Category Archives: DC Comics

All things DC- Batman, Superman, Wonder Woman, the Flash, maybe even Aqua-Man- they’re all here.

A Day Late Review of Gotham

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Fall is officially here, which means primetime TV is back.  One of the strongest new contenders this year is Gotham. In one of my earlier posts, I referred to Gotham as Batman getting the Smallville treatment.  I watched the premiere last night (thank you Fox Now app on Apple TV), and let me just say I was wrong.  Gotham is so much more than that.  First of all, the quality is leaps and bounds better than what we saw on Smallville.  By quality, I mean that it just looks nicer, the acting is just better, and the writing seems stronger.  Smallville always felt like a teenage soap opera with super heroes thrown in.  Gotham does not feel like that at all.  I think one of the big reasons is the fact that the main character is not Bruce Wayne.  From what I can tell, this is not the story of how Bruce becomes Batman.  No, this is the story of how James Gordon becomes Commissioner Gordon, and how he cleans up the police force in Gotham City. Jim Gordon is the main character, and also happens to be the only good guy in the whole city.  All the cops are corrupt and under Falcone’s thumb.  Gordon, alone, is trying to do the right thing and it gets him in trouble.

Spoilers: Bruce Wayne’s parents get shot.  If that really is a spoiler for you, then obviously, you know nothing about Batman, so chances are you are not going to watch this show, so chances are, it’s still not really a spoiler for you.  This leads to the best scene in the whole episode: Jim Gordon meeting and then comforting the traumatized Bruce Wayne.  It is well shot, well written, and well acted.  This is the moment that endears the viewer to both characters.  That’s a good thing, because the rest of the characters in this show are not endearing at all.  There is nothing likable about Fish Mooney, Oswald, Nigma, Bullock, or Falcone, or anyone else for that matter.  At the end of the episode, I was exhausted, just thinking about how much work Gordon has to do.  It is going to wear him out.  It’s going to wear me out as I watch it each week.

The final verdict for me on this show is a solid thumbs up.  I am not a Batman fan.  I am familiar with the basic story of Batman, I’ve read some of the essential Batman books out there, but I have never cared that much for Batman.  I know, I may the lone geek out there who feels that way, but I have just always felt that for a hero, Batman is just too dark and sinister.  I prefer my heroes to be less dark and sinister.  All that being said,  really enjoyed this show.  I think the big reason why was James Gordon’s character.  He is a good guy.  He is not dark and sinister.  He believes that light can overcome the darkness of Gotham, which makes him a better man than Batman/Bruce Wayne, who thinks the way to go is to fight the darkness with more darkness.  Gordon drives the show, and it feels more like a gritty cop show than a super hero show.  That just seems to work for me.  I would definitely say this is a must watch.

Marvel vs. DC: Small Screen Edition

Fall is just around the corner. Ok, for all intents and purposes, it’s here. That means that new TV is on the air, and right now, geeky TV is all the rage. A big portion of this new geeky TV is a bunch of shows based on material from comics, mostly superheroes. The two big comics publishers are presenting quite a bit of new material this fall, and a lot of it looks pretty good. While Marvel seems to own the summer box office, the small screen seems to be up for grabs. Here are the offerings from each company for the Fall:

DC

Arrow

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This may be the best superhero themed show ever. Notice what I wrote there. Not just going on right now, or in recent memory, but EVER. It is well written, well acted and well produced. When this show premiered a couple of years ago, it took me a couple of weeks to really get into it, but once I was in, I was in. I like the Oliver Queen/Green Arrow character. He’s like a grittier, somehow darker version of Batman. Plus, even though he’s filthy rich, like Bruce Wayne, he seems more relatable. Plus, the growing supporting cast is pretty good too. This has a lot going for it, and as it continues to succeed, more money will go into it and it will only get better. Plus, Ra’s al Ghul. This is worth checking out for sure, and until I see something better, this is the champ of the comic book shows. Arrow: Season 3 premieres on the CW on October 8.

The Flash

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Want to know if a show is doing well? One clue is if the studio behind it decides to make a spinoff. Enter The Flash, featuring a Barry Allen that we meet for the first time in Arrow during Season 2. This is the second full on super hero show that DC is bringing to the masses on the CW. It looks to be of the same quality as Arrow, so let’s hope it holds up, and maybe there are more shows coming down the pipe for us, based on more characters in the DC multiverse. The Flash is about a guy, Barry Allen who gets struck by lightning near some chemicals and this gives him super powers, as he becomes “the fastest man alive.” I love the Flash character in the comics. He was always upbeat, positive, a genuinely good guy, and I think this Barry Allen looks the part. Another interesting thing is that the show introduces us to the term metahuman, which is the DC version of people with super powers. I am excited to see where this new series takes us, and I hope it does well. The Flash also premieres on the CW on October 8.

