Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

Superman Goes Communist
National Review Online ^ | May 4, 2004 | Alexander Rose

Posted on 05/04/2004 8:07:00 AM PDT by Akira

Though I read them occasionally as a boy, I have never been overly interested in comic books, especially the American sort, the ones featuring superheroes dressed in super-tight costumes fighting super villains, none of whom ever seemed to receive super-long jail sentences for attempting, yet again, to destroy Our Way Of Life. A junior realist, I tended to read, instead, the British-produced, four-times-a-month Commando comics, which were generally set during the Second World War.

Commando — whose fabulous titles included Hun Bait, Iron-Cross Yankee, Ghost Stuka, and the unforgettable Deserters Deserve Death! — abjured those pathetic ads one saw in the trans-Atlantic comics for Charles Atlas bodybuilding manuals, Sea Monkeys, and those pervy X-Ray Glasses that unfortunately never worked. No, Commando offered helpful and educational schematics of, say, the Panzerkampfwagen IV (the version sent to the Afrika Korps between 1941 and 1943, and armed with the 75mm KwK 40 L/48 gun).

Working with a somewhat limited set of plotlines, Commando writers churned out thousands of stories featuring buff, manly English Tommies fighting merciless SS colonels who called them "Schweinhund" and shot prisoners with a cruel laugh (Wehrmacht officers, on the other hand, were depicted as honorable soldiers who obeyed the Geneva Conventions and said, "For you, Englander, ze war is over" and offered a cigarette when Tommy surrendered). When in triumphant mood, the Jerries, in their fiendish way, exulted in the kill, "Feuer!" But when their Messerschmitt 109s were shot down by the patently superior Spitfires (of course) piloted by chaps named Jenkins (commoner) and Greyshott (gentry), they cried "Gott im Himmel!" as their flaming crates streaked into the drink. In this age of moral uncertainty and nihilistic abandon, you'll be relieved to know that Commando comics are still selling well.

What the American and British comics had in common was their utter predictability and dialogue so wooden it was an insult to furniture. You always knew that the grizzled sergeant (all sergeants were grizzled) from Yorkshire would eventually come to appreciate the gallantry and prowess of his effete Old Etonian lieutenant (Coward in Khaki!, shrieked one Commando title), who would inevitably sacrifice his life for the good of his platoon. Over here, you always knew Batman (or Spiderman or the Green Lantern, etc.) would never stoop to kill the baddie when the cops weren't looking, even if by doing so he could save himself a lot of future headaches. They also tended to have suspiciously drawn-out conversations with themselves as the panes advanced, and one thing American comic-book guys never mastered was the art of convincingly summarizing a back-story ("Clark, I know that you're in love with Lois Lane of the Daily Planet, but Professor Lex Luthor has discovered how to weaken your powers by using Kryptonite stolen from your home world," exclaimed Jimmy Olson).

Unlike the Commando hacks, writers, pencillers, and inkers at DC and Marvel, the two venerable American houses, have in recent years tired of the traditional storylines. How many more times, after all, can they rehearse the hackneyed Peter-Parker-gets-bitten-by-a-radioactive-spider routine? As a result, they've begun experimenting with alternate histories of the superheroes, and are re-imagining the great icons of American kid (and now adult) culture.

The most recent of these efforts toys with the story of Captain America. Traditionally, Cap was a World War II warrior who enjoyed stoutly biffing erring Nazis, but who was frozen and then re-animated in the 1960s, when he joined the Avengers. Captain America, as Michael Medved pointed out on NRO last year, has suffered the indignity of being reinvented as Captain Anti-America by Marvel's in-house team of Chomskyites, but that sort of wholesale, mea culpist revisionism is not quite what I meant by writing an "alternate history."

MAN OF THE HAMMER & SICKLE Take, for example, DC's Superman: Red Son, an alternate history that has just appeared in "graphic novel" format; that is, DC has collated last year's series of single issues, bound them, and kicked the price up to $17.95 — which is more than you'd pay for a real novel. As "reimagined" by Mark Millar, the writer, the ship carrying baby Kal-El from Krypton lands twelve hours earlier than we have come to assume. Instead of crashing in the Midwest, and growing up wholesome and all-American, the man we know as Clark Kent comes down in the Ukraine, matures on a collective farm, and eventually arrives in Moscow, where he enthusiastically works for Stalin — the real Man of Steel — as a Sovietized Superman. "Superman: strange visitor from another world! Who can change the course of mighty rivers, bend steel in his bare hands.... And who, as the champion of the common worker, fights a never-ending battle for Stalin, Socialism and the international expansion of the Warsaw Pact," blares one television announcement.

