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  1. #1
    Extraordinary Member superduperman's Avatar
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    Default Superman retiring without powers.

    Anyone else besides me disappointed with finding out Clark from Smallville gave up his powers and retired? After ten years of waiting for him to become Superman, he spends less than a decade as Superman. I would rather they not get Welling back at all if this is the only way they could get him to return. Which got me thinking, do most fans like this idea or would they prefer a Superman who keeps his powers?
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  2. #2
    The Man Who Cannot Die manwhohaseverything's Avatar
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    I have no problem with clark giving up his power. I love that he is now strong enough to take care of himself by sweating and working.having said that, If lex is the president and clark decided to just leave then that's a problem for me.I don't care if superman has power or not. I hate the sun dipping nonsense.

  3. #3
    Ultimate Member Ascended's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by superduperman View Post
    Anyone else besides me disappointed with finding out Clark from Smallville gave up his powers and retired? After ten years of waiting for him to become Superman, he spends less than a decade as Superman. I would rather they not get Welling back at all if this is the only way they could get him to return. Which got me thinking, do most fans like this idea or would they prefer a Superman who keeps his powers?
    I mean....what else did we expect from Smallville?

    I'm not bothered by it for this particular version. We spent ten years watching Smallville Clark drag his feet and it took the devil himself and an evil planet literally falling on earth to get Clark to put on the cape. Of course he retired early. And since he had already dealt with most of the usual big Super-threats before the show ended, I'm assuming his Superman years were pretty mundane and boring.

    For all other versions, willingly giving up his powers is not an option. No. Not for any reason.

    I could.....maybe.....buy the idea of Clark, having defeated every threat in the universe, giving up his powers so he could die of old age alongside Lois, instead of outliving her by centuries. Even that would be a really hard sell for me to get behind, but I could almost maybe possibly accept it as valid if the execution was spotless.
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  4. #4
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    It's all kind of moot given spoilers:
    Earth-167's universe is obliterated by anti-matter. They're all dead.
    end of spoilers

    I look at it this way:

    1) We don't know how long he's been Superman. You tell me it was ten years, but I have no way of knowing how much time has passed for him on his Earth.
    2) There were many times that Clark lost his powers before--and he always got them back again. So with time, he could have got his powers back and returned to saving people.
    3) I assume this is an Earth where Lois can't get pregnant and have kids without Clark being a regular human, so he gave up his powers to have kids.
    4) We don't know if those kids have powers.
    5) Given the choice between Clark in a lumberjack shirt or no Clark in the crossover, I'll take the brawny man in the lumberjack shirt. (That's what she said.)
    Last edited by Jim Kelly; 12-13-2019 at 09:58 PM.

  5. #5
    Wayward Member GSman's Avatar
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    Since the comics are canon, there's a league with Batman and wonder woman to protect the world in his stead. Not to mention Kara. Also him and Lex are apparently on good terms again, so not much of a reason to worry about the earth's well being.

  6. #6
    Ultimate Member Sacred Knight's Avatar
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    It actually kinda makes sense for him. He was an incarnation that really wasn't frothing at the mouth to be Superman once the time came. It rather works for him. Like Ascended said, for most any other version there's no way. But the way the Smallville story was told, it makes some semblance of sense.
    Last edited by Sacred Knight; 12-13-2019 at 10:11 PM.
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  7. #7
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    It fits Welling's version of Clark. He spent most of the series wanting to be an average guy. Heck, even Chris Reeve fell prey to that lunacy in Superman II. Welling's version just had better timing.

    My preference is for a Superman who is powerless to see it as a sacrifice or a loss depending on the circumstances I can see him take an action which erases his powers if it is necessary for the greater good. I can see him wind up powerless as the result of someone else's actions and eventually accepting that he can't regain the powers. But my concept of Superman wouldn't give up his powers anymore than you or I would give up one of our senses or our limbs. The powers are a natural part of who he is.

    At the core- I'm not a fan of Supermen who aspire to come down to Earth with the rest of us, I'm a fan of versions that want to bring us up into the sky with themselves.

  8. #8
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    I'm fine with it.

  9. #9
    Invincible Member Vordan's Avatar
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    It works for Welling to have a “Whatever Happened to the Man of Tomorrow?” type of ending because he really didn’t want to be Superman, both the actor and the character. Obviously other Supermen like Routh chose differently. However I agree with what someone else said in response to this: Being Superman is more inspirational if it’s a choice for Clark, and for that to get across we need a Superman that chooses to not be Superman anymore, as a way of contrasting with the mainline version who should choose to keep being Superman no matter what.