Gotham

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Gotham brings us the story of Gotham City and James Gordon before Batman. It gives us a glimpse of life in the city before Bruce Wayne grew up. It seems like we are going to get the back stories of some pretty nasty characters and see what life was like for a young Bruce Wayne just after his parents were murdered. From all of that, I feel like this is basically giving Batman the Smallville treatment. However, this has been getting rave reviews from critics, and geeks everywhere are anxiously anticipating the premiere of this series. One major difference between this show and Arrow and the Flash: Don’t expect to see the Dark Knight in costume, similar to what we saw with Smallville. The show still looks interesting, with plenty of very disturbing and fascinating supporting characters in the Batman universe. Gotham premieres Monday, September 22 on Fox.

Marvel

Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.

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Agents returns for round 2. This was a runaway hit last year for Marvel. Many people wondered how fans would respond when Marvel tried to bring their big screen world to the small screen, and people loved it. Of course, most of the season was partially building up to Captain America: The Winter Soldier, helping people to get excited for the new film. In return, the film rewarded the show by destroying the titular organization, S.H.I.E.L.D. I imagine that this season will deal with how these agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. go on in a post-S.H.I.E.L.D. world. The biggest draw for this show is the connection to the Marvel Cinematic Universe. It builds on that hype, but really delivers little in the way of actual super powered people. Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. season 2 premieres on Tuesday, September 23.

Agent Carter

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Agent Carter from Captain America will also be getting her own series this fall. Late this fall. No trailer on this one, and not a lot of information, except that this series will follow the adventures of Agent Carter and Howard Stark. Fans have been excited about this idea for a while now, so there is a lot of buzz. The series, though, will not be starting with the rest of the fall bunch of shows. Instead, it will be premiering during Agents of SHIELD’s mid year break.

Lots to look forward to from the big comics studios. In addition to the shows listed here, DC’s Constantine will be premiering on NBC this fall, and the productions for Marvel’s NetFlix shows are moving forward. IT’s too bad that we have to wait for Daredevil and Ironfist on Netflix before we get a Marvel show about actual super heroes.

What do you think? What are some of the shows you are looking forward to this fall? Share your thoughts in the comments.

Death in Comics

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One of the big, if not THE biggest, story lines of the Fall this year is the Death of Wolverine in Marvel Comics.  The creators, artists, writers, everybody at Marvel are all saying that this is it for Logan.  He is not coming back, his death will be final, no coming back.  And everyone who has ever read a super hero death storyline just smiles when they hear Marvel say that, because we all know the truth.  We are all sitting here, ready to call “BS” on Marvel.  Yeah, right.  If there is one thing death isn’t in the comics, it’s permanent, at least for heroes.  As a side note, the lovely cover art you see above is a Salt Lake Comic Con exclusive cover for this issue.  There will only be 3000 available, and they will only be available at Salt Lake Comic Con, if you’re interested.

Death is a funny thing in the comics.  We all know that when a hero dies, it is only a matter of time.  I remember being a young lad when Superman “died.”  I was shocked.  He was always my     favorite, and I was shocked to see him go.  I wondered what the world would be like without the Man of Steel in it.  How would it go on?  Even at the age of 10 or 11, I was intrigued to find out.  DC did let this play out for a little while, but eventually, Big Blue was back, better than ever.  And by eventually, I mean it was about a year. Of course, one of the huge benefits for DC was the number of issues they sold of the “Death of Superman.”  This was a pivotal moment in comics.  There had been deaths before.  Some of the more impactful ones would be the death of The Flash, Barry Allen, the death of Robin, Jason Todd, and the death of Phoenix, Jean Grey.  These each had been a big deal, and very meaningful in their respective series, and in the case of the Flash, to the whole DC Multiverse.  Up to this point, though, by and large, the heroes had remained dead. We saw how the world moved on after each of these deaths.  For example, Wally West stepped in to fill the shoes of the Flash, and became a very popular character in his own right.

