone to put positive spins on things. Wendell arranges for Supergirl to make an appearance at the Space Girls concert the following night. One of the Space Girls bears an uncanny resemblance to the woman Twilight was incapable of saving in her origin (told in flashback in issue #16), and Twilight is drawn to the concert. When Supergirl learns that Wendell sorta, kinda implied that she would replace a departed Space Girl, she reluctantly agrees to a one-night appearance. Of course, Supergirl warns her hosts that "If super-villains attack or something don't blame me." Famous last words. It seems that Twilight is a potential Female Fury who was smuggled to Earth as an infant. The Furies locate Twilight at the concert proper, causing the usual hilarity to ensue.... On other fronts, the Danvers reunion seems to be going well, even if Mom is worried that the recent racist rumors have caused everyone to hate Linda. (She has enough to worry about with Fred being the target of 'cop-haters' in his job.) Fred gets promoted to plainclothes detective, and is assigned almost immediately to the deaths we witnessed last issue. Linda goes to thank Wally for everything, only to find out the house he lives in is occupied by someone else -- and has been occupied for years by someone other than Wally. I'm afraid that after the last batch of stories, this is a disappointment. There are good moments, but the story never really goes anywhere. The plot development with Wendell is interesting, but if all it's going to do is provide set-ups for Peter David vaudeville, I can do without it. The Furies are devoid of characterization this time out (although David can't resist sticking some vaudeville in there; there's a fight between Stompa and the generic-archer-character Artemis over Stompa's tendency to refer to herself in the third person), and Twilight seems to have just wandered in with no warning. Most of all, David spends far, far too much time with the Space Girls who are as uninteresting as can be, even if one may or may not be Twilight's 'failure.' The weirdest development concerns Wally, whom Linda finds doesn't live where he said he lives. I have to wonder if this is David's way to write this character out. It smacks of the elf-with-the-gun in the 70's _Defenders_ comic (anyone remembers that storyline?). It seems very offhanded in its way, and depriving us of the most bizarre development in the series would be disappointing. Kirk continues to do his usual fine work. Maybe because there is so little combat, he shines somewhat brighter than usual. His facial expressions in particular convey a lot of subtlety and are a welcome sight; check out the progression at the bottom of page 13, where Kirk does the best damn double take I've seen in a while. Every once in a while, I have noticed that David just gets sort of lazy, and coasts for a bit. There are whole sequences in his twelve years on _The Incredible Hulk_ that are pretty much unreadable; pick any story arc featuring the Pantheon, for example. David also has a tendency to stay on a book far too long than is necessary. Considering how disjointed and wandering this story is -- and how execrable the _One Million_ entry was -- maybe David is reaching his point where he's going to be producing diminishing returns. After all, "Spaceworld" is just average... but in comparison to the last few non-crossover issues, it could be the signs of a decline. Tom Deja ============================================== SUPERMAN ADVENTURES #26 Dec 1998 $1.99 US/$2.95 CAN "Yesterday's Man Of Tomorrow" Writer: Mark Millar Penciller: Aluir Amancio Inker: Terry Austin Colorist: Marie Severin Seps : Zylonol Letterer: Louis Buhalis Asst. Editor: Frank Berrios Editor: Mike McAvennie Cover: Rick Burchett and Terry Austin RATINGS Average: 2.5/5.0 Shields CoS: 2.5 Shields GN: 2.8 Shields - Clever tactic by Mxy, though "it's too boring without my foe to torment" is getting old. GR: 1.0 Shields - Too unbelievable, even for Mxyzptlk. I seriously doubt young Clark Kent was ever so dumb as to exile himself from earth on the word of a 4-foot stranger! JE: 4.2 Shields - A great Mxyzptlk story. Millar really lampooned all the old Superboy conventions and yet still reminded us how charming they were. JSy: 2.5 Shields - Mxy isn't funny, and Clark doesn't really do anything heroic. In fact, his only contributions to the tale are in his refusals to act and in his absence from Earth. Not horrible, as an Elseworld would go, but this isn't an Elseworld. ST: 2.3 Shields - Nothing special here and a few things that grated, including the bubbleheaded Lana. Some nice tips to the Silver Age Superboy, but Mxyzptlk's appearance seemed... uninspired. When John Byrne did his revamp of Superman in the 80's, one thing that got people upset was how he completely changed Clark Kent's backstory. For the Silver Age Superman, with whom most people are familiar, Clark Kent was a newspaper reporter whose personality was that of a 98 pound weakling with no confidence, social skills or athletic ability. Clark used this persona to cover for his alter-ego of Superman, so no one would suspect the dual-identity, and had been doing so since his youth. Stories of "The Adventures of Superman when he was a boy" were told, and we learned that Superboy lived in an idyllic small town that just happened to have robots, aliens, well-dressed robbers who always had a suit and tie on, and mad scientists in abundance. Byrne, at the urging of the editorial board at DC, stripped away all of that. His Clark Kent was unaware of his heritage (or powers) until he was in his late teens. He was a popular student and the star of the football team, and never even thought of a career as Superboy. While there was a lot of outcry about this change at the time, since then, DC has used Clark's upbringing and personality to drive many of the more enjoyable aspects of the current series. The current issue of Superman Adventures gives another spin on Superboy, one that doesn't work as well as it should. Mark Millar, the series current writer, continues with his run of frustrating stories filled with good -- but poorly executed -- ideas. As the story starts, Mr. Mxyzptlk is fuming in his home dimension. His 90-day wait is almost up, and he doesn't have a plan. Even if he did, though, he knows Superman is ready for him. He realizes that his ability to travel in time allows him access to Superman from any time; he doesn't really have to pay attention to the 90 day rule, or even deal with a Superman who knows who he is. We go back to 13 years ago, as Clark Kent is getting ready to graduate high school. He has a crush on Liz Allen...oh, I'm sorry, Lana Lang and is always being teased by Flash Thompson... err... Brad something. Clark has a heart to heart conversation with his dad about all the good he could do with his powers, but Pa cautions him to wait until he's older. Mxyzptlk appears, and tells Clark about what the future holds; Clark starts out doing good, but will eventually use his powers to become a dictator, moving from making the world a better place to making the world conform to his view of what a better place is. Mxy convinces Clark that the only way to prevent this dark future is to go to the moon and promise not to meddle in human affairs. Clark buys into this; since Mxyzptlk knows everything about his past, he must know everything about his future as well. Superboy's self-imposed exile means Mxyzptlk can run wild on Earth with no one to stop him. Mxyzptlk shortly finds himself bored with no one to oppose him, so he goes to the moon to convince Clark to come back to Earth and fight him. Even after learning the truth, Clark refuses, saying that the whole thing is stupid and juvenile. This makes Mxyzptlk furious, and he decides that he'd rather go back to the future and bother an adult Superman who will at least play with him. He banishes himself back to the 5th dimension setting everything back to how it was, and causing everyone to forget everything. The synopsis doesn't make the story sound as disappointing to read as it was to read. Most of the story's problems come from pacing; it takes 15 pages to get Superboy to living on the moon, then we see two pages of Mxyzptlk running wild and the rest of the story is the wrap-up. It was as if there were two competing themes, but 'Mxyzptlk fooling Superboy' should have been the main story and 'what Clark's life was like before he was Superman' relegated more to a subplot role. As is, the mix just didn't work. Because of that, the final page of Clark and Pa Kent discussing his upcoming career as Superman didn't have the emotional impact it was supposed to, and instead felt tacked on. Superboy's decision not to fight with Mxyzptlk was a good one, but he had made so many other poor decisions along the way that this one seemed like it was pulled from a hat because there weren't many pages left. The other major flaw, in my eyes, was patterning Clark Kent's school life so much on what felt more like Spider-Man's. Clark was still drawn as a huge figure, bigger than the bully, and yet everyone treated him as if he were a scrawny weakling. Lana Lang has never been portrayed as an airhead who doesn't even know what an "F" for a grade means. While I don't think the animated series should be married to any portrayal of Clark Kent's childhood, any one of the pre-Crisis "perfect son", the post-Crisis "gifted athlete", or the shy, retiring Clark Kent of the 1978 movie are far better templates than this one. Amancio continues to improve, with very nice panel flow throughout the story. Especially nice is the page where Clark fantasizes about hitting the bully so hard that he flies into space. The two-page sequence of Mxyzptlk making Metropolis go haywire were inventive and fun, and made me wish that sequence would have gone longer. Too bad the sequence of Mxyzptlk convincing Clark to go to the moon went on for at least a page too long. Once again, I have to rate this book as average -- two-and-a-half shields. With comic prices so high, I don't recommend average books, so buy this one only if you are a fan of Mxyzptlk, or like the artwork of Amancio. Cory Strode ___________________________________________ TEAM TITLES: ----------- JLA #24 Dec 1998 $1.99 US/$2.95 CAN "Executive Action" Writer: Grant Morrison Penciller: Howard Porter Inker: John Dell Colorist: Pat Garrahy Separations: Heroic Age Letterer: Ken Lopez Assoc. Ed.: Tony Bedard Editor: Dan Raspler Cover: Porter and Dell RATINGS Average: 3.2/5.0 Shields AW: 1.5 Shields DWd: 4.0 Shields - A good lead-in to the Ultramarines, an interesting subplot, and a bit of fighting. Thats what it's all about! EM: 3.2 Shields - A fun read, but too much, too fast. Is anyone convinced that these four are a threat to the JLA? At least Shaggy Man is due for a return. GN: 3.3 Shields - Nice to see that history -- both the JLA's and Eiling's checkered past -- is being remembered. MS: 3.9 Shields - It's about time a DC comic lived up to the post-_One Million_ hype. I shouldn't be surprised it's this one. From proteum to the president, Morrison does it again. ST: 1.5 Shields - The storytelling devices didn't work, Porter/Dell's art was sub-par, I don't get how Aquaman could get the bends, didn't believe in the 'military coup', and can't see these guys as a threat. Without the 'Shaggy Man' setup, this would have been a total waste. TD: 2.5 Shields - An interesting set-up for the much threatened 'Shaggy Man' story Grant alluded to in interviews about the JLA. Now that everyone has nuclear weapons, super-powered heroes are the next phase in the weapons race: it's a theme that's been done many times before, with varying levels of success. In "Executive Action," Morrison, Dell, and Porter offer us this theme again, with very little that's new or unique, or anything that convinces me there's any reason to explore the theme any deeper. For the past thirty years, it's been Russia that's come up with ways to enhance their citizens with super-powers. On many occasions (such as the Troika in _Flash_, Rocket Red in Giffen's _JLA_, or the Red Guardian from _The Defenders_) the subjects usually turn on their ruthless creators and either defect to the U.S. or become free agents. In this case, however, the new team is under the direction of one of our own, General Eiling -- an infamous general responsible for the creation of Captain Atom and who has been involved in a number of military scandals and cover-ups in the past. Originally under authority of the President, who approves the program after Superman refuses to tie the JLA to the service of any specific nation, Eiling takes four marines, has them enter some mysterious sphere, and transforms them into the super-powered UltraMarine Corps. It may be interesting to see what eventually happens to this team, given that they have no other country to which they can defect. Will they repent and turn on Eiling, or serve him till the end? For reasons unbeknownst to me, Eiling chooses to announce the creation of this team to the world in a press conference. He subsequently uses them to release the Shaggy Man from the underwater prison where the JLA has been keeping him and then to ambush the JLA. Apparently Eiling sees the JLA as a threat to U.S. superiority, and is willing to seize power from the President (he calls it a "coup") to see that they're eliminated. Now, this issue starts out with the warning that the Shaggy Man has enough power to be a planet-threatening menace. While I don't specifically remember any of his battles with the JLA, I do remember seeing him on a striking George Perez _Justice League of America_ somewhere around issue 190. That makes it about ten or twelve years since his last appearance. I don't remember him being in the rampaging, Earth-threatening, Doomsday- class menace category, but I'll give Morrison the benefit of the doubt for now. There are a couple of other places in this issue where Morrison indulges in questionable. One is Lois' assertion that Eiling's press conference is the 'story of the century'. It's so important, in fact, that she prompts Clark to ignore the JLA emergency signal! As unbelievable as it is that this general who routinely engages in covert operations is announcing his new secret weapons (the same secret weapons he's about to use in another covert operation to seize power, free the Shaggy Man, and assault the JLA), Lois' behavior really strained the credibility of this story. Then there's the issue of Eiling staging a "coup" without any struggle from a blustering President, who doesn't even call his Secret Service Agents to take the creep into custody. No, this President cedes authority much too easily to be believable. Finally, we have what is virtually a three-page reprint from _JLA Secret Files_, in which it is revealed why Orion and Barda have been sent to join the JLA. There's this menace called Mageddon, see, and he/she/it is going to do some terrible things two