The thing is there are hundreds of DC and Marvel comics in recent years, when the no-trunks idea has taken hold, where the artists draw lines that make it seem like the characters are still wearing trunks, just trunks that are exactly the same colour. So the red trunks with red leggings question has merit. I don't think people would make a big deal about it, because when Superman was wearing all blue, some artists did draw those lines and nobody seemed to freak out about it. It's only when there's an obvious contrast that it seems to attract attention. This is why I don't think it's such a big deal if Batman wears black trunks with black-grey leggings. Or if Captain America wears blue trunks with blue leggings.
Nah it's fine, I was just messing with you. Still though, I don't see where the issue is if there's no actual outer-wear, just a color pattern as in the Rey Mysterio example. Maybe if there was something else there to indicate visually that the red is just a color pattern(like the 619 down the side of his pant leg)?
Just for the hell of it, another example of the trunks-which-aren't-trunks look:
ed209-16.jpg
Last edited by Last Son; 07-06-2018 at 07:44 PM.
It just is a visual that seems distracting. A red belt, a slightly different blue from the top, not drawing the bottoms like latex leggings but more like pants, problem solved outside the fans who hate change.
And Robocop is different, because it doesn't look like trunks, but like his legs are mechanically separate from his pelvis, which works because robot.
If the bottoms were drawn more like pants, then it would be even more apparent that the red portion isn't trunks. I don't hate change, I just don't have a problem with the trunks and I feel like all this wide-scale conforming is making superheroes less unique. One common excuse to ditch them is "no one else has them anymore, so Superman shouldn't either", which is kind of a silly reason to get rid of something. Like every superhero look should just be the same few acceptable suit elements mixed and matched like a create-a-superhero feature in a video game.
Last edited by Last Son; 07-06-2018 at 08:10 PM.
I disagree. There are so many different things that make Superman look distinctive to me outside the undies. And plenty of things make heroes look different from one another without being as dated. Masks, is there one? Is it domino, partial or full face, a cowl? Cape or no cape? Armor? Boots or sneakers? Symbol of some sort? Colors and textures. Gloves or no gloves? Belts? Just for show or functional? Jacket or coat? Superboy style street clothes? And I will quit now because I could do this for a bit.
And if the bottoms were drawn like pants, why put another color in it?
I still say its not a question of how much color rather the distribution of it. Obviously utilizing the trunks give you more red. But when using a trunkless design you can distribute some red via accents elsewhere. This has been mostly achieved via the belt. The New 52 went a step further and provided red accents to the cuffs and neck areas. A similar idea is how the Flash suit works. Its essentially one big red onesie but the yellow accents make it work without it having ever needed a pair of yellow trunks.
"They can be a great people Kal-El, they wish to be. They only lack the light to show the way. For this reason above all, their capacity for good, I have sent them you. My only son." - Jor-El
The too much blue;
That's an argument that is base on an overall design look.
Unlike the anti-trunk fall back crutch - that they are "underwear" (which they aren't) and /or "outdated" (when the entire costume comes from the same time period) - in truth, "outdated" is just a replacement word - as it just high-lights the one section of the - body and costume - that some find offesnsive in some manner because it reminds them of the whole underwear misconception to begin with!
Just like land real estate it is - LOCATION, LOCATION, LOCATION - couch it, any way you like but the needle alway comes back to this and the location here is just a problem for some.