Post-Crisis Superman is just way too soft to be Superman and anytime he and Pre-Crisis Superman meet up there is an immediate near instinctual dislike between the two.
Rules are for lesser men, Charlie - Grand Pa Joe ~ Willy Wonka & Chocolate Factory
My head-canon on Lois - she always has a knife on her for conveniences and emergencies, but semi-realistically, most of the emergencies she gets into either don’t require it or outmatch it’s utility.
Like action, adventure, rogues, and outlaws? Like anti-heroes, femme fatales, mysteries and thrillers?
I wrote a book with them. Outlaw’s Shadow: A Sherwood Noir. Robin Hood’s evil counterpart, Guy of Gisbourne, is the main character. Feel free to give it a look: https://read.amazon.com/kp/embed?asi...E2PKBNJFH76GQP
Last edited by manwhohaseverything; 03-11-2024 at 08:52 PM.
"People’s Dreams... Have No Ends"
Geoff johnss is bad at writing that version of superman.He tried to do some dumb meta commentary with that superman about fans.that's my problem with that,superman should be bigger than that.iT wasn't two guys with different ideas going at it.."rule of law knight savior vs vigilante gladiator champion".it was "comics fans are nostalgic for simpler times". Geoff johns had goldenage superman give a paternalistic shpeel to the guy that tried to molest lois in action comics #1 in action comic #1000..Goeff johns take on that character is that dumb.Anyways,i liked the panel where clark slams a car at the farmboy
Last edited by manwhohaseverything; 03-12-2024 at 09:41 AM.
"People’s Dreams... Have No Ends"
Honestly, infinite crisis is about it. post-crisis superman had more adventures with kingdom come guy.
"People’s Dreams... Have No Ends"
I think part of the challenge is that Pre-Crisis you didn't have a whole lot of complex characterisation in comic-books. So if we were to contrast the personalities of Pre-Crisis Superman and Post-Crisis Superman, a lot would be based on a modern re-examination of the former. I think that's what IC tried to do, to some extent.
Also, I guess the current stance is to try to ignore/erase the differences between Pre-Crisis and Post-Crisis. The base template for Superman today in the comics (and most other media) is Post-Crisis, albeit with a lot of Pre-Crisis elements and ideas thrown in.
You could tell an interesting story no doubt, but you'd need to really define the distinctions between the two versions and decide along what aspects you want to contrast them.
Incidentially, I'm not very sure since I haven't read the relevant stories but...did Post-Crisis Superman (after Convergence) interact much with the New 52 Superman? How did that go? I feel the New 52 Superman was pretty close to being a modern reimagining of the Pre-Crisis Superman in some ways.
Post-Crisis Superman ended up on the New 52 Earth after Convergence but they never met until five minutes before New 52 "died". It wasn't much of an interaction. Then they spent six months pretending they were going to get him back only to just decide to "merge" them and wipe his history altogether. 2016-17 was a weird time.
Assassinate Putin!
Head-Canon. Personal interpretations of canon stories that are neither confirmed nor denied by the canon. Here are some of mine.
1. The K-Metal from Krypton story happened and the reason Earth-Two Lois wasn't after Superman's secret identity was because she already knew it.
2. The comic strip, radio show, and Fleischer shorts are part of Earth-Two canon. Possibly the Kirk Alyn serials and the George Reeves TV show as well.
3. The Ghost of Superman Future, Whatever Happened to the Man of Tomorrow, and An Enemy's Gift (a short story by Elliot S! Maggin) are compatible, and the future of Earth-One.
4. Earth-Two Superman started his career in 1934 in Cleveland at the Daily Star, then was moved with Lois and George Taylor to Metropolis to the Daily Planet in 1938.
5. Mike Sekowsky's run as editor of Supergirl (Adventure Comics 397-409) took place on a different, now quarantined, universe.
6. On the other hand, Brave and the Bold #63 is canon; Supergirl and Wonder Woman were on a secret mission.
7. Earth-One Superman suffers from depression.
Yeah... Lois knowing Clark is Superman... just makes sense in most universes.