months hence. So far, I'm not shaking with anticipation. But if beating Mageddon gets droolboy Orion off the team any faster, bring Mageddon on! _JLA_ #24 was less an inspired effort than a hodgepodge of incidents meant to set up the next few issues. The art was lackluster but okay, and the storytelling simply there. You may want to get this issue in case they don't recap it sufficiently in the next one, but I see little to recommend this comic to anyone. Anatole Wilson ============================================== YOUNG JUSTICE #3 Dec 1998 $2.50 US/$3.75 CAN "The Issue Before the One Where the Girls Show Up" Writer: Peter David Penciller: Todd Nauck Inker: Lary Stucker Letterer: Ken Lopez Colorist: Jason Wright Separator: Digital Chameleon Editor: Eddie Berganza Cover: Todd Nauck, Lary Stucker, and Patrick Martin RATINGS Average: 3.1/5.0 Shields GR: 2.6 Shields EJ: 4.3 Shields - I have not laughed *this* hard since reading the last issue! Mxyzptlk as a serious boy was even *more* funny than him grown up! And I loved the nods to McGurk etc. EM: 3.0 Shields - A fun, light read with some good humor and bad puns. GN: 3.4 Shields - Peter David finally is hitting a balance on this book. Rather than beating the readers over the head with gags, the humor is growing out of the situations. A serious Mxy is something to watch. JSy: 3.5 Shields - A nice humor-laden recovery from the previous (non-1M) issue. A serious Mxy is an interesting concept, even if the basic plot did become a bit formulaic near the end. TD: 0.5 Shields - Peter David must stop writing this. The most unfunny comic of his career, without one single laugh by any stretch of the imagination. VV: 4.0 Shields - This was my first issue of _YJ_. It was funny and reasonably fast-paced, but overbearing in its attempts at humor. It's Halloween -- a night, as PD so aptly puts it, "of pagan rituals that has insinuated itself into a mostly non-pagan society." That scholarly observation is the only observation of any depth in another attempt at a fun and frothy YJ. The froth, however, outweighs the fun. The main action occurs at a "Hallow-Teen" party hosted by fun-loving Superboy, party animal Impulse, and wet-blanket Robin (whose high collar makes him look, appropriately, like a disapproving priest). There, after some standard sitcom dialogue and hi-jinks, the boys take on a younger, studious version of Mxyzptlk. Some of this was funny. For example, Impulse's twist on "tactile telekinesis" -- "textile telekinesis" -- was clever, and the jerk he pulled it on certainly deserved it. When an annoyed Mxyzptlk transforms the kids into fingers on his purple-gloved hand, Impulse asks, "Could you, y'know, turn us back to normal...before you forget and start picking your nose or something?" It's not a gut-buster, but it's something a kid would think of to say and naturally draws a chuckle. Even funnier were the first two pages, upon which, ironically, neither Young Justice nor Mxyzptlk appear. I found PD's mix of ancient occult, modern day computer-frustration, and, of all things, an old World War II song, surprising and hilarious. Fairly quickly, however, the delight fades. After a battle that tiresomely recycles old Warner Brothers cartoon gags, the boys make Mxyzptlk promise that he will never ever torment Superman. At this point in his life, he's only too happy to comply. His decision, however, causes a "temporal ripple" -- a damaging effect on the present time. The ripple effect shows no imagination; it's simply depressing. (Compare it to _The Simpsons'_ approach to the same theme in one of their Halloween episodes a few years ago. Homer swats a mosquito in the distant past, causing much more creative and funnier effects in the present.) Likewise, Robin's solution to the problem, involving Mxyzptlk's behavior modification, is neither very impressive nor very funny. When Mxy becomes the imp we all know and love-hate, PD does forge a clever link between a nerdy-looking kid named Mick Gurk and those historic first lines the imp spoke on the four-color page. It's cute, and it's worth a snicker, but's it's just another in-joke. For me, it's ultimately another sobering reminder of how ingrown superhero comics have become. I was so disappointed in the plot and its resolution that other, smaller flaws stood out. Why are Robin's gloves so big? What is it about the Three Stooges that will make an imp's hair turn white? (They've only made mine turn gray and fall out.) What, on page 10, panel 2, is that stuff in the old man's hand -- teeth, hair, tapioca pudding? And why, oh why, must we endure yet another spin on that old, old, old line, "Is that a in your pocket, or are you just happy to see me?" (Yeah, like a teenage girl would actually be culturally aware enough to use it!) Before I forget, and I really ought to, there's a sidetrip into Red Tornado territory. He takes his daughter for a ride on a broomstick. The sidetrip fails to interest or amuse or touch me. While I always appreciate anybody's efforts to put the "funny" back into funnybooks, PD is either trying too hard here or else he's just not trying hard enough. In short, friends, I liked a little of "The Issue Before The One Where The Girls Show Up." I just hope I like the next one a whole lot more. Gary D. Robinson ___________________________________________ MINISERIES: ---------- SUPERMAN FOR ALL SEASONS #4 Dec 1998 $4.95 US/$7.50 CAN "Book Four: Winter" Words: Jeph Loeb Pictures: Tim Sale Color: Bjarne Hansen Letters: Richard Starkings Cover: Tim Sale and Bjarne Hansen RATINGS Average: 4.4/5.0 Shields DWk: 4.3 Shields DWd: 4.5 Shields - Why the hell can't the regular S people do stories like this? This is one series I will be reading over again. GN: 4.2 Shields - Loeb's characterization of the early Superman is dead-on. The art is perfect for this tale. All in all, a nice cap to the miniseries. GR: 4.9 Shields - I hadn't been moved by a Superman story since Alan Moore's "Whatever Became of?" There were tears in my eyes at the end of this one. A pure treasure. JE: 4.8 Shields - A great end to a great series. It's exactly these kinds of stories that have made Superman the cultural icon that he is. JSy: 5.0 Shields - I couldn't find a thing wrong with this book. This is one of the best series DC has ever published, bar none. SDM: 2.9 Shields - A bit of a letdown. The art is still great but the story is too much like part one. While the legend of Superman is still on view, the man in the costume is too much of an idealized country boy. VV: 4.8 Shields - This series (and the art, and I usually don't comment on art) grew on me over time. It is a story like this that gives us good insight not only to why Clark does what he does, but also the idea that he has had to face tough decisions along the way. This fine miniseries ends with not exactly a whimper, but less of a bang than its first few episodes, thanks to a skimpy plot and a decline in the jaw-dropping gorgeousness of earlier issues. That isn't to say this isn't the best Superman comic published this month, because it is. It's just not the best by as wide a margin. It's winter in Metropolis, and a familiar little kid, Trevor Burbank, is playing out on a balcony he really shouldn't be on, when one of LexCorp's robot-suited soldiers flies by and tells him to stay inside. (Love that green-and-purple color scheme; it brings to mind '70s Curt Swan comics.) Meanwhile, Lex Luthor is gloating. The city is under his paternalistic protection now, and Superman is nowhere to be seen. Lois Lane is looking out her window too, wondering more agitatedly where Superman could be. Then she starts thinking: Clark Kent is taking some time off too. I wonder if... She pauses for a moment, considers her thought, and dismisses it. (A note on this scene: why is the headline on the Daily Planet's first Superman story "It Flies"? Hasn't it been established as "Caped Wonder Saves City," or something like that?) Finally, the scene shifts to Smallville, where we see Clark (looking a little silly in his high-school letterman's jacket) talking to Lana Lang, who's been narrating the story from the beginning. They head to the Smallville General Store and talk to their old friend Pete Ross, but it's clear that Smallville isn't really the place for Clark any more. Clark and Lana go back for dinner at the Kents', where Police Chief Parker shows up to warn them about an impending flood. Jonathan Kent and Lana convince Clark to go be the hero he is, and to work within his limitations. Superman goes out, changes the course of a mighty river, rescues his family, saves the town, hugs his dog, goes to church and flies home (with a story about it for the Planet). At the end, we see Luthor's soldier botch a rescue which Superman puts right (the unlucky Trevor again), as Lana announces in her narration that she's staying in Smallville. The joy of this series has been the way Loeb and Sale make their points through suggestions and incidental details, and with this issue they get a little too obvious. Jonathan and Lana's speeches to Clark are beautifully done, but they also seem a little too poised and movie-ish, and the business with the dog is almost painfully Norman Rockwell. On the other hand, there are still lots of small, marvelous bits of business: the accusing finger the armored Lex-guy keeps pointing at Trevor (and the fact that he calls him "citizen"), the LexCorp sign replacing the "Home Of Superman" sign, the canning jars on sale at the general store, the wedding band on the close-up of Jonathan Kent's hand, the perfectly executed building design of Smallville, even the old-fashioned design of the Smallville police car. I've said it before, but it bears repeating: more attention to gestures and details like these would do worlds of good for the triangle titles Tim Sale gets a lot of show-off space in this issue -- five double-page spreads and four full-page panels. It's curious that this time he uses them mostly for big, simple compositions, but that seems to have a lot to do with the seasonal scheme of the series. He suggests the mammoth, empty expanses of winter with ease. Superman, when he appears on panel, is either huge (the gigantic spread of him flying over flooded Smallville, with his cape occupying a good third of the composition, is especially gorgeous) or tiny (contrasted with some gigantic thing or other that he's carrying or throwing). Look carefully, too, at how he varies his lines for effect: Metropolis, with Superman arcing over it at the end, is all straight contour lines, almost a blueprint for a city of the future; the interior of Lex Luthor's office is full of huge black areas, with pure black masses (including Luthor's suit) that frame the exterior view as negative space. Bjarne Hansen's coloring is, once again, a marvel. Have a close look at the yellows in the story alone, and you'll see how. The yellow of the windows on the first few pages is dirty and wintry, tinged by the snow; within the Planet offices, everything has the yellow of mass-produced overhead lights tinging it; the yellow of the lamp in the Kents' house is, in fact, the color of an old lampshade, with a lighter spot inside it where the bulb is shining; Superman's belt and insignia background are pure process yellow, no matter what the atmospheric conditions; a springlike dawn yellow is creeping into the horizon on the last Smallville pages, and more pronounced on that double-spread of Metropolis; and when the windows from the beginning of the story appear again at the end, they're a brighter, purer color, and closer to the process yellow of Superman's costume. A nice touch. As a final note, it seemed curious at first that, after the set-up of the previous issues, the fourth wouldn't include any kind of confrontation between Superman and Lex. On consideration, though, the conclusion to the story is subtler the way Loeb and Sale handled it. The climactic moment of the story is Martha telling Lana that costume or no costume, Superman is, in essence, Clark. And the conflict is, in fact, within Clark; when he returns to Metropolis, he's already triumphed. Douglas Wolk ============================================== SUPERMAN: THE DARK SIDE #3 Dec 1998 $4.95 US/$7.50 CAN Words & Story: John Francis Moore Pictures: Kieron Dwyer Inks: Hilary Barta Letters: Steve Dutro Colors: Trish Mulvihill Separator: Jamison Cover: Dwyer, Barta, and Mulvihill Logo: Todd Klein RATINGS Average: 4.1/5.0 Shields RG: 5.0 Shields DWd: 3.5 Shields - For someone who does not like the New Gods, I found this story very enjoyable. Now why cant Barda look like that in _JLA_? JE: 5.0 Shields - I have rarely seen comic books finer than this. The team of Moore, Dwyer, and Barta just can't seem to fail. I still can't believe how much action and character development was packed into three issues. JSy: 4.5 Shields - A great ending to an excellent series. I especially loved the concluding twists which kept this from having the same old "Superman mythos set right" ending prevalent in most Elseworlds. ST: 4.0 Shields - This series got better as it progressed, and this was the finest of the three. VV: 2.5 Shields - Not much to say here. I'm not a fan of the New Gods, so a lot of this left me in the lurch. The Anti-life equation has made the conquest of Earth a simple task. All that stands between Darkseid and complete domination of Earth are the few remaining New Gods and even fewer unaffected humans -- Bibbo (because of a metal plate in his head) and Lois (who now carries a mother box). As Lois and Orion try to make a plan that will somehow defeat Darkseid, Kal manages to escape from Desaad, Granny, and Apokolips with the help of Barda. When Kal arrives on Earth he joins Lois and the New Gods in a last-ditch plan that uses all of their powers to distract and embattle Darkseid and his followers. Things are not going well until Orion shows up unexpectedly with an army of Bugs. The Bugs destroy the Anti-life machine, and forces rally until Darkseid pulls out his Anti-mother-box and fries the devices that Orion and Kal are using. Orion goes down, but Kal has spent enough time on Earth that his powers have started to surface. He takes the battle to Darkseid, but is withering under Darkseid's power. Only the sacrifice of Lightray (one of the New Gods), who gives his life to fully power Kal, gives him the strength to defeat Darkseid once and for all. The rest of the book goes on to show how Earth and Apokolips recover from the wars. I don't want to spoil the final ending of the book, but it didn't end the cliched way most Elseworlds Superman stories end. When I review a story, I try very hard to read the book at least three times before I sit down to write. This time I had to force myself to stop after five, and I know I'll be re-reading it several more times when I start over with the first one. I really thought that I had this one figured out. I was able to predict that the Bugs would be instrumental in the