Passing over the Queen Mary II-sized plot-holes, it's a brilliant idea, and there is some fun to be had in cameos by Batman (now wearing a fur hat and working as an anti-socialist vigilante) and Wonder Woman, who plays a radical fellow-traveler fighting for women's rights. There's also some terrific artwork of Superman, a hammer-and-sickle emblazoned on his chest in place of the iconic "S," wearing a Red Army uniform and encouraging his "comrades" to throw off their shackles.

Unfortunately, there's an unnecessary pompousness to the proceedings. Mark Millar makes no secret of his Leftie views — he changed the storyline, he says, to genuflect on "unethical American foreign policy" (yeah, right on); Superman the Sov "is an allegory of George W. Bush and very like America," you get the picture — and doesn't bother mentioning the Gulag even as he paints Stalin as an avuncular fellow.

SUPERMAN, CAESAR, HITLER... But before we get too worked up about Millar's Walter Duranty-like fantasies about the CCCP, or grow purplish with rage over his tinkering with the hallowed tale of Clark Kent, it's worth remembering, first, that it's just a comic, and secondly, that the characters may be Red but their motivations and dialogue remain as unconvincing as ever. Most importantly, we ought to acknowledge that the kind of intellectual puzzle Millar's playing is a worthy and interesting pursuit in its own right.

Alternate histories, sometimes known as "counterfactuals," or the "What-If" school of history, enjoy a long tradition. Tactitus, the Roman historian, once wondered what would have happened had Germanicus, Augustus Caesar's stepson and a first-class general, not expired young. Tacitus believed he would eventually have "outstripped Alexander in military fame." More recently, there's been a vogue for these counterfactuals: The perceptive historian, Niall Ferguson, edited a book entitled, Virtual History, whose contributors discussed such topics as what might have happened had the American Revolution not erupted, had Charles I avoided Civil War with Cromwell, and how long the Soviet Union would have existed had Gorbachev not given it an unwitting push. There's also been the two bestselling What If? books, edited by Robert Cowley (NR's Victor Davis Hanson contributed to the sequel a piece on Socrates dying early, before he'd had a chance to mold Western philosophy).

All this alternate history stuff is very interesting, but is it important? Yes. Thinking counterfactually makes history appear less pre-ordained, less determinist, less inevitable, less obvious, than Marxists (and theologians, progressives, and congenital foreign-policy optimists) lead us to believe. Which is precisely why humorless Stalinists like E. H. Carr called alternate histories a mere "parlour game," and the less humorless (but more vulgar and equally Red), E. P. Thompson dismissed them as "Geschichtswissenschlopff."

At any time, anything could have happened, and we can appreciate the value of contingency in human affairs. On a real-world level, we learn that history is important, but never omnipotent: The mighty torrent of events rushing forward can be slowed, or diverted, or it may end abruptly in a waterfall, or even be dammed. Chance, foresight, wisdom, and opportunism play their major roles, and there is no need to fear that history "must repeat itself" (a cyclical form of determinism recently resurrected in "Vietnam" analogies), or that nations "cannot free themselves of their pasts" (the post-1945 generation of Germans certainly has, and perhaps one day too shall Middle Easterners and Africans).

Only in comic books are outcomes inevitable and histories unbreakable, but maybe not forever.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Political Humor/Cartoons
KEYWORDS: 2004electionbias; antiamericanism; bushbashing; bushhasser; comic; comicbook; comicbooks; comics; commiecomics; commieshill; communism; communists; culturewar; dc; dccomics; graphicnovel; indoctrination; iraqwar; joestalin; josephstalin; lovedclintonswars; manofsteel; marxism; mediabias; prodictator; prostalin; reddupe; saddamite; socialism; socialists; sovietunion; stalin; stalinsusefulidiots; superman; supesareddupe; timelifewarnerturner; unclejoestalin; usefulidiots; ussr; warnerbros; wb; workoffiction
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-2021-4041-59 next last
"Superman: strange visitor from another world! Who can change the course of mighty rivers, bend steel in his bare hands.... And who, as the champion of the common worker, fights a never-ending battle for Stalin, Socialism and the international expansion of the Warsaw Pact."
1 posted on 05/04/2004 8:07:00 AM PDT by Akira
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | View Replies]

