Blowtorch
Familiar Face
- Messages
- 64
- Location
- Madtown, Wisco
(It's Batman, of course)
Isn't it safe to say that one recognizes a superhero when one sees one?
I say it's Batman's lack of superhuman powers that make him interesting. That , and, you know, he's the coolest
That's exactly right, most Batman stuff is like a noir novel in that sense, where our hero is really no different than the villain, except for a matter of circumstance.the real nitty gritty about how Batman is little different than many of his nemeses like the Joker... he is simply more socially acceptable because the targets of Bruce Wayne's psychosis - the Batman persona - are considered to be socially undesirable, and so taking the law into his own hands (a common euphemism for certain types of criminal behaviour) becomes acceptable to the audience.
That's exactly right, most Batman stuff is like a noir novel in that sense, where our hero is really no different than the villain, except for a matter of circumstance.
That's why I like noir literature, and that's why Batman is way more interesting than some hero who is invincible and invulnerable (and boring)
Batman is my nomination for official crime-fighting "hero" of the Fedora Lounge,
although, one could certainly make a strong case for guys like The Rocketeer , Dick Tracy, and The Shadow
However, my favorite comic books are non-superhero ones, just because the concept of superhero (a dude who goes around at night wearing a cape and colored underwear) is quite ridiculous, if one thinks about it. One of my favorite characters is Pat Mill's (of 2000AD fame) Marshal Law, which satirizes the whole genre based on this premise.
I don't have a favorite. When you've been avidly consuming pop culture for sixty years, you realize that naming favorites and assembling best-of lists are pointless exercises. If not downright impossible.
But I remain completely fascinated by superheroes, because as I've often said here, I have come to believe that the stories that we tell over and over - and the mythic figures that keep recurring in new forms that populate them (e.g., wily Odysseus becomes Batman) - tell us more truths about our essential humanity than just about anything else.
As an offshoot of the question, I'll raise my hand to say that the second Nolan Batman movie "The Dark Knight" is the best superhero movie ever made. I'd even put it in my top-twenty of all movies ever made list.
The thing I always found interesting about Marvel's stable of superheroes was that so many of them were given an Achilles' Heel in one form or another. Peter Parker/Spider-Man lived with his Aunt May and had to keep his real identity a secret so that she wouldn't be targeted by his various adversaries; Bruce Banner had to control his emotions or he'd become The Hulk and unwittingly cause massive amounts of destruction; Tony Stark/Iron Man had a piece of shrapnel in his chest that constantly threatened his heart; Steve Rogers/Captain America had superhuman abilities, but was still vulnerable to bladed weapons, bullets, and such. And on, and on, and on....Where Marvel absolutely stand out with the most significant contribution to the superhero genre since its origin was the creation of Spiderman: a character with an ordinary background, ordinary problems, and whose super-power, by and large, doesn't improve his own life significantly...
Until March 4th of this year I would have agreed with you. Then I saw Logan.As an offshoot of the question, I'll raise my hand to say that the second Nolan Batman movie "The Dark Knight" is the best superhero movie ever made...
The thing I always found interesting about Marvel's stable of superheroes was that so many of them were given an Achilles' Heel in one form or another. Peter Parker/Spider-Man lived with his Aunt May and had to keep his real identity a secret so that she wouldn't be targeted by his various adversaries; Bruce Banner had to control his emotions or he'd become The Hulk and unwittingly cause massive amounts of destruction; Tony Stark/Iron Man had a piece of shrapnel in his chest that constantly threatened his heart; Steve Rogers/Captain America had superhuman abilities, but was still vulnerable to bladed weapons, bullets, and such. And on, and on, and on.
Until March 4th of this year I would have agreed with you. Then I saw Logan.
Plastic Man. More or less impossible to do as a dark-costumed, gritty reboot.
This is the same reason I was attracted to Marvel's superheroes--they were vulnerable in some way, and that made them more realistic. It's also the main reason I never really cared for Superman. Yes, the writers of the The Adventures of Superman radio show eventually came up with Kryptonite to give him some vulnerability (and to allow Clayton Collyer, the voice of Superman, to take a vacation), but it wasn't quite the same. And I think that's why Batman has always been my personal favorite--he's intelligent, has trained his body, and apparently has more money than anyone can imagine, but he's still just a guy with no superhuman powers.As an angst and hormone-ridden young man, the Marvel titles "spoke" to me more by having the heroes be vulnerable and flawed. Stan Lee Jack Kirby gave us anti-heroes and fed into the entire post-1960 culture that gave rise to things like Dirty Harry, etc. So I was always a Marvel guy. I read Superman and Batman, and had a special love for the Green Lantern, but it was Spiderman I had a subscription to. The nerd in me loved the F4, and I was a big Iron Man fan, as well as Cap.
There was always something "clean" or "cut and dried" about DC comics. I liked the grittier aspects of Marvel better...
You might enjoy it, but probably not as much as someone who is familiar with the characters' histories would. At the very least I'd suggest seeing X-Men Origins: Wolverine and The Wolverine first, but even those movies won't explain the relationship between Logan and Charles Xavier unless you've also seen X-Men, X-Men 2, and X-Men: The Last Stand....Also, as somebody who hasn't followed the X-Men series (I saw the first couple, but no more), would I get anything out of Logan? Or would I be too behind the curve?