Absinthe_1900
One Too Many
- Messages
- 1,628
- Location
- The Heights in Houston TX
I'd rather see them make a feature length animated Superman, in the same style as the old Max Fleischer cartoons.
I take it you haven't seen the Fleischer cartoons.Feraud said:...imagine what he would have said about Germans or Asians back then!
I take it you haven't seen the Fleischer cartoons.Feraud said:If Superman did not say "The American Way" because it was not a popular sentiment 1930s imagine what he would have said about Germans or Asians back then!
Chad Sanborn said:I couldn't agree more! Bruce Campbell would have made a great Superman.
Chad
Feraud said:I think the phrase, "Truth, Justice, and the American Way" was mangled not because it predates the 1950's anti-Communist chest thumping but because of the $$'s.
Singer & Co. are thinking about that juicy foreign dvd market.
To some folk, that is the American Way. [huh]
jamespowers said:Now this is more likely the reason pandering to the bucks. :rage: Superman is an American icon. Duh! What would he be for the Communist way?!
Regards,
J
You got that right, I am crazy.Miss_Bella_Hell said:You're crazy, X-Men III was great! Much better than Superman Returns. (No love for King Kong though.)
MudInYerEye said:Actually, the original Schuster/Siegel Superman circa 38-41 was seemingly a commited socialist. Many of his adventures involved righting social injustices which were invaribly commited against society by robberbaron warbuck-types. He was a one man anti-trust act delivering the New Deal with steel fists. Most early superheroes, which were mostly created by a large pool of urban left-wing artists and writers, expressed a similar message. Of course, things changed as the cold war approached.
jamespowers said:Superman is a symbol of how Big Government will take care of everything. It has a very leftist approach. Maybe the Communist Way would be more correct.
Marc Chevalier said:You'll enjoy the movie V for Victory.
.
Its lead character fights against a dictatorial British government. He spectacularly blows up London's Houses of Parliament at night.jamespowers said:[huh] [huh][huh] ------
Marc Chevalier said:Its lead character fights against a dictatorial British government. He spectacularly blows up London's Houses of Parliament at night.
.
This is a through back to the original Superman comics and the Max Fleischer cartoons of the 30's and 40's. The fraise, "American Way" wasn't added until the 1950's George Reeves' TV show, as a way of going against Communism.jamespowers said:Ok, now for the controversy. Remember the Truth, Justice and the American way slogan? Well it got axed down. Truth and justice are still there but the American way is gone. Is Superman now a PC character?
Regards,
J
MudInYerEye said:Just saw it. Very spare.
But, while somewhat disappointing, it was much better than KING KONG or X-MEN III.
MudInYerEye said:To me the definitive Superman was that drawn by Curt Swan during the 50's and 60's. His Superman was husky, square-jawed, and unmistakeably middle-aged. Bruce Campbell looks like Superman.