Killing off Superman was a big deal, though.  This would have greater ramifications than any other super hero would, and where would you find a replacement Superman? You couldn’t.  DC tried with 4 different versions, and none of them would have worked out long-term.  They knew the issue would be huge, and it was, but they also knew it would be huge when he came back.  The Death and Return of Superman basically set up a model for super hero deaths that has been followed again and again.  DC may be a slightly worse offender, but it is by a narrow margin.  Since Superman died we have seen the death and return of Batman, the Green Lantern  (Hal Jordan, a couple of times), and the return of Barry Allen and Jason Todd.  Big Blue set the precedent.  In Marvel, the biggest name to die and come back has been Captain America, not to mention Jean Grey who came back, and then died and came back and then died again (at least I think she is still dead), a trick she must have learned from Charles Xavier who has also died and returned multiple times. We have even seen the return of Bucky Barnes as the Winter Soldier.  Bucky had been dead so long, that it even became a running joke that all the other heroes come back except Bucky.

Death just doesn’t have any permanence in the comic book world for heroes.  This is actually kind of sad, and deprives the fan from a little bit of realism.  I write that with a grain of salt, realizing that we are talking about comics, a world where there is not a lot of realism.  Death happens in real life.  Sometimes it happens to the good guys.  In fact it happens a lot to the good guys.  It would be nice to see a little bit of that in the comics.  See how the world goes on with Batman or Superman.  I was intrigued when Batman died a few years back.  For the first time in a long time, I picked up a Batman issue (it’s true, I don’t read Batman, not at all.  Ask my comic book guy, Greg, at Black Cat Comics, he’ll tell you).  I bought it, because I was intrigued by the idea of Dick Grayson taking over for Bruce Wayne.  It was a story line that had a lot of potential with time, but DC barely gave it a shot.  Batman was back before we knew it.  Bucky filled in for Cap, and it was interesting to read his adventures as Captain America, but soon enough Steve Rogers was back.  I think comic book companies are really missing out on some great opportunities to tell some great stories and allowing us to get to know these characters in some new ways.  But it never really happens.  The hero never stays dead.

The strangest part is how pivotal death is to a lot of characters.  Some characters are dead and have remained dead and never come back.  Uncle Ben and the Waynes are the two best examples.  Uncle Ben’s death was the most important event in the history of Spider-Man.  Without that happening, Peter Parker would not be the hero he is. Period, end of story.  The same thing for Bruce Wayne witnessing the death of his parents.  These characters can never come back because that would change everything too much.  The truth is, look at how much depth they have added to the characters they have affected. That is what a good death could do.  It would add some depth to the characters that are left behind.  IT would also leave the door open for some other characters to step up.

I don’t know if Wolverine is going to stay dead (doubt it), but I hope he does.  His death would mean more if it was permanent.  It might actually matter.  Either way, Marvel will sell a ton of this series.

Batman vs. Superman vs. Captain America

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We all saw the date on our calendars, set roughly two years from now.  Two major superhero blockbusters set up to square off against each other on one weekend.  Once Warner Bros. announced that they would be moving Batman vs. Superman: The Dawn of Justice back a year to 2016 and that it would be May 6, many began to wonder if Marvel would move Cap 3 to a different date.  This week, Marvel confirmed that they would not be changing the date, but instead would set up what is bound to be one of the biggest movie showdowns in recent memory.  It leaves the rest of us wondering: Which do I see?  Or, do I decide to just see both in the same weekend.  Or, by that point, will either really be worth my time? Decisions, decisions.

It’s a bold move by Warner Bros. and DC.  Let’s be honest, Marvel has been building quite the hit machine.  The success they have had at the box office has been astounding, and their movies have all been pretty high quality.  There’s not a Green Lantern stinker in the bunch.  DC, on the other hand, has been left out in the cold.  They had success with Christopher Nolan’s Dark Knight Trilogy, and Snyder’s Man of Steel, but it seems like they are almost late to the game.   Marvel has been quietly (or not so quietly) building a strong group of characters on the big screen, while it looked like DC could only successfully develop the big two, Batman and Superman.  They had one effort in there with Green Lantern and it was so rotten, that it was probably a good idea to just walk away from it.  Marvel has even beaten DC to the punch with a team based movie that didn’t suck.  Avengers and its success started all the same questions about a Justice League movie and if it could be done.  Unfortunately, it took Marvel 4 years to get to Avengers, and DC is already so far behind that they can’t take 4 years to develop their team in the same way.  Just for fun, by the way, Marvel is now ready to have a second team movie success with a non-major team.  Seriously, other than pretty serious geeks, most people had never heard of Guardians of the Galaxy until now, and it is set up to be a huge success.  Why, because Marvel has been a machine lately.  Everything they have done has been so good and so crowd pleasing that they can now gamble on titles like Guardians and knowing they will be successful.  This is what Warner Bros. and DC is going up against.