To: LibertyThug
USSR bump
2 posted on 05/04/2004 8:07:29 AM PDT by Akira (The people have spoken.....the bastards.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: mhking
Comic ping!
3 posted on 05/04/2004 8:19:12 AM PDT by TheBigB ("Any moment now, unspeakable horror! Trust me!" -Tom Servo)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 2 | View Replies]

To: Akira
If I remember right during the build up to the Iraqi War there was a Superman issue where the President was Lex Luther and had ordered an evil pre-emptive war against an innocent middle eastern country which Superman opposed or some nonsense. It appears that the comics are becoming propaganda for the left like other media outlets.
4 posted on 05/04/2004 8:20:52 AM PDT by Dr Snide (vis pacem, para bellum - Prepare for war if you want peace)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Akira
Glad to see the author finally emerged from the lead mine. DC's only produced about 5 zillion "Alternate Universe" stories in the past 40 years, starting with Flash # 123 in 1961.

Eventually, the DC universe became so full of alternate worlds that they consolidated the whole thing in Crisis on Infinite Earths in 1986.

In the past 10 years, DC has produced numerous "Alternate Reality" stories under the "Elseworlds" imprint. One story might show Batman as Sherlock Holmes fighting Jack The Ripper. Another might have Superman as a hero in the Old West.

The reason graphic novels cost more than regular novels is that graphic novels are printed in color, on better paper, and usually have smaller print runs. Plus a lot of regular novels aren't all that cheap anymore. Paperbacks will typically run $6.99 or more cover price, and hardbacks will run $22 to $30- even lame, non-believable pieces of alternate reality fiction like Hillary Clinton's book.
5 posted on 05/04/2004 8:22:25 AM PDT by VisualizeSmallerGovernment (Question Liberal Authority)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Dr Snide
That'd be this thread here...

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/955744/posts

6 posted on 05/04/2004 8:24:44 AM PDT by TheBigB ("Any moment now, unspeakable horror! Trust me!" -Tom Servo)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 4 | View Replies]

To: Akira
Stalin's buddy Adolf would have appreciated "Uebermensch."
7 posted on 05/04/2004 8:25:44 AM PDT by T'wit ("To educate a man in mind and not in morals is to educate a menace to society" - Theodore Roosevelt)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Akira
...and there is some fun to be had in cameos by Batman (now wearing a fur hat and working as an anti-socialist vigilante)...

How does Superman ending up in the USSR change Batman's past? Boy, that writer sure is willing to make some amazing changes to sound off on his political agenda. I wonder if he's been torn apart by rabid fan-boys yet?

8 posted on 05/04/2004 8:26:44 AM PDT by Future Snake Eater ("Oh boy, I can't wait to eat that monkey!"--Abe Simpson)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Akira
You'd have to have a world full of "Supermen" to make a system like communism work.
9 posted on 05/04/2004 8:29:20 AM PDT by pawdoggie
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Howlin; Ed_NYC; MonroeDNA; widgysoft; Springman; Timesink; dubyaismypresident; Grani; coug97; ...
[Yawn].

This is tale from DC's "Elseworlds" line. A "What-If" story.

"What if baby Kal-El's rocket landed in Russia instead of Kansas?" Everyone is up in arms over this, and for no good reason.

Ah. I forget. Everyone's heads are in the sand over this, so it's "eeeeeevil."

Not only that, the three issues were issued what, a year ago? The graphic novel format is actually much better for those of us who don't want to fight the fanboys crowded around the counter at the local comic shop. $17.95 for the three-issue series? Considering the original was somewhere between $$5 & $7 bucks a pop, that ain't too much to plunk down for better paper, a decent binding and a package that fits better on my bookshelf. Add in a reasonably good story, and you'll get a sale from me and thousands of other people.

Message to the author: Take off the tin-foil. It makes you look foolish.

Just damn.

If you want on the list, FReepmail me. This IS a high-volume PING list...