  10. #10
    Extraordinary Member Jokerz79's Avatar
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    fine with it also it might mean Connor is Superman now.

  11. #11
    Uncanny Member Digifiend's Avatar
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    You're assuming Conner even exists. More than likely, Kara's the one picking up the slack, I bet she's on the Justice League in his place, maybe even calling herself Superwoman by now.
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  12. #12
    THE MARK OF MY DIGNITY Superlad93's Avatar
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    I guess you never watched the show all the way through. Conner certainly exists, and he's a clone of Lex and Clark.
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  13. #13
    Extraordinary Member Jokerz79's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Superlad93 View Post
    I guess you never watched the show all the way through. Conner certainly exists, and he's a clone of Lex and Clark.
    and joined the Titans in the Season 11 comics.

  14. #14
    Savior of the Universe Flash Gordon's Avatar
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    I never like seeing Superman "give up his powers", they're biological abilities not magical. They're his birthright, not gifted by a dying Wizard or manufactured in a lab.

    I also really hate the idea that the Clark Kent we followed for 10 year, plus 3 years of comics, ended up this way. It's selfish. People are relying on Superman. I also don't really see it in Clark's character, as seen on the show. He was 15 at the start of the show, and is maybe 24/25 by the end of it. People change a great deal. You can't take the word of an 18 year old as gospel for the man's identity.
    Last edited by Flash Gordon; 12-14-2019 at 11:18 AM.

  15. #15
    Astonishing Member misslane's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by superduperman View Post
    Anyone else besides me disappointed with finding out Clark from Smallville gave up his powers and retired? After ten years of waiting for him to become Superman, he spends less than a decade as Superman. I would rather they not get Welling back at all if this is the only way they could get him to return. Which got me thinking, do most fans like this idea or would they prefer a Superman who keeps his powers?
    Not really. First, the episode didn't say he gave them up permanently. Like the other meta "jokes" and references in the crossover, like Sara saying she didn't want the Legends involved in another "crossover" and the Monitor calling last year "Elseworlds," Lois' "about a decade" quip to Clark and the fact that the newspaper articles stop at 2017 with Lex president (the finale stated Lex was elected in 2018), it's almost certainly meant to be the fall of 2019. That being the case, Clark's daughters are twins and likely only about 4 months old. If it's meant to be exactly 10 years since his Superman debut, he could have a 2 year old and a 1 year old (and that's only if Lois got pregnant the second time almost immediately after giving birth to her first daughter). Second, neither the script nor any of the writers have said it was a permanent power loss. Meaning, Clark basically just took a year of paternity leave either for <1 year old twins or 1 year leave first for his 2 year old when she was a baby and another year off as his second baby grew to a year old. As far as what the show explicitly stated and implicitly suggested, this is not a long term retirement.

    Second, this Superman may have only been a public superhero for about a decade, but he had been saving people since was a teen and been working as a hero in the shadows for about 3 years prior to becoming Superman. He defeated almost all of his major villains and has a host of superfriends ready to pick up the slack. He's also not unlike Hoechlin's Superman who said in the first COIE episode that he had intended to "give up the cape" to be a father. Meanwhile, you have other Supermen, like the one Routh was ostensibly playing, who in Superman II and Superman Returns gave up his powers to be with Lois or abandoned Earth to seek out the remnants of Krypton, which are not exactly superior reasons to make such a decision.

    I will say, contrary to others' claims, SV Clark was not presented as someone who wanted to be normal or not be a hero. He just didn't want to be a freak. He was also a teenager who was figuring out his identity. The show was his journey to wanting to be a hero and embracing that. There are several lines throughout the final seasons that make it very clear that Clark wanted and liked being a hero. It's not "in character" for him to regress back to turning away from that. And that's the key here, he's not regressing or turning away. He's just taking a break. Part of his journey was also learning to reach out to people and trust them. That's what he's doing now with his team.

    I think it's fine. That being said, the truth is what was presented left plenty of room for interpretation; it was so vague. If I'm angry about anything, it's that they were so ambiguous. It makes interpretations, whether they're more optimistic or pessimistic, equally valid, which means it's difficult to have anything but mixed or confused feelings about this. I would have preferred something clearly positive as opposed to this mixed bag.
    Last edited by misslane; 12-14-2019 at 12:07 PM.

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