ending, and was almost dead on as to how. However, I had predicted that the ending would be that Orion would defeat Darkseid and that they would perish together, leaving Kal and Lois behind to rebuild. The actual ending was far more satisfying than I had expected. It gives me hope for the future. All too often a great story is ruined in the final pages by some cliched ending. Not so this one. While it is true that "they all lived happily ever after," the who, how, why and where made the ending much more satisfying. I want to say a lot more, but to do so might spoil the ending for some of you who might yet pick it up. The art was simply fantastic. Incredibly detailed inking with some of the best use of shading and colors that I've seen in years. Couple this with the perspectives and you have panels that seem to be almost three- dimensional. I especially loved the way that familiar characters show up in the background. In one panel, we see many members of the Superman supporting cast and I think I found Siegel, Shuster, and Kirby - but I'm not 100% certain. Sure looks like them though. I suspect that there may be even more, but I don't know the faces of the current DC staff well enough. While this book hasn't knocked _Kingdom Come_ out of my number one favorite position. It has earned a place in my top five, and I suspect it will remain there for a long time to come. I can't wait until it comes out in trade paperback so I can preserve my originals. Rene Gobeyn ___________________________________________ MINISERIES (cont): ----------------- SUPERMAN: THE DOOMSDAY WARS #1 Dec 1998 $4.95 US/$7.50 CAN "Birth" Writer: Dan Jurgens Pencil Artist: Dan Jurgens Finished Inks: Norm Rapmund Letterer: John Workman Colorist: Gregory Wright Separator: Android Images Asst. Editor: Maureen McTigue Editor: Joey Cavalieri Cover: Jurgens and Rapmund RATINGS Average: 3.1/5.0 Shields GR: 2.4 Shields EJ: 4.7 Shields - The art was *incredible*. The characters were utterly human, utterly believable. I wept with Lana as she begged Clark for help. I screamed with outrage as Doomsday erupted into the JLA --- and I literally screeched in *fear* as he revealed there's a *brain* behind all that brawn! Can't wait to see the next part! GN: 3.4 Shields - Nice art overall, though Superman looks a little thin at times. I'm curious to see how Doomsday returned, though I've got pretty good idea about the source of his new smarts. (Think green.) JE: 4.2 Shields - This issue had some great moments (Doomsday's defeat of the JLA and the birth of Lana's child among them), but the easy defeat of Brainiac and Superman's failure to answer his JLA signal angered me more than a little. Doomsday himself seems to have become just another villain without all the drama that made him great. JSy: 3.0 Shields - Both the premise and the art are fantastic, but the dialogue in the action scenes was incredibly stiff -- I can't imagine anyone talking like that. I'm also not quite sure why this story couldn't have been told within the confines of the four monthlies... VV: 2.3 Shields - I am *not* thrilled to see Doomsday back, although I can't wait for the big expository scene explaining his smarts. Of course, after having adapted to defeat Superman *and* come back from total entropy, I suppose the only way Doomsday will be defeated is to become part of the Source. Doomsday's back. The creature supposedly thermodynamic-ed to death at the end of time has returned to thrust his bony protrusions into the Man of Steel's life once more. Maybe this excites you. If so, great; I'm happy for you. Doomsday's resurrection bothers me, though. and I'll tell you why shortly. The creature returns in the midst of an unusually introspective Clark Kent's soul-searching. Clark is remembering past failures -- how in spite of his best efforts, his pa's cattle starved to death in a blizzard, and how Cat Grant's son was murdered by the Toyman. His reveries are cut short by an urgent summons to Smallville. There Clark discovers that Lana Lang Ross, seven months pregnant, was in an accident that caused the premature birth of her child. Almost immediately, Superman receives another urgent signal, this time from the JLA. He chooses to fly little baby Ross to an advanced neo-natal care unit. As the first chapter closes, Superman remains ignorant of Doomsday's return. Eventually, however, he will have to face a new, improved monster. Here are all the makings of edge-of-your-seat suspense, yet I sit back frustrated, not anxious. Why? Well, For one thing, I'm not afraid of Doomsday any more. In an interview, Leonard Nimoy once said, "Nobody dies in science fiction." Read this as, "No fictional character dies while you can still make a buck off him." Spock came back. So did the Frankenstein monster -- in a series of deteriorating films stumbling downhill from horror to irony to humor. Today, the Frankenstein monster is a joke, albeit a profitable one; a one-liner accompanied by the faint "ching" of a cash register. The same is happening to Doomsday. This is not to say that comics heroes and villains should never return. Who didn't cheer when Superman came back from the dead? By then, the original Superman character was long gone anyway, wound tightly in a shroud of fifty-plus years of innovation. Who cared about that guy? I wasn't around when Superman first leapt into the sky, but I *was* there when Doomsday first burst from his mysterious prison in the middle of nowhere. The effect on me was galvanic. "The Death of Superman," the great adventure in which this rampaging hulk first appeared, still burns in my memory. Doomsday, while not a terribly original character (being a variation on Dr. Frankenstein's creation, itself a variation on the ancient Thing Without A Name), was nonetheless compelling: powerful, mysterious, implacable -- in a word, dynamic. When he died, man, I was living it! As far as I was concerned, Doomsday had done his job. Having performed with savage splendor, I felt that the best possible thing for him to do now would be to die and rot. Let him become and remain a fearful memory for the revived Man of Steel. (Pardon me while I wipe up my naivete. It's dripping.) Unfortunately, The Cat In The Hat Came Back, and so did Doomsday. Indeed, he was back even before the "Death of" trilogy itself ended, sneering at us from a desolate rock in space. I sighed. "Oh well, I guess a sequel's only fair." After all, lots of fans wanted to know where he came from. In due course, we found out. At The End of Time, they said, he was destroyed. I wanted to believe them, but in my heart I knew it wasn't so. Now he's back again, but my meter has clicked back from Horror to Irony, skipped over Humor, and rests on Boredom. There's a mystery in _Doomsday Wars_ #1, of course -- how the big brute got smart -- but I can't seem to care. The rest of the book sports the same old fisticuffs, the same by-the-numbers defeat of lesser heroes on the way to the scheduled bout with Big Blue. I wait and yawn and check my watch. My major beef, then, with the first chapter is the resurrection of a villain who, I think, works better dead. I wish that were my only problem, but another waits in the shadows, almost as great. It's Dan Jurgens' mishandling of Superman. From her hospital bed, Lana pleads with Clark to save her baby, yet he appears torn; should he help Lana or the JLA? Good grief, he doesn't know half those people very well, let alone what they're facing! This is his childhood sweetheart. Even if he *knew* about Doomsday, there shouldn't be any conflict here. The Superman we all know and love would die for this woman, but when Lana chokes, "Save my baby's life," he stammers, "But...the Justice League...." I can't accept this. It rings false. Yes, Superman does decide to save her child, but his earlier indecision seems contrived, and it's too loud a sour note to be ignored. More sour notes jar me. The dialogue leaves a lot to be desired. I can't hear a Kansas farmboy like Pete Ross saying, "Clark-o, your numero uno responsibility is to yourself" -- and in a howling snowstorm, yet. Jimmy Olsen is young and enthusiastic, but he's not such an airhead as to refer to Clark as "The Clarkmeister" and "The Clark-man" within three panels. When people start talking like that at a party, you can bet they've belted more than Soder Cola! The art ought to compensate for the lackluster writing. It doesn't. It seems to consist of close-ups of the characters with inanimate objects and surroundings going largely undefined. I have to admit, though, that Jurgens' and Rapmund's torturous depiction of Doomsday stretching Plastic Man literally to the breaking point sent a shudder through me. I understand that Jurgens' work is quite popular, at least with those other than jaded critics like myself. I'd like to like his stuff better. The take-off's been somewhat bumpy. Maybe the flight and, hopefully, the landing will be better. But for Pete's sake, will somebody please kill Doomsday! Gary Robinson ============================================== SUPERMAN: SILVER BANSHEE #1 Dec 1998 $2.25 US/$3.50 CAN Writer: Dan Brereton Penciller: Joyce Chin Inker: Andy Lanning Letterer: Ellie de Ville Colorist: James Sinclair Separations: Digital Chameleon Assistant: Maureen McTigue Trick-or-Treater: Joey Cavalieri Painted Cover: Brereton RATINGS Average: 3.1/5.0 Shields JE: 3.5 Shields EM: 3.9 Shields - The tragic curse of the Silver Banshee takes center stage in this tale. I've always liked the character, and the creative team uses her well. JSy: 2.8 Shields - The art features just a few too many scantily-clad and seductively-posed women for a Superman book, in my opinion. While I like the tragic aspects of the Silver Banshee, she's been rather boring of late. TD: 3.5 Shields - Daniel Brereton's artwork is spectacular as always, although the story was a bit on the light side. (And *yes*, I am the idiot praying for a Superman/Psycho special.) VV: 2.0 Shields - With the exception of one fifth-dimensional imp, I don't like stories featuring Superman and magic. This story just seems too dark, and the dialog between Lois and Clark sounded just a bit off to me -- maybe too "lovey-dovey" for an old married couple. For those of you don't recall, the last time Brereton was involved in a story involving the Silver Banshee was the phenomenal _Legends of the World's Finest_ series a few years back. That series presented the Silver Banshee as both a villain and a sympathetic character. (It also featured Brereton's fabulous artwork throughout, but I digress.) I felt that series was the end cap on the entire saga of the Silver Banshee; the last of the MacDougals had been destroyed and the Silver Banshee herself had been redeemed. As a result, when I heard about the upcoming _Superman: Silver Banshee_ series, I was quite skeptical. The first issue wasn't as bad I feared it might be, but it didn't live up to its full potential either. We open with Clark observing the Daily Planet Halloween party from his desk. Lois walks in and tells him that she has just found her big break in the Tricker Treaters story. It seems that one member of this gang of notorious art thieves has decided to quit, and wants to meet Lois at an abandoned church to give her the story. Clark has a few misgivings about this, but Lois tells him not to worry and heads off. He lets her go but promises to keep an eye on her. The scene then shifts to the dimension of the ancient Crone. The Silver Banshee comes before the Crone and asks why she has not yet been freed from her spiritual bondage. The Crone explains that she must journey to earth and ask the last of the MacDougals, a girl named Lacy MacElwain, for her freedom. The Crone tells the Banshee that she has only one night in which to convince Lacy to lift the curse of her own free will. As the story progresses, it is revealed that Lacy is a member of the Tricker Treaters. Lois is taken prisoner by a man named Thorpe after she discovers that her gang informant is dead. A sorceress named Hecate then traps the Silver Banshee's soul as she is attempting to come to earth. Thorpe returns to Hecate's home to deliver the unconscious Lois; the Tricker Treaters are also attendance, attempting to get payment from Hecate for their theft of an ancient Pict amulet from the Metropolis Museum of Natural History. By this time, Clark has discovered Lois is missing and sets off to find her. Back at Hecate's chambers, Thorpe has transformed into a werepanther and is killing the Tricker-Treaters on Hecate's command. Lacy escapes from Thorpe and manages to take the amulet from Hecate. She feels drawn to free the Silver Banshee and upon touching her, disappears. Lacy reappears outside where Silver Banshee tells Lacy to destroy the amulet in order to end her curse. Lacy finds she cannot break the amulet and is almost killed by Thorpe save for Superman sweeping down to save her. Superman flies into Hecate's observatory to stop her, only to be defeated by her magic. As time passes, Lacy has returned to her apartment and is trying to forget the events of the night. The Silver Banshee reappears and again begs her to break the amulet, but she doesn't get the chance because Thorpe and the undead forms of the Tricker Treaters burst into her apartment. I felt this issue succeeded on several levels. As always, Brereton's cover art was fabulous, and that art by Mrs. Chin was suitably eerie for a Halloween special. The characters of Hecate and Thorpe have potential as well. They could become powerful supernatural villains for Superman -- something he sorely needs. This issue also had something so many comics lack these days: a cliffhanger. On a more critical note, I felt that Brereton didn't quite have the right characterization for the Silver Banshee. She used to be filled with a blind, unthinking rage, and this rage made her a far more appealing and intriguing character. I had a problem with Superman's incredibly easy defeat by Hecate as well. Even against a magic-based foe, Superman would never be defeated so quickly. The overall plot is also a sticking point for me. It seems like Superman just fell into a horror movie starring the Silver Banshee; he is peripheral to the story at best. I feel I may have set my expectations too high for this story. I enjoyed reading it and I am looking forward to the next issue, but it just wasn't as good as I hoped it would be. The Silver Banshee's last story, _Legends of the World's Finest_, was truly an epic. (If you haven't guessed, I really liked that series and am encouraging you to buy it.) I judged this story based on those standards and found it wanting. Josh Elder ___________________________________________ SPECIALS: -------- ELSEWORLD'S FINEST: SUPERGIRL AND BATGIRL Dec 1998 $5.95 US/$8.95 CAN Plot and Script: Barbara Kesel Plot and Pencils: Matt Haley Plot and Ink: Tom Simmons Lettering: Bill Oakley Color and Seps: Moose Baumann Assistant Editor: Maureen MacTigue Editor: Joey Cavalieri