10 posted on 05/04/2004 8:33:28 AM PDT by mhking (When I can't walk, God carries me and my FRiends & family support me.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Akira
you always knew Batman would never stoop to kill the baddie when the cops weren't looking

Bob Kane's, & Frank Miller's, Batman would. He would playfully torture them for a while first. He wasn't a super-hero. He was a psychotic killer out for vengence. I loved that Batman.

11 posted on 05/04/2004 8:34:20 AM PDT by laotzu
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Akira
Superman and the others are reifications of ideal human types as sketched out in German Idealism, the bastard spawn of French Philosophy.

The totalitarian word made flesh, so to speak.

Just an opinion. ;^)
12 posted on 05/04/2004 8:37:23 AM PDT by headsonpikes (Spirit of '76 bttt!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Akira
"...British-produced, four-times-a-month Commando comics ..."

Mine were Sergeant Fury and his Howling Commandos, Sergeant Rock and Easy Company, and .. the tops ..


The Haunted Tank

13 posted on 05/04/2004 8:46:54 AM PDT by BlueLancer (Der Elite Møøsënspåånkængrüppen ØberKømmååndø (EMØØK))
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Future Snake Eater
How does Superman ending up in the USSR change Batman's past?

The Soviet Batman is not Bruce Wayne; he is the child of dissidents whose parents are killed by the state after being detected by Superman. In his efforts to escape, he was trapped in a room or cave full of bats, and became obsessed with revenge against the state and its crimes.

Actually, the book is pretty good. If the author was trying to draw parallels with GW, he failed. The book is pretty clear on the point that the Soviet system, Superman-style, exists and succeeds only by changing its people into robots. It is the fragmented United States and Lex Luthor that end up saving the world from Super-USSR and creating a near-paradise society based on freedom.

14 posted on 05/04/2004 9:02:25 AM PDT by AzSteven
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 8 | View Replies]

To: Akira
This would be amusing if it weren't still another way in which our children's minds are being twisted. Instead of being exposed to simple but real models of heroism, they are being exposed to cynical satire or twisted role models.

It happened with children's books around the time of Judy Blume. It has happened with the movies, where very few real heroes are portrayed outside the work of Mel Gibson and a few others. Even when a character behaves heroically, he has to do it with a cynical laugh.

I think one reason (among many) why Tolkien is so popular is that he shows genuine heroism of all kinds and degrees. It's a rare commodity.

There was a theory that after 9/11 cynicism and coolness would go out of fashion. If they did, it was only for a couple of weeks.
15 posted on 05/04/2004 9:32:15 AM PDT by Cicero (Marcus Tullius)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Cicero
Superheroes for saving Saddam?
Brent Bozell (archive)

September 19, 2003

It was only a matter of time, I suppose. Comic-book superheroes have gone into the liberal political indoctrination business.

The September issue of the DC Comics book "Justice League of America," or "JLA," presents Superman, Batman and Wonder Woman as U.N.-promoting paper dolls for a thinly disguised propaganda play against President Bush's war on Saddam Hussein.

The story begins with a "napalmetto" attack on home soil. President Lex Luthor -- how nice, a supervillain standing in for President Bush -- connects the terror attack to "Qurac" and says the "Joint Chiefs are recommending military pressure." Wonder Woman protests: "International law and the U.N. Charter forbid unprovoked action against a sovereign nation." She then lectures, "We cannot simply disregard international ethics to depose him ... what message does that send to the world?"

(Ten-year-old Johnny must be on the edge of his seat reading this, don't you think?)

The scene then changes to people mobbing a supermarket for olive oil because the "Department of Defense" insists it will help in a napalmetto attack. Clark Kent tries to reason with Lois Lane that "the connection to Qurac still isn't clear," but Lois replies, "Every White House official is talking about prevention." Then, Gotham police use a false alarm to shut down the subway system and obstruct peace marchers, and a cop clubs a protester in the face as he says, "It's not safe for ya to risk gettin' badly hurt to attend a lousy cowardice rally!"

Superman then tells President Luthor that millions of people are protesting worldwide. "No one supports what you're doing," says Super Pollster.

"I hear them," says the evil president, "but I can't listen to them." When Superman says perhaps an attack could be delayed for more proof, the president retorts, "Where do you get off questioning me? ... It's unbecoming to question your president during times of international unrest." He says Batman and Wonder Woman were removed from the room because "they were confusing you with unpatriotic talk."

