It's horribly egotistical of me to suggest that I was the one who, even incrementally, helped prod the bean counters at DC Comics to hard reboot Superman, but it's definitely possible that I contributed to the conversation with my heavy coverage of Superman titles about 8 or 9 years ago here at ComicBookBin. The articles were well read and well received, and when Geoff Johns soft rebooted Superman's origin story with Superman Secret Origin, I hailed it as the potential beginning of a new era in comics: "When Superman is the subject of a major reboot with a miniseries, a new
age has descended upon us, no matter what the 'Comics Age' haters say.
We have entered the Neo-Silver Age of comics, and the verdict on the
first issue of the first big miniseries event of the new age is…"
-from my review of Superman: Secret Origin #1 (of 6) Again, I don't even know if anyone at DC Comics even read my articles, but I suspect they did, even if Ian Sattler (then DC Comics story editor and participant at a Hero's Con panel in Charlotte NC some years ago) took my ComicBookBin business card and promised to pass it to James Robinson so he could read up on my Superman coverage, didn't actually pass my card along to James Robinson. Still, and once again, I'm in no way suggesting that DC Comics created The New 52 Superman to really "start a new era in comics" at my suggestion, but it's a tantalizing idea that I, and I'm sure many others found interesting, from a storytelling point of view as well as a sales one, as well as one that many individuals (including the powers that be at DC Comics) arrived at around the same time.
It appears that too many people missed the Post-Crisis/Gen X Superman character so much that in this case, both Sattler and myself were proven wrong. The New 52 Superman failed to gain traction because his story wiped away the legacy of the great stories that involved the Post-Crisis/Gen X Superman, AND because, as a character himself, The New 52 Superman just wasn't what readers (at least this reader) wanted out of their Superman and his stories. Story AND character (of the main hero himself) were equally unappealing. Now, The New 52 Superman is dead. Long live the Post-Post Crisis/Gen X Superman. It appears both story, supporting characters, and the character of the main man himself all three need to contribute to making a great Superman story.
© Copyright 2002-2025 by Toon Doctor Inc. - All rights Reserved. All other texts, images, characters and trademarks are copyright their respective owners. Use of material in this document (including reproduction, modification, distribution, electronic transmission or republication) without prior written permission is strictly prohibited. |