Cover: Haley and Simmons RATINGS Average: 3.4/5.0 Shields TD: 3.0 Shields JSy: 4.0 Shields - An interesting story with some fascinating concepts and characters. Lovely art, though perhaps a little... bulbous. SDM: 3.2 Shields - Entertaining but not too original, with echoes of too many other "Elseworlds" stories. Barbara Kesel does a good job creating distinct characters (especially the Alfred-like Bruce Wayne and the members of the JSA), but what almost ruined it for me was the ridiculously exaggerated art, making both heroines just a bit too well-endowed. I'm tired of artists who seemingly have no idea what a real woman (or man) looks like. First off, I'd like it be known that just *once* I'd like to see an Elseworlds story with a happy future.... Gotham City is celebrating the opening of a Lexcorp office with a large ceremony welcoming its CEO, Lex Luthor. Twelve of the celebrants are members of The Justice Society, led by Wonder Woman, who have not been in Gotham since Batgirl sealed the city off and banned paranormals. Unbeknownst to the Justice Society, however, Luthor is kidnapped by Emil Hamilton and the Joker, in the hopes of exposing the deep, dark secret of the source of Luthor's technology.... The pull of Elseworlds is to see familiar characters in new light in the hopes of giving the readers new insights. Of course, there is new light and there's new light; this book's light is so new I don't know where it came from. There are certainly problems with this story, implausibilities that detract from the enjoyability factor. Most of these implausibilities deal with the Batgirl character. Kesel basically grafts Bruce's origin onto Barbara and then proceeds to make her a genius level mastermind, able to come up with an electronic network that monitors *everything* in both Gotham and Metropolis (which here seem to be twin cities a la Minneapolis-St. Paul), plus she has developed sufficient technology to test the powers of Captain Marvel, Dr. Midnite, Wonder Woman and a new character called Interceptor. Despite this, Gotham is shown as the same nasty, rundown place it always is. Why hasn't this technology bled out into the modern world? There are other minor developments that seem to be made only to advance the plot -- for example, the Venom Hamilton uses just *happens* to use kryptonite as an ingredient. I also question the alterations in some of the existing characters. The Joker here has no real connection to Joker Prime, and seems to exist just so there's a Bat-villain involved. It feels at times like Kesel and Haley just had a whole truckload of neat ideas they wanted to unload and didn't pay attention to integrating those ideas smoothly. Why is there a black, bald Captain Marvel? Why is Ambush Bug a member of the Society? Why is Bruce Wayne a totally ineffectual sop? On the other hand, some of the major stuff works real well. The fate of Kal-El ties in extremely nicely with the main plot and connects right up with the reasons behind Luthor's technology, and the opening sequence -- where Batgirl warns the JSA to toe the line -- is choice. On top of that, you've got Matt Haley's artwork, and he's really, really good in a Bart Sears/'everybody's metallic' sense. This guy's something else, with some nice layouts and a good, dynamic sense of flow and power. While the story was weak, the pencils more than make up for it in this special. It's not worth the five bucks it costs, but _Elseworld's Finest: Batgirl and Supergirl_ has enough in it -- especially its excellent artwork -- to be entertaining. I just don't think I'd be willing to visit this world again the way I am with such great entries as _Thrillkillers_, _Gotham by Gaslight_ ... or, for that matter, the original _Elseworld's Finest_. Thomas Deja ============================================== SUPERMAN 3-D #1 Dec 1998 $3.95 US/$5.85 CAN "Bad Trip to Nowhere" Writer: Louise Simonson Penciller: Neil Vokes Inker: Scott Koblish Letterer: Ken Bruzenak Colorist: Glenn Whitmore Color Separations: Digital Chameleon 3-D Separation Effects: Ray Zone Assistant Editor: Maureen McTigue Editor: Joey Cavalieri Cover: Scot Eaton and Jimmy Palmiotti RATINGS Average: 1.9/5.0 Shields MS: 1.0 Shields EM: 2.9 Shields - It wasn't a *bad* story... it just cost too much for what I got. JE: 2.8 Shields - I really dislike Mainframe and his minions, so I hope this will be their last appearance for a while. I do, however, like Misa and Jimmy hanging around together; it's the perfect setup for a return to the old _Superman's Pal: Jimmy Olsen_ type of stories where anything could happen. JSy: No rating - Perhaps the first time I've regretted buying a Superman book since _At Earth's End_. This has nothing to do with the contents; for all I know, it's a masterpiece. I'm peeved because the 3-D glasses were *so* incompatible with my real glasses that I gave up trying to make them work. How 'bout some clip-ons, DC? ST: 1.5 Shields - At least now we know where Mainframe et al got to, but this story failed to make me care. Vokes and Koblish give us so-so artwork, and the 3-D effects don't enhance it. Too much money for too little product. TD: 1.5 Shields - Could *anybody* explain this story for me? Please? A drab story that is just an excuse for 3D effects.... "Bad Trip to Nowhere" -- the title really says it all. Essentially, this is the story of the Hairies vs. Mainframe. The Hairies are a group of technologically advanced hippies created by Jack Kirby who run around in the Superman titles riding a big monster truck called the Mountain of Judgement... or something. I've read the Superman books for some time and this is all I ever found about these guys. Mainframe, on the other hand, runs a team of interdimensional cyborgs bent on downloading all realities onto DVD... or something. I know even less about these guys, since Louise Simonson has only written about four appearances for them, and none of them have been very descriptive about Mainframe's motivations or goals. So it boils down to a story about two of the most convoluted and obscure groups of characters in the Superman mythos. They almost never show up, yet suddenly we have a whole special about them with almost no backstory. As little as I understand, I can only wonder how a new reader followed this book while keeping his sanity. So anyway... Misa, the Hairie who has left her people to pal around with Jimmy Olsen, helps defuse a rift in time and space. With Superman, the pair race off with Jimmy's Dimension Hopping Bike (don't ask) to look for Misa's dad. Misa is convinced that whoever caused the rift stole Hairie technology to do it. Sure enough, they find Misa's dad (now an intangible spectre) who tells them that Mainframe downloaded the Mountain of Judgement and is using Hairie technology to download other realities. After a couple of battles, the Hairies, Jimmy and Superman beat Mainframe, trap them into their own DVD, and free all the captured dimensions. Then Misa and her dad make up and everybody goes home. The end. The bulk of dialogue for this story is technobabble and bad comic book fight jokes. (Misa's dad: I don't have to be a ghost to be your worst nightmare!) Any character development is minimal, as Misa supposedly has become more responsible (not that I could tell, but that's what Superman said), and Mainframe never had any personality to begin with. Superman is demoted to guest star in this issue. All he does is grunt work for the Hairies, such as welding sheet metal together with heat vision. Happy 60th, Clark. On top of this dull plot and needlessly complex scripting is the 3-D effects. See, not all of the pages could be in 3-D, so Weezie set it up so that whenever the characters opened up a dimensional gateway or went to a weird dimension, it would be in 3-D. That means that for every six or so pages of 3-D you get a few pages of 2-D. Not a bad way to explain a cost-cutting measure, but the effect of switching back and forth is almost nauseating. To make things worse, the colors become distorted through the red and blue glasses, and the word balloons aren't rendered for 3-D so they're pretty tough to read. Every 3-D comic I've ever seen has been in black and white, and there's a good reason for that. If DC ever tries this again, I suggest they set the story in the Black and White Dimension, and set aside the non 3-D pages for the beginning or end of the story. (That, and make the glasses easier to remove from the comic.) Saving grace: The artwork. Vokes and Koblish did a pretty good job. This is supposed to be a "fun" story, and in that spirit we get a dynamic, slightly cartoony art style. The art holds up so well that I recommend reading the issue without the glasses, especially since DC seems to have put a lot of effort into making the 3-D experience difficult and tedious. Trust me, you'll enjoy it better, and it's the only reason I rated this book as highly as I did. I must say that I was pretty disappointed that Louise Simonson gave such a poor showing for this issue. After nearly two months without her writing a Superman title, I was looking forward to her return, but if this is what I can expect from her in the future maybe it's best that she's moving off the Superbooks in a few months. After all, both Jurgens and Stern have improved considerably since picking up new comics, so hopefully Weezie can do the same. In the meantime, I'd suggest you steer clear of _Superman 3-D_ unless you want to spend three dollars on some paperboard glasses. Mike Smith ___________________________________________ SPECIALS (cont): --------------- SUPERMAN: WAR OF THE WORLDS Dec 1998 $5.95 US/$8.95 CAN Writer: Roy Thomas Artist: Michael Lark Letterer: Willie Schubert Colorist: Noelle Giddings Separator: Heroic Age Assistant Editor: Maureen McTigue Editor: Joey Cavalieri Cover: Michael Lark RATINGS Average: 4.0/5.0 Shields JSy: 4.8 Shields EM: 4.9 Shields - Thomas and Lark put out a tale that weaves these two classic stories well. I hope they get a series. GN: 4.2 Shields - A fitting tribute to the 60th anniversaries of both Superman's debut and Orson Welles famous radio broadcast. GR: 3.0 Shields - Very interesting, ultimately unsatisfying. An admirable attempt to recapture Superman at his most elemental. His death was unnecessary. And what the heck is this "war fever"? JE: 3.8 Shields - Overall it was a good read, but it could have been far greater. It wove the elements of the two different stories together quite well, but it failed to really make Superman a necessary part of the story (e.g. _Superman's Metropolis_). ST: 3.5 Shields - Luthor's too-rapid 'redemption', the inconsequentiality of Superman on the ultimate chain of events, and a $9 price-tag make what could have been a great story merely a good one. A nice Golden Age story, but viscerally unsatisfying. 1938 brought to the world two of the greatest works of science fiction of all times. One, a fantastic creation from the minds of two teenagers, would become one of the most recognizable characters in the world and the inspiration for an entire industry. The other, a realistic radio drama based upon the work of one of the fathers of science fiction, set the United States in a panic and launched the career of one of Hollywood's greatest filmmakers. Now, on the 60th anniversary of Jerry Siegel's and Joe Shuster's Superman and of Orson Welles' radio dramatization of H.G. Wells' _War of the Worlds_, writer Roy Thomas and artist Michael Lark have brilliantly melded these two concepts into one magnificent tale. This tale diverges from Superman's original story almost immediately. Having lucked into an interview with Daily Star editor George Taylor, Clark Kent is given the opportunity to prove himself. He and Lois Lane (who writes of the "Miss Lonelylove" column but wants to be a reporter) are paired up and sent out to investigate a meteor that landed near Woking the night before. They arrive to discover that the meteor was no meteor at all, but a metallic cylinder that opens before the gathered crowd. After one alien dazedly falls from the craft and another pokes his head out, the next thing to be seen is a weapon -- a heat-ray that starts burning the crowd. Clark quickly shields Lois, but he can do nothing to save the rest of the onlookers. Much to Lois' surprise she and Clark survive, but Clark's clothes have been burned away to reveal the costume of Superman! To the astonishment of Lois and the arriving military forces, Superman engages and defeats the Martian craft, only to learn that there are many more sweeping across the world. While Lois leaves with Lex Luthor, a scientist also investigating the landing site, Superman and the military continue to battle the other Martian craft. This, however, is very much the Golden Age Superman -- perhaps the weakest of the many Superman incarnations -- and he is eventually defeated and captured. Metropolis falls shortly thereafter. Three weeks later, Superman awakens to find himself restrained in the belly of one of the Martian craft ... and Luthor working alongside the Martians! The Martians are dying from exposure to Earth's bacteria, but Luthor has discovered that those in proximity to Superman have shown no ill effects. Once Luthor has created a vaccine from Superman's antibodies, the Martians have no further use for Luthor and turn on him. He is only saved by a timely appearance of Lois. The three eventually escape and Superman learns how to disable the Martian craft, but at the cost of his life. With the knowledge in hand, Luthor invents a machine to defeat the Martians, and the world begins to rebuild. Thomas pays close attention to the Golden Age debut of Superman, incorporating the first few pages of _Superman_ #1 almost verbatim. He does have a little fun with the story, explaining how the inexperienced Kent could have gained his interview with the editor of the Daily Star, and introducing Perry White as Taylor's city editor. In another nod, Perry ends up covering a mob scene at the county jail, which was Clark's first story in _Superman_ #1. Furthermore, Thomas takes advantage of the relative weakness of the Golden Age Superman to present a tale in which the hero himself can be defeated, while his spirit and example live on to motivate humanity. Being familiar with both H.G. Wells' original tale and the early issues of _Superman_, I found much of the plot to be fairly predictable, although I don't recall off-hand anyone using this particular method to disable the flying Martian craft. Regardless, this predictability did not in any way hamper the story, as Thomas and Lark deliver strong, resolute characters, intense action, and powerful drama. The only negatives to the story came in the redemption of Lex Luthor, and in an awkward xenophobic scene near the end where Lois recoils from the alien Man of Steel, comparing him to the visibly alien Martians. It appeared to me that Luthor's initial willingness to sell out his own species was completely forgiven in light of