A subsequent picture has an enormous video image of a wide-mouthed president appearing ready to eat a shadowed Superman as he bellows, "America will bear the burden alone, if necessary."

Superman vows, "I will know the truth, and I will not feel ashamed or be called un-American for demanding it."

The storyline ends with the reader discovering it's all been a nightmare Superman's been having through a Martian therapeutic device. He recalls the dream with horror: "Luthor took the U.S. to war, despite our protests ... he killed everything we stand for." Superman laments being "paralyzed with indecision ... and the world paid the price." Superman shouldn't be so hard on himself. Being paralyzed by indecision is how the United Nations usually responds.

The Internet message boards sizzled and seethed when the JLA book hit the stores. "Maybe Clark Kent is French after all," joked one. But mostly, comic-book fans prefer traditional fantasy situations, not the action-free, didactic lectures offered by JLA writer Joe Kelly. "Someone needs to remind him that these are superheroes with outrageous powers and shouldn't be bogged down in political situations all the time," said one. In other words, can we do without Superman as Cyrus Vance and Wonder Woman as Madeleine Albright? Can they kick butt instead of lecturing on international law? Do they get to engage evil, or do they have to wait for a subpoena from The Hague?

In an interview, Kelly explained his Superman as Ted Kennedy with muscles: "I believe that he believes in an idealized America. One that operates above boards, truly does embrace diversity, and cares for its downtrodden, but not because he's naive, but because it IS possible." As for the super-villainous president, Kelly opined: "Luthor represents duplicity to Superman, so to keep it personal, it makes the most sense to use him." Why the blatant (or if the word fits, cartoonish) propaganda? Kelly acknowledged his agenda: "I think that comics are a much more powerful medium than people imagine, and in certain circumstances, it's appropriate to use them to discuss political issues."

Sadly, DC is not alone in the liberal-revisionist comic-book world. The other giant, Marvel Comics, has also transformed Captain America, the former Nazi-fighting hero, into a brooding listener to a series of post-Sept. 11 lectures against America's "empire of blood."

But in the real world, it's not all an apocalyptic vision of rogue presidents and policemen bashing peaceniks who alone hunger for the truth. It's not a grim vision of media outlets and citizens reacting like sheep to Pentagon directives, and then, illogically, at the same time, a world rising up in unanimous protest against American military action. In the real world, people want a strong defense by action heroes, not just guilt-ridden lecturers waiting for universal agreement with their pacifist dreams.

Brent Bozell is President of Media Research Center, a TownHall.com member group. ©2003 Creators Syndicate, Inc
16 posted on 05/04/2004 9:43:21 AM PDT by Esther Ruth (You shall love the Lord you God with ALL your heart, mind and soul!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 15 | View Replies]

To: BlueLancer

17 posted on 05/04/2004 9:46:02 AM PDT by 7thson (I think it takes a big dog to weigh a hundred pounds!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 13 | View Replies]

To: laotzu
In Batman #1, Bats says the following "As much as I dislike taking human life, this time it's necessary".
18 posted on 05/04/2004 9:50:51 AM PDT by GodBlessRonaldReagan (Count Petofi will not be denied!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 11 | View Replies]

To: Akira
There's also some terrific artwork of Superman, a hammer-and-sickle emblazoned on his chest in place of the iconic "S," wearing a Red Army uniform and encouraging his "comrades" to throw off their shackles.

Except that this change throws out that S which came from his home planet, not the Earth. Do the commies FORCE him to do this? Not bloody likely.

Q.T./David Carradine/Bill explains this clearly in Kill Bill Vol. 2. Even Jerry Seinfeld would agree.

19 posted on 05/04/2004 10:00:04 AM PDT by weegee (JFinKerry used the words Medals and Ribbons interchangeably before he didn't.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Akira
and how long the Soviet Union would have existed had Gorbachev not given it an unwitting push.

The writing was on the wall. 10 years longer tops (only could have been prolonged if the Clinton Administration had been there to opt for HELPING keep the Soviet Union together).

20 posted on 05/04/2004 10:02:55 AM PDT by weegee (JFinKerry used the words Medals and Ribbons interchangeably before he didn't.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-2021-4041-59 next last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson