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stelok
06-15-2008, 08:19 AM
http://news.ph.msn.com/entertainment/article.aspx?cp-documentid=1466703


Superman first appeared in Action Comics #1 (June 1938) Why is there such a quiet anniversary for seventy-year old popular icon? I remember Marvel and DC celebrates their iconic characters' 25th, 30th, 40th, 50th anniversaries like it's a big deal, but not a 60th?

Superman, the septuagenarian original comic book superhero
Superman, the original comic book superhero, turns 70 this month, but his strength and invulnerability draws fewer fans in the 21st century world of flawed, postmodern heroes.

An indisputable icon of American pop culture, the Man of Steel made his first appearance in the June 1938 issue of "Action Comics." He is the brainchild of Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster, residents of the midwestern town of Cleveland, Ohio.

Supeman can fly in the sky, but he's not a bird or a plane. He's faster than a speeding bullet, more powerful than a locomotive, and able to leap tall buildings in a single bound.

About 1.9 meters (six feet, three inches) tall and weighing some 102 kilos (225 pounds), Superman has blue eyes, black hair and is a mild-mannered reporter working at the "Daily Planet" newspaper under the alias Clark Kent. He was born on the planet Krypton, exiled to Earth as an infant, and for decades has been fighting for Truth, Justice and the American Way.

"He is a complete fiction, but he is so complete, so ideal, and so well-known around the world -- most Americans will know his origin simply by osmosis by the time they are eight -- that he is a much fuller representation of an American self-view than Uncle Sam or Mickey Mouse," said Bradley Ricca, who produced a documentary titled "Last Son" on the origin of Superman.

"He really is the quintessential modern American symbol," said Ricca, who is a Case Western University professor specializing in American literature and popular culture. "He is an immigrant in an imperfect world" who "battles injustice in any form."

Superman "is the first fictional superhero, with all the characteristics at the same time: the powers, the cape, the secret identity, the colorful costume, the complicated love triangle, and the unmatched sense of justice," Ricca told AFP.

Superman "is the progenitor of the genre and sets the standard for other figures," said Peter Coogan, who holds a doctorate in American Studies from Michigan State University and specializes in superheroes in US history.

"It can be said that all superheroes are imitations of or the children of Superman," playing "a symbolizing function as an embodiment of American mythology," Coogan told AFP.

"Superheroes embody a vision of the use of power unique to America. Superheroes enforce their own visions of right and wrong on others, and they possess overwhelming power, especially in relation to ordinary crooks," said Coogan, who also heads the non-profit Institute for Comics Studies.

In his 2007 master's thesis at Georgia State University, another student of the genre, Aaron Pevey, wrote that Superman lost popularity precisely because he is invulnerable.

"While Superman might have succeeded as a modern hero, he fails as a postmodern one," wrote Pevey. That explains, he believes, why DC Comics has seen a slump in sales of Superman comics over the last few years.

Teenagers prefer darker, troubled, sometimes ambivalent heros, including such classics as Batman, Spider-Man or Wolverine of "X-Men" fame.

Superman, born in the years before World War II and a distant heir of Nietzsche's �bermensch, has seen his personality change over time.

While aggressive in the 1940s, by the 1950s the storyline focus was more on Clark Kent's quest for the love of Lois Lane, his colleague and future wife. In the 1960s and 1970s Superman developed a more complex personality, and in 1986, DC Comics hired John Byrne to carry out a character overhaul. The result was a character that was less of a messianic figure and more of a modern-day Hercules.

With sales slumping, DC Comics killed off Superman in a battle with a powerful character named Doomsday in 1993. But Superman, whose various nicknames include "The Man of Tomorrow," of course come back from the dead.

In a country where the quest for entertainment is a national obsession, it is more likely that Superman will continue facing close encounters with deadly kryptonite than he will be forced into retirement.

"Superman has endured, and will endure, because he is more than just a silly character with his underwear on the outside and a spitcurl," said Ricca. "He is the hope not that we can be rescued, but that we can be good."

bookguy
06-15-2008, 09:53 AM
Maybe it's because he's too old? :eek:

70 years old isn't really all that spectacular in comparison to 75 years old.

Wait 5 years, then it would be a celebration. :wink:

eggie
06-15-2008, 10:01 AM
Cleveland is doing some stuff this month to celebrate the 75th anniversary of his creation and the 70th anniversary of his first appearance.

NOD
06-15-2008, 04:57 PM
I'm shooting a baby into space every day this month to commemorate his first appearance.

DonC
06-15-2008, 05:34 PM
Maybe it's because he's too old? :eek:


Bingo. Here's what I was told by someone involved with Cleveland's proposed "Summer of Superman": DC Comics does not want to advertise that Superman is that old. They want people to think the character is fresh and new, not dated. (This goes for all of their characters, by the way. No more 50th anniversary of the Legion of Superheroes.) Cleveland had all sorts of plans they wanted to do but DC wouldn't let them use any of the Superman trademarks. There are still some plans, mostly honoring Siegel and Shuster, but nothing on the scale the city wanted to do.

Speaking as a Superman fan who lives in Cleveland, it sucks.

Ilash
06-15-2008, 05:41 PM
Nothing could celebrate Superman's 70th birthday better than the fact that 866 issues in, Action Comics is now easily one of the very best superhero titles on the stand thanks to the remarkable work that Geoff Johns and Gary Frank have been doing and this month's issue is a particularly fantastic example of this. 70 years on and it seems like there truly is a whole lot of life left in this iconic character.

pitbull in a skirt
06-15-2008, 06:15 PM
Because everyone is too busy sucking Batman's batarang to pay attention right now.

B. Kuwanger
06-15-2008, 06:18 PM
It's funny how to think how balls out they'll go in five years. I think 70 is a very neat number.

umbc8
06-28-2008, 06:08 PM
I don't know. Metropolis, IL seemed to have a bigger Superman Celebration than earlier this year since its the 70th, and its every June to mark every birthday.

70 just isn't as big of a deal as 75. We should get some pretty cool stuff in the next 5 years. Even if DC is trying to make him seem newer, everyone knows he's old (seems like anyone with a pulse has seen at least one episode of the 50s Superman show). Also the Legion just isn't as well known as Supes, and Supes is the first superhero.

WorstThingUS
06-28-2008, 06:12 PM
As others have said. 75 is a landmark number, not 70.

trickster
07-03-2008, 09:04 AM
For the same reason MTV didn't REALLy celebrate it's 25th anniversary. Duh!

Sean Walsh
07-03-2008, 09:19 AM
For the same reason MTV didn't REALLy celebrate it's 25th anniversary. Duh!

Please don't compare Superman the Man of Steel and an American icon with MTV (which, to my knowledge, barely even shows music videos anymore). :tongue:

trickster
07-03-2008, 10:00 AM
MTV is the image of America far more then Superman. Since when have comics prevailed over hip-hop? Superman doesn't even mention the American Way (whatever the hell that is). Comic fans are outsiders at best.

pitbull in a skirt
07-03-2008, 02:44 PM
There was a 20th anniversary special they had for MTV, which is why I found it hilarious they bothered to have another one during the 25th. Its like...okay, you just did one.

mgs
07-04-2008, 04:51 PM
I'm shooting a baby into space every day this month to commemorate his first appearance.

LOL!! :D

and, I'm thinking a certain lawsuit probably has been kinda of a downer on the whole celebration thing.

pitbull in a skirt
07-04-2008, 08:41 PM
Anyone with or know a loved one who is pregnant, please name the child Kal-El.