Funny you mention Englehart considering what he did to Falcon.
Does anyone remember the anger and tears over Truth: Red, White, and Blue by Reggie Hudlin? I read that book and I was just like "Does anyone know about the Tuskeegee Experiments? Because this story sounds like it was based on that." With those kinds of readers, they read superhero comics because it allows them to wallow in a world where POC, women, LGBT knew their place (or didn't show up at all). So any comic that even remotely challenges that no matter how conventional pisses them off.
Robert Morales wrote it, actually. It's rumored that might be why there's some supposed dispute over the character of Eli Bradley.
Having now seen the film, the answer to this is right there in the post quoted. Just not the difference I believe Carabas is alluding to.
They are in the film. Those costumes actually make sense in context. Don't really want to spoil anything be going any further into the specifics.
Could the Snap Wilson thing have been not so much Englehart's doing as much as it were editorial mandate? Marvel was trying to jump on the blaxplo bandwagon with several of their AA characters at the time.
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there a thread on reddit of all the cuts part of the movie JUSTICE LEAGUE of the cuts three of them relate to cyborg and I glad these part got cut out
https://www.reddit.com/r/DCEUleaks/c...2/differences/
Last edited by voltblack; 11-18-2017 at 02:51 PM.
Didn't Englehart later try to defend Snap Wilson by saying the story intentionally left it vague as to whether it was true or just Red Skull playing mind games with Steve and Sam? Because he left the title shortly after it, and subsequent writers (including Priest) took Snap Wilson as canon. He may honestly have intended it to just be a lie like was initially hinted.
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That's the weird thing about Steve: While he did introduce Snap Wilson, he's also the writer that showed Sam asking Black Panther to create his wings.
One black hero empowering another is pretty awesome.
On the DC side....
While Steve did not bring John Stewart back as Green Lantern in the 1980's, he's the writer who did the most with him when Starlin & Priest did their damage afterward.
Last edited by Anthony Shaw; 11-19-2017 at 09:19 AM.