SaneAmongInsane said:
Okay that's an interesting angle for Stark... I however just have no interest in the character I suppose. I want to say it's because I feel like I can't relate to him, but that sounds silly. I can relate to Superman and Batman but not Iron Man? *shrug*
Honestly, at the risk of repeating myself, I kinda suspect that has a lot to do with how DC doesn't really have characters. (Marvel doesn't either, but back to that in a moment.) With DC it's easier to relate to Batman or Superman because (most of the time) they're presented as this kind of paragon archetype. Kinda like a narrative Rorschach test. You see traits you identify with, even if they're kinda not there. The illustration of this is of course the joke description of Batman as "A rich white guy with daddy issues."
It doesn't mean that they can't be interesting. And, a little further down you actually pinpointed one of the better bits from Batman: Frank Miller's Year One. But, for the most part they're devoid of features that can make them unlikable as well. I mean, it's Batman, what's
not to like.
In contrast the Marvel characters aren't so much characters, as gimmicks and quirks, piled together. Tony Stark is a jackass, Matt Murdoch is a blind jackass, Thor is an arrogant psychopath, and Spiderman's having a nervous breakdown most of the time. For a lot of people, those flaws are what really sells the characters. It sets a much lower bar for relating to the characters for the reader, or I should say for some readers.
Daredevil always strikes me as an excellent example of this. (And I'm going on old survey data here, so it may be a bit out of date.) But, in contrast to characters like Batman, he tends to be less popular with kids and teens (because of the disability angle), and has never sold as well as the batbooks (obviously). But, when you get to adult readers, and when you control for children/teens with disabilities (any disabilities, really) his appeal skyrockets. This got laid at the feet of him being an underdog, rather than Batman's rolling demigod status, as you put it.
I'm not saying Daredevil's better, but I am saying a lot of the Marvel books are somewhat tailored to specific mindsets, while DC's better suited to general mass consumption.
SaneAmongInsane said:
Yeah but... like whats the difference between a mutant and captain america aside from the origin of their super powers? I mean to the civilians of that universe?
Simply? Hypocrisy and jingoism. It's a bit like saying where's the difference between George Washington and Ho Chih Mihn? You ask an American that, especially thirty, thirty-five years ago, and you'd be told it's not the same thing. One of them is canonized in American consciousness, and the other is demonized. Even when there are some pretty striking similarities when you get down to the actual history.
Now, how does the source of his powers really justify the different treatment? It doesn't. But, his status as a "True American Hero" from long before the major waves of mutants started to show up, secures him a unique place in his world's culture.
In fact, I think you could do a pretty interesting run playing with the idea that he actually is a mutant, and that the serum never really worked at all, that he was the secret ingredient. But, I hope that kinda makes sense.
SaneAmongInsane said:
also the Ghost Rider/Thor issue bugs the crap out of me. Ghost Rider exist so Judeo-Christian religion is correct. There is a God, but God also says there is no other Gods but him.... Yet Thor is there.... Didn't Spiderman make a deal with the devil once too?
There was also a rather godawful (pun not intended) run of Punisher stuff back in the late 90s, where he was hunting down and killing Demons for Heaven.
But, yeah, Marvel has a lot of gods or godlike beings floating around. I suppose it's possible that Thor is really some kind of transdimensional being that really was the Norse god. But, ultimately, Marvel's universe has at least the Norse and Greek pantheons running around as well as the Judeo-Christian God, and all that entails. I can see where it can be a real sticking point for Christians, but the setting itself just kind of shrugs and says "there are more things in Heaven and Earth than are dreamt of in your philosophies," right before butchering Shakespeare by having Thor open his mouth.
Actually, as an aside, Ultimates 2 revolves around Loki manipulating reality in such a way to convince everyone that Ultimate Thor is in fact just an escaped mental patient with a prototype powered armor suit. It's actually a pretty damn entertaining read, though not as good as the first Ultimates.
EDIT: Come to think of it, DC's actually just as guilty. Although he was in exile from main continuity for a few years, John Constantine frequently trucked with Angels and Devils, and he exists alongside Wonder Woman and her Greek Pantheon backing.
SaneAmongInsane said:
I know what you mean about Batman, we don't have enough stories where he's literally just a rich guy dressing in a silly costume fighting crime. I'd imagine that be a hard sell for the fanbase, especially Batman's basically become a human demigod that steam rolls through everything... But when it comes to the Batman stories I like to read (or shamefully write in FanFiction) I like the stories like Batman: Year One where he makes rookie mistakes and shit.
Yeah, of the recent Batman material (say, the last 15 years), my favorites have all been the books set early in his career, Long Halloween, Dark Victory, and the Matt Wagner stuff, including Trinity, (and of course Elseworlds... anything Elseworlds just about).
It's not that I dislike the character, it's that since Dark Knight Returns, Batman has become this unkillable ubermensch you can defeat anyone he wants with sufficient prep time, even characters that he has literally no way to beat, like Midnighter.
SaneAmongInsane said:
Didn't like Superman until someone explained the concept to me that it's such amazing thing that he chooses to be hero and guardian of Earth cause... well, think about it. He has no real reason to care about any of us, he's an alien. He's also powerful enough that he could enslave us as easily as he chooses to save us... Yet all he really wants it's the ability to have a normal life, a job, Lois Lane's heart. To me that's really cool, especially since anyone else who had his powers would probably end up like Hal Stewart from the movie
Now I know what you mean, most of his comics don't really explore that but *shrug*
Yeah, I think Superman has some real potential depth. Unfortunately, it's usually only depth we see played with in Elseworlds (like Red Son or Kingdom Come), or in parallel characters, like Mark Waid's Irredeemable. I'm not saying he can't be interesting, or isn't interesting, just that most writers who actually take over the book don't have anything interesting to say with him. So it runs a real risk of degenerating into The Adventures of Mary Sue Man, instead of some really meaty philosophy.
I get why, that's not what DC wants with the character, and that's fine, it's their court, they get to make the rules up as they go, but it does disappoint me a bit.