But will it still be this way in 2016?  Right now is the golden age of Superhero movies.  I don’t think there has ever been a time when there have been so many big budget superhero flicks, and so many that have been taken so seriously.  Our culture is a culture of fads, however, and one has to wonder how long this particular fad will last.  Looking at it, there have always been superhero films, but this particular run probably started with Iron Man in 2008, so it’s been 6 years already.  How long will the frenzy continue?  All signs point to no time soon, but that’s what a lot of people thought about pogs, and we all know how that turned out.  It was over as quickly as it began.  Or how about alien summer blockbusters?  The 90s was full of those.  Will Smith made his living in the 90s off of big budget alien movies.  That trend is now over.  Trends in movies come and go, and realistically speaking, as much as I want this one to go on forever, it won’t. Will it last until 2016?  I don’t know.  Captain America 3 will take place after Avengers 2, so it will be the 5th movie appearance for Cap.  Will people still care?  I suppose a lot of that will have to do with what happens to the character in Avengers 2 and what else is happening in the Marvel Cinematic Universe.  For Warner Bros. and DC, this might be a good thing.  We have never had a Superman/Batman crossover before, and the fans want it.  At least they want it right now, in 2014.  We’ll see if anyone is wanting Superhero movies in 2016.  Chances are they will, but Batman v Superman may just be different enough from what we have seen in the past to draw more people to it instead of Cap 3.  We may be tired of Cap by round three, or we may be deeply invested in the character.

In any case, May 6, 2016 is shaping up to be quite the weekend.  I’m thinking we book the babysitter now for both Friday and Saturday night, and just plan on spending 5+ hours in the theater getting our geek on.

Who is the Batman?

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One of my favorite movies of all time turns 25 today.  I mean, if you equate theater release dates to birthdays for movies.  25 years ago today Tim Burton’s Batman premiered, and changed everything for comic book movies.  This wasn’t like today, where a new super hero flick seems to be hitting the megaplex every other week.  No, at this time super hero movies were few and far between, and rarely taken seriously.  Super heroes were really for kids, not for grown ups.  Don’t get me wrong, Batman wasn’t the first movie to take comics seriously.  Richard Donner’s Superman: The Movie  is a great example of one that came before, but Batman did it better.  Maybe I’m waxing nostalgic because this was the first big movie that I got really excited about.  I was obsessed with it, and I could not wait to see it.  To my little 7-year-old mind, this movie just looked incredible.  Unfortunately, to my mom’s mind, it did not look like anything she wanted her son to see.  And when your 7, your mom has a lot to say about what you can and cannot see.  I never got to see this movie on the big screen.  But I was a persistent child, and I knew it would come out someday and VHS and it would be mine.

The VHS came out in November of that same year and it was literally the only thing I wanted for Christmas.  I did not ask for any other single thing.  Just that movie on VHS.  I was obsessed.  Have you see A Christmas Story, where Ralphie was obsessed with an air rifle?  He drops all those hints and writes his school them on how that is what he wants.  I would imagine most people reading this site have seen that movie.  Well, Ralphie had nothing on me.  I don’t think my hints were subtle.  I let everyone know I wanted that movie.  Mom, dad, grandmas and grandpas and even Santa Claus.  Anyone who asked, I told them.  I remember going to a Christmas party that year with “Santa Claus” and Santa brought a gift for everyone.  When it was my turn he asked me what I wanted, and I told him, and he asked if I had been good that year, and I told him yes.  Then he gave me my gift.  It was the exact size of a VHS tape.  I remember seeing it and getting so excited.  Then i had it in my hands and I gave it a little shake. It was definitely a VHS tape.  I ripped the paper off before even leaving Santa’s lap.  Could it be?  Was Christmas really coming early this year? I pulled the paper off completely and held up the cassette to see my prize. And my heart sank.  It was Batman, but it was the Adam West 1960’s Batman.  I was crushed.  But then I realized something.  There was still time.  And this was ultimately my fault.  Santa must be behind the times, and I had been irresponsible and not specific.  I hadn’t said the new Batman movie.  Santa had just been confused.  I would just have to now let everyone know which Batman I wanted, so there would be no more mix ups.