his helping to defeat the Martians, despite the fact that he only turned against his allies after they had first turned on him. Both of these problems were very minor and did not significantly detract from the book. Michael Lark's art is gorgeous, beautifully capturing the feel of Joe Shuster's Superman, but with a bit more detail. (I'd love a print of the cover!) Noelle Giddings' colors also contribute immensely to the mood of the book. This is not the bright, cheery Superman or Metropolis that we're used to seeing in today's books; Superman's colors are pale, yet darkened, and many scenes make excellent use of orange and red tinting to illustrate nearby fires. The quality of the special format books has been staggering of late, from _Peace on Earth_, to _Superman for all Seasons_, to _The Dark Side_, and to this. It's easy to complain about the plethora of high-priced projects coming out these days, and rightly so. However, given recent performances, it may not be long before Superman fans begin passing on the monthly titles in favor of the higher-quality projects such as _Superman: War of the Worlds_. Jeff Sykes ___________________________________________ THE PHANTOM ZONE: Reviews of the pre-Crisis Man of Steel ------------------------------------------------------------------ WHEN SUPERMEN MEET ------------------------------------ by Lou Mougin (lomougin@wf.net) If you think The Flash was the first super-hero from Earth-One to meet his Earth-Two counterpart, you're wrong. Superboy did it years prior to Barry Allen's encounter with Jay Garrick, meeting Clark Kent of Earth-Two before the latter had ever dreamed of becoming the original Superman. None of us knew about it until 12 years after the first team-up of Supermen in a 1969 issue of _Justice League of America_, but it seemed fitting. The first meeting of counterparts was reserved for the first super-heroes of both Earths. This remarkable revelation took place in the back of _New Adventures of Superboy_ #15-16, March and April 1981. Bob Rozakis wrote and John Calnan, Tex Blaisdell, and Dave Hunt illustrated a tale in which fighting a tornado threw Superboy of Earth-One straight across temporal and dimensional barriers and back to the 1930's of Earth-Two. There he secretly observed John and Mary Kent, the foster parents of Clark Kent of Earth-Two. Young Clark was intent on making a living as a circus performer, cashing in on his "freak" talents. Superboy caught up to him, and dropped out of the sky to introduce himself. The nonplussed Earth-Two Clark soon learned of the existence of parallel worlds (the terms "Earth-One" and "Earth-Two" weren't coined until the first JLA-JSA team-up), and of his counterpart, who wore a costume and defended Earth as the mighty Superboy. Clark of Earth-Two wasn't aware of all his powers, so Superboy gave him a beginner course on how to fly, use super-breath, and employ super-hearing. Later, Clark introduced Superboy to his parents ("This boy is like a twin brother to Clark!"), and the three Kents learned for the first time of the existence of Krypton. However, Clark was still bent on helping the Kents out with money from being a circus performer. Superboy convinced him to at least wear a mask in his act, and John Kent finally gave his permission. As fate would have it, during Clark's first performance as a masked trapeze artist, the center pole of the big top cracked and he was forced to grab it and fuse both pieces together again. The event decided young Clark in favor of becoming a super-hero, like the Superboy from another world. Shortly after that, Clark and Superboy joined forces to produce a tornadic force that sent Superboy of Earth-One back to his proper place and time. The implications of this story are pretty incredible, in terms of the Golden Age Superman's career. If we can accept this story as canonical (which I have no problem with), the first Superman's career and uniform were directly inspired -- one might even say copied -- from his Earth-One counterpart. Even more interesting, Clark Kent is said to have learned his Kryptonian origin long before the famed story in _Superman_ #61 (Nov-Dec 1949). Since I doubt anyone wants to challenge the canonicity of the latter story, it's obvious that Superman's memory was messed with somewhere in between. Prior to _Superman_ #61, he knew he had come from another planet -- but he didn't know which one. When Julius Schwartz began firming up the Earth-One/Earth-Two mythos with "Flash of Two Worlds", it was evident that there were two Supermen and two Batmen just as there were two Flashes. Supes and Bats had both guest-starred with the Justice Society in _All-Star Comics_ #8 and #36. But there were apparently no plans to use them in the cross-Earth team-ups of the Justice League and Justice Society in annual _Justice League of America_ two-parters. Since the Golden Age Man of Steel and Caped Crusader looked pretty much identical to their later counterparts, differentiating them would be confusing to readers. Also, editors Mort Weisinger and Jack Schiff might have objected to it. They were probably more comfortable with a one-Superman, one-Batman mythos. But Schiff lost editorship of the Batman titles, the Earth-Two mythos was firmly in place by 1969, and Schwartz and new JLA scribe Denny O'Neil were looking for a new Justice Society character to revive in _JLA_ #73. Everybody in the old membership had made at least a cameo in the new series, save for two -- Superman and Batman. So, the cover of that issue (by Joe Kubert) depicted the Justice Society guest-stars for that issue, and featured prominently with his peers Dr. Mid-Nite, Dr. Fate, Green Lantern, Starman, and Wonder Woman was the Superman of Earth-Two. There was no meeting of Earth-crossing heroes in this issue, as it was just a tale told by the Red Tornado of the JSA's ruinous meeting with the living star Aquarius. Superman of Earth-Two appeared without the white streaks at his temples which would be added in later appearances. He did manage to show up, sock Aquarius with a fine uppercut (delineated by Dick Dillin and Sid Greene), and get knocked out by a blast of magic. That was the extent of his involvement. The cover of issue #74 was one of the greatest JLA covers of all time: Neal Adams's rendering of one Superman hurtling down and smashing another Superman into the pavement while six other heroes looked on in shock. Within, when the Justice League members came to the rescue of their Earth-Two comrades, Aquarius took control of the JSA's minds and ordered them to destroy the newcomers. The first JLA member to touch down was Superman, who, obviously, hadn't seen his Earth-Two self since their meeting as Superboys, which we weren't privy to at that time. Supes stuck out his hand and said, "Superman of Earth-Two! I've always wanted to meet you! I imagine we have a lot in common!" The Golden Age Superman punched him in the gut. Within seconds, Superman-One deduced what had happened to his JSA counterpart and counterattacked. Headbutting Superman-Two, he mused to himself, "When this is over, I may not like myself anymore!" The next thing we saw of the two heroes, they exchanged final blows, collapsed comically against each other, and both hit the floor. Things got pretty grim after that, as Larry Lance (Black Canary's husband) died, Superman of Earth-Two (presumably) preached his funeral, and Aquarius met his end. There wasn't much time for the two heroes to compare notes, but the first official meeting of the Supermen of two Earths had taken place. Apparently the two-Superman team-up had gone over well with the readers, because both of them were back in the next JLA-JSA outing (_JLA_ #82-83). This time the Earth-Two Batman showed up and played a passive role, as Earths One and Two came closer together and the downing of the Earth-Two Superman by aliens caused a similar fate to befall Superman of Earth-One. There was no real teaming of the two Supermen here, as both of them stayed unconscious for most of the adventure, and no revelations about the older Superman's current life. The two Supermen were featured again in the next team-up (_JLA_ #91-92). This one was written by Golden Age fan-turned-scripter Mike Friedrich, and in it we learned from a short caption that the Earth-Two Superman was now editor of the Daily Star on his world. (Since Clark Kent had worked for the Star rather than the Planet in early issues of _Action_, comics fans had battened on the fact as another differential between Earths One and Two, despite the fact that Superman worked for the Daily Planet during most of his Golden Age career.) The two Supermen teamed with two Atoms and the Flash of Earth-Two, came across a lost alien boy and his pet, and ran into Solomon Grundy for good measure. The Men of Steel had a little more space to operate in this one, but Friedrich, who was scripting Robin's solo-strip in Batman, devoted most of the spotlight to a get-together of the Robins of two Earths. By this time (1971), Julius Schwartz had taken control of Superman and World's Finest and certainly could have guest-starred the Superman of the Golden Age in a story with his modern counterpart, just as he had done with the Earth-One/Earth-Two heroes in Flash, Green Lantern, and Atom. He chose not to do so, for whatever reason, so that event remained a few years in the future. Superman of Earth-Two reappeared, though without his Earth-One version, in _JLA_ #107-108 (1973), in which the two Justice groups teamed with Quality's heroes of the Golden Age to bring down Nazis who had won World War II. At last, Supes was sporting some white at the temples, and had a great scene in which, facing down German rifle bullets, he grinned and said, "Ratzi, I don't know where you've been hiding all these years ... but I cut my baby teeth on skunks like you!" Len Wein, Dick Dillin, and Frank McLaughlin were responsible for this one. It would take four more years to get the Supermen in another team-up. But in that one, at long last, they'd be on their own. To be continued ___________________________________________ SUPERMAN #171 ----------------------------------------------------- Reviewed by Scott Devarney (devarney@ll.mit.edu) August 1964 Overall Rating: 3.9/5.0 Shields The cover of this issue is such a quintessential Silver Age Superman cover; it features Superman in a loincloth battling a caveman, who is wearing Superman's costume, as a red sun blazes in the sky. It displays the anything-can-happen wonder of those Silver Age stories. The cover gets 5 shields on its own for doing its job and making the reader interested in the story inside. Apparently, the editors of _Superman From the 30's to the 70's_ also liked this cover; it was one of the featured covers in the "Superman in the 60's" section of that book. "Superman's Sacrifice" Rating: 4.5 Shields Two aliens arrive on Earth with a strange challenge for Superman -- either he kills someone within 24 hours or they will destroy Earth -- and they back up this threat by blowing up 2 uninhabited planets in a distant galaxy. After pondering his dilemma, Superman decides that the only way out is to sacrifice himself. He exposes himself to a cache of kryptonite, but the aliens won't let him off so easily and they transmute the kryptonite into harmless rock; Superman must choose another's life. After conferring with his friends at the Daily Planet, refusing Jimmy's offer to be killed and foiling Lana's attempt to kill herself for him, Superman makes it appear that he's placed Clark at ground zero of a missile test. When Superman confronts the aliens, they reveal that they know that Clark is Superman. They also reveal that they are gamblers who wagered on whether they could force Superman to kill. To repay Superman for providing a few hours of diversion, they use mental powers to erase everyone's memories of their visit and Superman's "murder" of Clark. This is easily the best story of the issue. It epitomizes what Superman is all about, not the great powers but the great strength of character. In true heroic fashion, to save Earth, he sacrifices both his secret identity and his career as Superman rather than allow anyone else to come to harm. It shows how sacred his vow against killing is to him. It also shows his obvious courage and sense of responsibility towards his adopted planet. The nobility of the supporting cast is also well-demonstrated. Jimmy, the ultimate best friend, unhesitatingly offers his life to Superman. Lana actually attempts to kill herself and give Superman the "credit". Lois tries the same tactic only to have Lana beat her to it. Much of the time Lois and Lana come across as petty and conniving, but here their loyalty to Superman is unquestionable. The only problem with this story is the ending; Superman should have stopped the aliens instead of letting them go on their merry way. They did threaten Earth with annihilation. Presumably they have threatened other planets and will threaten more worlds and put more lives at risk for their amusement. In the final panel, Superman questions, "I wonder what poor planet will be at their mercy next?" The obvious answer is, none, because Superman should prevent any other planet from being at the aliens' mercy. "The Curse of Magic" Rating: 2.5 Shields Mr. Mxyzptlk puts a curse on Superman so that any innocent remark he makes will come true. Mxyzptlk then voluntarily says his name backwards but keeps his curse on Superman. Thus, at a testimonial, Superman mentions that he's hungry as a horse, and a hungry horse appears to disrupt the banquet; while playing with children, he sings "London Bridge is falling down" and the real London Bridge collapses; while visiting a movie set, to appease a temperamental child star, he recites "Twinkle, twinkle, little star" and the young actress turns into a human star. Figuring that Mxyzptlk returns to his own dimension by saying his name backwards, Superman says his own name backwards which removes the curse. This is a cute, if unremarkable, story. The ways which Superman resolves some of the problems are clever, and we see Superman performing more personal, mundane tasks. Using nursery rhymes to twice get Superman into trouble is too repetitive, although some of the other ways used are inventive. The plot is hurt by a giant continuity hole which is too big to ignore. Mxyzptlk has never been able to keep his pranks going after saying his name backwards, yet in this story, he is able to keep his curse on Superman. Unfortunately, this lightweight story can't overcome this blunder; Superman's predicament isn't interesting enough to overlook the error upon which it is based. One final note: in his review of _Superman Annual_ #1 in the September issue of KC, Rich Morrissey postulates that Smallville was fairly close to Metropolis. This story seems to bear that out, as during a slow news day in Metropolis, Perry sends Lois and Clark out to Smallville to dig up some stories of Superman's youth. "The Nightmare Ordeal of Superman" Rating: 3.5 Shields Superman is examining the strange radiation of a distant sun, for famed astronomer Dr. Luring, when he is stranded on a nearby planet after the sun changes from yellow to red. He manages to use Dr. Luring's instruments to send a message to Earth. Dr. Luring, Jimmy, and Lois make plans to mount a rescue mission using a new missile as soon as it can be completed. Meanwhile, Superman is attacked by one of the planet's savages, who steals Superman's costume. While trying to retrieve the costume, Superman discovers that he is no match for the mighty caveman. Beset by the elements, Superman seeks refuge in a cave, away from the primitives. He struggles to provide food, water, and heat for himself and eventually succumbs to a virus which makes him delirious. Days later, as Superman's illness subsides, Dr. Luring, Jimmy, and Lois finally arrive. Jimmy uses the old red hair trick to scare the caveman into returning Superman's costume. On the way home, Superman reflects on how it felt to be weak and helpless while Jimmy and Lois reflect on what it's like to rescue Superman for a change. This story, featured on the cover, is certainly intriguing. It's interesting to see heroic Superman placed in an unusual role -- that of victim. Unfortunately, without powers, he comes off as a whiner. He keeps reminiscing on how he could easily perform great deeds as he is now struggling to merely survive. The writer clearly wants to show the irony of Superman's dire predicament but he overplays it. The message learned from Superman's ordeal is that, without his powers, Superman folds like a cheap card table. Still, Superman's ordeal and rescue are logically set up. The writer covers a lot of ground in this 8-page story; it's one of those Silver Age stories that could easily take multiple issues to tell today. It's just that, despite the odds, Superman should have found a way to prevail. ___________________________________________ TALES OF EARTH-ONE -------------------------------------- by Bob Hughes (rhughes3@ix.netcom.com) (or see my web page, "Who's Whose in The DC Universe" at pw2.netcom.com/~rhughes3/whoswho.htm) Episode #7 How They Got Their Jobs Hard as it may be for younger comic fans to believe, there was a day when super-heroes had to work for a living. Oh sure, there was the occasional millionaire playboy (Bruce Wayne), or the sly dog who married money (Ralph Dibney), but everybody else had a 9-5 job that they held down in addition to their heroic activities. Besides putting the bread on the table, the job served as a device to help humanize the ultra-human and to help the reader identify more closely with him or her. It also allowed the writers to develop a supporting cast of characters, who, if nothing else, would give the hero somebody to rescue each and every issue. Nowadays, super-heroes never take off their masks, never hang around with the hoi-polloi and generally are reduced to rescuing each other. Boring. The first hero to have such a 9-5 existence probably was Clark (Superman) Kent. The Shadow, Zorro, the Scarlet Pimpernel and all those others who went before him were firmly in the millionaire playboy school. Heck, even Tarzan was a millionaire playboy. Of course in order to have a career, you first have to get a job. As we saw last month, "Superman" began with Clark already working for a newspaper, although there was some confusion as to which newspaper. But in _Superman_ #1, Siegel and Shuster backed up and we saw Clark apply for a job, bringing in a scoop about a mob riot and attempted lynching to meet the editor's challenge. Lois, of course, already worked at the paper, writing advice to the lovelorn, but hoping for a chance to do some real reporting. Jimmy came along later as an office boy who brought in a scoop and became a cub-reporter (_Superman_ #13). But of course writers couldn't leave these stories alone. Over a thirty year period one tends to run out of story ideas and it's hard to resist the temptation to revisit earlier scenarios and "tweak" them a bit. In "Clark Kent's Career" (_Action_ #144, May 1950) Alvin Schwartz has young Clark attend a lecture given at Smallville High School by Daily Planet editor Perry White. He decides to become a reporter when he gets out of college. But when he gets to Metropolis, Perry refuses to hire him and Clark takes a series of menial jobs, including vacuum cleaner salesman and taxi driver. Finally, after Clark saves Perry from syndicate gangsters and turns in an exclusive account of Superman's crusade against the syndicate, Perry relents and hires him. (The preceding courtesy of Michael Fleisher's _Great Superman Book_). The number of Superboy stories purporting to depict the first meeting between Perry White and Clark Kent is too large to cover in this article. The definitive Silver Age version of Clark Kent's hiring is memorable for more then one reason. "How Perry White Hired Clark Kent" (_Superman_ #133, 11/59, art by Al Plastino) was Jerry Siegel's first Superman story in over ten years. The circumstances of his return to the writing of his greatest creation may not have been to his liking, but his natural affinity to the character made him responsible for many of the best Superman stories of the next seven years. Fittingly, Siegel re-started his own career by having Clark Kent arrive in Metropolis for the first time, all over again. Actually, Clark had attended Metropolis University, so he should have been in town for four years already. Still, living in a frat house isn't the same as having your own apartment and being responsible for the rent. And Clark's inheritance from Pa Kent would be starting to run out soon, so he begins searching for a job. Clark soon is at the offices of the Planet where he begs Perry for a job. He tells Perry that he admires the paper so much he knows every big story they've printed for the last 30 years! Of course with x-ray vision and total recall, Clark has no trouble citing names and dates to prove his boast. Unimpressed, Perry sends Clark to the Metropolis Zoo and tells him to come back with a scoop. Clark quickly realizes he'll have to generate his own story, so -- after sizing up the zoo's gorilla population -- he disguises himself as Ferrocio and breaks into tired Old Bongo's cage. There he lets the old gorilla "beat up" the young pretender, creating a human interest story for the Planet. The inhabitants of Metropolis are apparently just as big suckers for a good gorilla story as were DC comics readers of the same era. Still skeptical, Perry sends him to the carnival for his next assignment. Clark doesn't have to drum up any work this time, as the Ferris wheel gets stuck and Superman has to perform a daring rescue. Well, actually it would have been a pretty routine rescue. So to keep himself from being bored, Superman restarts the Ferris wheel at invisible super-speed, changes to Clark and takes an empty seat in one of the descending cars. Now Clark can write an "eye-witness" perspective on what it's like to be trapped on a Ferris wheel. This is not exactly honest. But then again, having a secret identity at all isn't really the height of honesty. And to be realistic, Perry's "assignments" are just attempts to get rid of a country bumpkin he has no intention of ever hiring anyway. As if to prove my point, Perry's next task is for Clark to get a picture of Superman holding a chunk of Kryptonite! Perry just happens to have a piece in the office that was recently captured from the Anti-Superman Gang. Plop! Oh look, there's Clark passed out on the floor! He just has enough strength left to use super-ventriloquism to make his stomach rumble. Lois immediately jumps to the conclusion that Clark fainted from hunger. After wolfing down a five pound steak on the Planet's expense account, Clark promises he really can get that picture for Perry, as long as Perry leaves the Kryptonite in the lead box. With the help of a green painted rock (and a little super-speed) Clark soon returns with the promised picture and, as usual, Lois provides her own explanation of how it was possible. The Kryptonite the Anti-Superman Gang had must have been fake! Since Clark was the only one smart enough to figure this out (and can also apparently contact Superman at will) Perry is impressed enough with his ingenuity to finally hire him. Lois welcomes him to the staff, but promises to scoop him as often as possible. So that's how Silver age fans thought Clark got his job. But Lois was already there. Where did she come from? A few month's later in _Lois Lane_ #17 (May 1960) Otto Binder and Kurt Schaffenberger revealed "How Lois Lane Got Her Job." At a party celebrating the anniversary of Lois's arrival at the Planet, Jimmy taunts her by saying all her big scoops came with Superman's help (like he should talk!). Lois states that she got her job before Superman came to Metropolis without any help from him at all and relates three early scoops to prove her worth. The first scoop was tracking down a mysterious safe cracker who could break into safes without blowing them up. Lois ingeniously traces all the safes involved to one company and fastens her suspicions on a particular employee. She disguises herself as a cleaning woman to spy on him. Cunningly, she knocks his notes on the floor in order to scoop them up with her vacuum cleaner. But suddenly there's a power failure! Fortunately for Lois, it only lasts a few minutes and she is able to get his notes, which turn out to be records of all the safe combinations and serial numbers. A big scoop, with no help from Superman at all. Clark, however, recollects to himself that the reason the power failure ended so quickly was because Superman used a Ben Franklin kite to send power to Metropolis Hospital and the surrounding area. Lois' second scoop was to get a picture of the Rajah of Sari, who claimed to have had a superstitious fear of being photographed (these writers never understood the difference between a reporter and a photographer, and constantly had them trading such duties back and forth). Lois tries to lure him out of hiding by showing up at his door with a rare white panther in tow. It was really an old, tame black one which she had dyed. The Rajah does come out, but his face is covered with a veil. Only a sudden gust of wind reveals his face for her hidden camera. His face revealed, the Rajah turns out to be an imposter -- another scoop for Lois. But you guessed it, Superman caused that wind gust when "jump starting" an airplane at Metro airport. Lois's third scoop came from an archaeologist digging outside Metropolis. When he finds a huge new dinosaur bone, Lois becomes desperate to get the story to the Planet. Because her car has broken down, she puts her story into a bottle, together with a $5 bill, and throws it into the river, hoping it will reach the Daily Planet within the hour before the evening paper goes to press. Superman finds that bottle while raising a sunken sub. The backwash pulls it to the surface -- a fisherman finds it and races it to the Planet so he can keep the $5. Of course, he could have kept the $5 anyway, but he was an honest guy. This third scoop is the lamest of all. One would think that Lois could have walked to Metropolis faster than the river could float the bottle there, but Binder only had 7 1/2 pages to squeeze this story into and there wasn't room for much detail. Despite Clark's silent surmise that he was responsible for Lois's first scoops even though she didn't know it, I don't agree with him. Lois did the work on those stories. She came up with the plans, ferreted out the details and resourcefully handled the unexpected. His accidental proximity was just that, an accident, neither necessary nor sufficient for her getting her stories. Now Jimmy Olsen came along later than Clark's arrival at the Daily Planet. The story of his hiring should have been simpler to write. But Weisinger and his writers never did anything simple if they could make it really complicated instead. Thus, in "How Jimmy Olsen First Met Superman" in _Jimmy Olsen_ #36 from April 1959, Otto Binder and Curt Swan perpetrated this little assault on your sanity. It's Jimmy's first day in Metropolis. On the bus he daydreams about someday meeting Superman and mentions the fact that he's just finished reading about the Man of Tomorrow in a book by Lois Lane. Soon Jimmy is scanning the want ads, looking for a job, when he finds a scientist, Professor Crane, looking for an assistant. Sounds like more fun than bagging groceries, so off Jimmy goes to apply. What do scientist's assistants do in Metropolis? Why they run test flights on time machines, of course. (I accidentally typed "off course" there. Hm!) The Professor sets the time machine to take Jimmy 20 years into the past, but he warns Jimmy that, since planets move in space, he may not land on Earth. Amazingly, Jimmy ends up on Krypton. (Wait a minute! It's not amazing. This is Jimmy Olsen; things like this happen to him every day!) Jimmy is immediately chased by the police for crossing against the light (on Krypton green means stop and red means go). He escapes by hiding at a science fiction pageant. Suddenly, Jimmy realizes he's being crushed by Kryptonian gravity. Fortunately, a nearby display offers free anti-gravity belts and Kryptonian clothing to all citizens (sounds communist to me, not to mention extremely coincidental). Jimmy has no problem figuring this out because he can read all these signs thanks to the detailed instructions on how to speak Kryptonese that were included in Lois Lane's book. Jimmy decides as long as he's on Krypton he should get a job (Why? The government apparently gives everything away for free!), so he applies for a nanny position at the House of El. It seems Jor-El and Lara need someone to watch little Kal while they work on their escape rocket. Jimmy gets to watch many of Jor-El's early experiments, including sending Kal's dog Krypto up in a space capsule. (If the Kryptonians have anti-gravity, why is Jor-El trying to build a propulsion rocket?) Of course, while Jimmy is watching Jor-El instead of his son, little Kal wanders off and Jimmy has to search for him. Outside, he finds the Science Police searching for Jor-El's secret laboratory. They intend to arrest Jor-El for causing a public panic. (No free speech on Krypton!) Realizing that they might see Kal and follow him back to the lab, Jimmy distracts the science police by engulfing them in a cloud of dust, while Krypto drags Kal back inside. As a reward, Jor-El offers Jimmy a spot in his new rocket. But Jimmy knows that Jor-El will never get to finish it. Soon the planet begins to tremble. As the Krypton quakes begin, Jimmy returns to his time bubble and sets the controls for his return to Metropolis. But when Jimmy gets back to Earth he doesn't remember anything of his trip through time and space. The disappointed Professor fires Jimmy, so once