Christmas morning was magical at my house.  My parents always made us wait before running out to see the presents.  The two of them would go into the family room and oooohh and aaaahh about what Santa brought.  They would take pictures and make sure everything was lit just right.  I hated it.  It was agony to a little kid waiting to see what I got.  I just wanted to get in there and open the presents and appraise my haul for the year.  This is the worst thing that parents can do to a kid on Christmas morning.  Just ask my kids.  They can’t stand it when I do it to them.  This particular morning I didn’t care about how many presents there were.  All I wanted to see was that one, VHS shaped present.  I don’t remember what other presents I got that year.  Just one.  Batman. It was there.  Santa had come through.  I couldn’t wait to open the tape and throw it into the VCR and watch it.

It was the most amazing thing I had ever seen.  I think I watched it 30 times before school started again.  I picked 30 there because it is a large number, and, i feel, not exaggerated at all. And I watched it regularly all growing up.  I hung on to this original VHS cassette for very long time.  I think I finally got rid of it a few years ago, but when I did, the case was worn and beaten with numerous white creases running along the front and the back.  The top flap was gone so the cassette would slide out of either end and the sticker on the front of the actual VHS tape was all but worn off.  I don’t even know if it still worked.  Chances are, if it did, it didn’t work well.  It was probably poor quality from having watched it so many times.

This movie was a big part of my childhood.  It influenced a lot of my later life.  It was the first geeky thing I remember that was really cool to like.  It made something geeky mainstream.  It changed the way the world looked at Batman, and certainly the way I looked at the character.  Joker was actually scary now.  More importantly, to me anyway, it started a life long unhealthy obsession with all things Tim Burton.  It was the first of his films that I remember loving.  I don’t think I was obsessed with his other work when I was 7, but I think my love for this movie was influential on appreciating his work later.

You can argue that the Dark Knight Trilogy is better, and in a lot of ways, it probably is.  Jack Nicholson’s Joker was scary, but Heath Ledger’s was terrifying.  Michael Keaton brought the all black look for Batman to the screen (Thank you Tim Burton for abandoning the blue tights), but Christian Bale brought the all black to a whole new level. Despite all that, this movie is my favorite Batman movie ever.  This movie made batman cool for a whole new generation, in a way that Adam West could only dream about.  Michael Keaton made the Dark Knight, well, the Dark Knight. Sure, he didn’t worry about disguising his voice, but he compensated but just not saying much.  I know there is probably a lot about this movie that is beginning to show all 25 years of age, but it laid the ground work for the super hero movies of today.  Plus, it made one 7-year-old boy very happy on one magical Christmas morning.

How the 90’s (almost) Ruined Comics

I was born in the 80’s, early 80’s, so that meant that as a human being I was really just hitting my stride when the 90’s came around.  I was starting to figure out who I was and appreciate what I was into.  One thing I was way into in the 90’s was comic books.  I loved them.  Whatever money I earned in allowance or from paper routes I spent on comics.  And they seemed to be everywhere.  And there seemed to be so many major things happening in the comic book worlds.  I really felt fortunate to be living in what my teenaged mind could only fathom as the “Golden Age” of comics.  There was never a better time when there was so much available everywhere.

What I didn’t realize was that all of this was happening because, in reality, the 90’s was quickly killing off the art medium I loved so much.  There was such a big boom in comics in the 90’s that things started to escalate very quickly and there was no way that the industry could sustain itself at the pace it was going.  This was a huge time sales wise for the “Big 2” (Marvel and DC), and it also saw the emergence of some of the major minor publishers like image and Valiant. IT was so huge that the publishers decided to give the people what they wanted and a lot of it.  People wanted comics, and they wanted their purchases to mean something, so we needed big, life altering story lines for major characters.  People wanted number 1’s so we saw the birth of a lot of new heroes (or anti-heroes, another big movement of the 90’s).  And, the publishers discovered, people wanted deaths.  Big change was about to sweep through  both major publishers, and it would almost destroy everything.