again he's pounding the pavement, looking at the help wanteds. Suddenly, Superman comes flashing down out of the sky and says "Hello James Olsen, I have a job waiting for you as a cub reporter for the Daily Planet newspaper! Wear this special ultra-sonic signal watch I made. You can call me any time you need me! You see, you're going to be my pal!" The startled Jimmy then learns the story of how he had been Kal-El's baby sitter on Krypton and saved Superbaby's rocket from the science police. And that's how Jimmy got his job. I wonder what Superman told Perry though... I found this story to be rather disappointing, primarily because I had always thought that Jimmy had made the signal watch, but this was never true, until John Byrne re-wrote continuity years later. There are an infinite number of holes in this story and I simply don't have the time and space to go into them all. But it sure threw readers a curve, having Jimmy meet Superman for the first time as a baby and them becoming pals immediately on Jimmy's arrival in Metropolis, rather than developing a relationship slowly over time. Of course, the story contradicted all the previous first meetings of Jimmy and Superman, but that's for another article, another day. Now, how about Perry? Clearly, since Perry was editor of the Daily Planet long before Superman got to Metropolis -- indeed, while Clark was still in high school -- Superman couldn't have had anything to do with his early career, could he? Of course he could -- as told in "Superman Meets Al Capone" in _Superman_ #142 by Otto Binder and Wayne Boring in January 1961. Previous to this story, Superman had hurled the giant ape, Titano, back through time to the prehistoric era, where his Kryptonite vision would not pose any threat to the Superman family. But now Perry wants to know if a new species of dinosaur recently discovered is actually bigger than Titano. Foolishly, even though he knows how dangerous Titano is, Superman volunteers to fly through the time barrier and track this dinosaur down. Sure enough, Titano finds Superman and brushes him with Kryptonite vision before Superman can get up enough speed to launch himself through time again. Because of this, Superman crash lands in Chicago in the 1920's. (It has to be at least 1926 because Capone didn't take over Chicago's mobs until 1925.) There he has to stay until his powers are recharged, so he changes to Clark Kent and proceeds to get his shoes shined. By an amazing coincidence, (actually I'm not at all sure what would constitute an "amazing" coincidence in a 1960's Superman story) the shoe shine boy turns out to be... Perry White. Quickly, Clark whips his glasses off and smears shoe polish (to create a scar) on one cheek so that Perry won't recognize him years later. (He needn't have worried. After all, Perry met Clark at least a dozen times when Clark was in high school and he never remembered a single one of those encounters.) The man next to Clark on one side of the shoe shine stand turns out to be Cyrus Martin, publisher of the Chicago Journal. He offers White a job if he can bring him a scoop. The fellow on the other side turns out to be a member of Al Capone's gang. He mistakes the disguised Clark Kent for another hood, "Touch Vincent", and offers him a job in Capone's mob. (Chicago is surely the land of opportunity!) Superman decides to play along so he can help Perry get his scoop. Soon "Touch" is ushered into the penthouse office of Al Capone. After several "tests" of his skills and loyalty, Capone offers Clark a job in his mob. But just then he finds out that the real "Touch" Vincent is still in prison and jumps to the conclusion that Clark must be a federal agent. A wash of machine gunfire leaves Clark untouched, leading to the myth of an "untouchable" federal agent operating in Chicago. Unable to arrest Capone because that would change history, Clark simply flies away and writes up the story of how an unnamed federal agent almost infiltrated Capone's mob and leaves the story at Perry's shoe shine stand. His powers restored, he flies back to the present, having assured himself that the young shoe-shine boy would eventually become editor of the Daily Planet. The major problem I have with this story (other than the standard coincidences) is that Perry doesn't actually do anything. He shines shoes. He asks for a job. Superman leaves a completely written news story for him and Perry turns it in and gets a job. This doesn't say much for Perry's skills as a reporter. Secondly, what was the scoop? Clark didn't arrest Al Capone. He just almost joined his gang and then withstood a blaze of gunfire. None of this was in public. There was no way for Perry or Cyrus Martin to verify that any of it actually took place. And if it did, so what? The headline reads "Untouchable stranger foils Capone mob," but all Clark did was destroy one truckload of beer (by turning it into vinegar). Somehow this doesn't strike me as a page one story. So now we've got the entire cast assembled busily stumbling over "amazing coincidences" at the Daily Planet. But where did the Daily Planet itself come from? Would you believe, San Francisco? At least that's the theory advanced in "Lex Luthor, Daily Planet Editor" from _Superman_ #168, by Leo Dorfman and Curt Swan in April 1964. On the Planet Lexor, Luthor -- married -- at peace at last -- considered the greatest hero of his entire planet -- is still obsessed with revenge against Superman. Thus he spends his time creating artificial Red Kryptonite dust which will temporarily wipe out most of Superman's powers. With his wife's blessing he flies to Earth to capture Superman and bring him back to Lexor as a prisoner. But Luthor screws up somehow and his space ship travels back in time and lands in San Francisco in 1906. Stranded, Luthor adopts the identity of Cyrus Groat, newly arrived to take over the editorship of the San Francisco Daily Planet! Superman, meanwhile, (Does "meanwhile" mean anything in a time-travel story?) is trying to keep tabs on Luthor and can't find him anywhere. Fortunately the Kandorians have a Psycho-Locator which can trace anyone's brainwaves through time and space. It tracks Luthor down to San Francisco in 1906 and Superman wings his way after him. Changing to Clark, Superman immediately goes to the Daily Planet and asks Groat for a job (not recognizing him as Luthor through his false beard). Luthor recognizes Superman however, and jumps to the conclusion he's playing at being Clark just this one time (rather than playing at being Clark all the time.) Groat tells Clark he'll hire him if he can bring in three scoops (where have we heard this before?). For Clark's first scoop, he gets an interview with famous actress Lillian Russell. For his second scoop, he boxes a crooked prize-fighter and wins $1000, which he donates to the fire department. Groat sends him back to get a story on the new fire engine they bought and Clark goes, not realizing that the red fire engine has been painted with Luthor's Red Kryptonite paint. Oh no! All of Superman's powers are gone except for his super-vision! (which if he'd used on Groat in the first place, would have kept him from ending up in this position.) Using only his vision powers, Superman has to put out a fire on a paddle-boat steamer. And it's a good thing he does too, because one of the passengers is six-year old Perry White. (Let's see -- if Perry was 6 in 1906 that makes him awfully old for a shoe shine boy in 1926! It also means that Perry was 64 in the current story line and one year away from retirement. Oh well, if comic book writers could add, they would have become accountants.) Superman quickly puts two and two together and realizes Cyrus Groat is Luthor, but it's too late, because Luthor has a gun to his head. He drags Superman to an island in the middle of San Francisco Bay where Luthor has constructed a teleportation machine to take them both back to Lexor. However, just as Luthor fires it up, the ground shakes and knocks off his settings. Luthor vanishes, leaving Superman behind. Superman now finds himself trapped without his powers in the Great San Francisco earthquake. He falls into a fissure, but Lillian Russell tosses him a rope and pulls him out. (What a coincidence! Her name has five "L"'s in it!). Without his powers, Superman can do nothing to stop the earthquake and is reduced to helping feed people (from a soup kitchen of course). But eventually his powers come back and he returns to the present, still looking for Luthor. His telescopic vision reveals Luthor never made it back to Lexor, so where is he? Well, if he's not on Lexor -- maybe he's still in San Francisco. Superman flies to an island in present day San Francisco Bay where the federal government has recently closed a prison facility. There he finds Luthor -- the last prisoner in Alcatraz! His teleport ray had brought him back to the present, but not moved him in space, so he had materialized inside the abandoned prison! Close, but no Perry White cigar. Alcatraz was indeed closed in 1963, but it was built in 1868, long before Superman and Luthor visited the uninhabited island in 1906. (Oh well, I suppose if comic book writers knew anything about history, they'd be teaching it in college.) How did the Daily Planet get from San Francisco to Metropolis? How did Perry White get from San Francisco to Chicago and then to Metropolis? I don't know. Perhaps there are other "untold stories" in those Silver Age Superman comics books that I have yet to uncover. As a young fan in the late Fifties and early Sixties, we ate these kind of "How so-and-so first something-or-othered" stories up. In a time without comic book stores or reprints, this was the closest we could get to finding out the beginning of the story. The fact that these new stories had little or nothing to do with the original versions, we neither knew nor cared. Would we have preferred the originals if they had been available? Probably not. To a young reader they would have seemed like pale antiques. And the writers of the day would have been denied the challenge (not to mention the payment) of spinning a contemporary story out of old threads. Nowadays, many of my generation of fans grouse and carp about younger writers re-writing these same stories for today's kids. Well, I say let the youngsters have their fun. After all, we know how it "really" happened. ___________________________________________ SUPERMAN STORIES ------------------------------------------ By Sean Hogan (shogan@intergate.bc.ca) Batman This time, I'm going to look at issues that have featured the World's Finest team of Superman and Batman. Sadly, Batman's creator, Bob Kane, passed away earlier this month, on November 3, 1998. My condolences to Bob Kane's wife, Elizabeth Sanders Kane, and daughter, Deborah Majeski, and his other family members and friends. It was nice to read that, up to the day of his death, the 83 year old Kane was looking at "stacks and stacks" of fan mail. I grew up on the World's Finest team-ups between Superman and Batman, so I'm a sucker for the less frequent team-ups that the new continuity offers (or at least, has offered up until recently). In the Silver Age, Superman and Batman were best pals. Some of the most enjoyable Superman stories were ones that teamed him with Batman, both in the original _Justice League of America_ and (with Robin) in _World's Finest Comics_. Together, Batman and Superman were icons of friendship and teamwork. Since Superman continuity was re-started, and Batman became more of a reclusive loner following _The Dark Knight Returns_, stories have emphasized the contrast between the two. There is respect and friendship of a sort between them, but nowhere near the best pal's status that they enjoyed previously. In this article, I won't mention the new _JLA_ or the annual crossover events in which the two usually meet only briefly. The focus will be on stories that deal with the relationship between Batman and Superman. Their first meeting is in issue #3 of John Byrne's mini-series, _The Man Of Steel_. The time is established by Batman as 8 months since Superman's debut in Metropolis. This is early in Batman's career also as his costume has the black bat on his chest, without the gold oval. Batman is considered an outlaw at this time, which is the reason for Superman's visit to Gotham. Superman snags the batrope and uses it to carry Batman towards police headquarters. Batman lets go of the rope and drops out of sight, eluding Superman temporarily. Batman reveals that he anticipated Superman's arrival and has surrounded himself with a forcefield. If Superman tries to get close, a hidden bomb will kill an innocent person. The weak point of the story is the forgettable villain -- Magpie, a female who collects pretty, expensive baubles while cavalierly committing murder. It's too bad that Byrne didn't use a villain with a stronger presence or some history from the old _World's Finest_ continuity. At the end, Superman concedes that Batman seems suited to the job that needs to be done in Gotham. He is shocked when Batman reveals that the life in danger was his own, as Batman removes the bomb from his utility belt. Superman takes his leave with a wave and says that he doesn't fully approve of Batman's methods, and will be keeping an eye on him "to make certain you don't blow it for the rest of us ... but ... good luck." Batman wistfully thinks, "A remarkable man, all things considered. Who knows? In a different reality, I might have called him 'friend'." The thought is a bit too hokey, but Byrne's acknowledgment of what was and what may yet be is a nice nod and wink to the reader. This issue sets up the dynamic between the two. They both fight for justice, but have different visions as to how to achieve it. They respect each other to a degree, but don't fully trust each other. The mini-series is set 5 years before the ongoing Superman series begins. Any relationship between the two during those 5 years still remains, for the most part, as "untold stories". The two next team up in _Action Comics Annual_ #1 (1987) when Batman (now with the yellow oval on his chest) asks for Superman's help in fighting a town full of vampires. The story starts as a Batman solo adventure, until he realizes he is in over his head (something that just doesn't happen when the Bat offices control the character). Batman calls Clark Kent to ask him to get in touch with Superman. Clark doesn't believe it's Batman, until he says, "and to prove my veracity, say one word to him". Clark says that the word proves Batman's story. Okay, class. Contest time. Byrne does reveal the word, and it's boring (spoilers ho: it's "Magpie"). What I want is for you to e-mail me at shogan@intergate.bc.ca and give me your suggestions as to what the "one word" should have been. I'll print the most interesting suggestions in a future column and snail mail _Action Comics Annual_ #1 to the lucky winner, chosen by me. There isn't much interaction between Batman and Superman in the story. They only meet in two pages near the end, when Batman saves Superman from a vampire. When Superman offers his thanks, Batman replies gruffly, "Call it self-preservation, Superman. I don't much fancy the idea of a Super-Vampire flying around," and tells him to clean his scratches with holy water. Batman appears for five pages of _Action Comics_ #594. Superman asks for his help in trying to determine who has been keeping a scrapbook of his feats before his official debut as Superman (unknown to Superman, Ma Kent had been saving clippings, and her book had been stolen). Batman brings Robin along to meet Superman. It isn't clear whether this Robin is supposed to be Dick Grayson or Jason Todd. While Robin stands slack-jawed (repeatedly saying "wow!"), the two discuss the scrapbook. Byrne draws Batman and Superman with smiles and they seem quite friendly. Batman congratulates Superman as Metropolis has declared the day as Superman Day. As Superman flies off he thinks, "Funny ... that 'congratulations' is about the warmest thing I've ever heard out of our dark friend. I didn't really approve when I heard he'd taken on a junior partner, but now I'm not sure. Robin seems to have had a ... well, a humanizing effect on the Batman." Superman's thoughts point out the contrast between the two: "The Batman works as well as he does in Gotham City because the people there tend to fear him. But I gotta say ... it sure is great to be loved". Superman checks back with Batman in _Adventures of Superman_ #440 for three pages. The meeting is made a bit edgier this time. Batman is in his Dark Knight persona, wondering where Superman is. "I don't like standing idle like this. Gotham is a garden that needs constant weeding". Batman doesn't bring Robin this time and he is abrupt with Superman ("As usual, your humor eludes me, Superman."). As to the scrapbook, Batman says that he wasn't able to come up with anything except, "the only absolute fact I was able to glean from the thing ... is that you're Clark Kent". Humorously, Superman's first thought is "Maybe I should have enlisted the help of the world's *second* greatest detective!" Batman adds that as a matter of "professional courtesy" he won't reveal Superman's dual identity to anyone. Superman shows that there are some brains with the muscles when he replies, "Oh, I'm quite sure you won't do that ... Mr. Wayne." Batman almost slips off his batrope as he thinks, "and to think I took all that effort to line my cowl with lead foil." More satisfying to a World's Finest fan is the three part "Dark Knight Over Metropolis" (_Superman_ #44, _Adventures of Superman_ #467, and _Action Comics_ #654). As with the old _World's Finest_ comic, the title page nostalgically declares: "Your two favorite heroes, Superman and Batman, in one adventure together!" Jerry Ordway starts off nicely by having a shadowy figure on the rooftops, trailing Cat Grant and Jose Delgado. Surprisingly, the Batman-like figure is actually Superman. Next, we learn that Batman has found a Kryptonite ring in Gotham (formerly Luthor's ring) and the trail leads him to Metropolis. In part 2, Dan Jurgens has Superman thinking, "There has always been something about Batman that troubles me. He works outside the law -- with methods that are questionable at best." He wonders, "What is he doing in my city?". Batman drops in on a rooftop conversation between Gangbuster and Superman and makes it clear he wants to speak to Superman alone. Gangbuster asks, "Is that guy always this intense?". Superman replies tongue-in-cheek, "Actually, I'd say he seems to be in a pretty cheery mood tonight." Batman's distrust of Superman shows when, in discussing the case, he thinks, "No reason to let him know I actually have the ring. It may come in handy." In contrast, Bruce Wayne is charming and flirtatious when he attends an awards function at Luthor's where he "introduces" himself to Clark and Lois. He also meets Luthor for the first time, saying "Lex Luthor. I've wanted to meet you for some time now!". Double meanings abound. The third issue, written by Roger Stern, opens with a nostalgic scene of Superman and Batman, arms around each other, flying through the sky. The story has lots of interaction between the two (in hero and civilian guises), as well as conflicts with Luthor and Intergang. Batman deduces the history of the ring and gives it to Superman. The tale ends with Superman asking Batman to store the ring, in the event it ever needs to be used against him. Superman's final words are, "I want the means to stop me to be in the hands of a man I can trust with my life." Perhaps not (completely) in continuity (but who cares) is the 3 issue, prestige format series called _World's Finest_ (also in trade paperback). Luthor and Joker take on each other as well as Superman and Batman. While the story is well-written by Dave Gibbons, it is the art by Steve Rude (with inks by Karl Kesel) that make the story so special. Rude does wonderful scenic views of Gotham and Metropolis. His art is filled with dynamic movement, creative angles and brilliant use of shading and lighting. He fills panels with such terrific details that he could rival Sergio Aragones. Steve Oliff gets deserved cover credit for his coloring. The plot is complex, involving an orphanage with a murky history, located between Metropolis and Gotham City. In the process, Luthor and the Joker agree to trade cities. The heroes later do the same to chase their old foes. I recommend you get your copy and read, or re-read it. The 3 issue, prestige series _Legends Of The World's Finest_ (also in trade paperback) by Walter Simonson and Dan Brereton takes a darker look at the pair with a gothic storyline and dark, painted art. It's a fight between demons with the Silver Banshee, Tullus, and Blaze, as well as a possessed Man-Bat. Interestingly, the plot has the heroes haunted by bad dreams of each other's origins. Superman dreams of his parents, murdered by a lone gunman and begins to act harsher, angrier towards the criminals he faces. Batman dreams of being on Krypton and finds that he begins to fear the dark and the night and to lose his edge. There isn't much development of the Superman/Batman relationship (understandable with Superman under the influence of the Silver Banshee for much of the story). This is a darker view of Superman, in both story and art and won't appeal to everyone. I suspect if you prefer Batman or just like a good Halloween type tale, you will enjoy the read. No matter what version of Batman is your favorite, you can't help but enjoy the Zero Hour issue of _Superman: The Man Of Steel_ #37. With the timeline fracturing, Batman comes to Metropolis to find Superman. And it turns out to be not just one Batman, but several alternate versions of him. While Louise Simonson turns out a good story, the star of the issue is Jon Bogdanove's art. His alternate Batmen pays homage to artists from Bob Kane to Neal Adams to Frank Miller and many, many others. You may also want to pick up _Superman: The Man Of Steel_ #40 for the letter page which reproduces the cover to #37 with annotations listing the original artists for the various versions on the cover. Favorite quote: when the first Batman greets the long haired Superman saying, "Not going 'hippie' on us, are you?" On a darker note was Batman's appearance in _Action Comics_ #719, where Lois lies dying from the Joker's poison. David Michelinie writes a solid, disturbing story. Superman desperately seeks Batman's help. Batman diverts him, realizing that Superman is losing control in his grief over Lois' condition. The Joker tells Superman that the only way to save Lois it to inject the Joker with a serum that will produce the necessary antibodies, but kill the Joker in the process. Joker explains that since Superman is invulnerable, that "I'd destroy what you *are*." Forcing Superman to take a life, "even my life -- is bound to send you over the edge." Superman is wrestling with his moral code while Batman tries to convince him that he can't kill the Joker. Superman says, "I can crush mountains! Melt steel! Are you saying I can't save one woman?" Batman replies from personal experience as he says, "Life doesn't always have happy endings." He tells Superman to think about what Lois would want him to do: "For your soul and hers ... think!" Michelinie is challenging not only Superman's moral code, but also our own. Neither the choice nor the consequences are soft-pedaled. Superman and Batman stand helplessly over Lois' hospital bed as the poison reaches its final stage. At the end of the issue, Lois is still alive, but the question hangs in the air -- did Superman make the right choice? The issue shows the strength of the relationship between Batman and Superman. Even in anguish and indecision, with Lois' life in the balance, Superman relies on Batman's judgment and allows Batman to restrain him. Batman drops by for a chat in _Superman: The Wedding Album_. Showing how Silver Age references can be over-used, Batman offers congratulations, saying "I think you and Lois will make the world's finest team." Ouch. When Batman explains how he has arranged for other heroes to protect the city during the honeymoon, as well as arranging for Clark and Lois to have the apartment they wanted, Superman replies, "Thank you Bruce. That's quite a wedding present! You better watch this nice guy stuff before it trashes your grim and gritty image!" Batman's most recent appearance in the Super-titles was in _Superman_ #126. Luthor is on trial and claims that he needs the kryptonite ring for his defense. After some wrestling with his conscience, Superman goes to the Batcave to retrieve it. Batman is waiting for him. His advice, "I wouldn't do it. He's guilty. Let him roast!" Superman counters with, "I rely on the goodwill and the trust of the people to do my job, Batman. You rely on fear and terror to do yours. I have to do this." Interestingly, while accurately stating the difference in their approaches to crime-fighting, there is no longer any indication that Superman disapproves of Batman's methods. He seems to have accepted that different circumstances can merit different methods. Always cunning, Luthor manages to swap the kryptonite ring, so that Superman returns an imitation to the Batcave. I can't believe that Batman wouldn't check the ring as soon as it was returned. The issue cries for a follow-up where Batman arrives to retrieve the original ring from Luthor. Despite several appearances by Batman in the Super-titles, Superman has only made one appearance in the Bat-titles. The story in _The Batman Chronicles_ #7 is even written by Super-scribe Jerry Ordway. Using a theme from _Action Comics_ #1, Superman is trying to gather evidence to prevent the execution of someone who may have been wrongfully convicted of murder. Ordway delivers a gripping, realistic story with solid interaction between the heroes (incidentally, this issue is also well known for Devin Grayson's debut story about Dick Grayson and Donna Troy). As in earlier issues, there is a friendly, but prickly, relationship between the two. When Superman assists Batman during a battle, Batman's first remark is that he could have taken out the gunman without help. Superman takes no offense, instead openly saying, "I need your help, friend". It's nice to see that when a news helicopter spies them, it is Batman that disappears without warning, not the man with super-speed. There is always a conflict in pairing Superman and Batman, as the former's powers dwarf the latter. Writers must come up with some way to make Batman both relevant and a full partner of the team. In the Silver Age, this was often done by removing Superman's powers (red sun, magic, etc). Even though the new Superman is not as powerful as his earlier incarnation, he has less weaknesses (green kryptonite is rare, other varieties don't exist and he and Batman don't visit red sun worlds often). In modern stories, Batman compensates for the differences in their physical abilities by his intelligence and fore-thought, as well as his mysteriousness (such as his ability to disappear). The issue nicely contrasts their different approaches as Superman investigates through reporter Clark Kent while Batman muscles and threatens his way to the truth. The accused in the story is not completely innocent, which allows a discussion between the two as to what is the appropriate punishment for her. But in the end, the two agree that truth and justice must prevail -- although in this case their intervention is thwarted. As Batman says, "our philosophies may differ, but we're both after the same thing -- justice." In the recent _Superman Secret Files_ #1, a mysterious stranger investigates Clark Kent/Superman's background. The story has a review of the post-Crisis Superman as the stranger talks with Ma and Pa Kent, but the highlight of the story is the final two pages, when Superman meets Batman in the Batcave. Batman again repeats that, "We're opposites. You represent the light, while I represent the dark. You're a product of love and order, while I'm a product of violence and chaos" and that, "...you grew up with the life I craved." Superman replies that maybe the two aren't that different. The issue ends with Clark Kent and Bruce Wayne sitting down, mugs in hand, to talk. There are also some great non-continuity meetings between Superman and Batman (Elseworlds and Animated Series) that I hope to review in a future article. To end on a positive note, it appears that DC is out to please fans of the World's Finest team with several new offerings. John Byrne's _Superman and Batman: Generations_ is a four issue Elseworlds series (with the first issue released in November 1998) which features a look at the team at ten year intervals starting with 1939. And Karl Kesel is scheduled to do a new 10-issue _World's Finest_ maxi-series expected to debut in early 1999. Kesel will have a preview story in the _DCU Holiday Bash III_. The series will reveal that Superman and Batman have met regularly over the past 10 years and will include stories such as Batman checking on the four Supermen that appeared after his "death" and Superman checking on the Azrael-Batman. On a final note, my thanks to Jim Lesher who e-mailed me about Bob Kane and also answered my question about Mr. Mxyzptlk's identity of "Ben DeRoy" from last month's article. To quote Jim: "The name Ben DeRoy, by the way, was a swipe at The Beyonder, a Marvel Comics character who was supposedly omnipotent. He appeared in the two "Secret Wars" mini-series from Marvel Comics". That's it for now. Next time, I'll look at Christmas and other holiday tales from both pre- and post-Crisis continuity to give you something to look for over the holidays. ___________________________________________ **************************************************************** End of Section 10/Issue #56