What was happening is that people had discovered that having old comics could mean a lot of money.  That would depend on the condition of the comic, who the book was about, and the rarity.  People were beginning to pay out big money for Action Comics 1 and Uncanny X-Men 1 and so on.  This began to get people thinking that if the bought the right issues now, they could sit on them and they would gain in value.  Hopefully they would gain big.  These new collectors didn’t care about the stories or the characters, they only cared about an issue being a big deal.  The publishers caught on to this quick and started delivering big stories and events, creating issues that promised to be huge deals later.  And of course, you could buy just the regular news stand version, or you could buy one of 15 collector’s edition.  And, in order to sell these issues, and make an event epic it had to involve their big guns.  What the consumer didn’t realize at the time is that the comics people had no problem with these events involving big names (one of the criteria mentioned above) and the collectors were good about buying the issues and keeping them in “mint” condition (another one of our criteria for big time comics cash), but the publishers were not interested in making these books rare.  They published them by the hundreds of thousands and sometimes the millions to make sure that everybody had the chance to buy.  They weren’t interested in actually making a collectors’ market, just the illusion of one.  There was no rarity involved.  Take the new X-Men series with art by Jim Lee and written by Chris Claremont, 2 comics legends.  They started the series at No. 1, and that issue became the best-selling comic book issue of all time. Because it was everywhere.  I remember getting my copy from a big package of comics we bought at Costco.  Yep.  Costco.  I remember getting a bag and board for it and thinking, “someday, this is going to be worth a lot of money.”  I was wrong, because every kid who bought that same package of comics got that issue along with millions of others.  It’s not worth a lot of money now, and probably never will be.

Because all of this was happening, the characters I loved (the real reason I bought, and still buy comics) went through some rough times, and no one was safe.  As an example, let’s look at Superman.  I don’t know if the 90’s were rougher on any other character than they were on Superman.  DC wanted a big event and buyers wanted a major issue to “collect” and invest in.  The result?  Let’s kill Superman.  They introduced a new villain with not back story at the time, nothing.  He kind of just shows up and is on a destructive, direct course to Superman.  On his way, through multiple issues, he destroys everything in his path including the Justice League of America (at this time made up exclusively of second stringers) and finally meets Superman, for the showdown, in the middle of Metropolis.  Big battle ensues and with one final blow, the two of them take each other out.  Permanently. (Sorry…spoiler alert)  Superman is dead.  Fortunately, it looks like Doomsday is too.  And everyone is sad.  The issue where Superman dies was a huge seller, and the promoted it and promoted it.  And the one you wanted to buy came in a black plastic, sealed bag with a bloody red Superman “S” on the front.  Of course, if you were a “collector” you bought that one and never opened it.  I never bought that one because that thing skyrocketed in value almost immediately.  Right after, DC had to go about replacing Superman, so they introduced these guys:

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They called it the “Reign of the Supermen” and the reader was stuck trying to figure out which one was the real Superman.  This lasted about a year, and then it was time for another big epic event.  DC figured out, wait, if we kill a hero, then we sell a lot of books. What would happen if we bring the hero back?  So, they brought back the one true Superman and all these guys were exposed.  So now we had Superman coming back, and then he and Lois got married, and everything was good.  Until the Suneater shows up and as a result Superman loses all of his powers and we don’t know if they will ever return.  So DC needs to have another major boost in Superman sales, so let’s just totally scrap the old Superman and his powers and everything and we’ll have his powers return, but it will look like this:

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And then, they decided to split him up into 2 different people: Superman Blue and Superman Red.  And I stopped reading it.  I couldn’t do it anymore.  Fortunately for fans of the hero, 1998 was a milestone anniversary  for the big guy- 60 years.  For the anniversary issue they brought him back together into one guy and gave him his normal powers.  About this time, too, the whole collecting frenzy was dying down and DC and marvel began to realize they were stretched too thin so they starting dialing it back a bit.  The Death of Superman issue lost all its value when Superman came back, and “collectors” began to realize that things were not going to work out the way they had thought.  If you go to a comic book shop now ( I would recommend Black Cat Comics, if you live in the Salt Lake Area) you will occasionally hear someone come in looking to sell their old comics from the 90’s.  Then you’ll hear that followed up with muffled laughter from the patrons and staff in the store.

Comics seemed to stabilize after that and fans began to settle into the routine of when a character dies, they are probably coming back (since the year 2000, both Batman and Captain America died.  Just last year, Peter Parker died, and Doc Ock took over his body.  All three have returned to normal now).  Publishers still try to pull off major events (DC’s confusing New 52 and Marvel’s ongoing NOW!) , but for the most part, the frenzy has died down.  There may be alternate covers to specific issues every now and then, but the over use of foil and holograms and sealed packaging has all stopped.  No one seriously buys comics as an investment anymore, because most serious comic book buyers are more savvy and realize that you never really know which issue will be worth a lot of money.  Most of us, I think buy the books to read and enjoy.  Even with the huge success of the Avengers movie and other Super Hero films, I haven’t seen the same frenzy as what happened in the 90’s. It was a special time, and one that I am glad is over.