SUPERHEROES! - Excerpt - by Laurence Maslon and Michael Kantor
SUPERHEROES! - Excerpt - by Laurence Maslon and Michael Kantor
SUPERHEROES! - Excerpt - by Laurence Maslon and Michael Kantor
C A P E S , C O W L S , A N D T H E C R E AT I O N O F C O M I C B O O K C U LT U R E
Laurence Maslon
Michael Kantor
CHAPTER TWO
64 Pages of Thrill-Packed Action! Explosion of an Industry 36
Copyright © 2013 by Laurence Maslon and Michael Kantor
CHAPTER THREE
Okay, Axis, Here We Come! Comic Books at War 76
All rights reserved.
Published in the United States by Crown Archetype, an imprint of the
PART TWO:
Crown Publishing Group, a division of Random House, Inc., New York.
GREAT POWER, GREAT RESPONSIBILITY (1955 – 1987)
www.crownpublishing.com
CHAPTER FOUR
Crown Archetype with colophon is a trademark of Random House, Inc.
The Superhero Who Could Be—You! Superheroes Come to Earth 116
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available upon request.
CHAPTER FIVE
Worlds Will Live, Worlds Will Die! The Expansion of a Universe 180
ISBN 978-0-385-34858-4
eISBN 978-0-385-34859-1
PART THREE:
A HERO CAN BE ANYONE (1988 – 2013)
Printed in the United States of America
CHAPTER SIX
Book design by Roger Gorman
Creatures of the Night Reign of the Dark Superhero 220
Jacket design by TK
Jacket art: TK
CHAPTER SEVEN
Heroes We Can Believe in Again Champions of the New Millennium 260
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Acknowledgments 299
Captions for pages i-vii:
ii: Titans of an industry: the back cover of Superman vs. The Amazing Spider-Man (1976); art by Ross Andru and Dick Giordano.
iv: An interior page illustration from the Doc Savage pulp, Resurrection Day (1936). Index 300
vi: Holy triple threat, it’s the Candy Man! Sammy Davis, Jr., shares a laugh with Burt Ward (Robin) and Adam West (Batman) on the set of Batman (1967).
INTRODUCTION
WRITER’S WROSTRUM
SUPERHEROES Truth, Justice and the American Way 6
TRUTH
SUPERHEROES Truth, Justice and the American Way 8
When Batman made his debut in a six-page story called “The Case of the
Chemical Syndicate” in spring 1939, what you saw with Batman was what you
got. His essential external elements were in that first story: “Young socialite”
Bruce Wayne shares a jaw with his pal, Police Commissioner Gordon, who in-
vites Wayne to a crime scene. Two pages later, the Bat-Man appears to track
down the criminals and solve the crime. In the final two panels, a door to Wayne’s
study opens, revealing the mysterious identity of the Bat-Man. While Superman
bounced around the East Coast in his debut, pulling off a half-dozen feats in
thirteen pages, Batman solved one murder mystery, escaped the killer’s death “I must be a creature
trap, and sent him to his doom in six pages. Superman had exploits; Batman
had adventures.
of the night, black, terrible…
Over the next six months in Detective Comics, he gradually added to his bat-arsenal of bat-
paraphernalia—a utility belt (lifted from Doc Savage), a batarang, a Bat-Gyro (lifted from the
TOP: A rare instance of Batman wielding a gun—he was
more potent after he refused to take a life in his battle
I shall become
”
Shadow)—and he carried a gun and knew how to use it. His adventures sent him to a mythical against crime. RIGHT: Young Bruce Wayne vows his
a BAT!
revenge in Detective Comics #33 (1939); that vow would
country where he rescued the damsel-in-distress by shooting werewolves with silver bullets.
drive Batman for the next eight decades.
All of which was compelling to his young readership. All he was missing was his raison
d’être—an origin story. The editors insisted on one, and Bill Finger delivered for Detective
Comics #33. The resonance of Superman’s roots was about external factors—where he came
from, what he could do—but Finger exploited Batman’s internal resonance. In a two-pager
called “The Batman—Who He Is and How He Came to Be!,” we see young Bruce Wayne witness
the death of his parents during a botched stick-up and vow to use his inheritance to fight
crime. (The source of his father’s wealth would evolve over the years.)
“To avenge their deaths by spending the rest of my life warring on all criminals. Crimi-
nals are a superstitious, cowardly lot, so my disguise must be able to strike terror into
their hearts. I must be a creature of the night, black, terrible . . . I shall become a BAT!”
It would become one of the simplest and most fertile origin stories in pop culture.
Stan Lee, the cornerstone of the Marvel Comics Universe of the 1960s and beyond, and who
knows as much about creating heroic fiction as anyone since Homer, put it this way: “You try to
PART 1: Truth, Justice, and the American Way 46
Batman’s driven nature was submerged after the appearance of his brightly colored chum,
Robin the Boy Wonder, in Detective Comics #38, but it reared its cowled head again in an astonish-
ing story from 1948 (written by Finger): in the course of solving a smuggling ring, Batman recognizes
the mastermind as the man who killed his parents. “This is one job I’m doing alone. I don’t have to
explain—you can understand why,” he tells Robin. Calling on the killer, Joe Chill, in an abandoned
warehouse, Batman reveals his own identity to Chill in order to prove he knows his foul deed and
threatens to hound him until he confesses. In a neat ironic note, Chill seeks help from his fellow
criminals by admitting he killed Batman’s father—but before he can reveal Batman’s identity, he is
gunned down by his confederates, who blame Chill as “responsible for creating their dread nemesis!”
By adding a kid sidekick almost a year after Batman’s initial appearance, the creative team managed
to turn the character in a different, nearly perpendicular, direction. A few months into Batman’s run,
Bob Kane and Bill Finger were joined by Jerry Robinson, a young artist who would wind up contrib-
uting pencils, inks, backgrounds, plots, and characters to the Batman storylines. Robinson was on FROM TOP: Batman in his most Gothic moment; the first
the ground floor in bringing the Boy Wonder into the books: “Robin expanded the story potential— appearances of the “baterang” and the “batgyro” (all
from Detective Comics #31, 1939). OPPOSITE: Three of
Batman would save Robin, Robin would save Batman. The younger readers could relate to Robin, Batman’s most insidious enemies: The Joker, Two-Face,
and the older readers with Batman. There was a lot of interplay between Batman and Robin, with and Catwoman.
puns and whatnot. It did change the nature of the strip—it became a little lighter.” An understate-
ment, to say the least. The Boy Wonder, with his primary colors and relentlessly optimistic nature,
took Batman out of the shadows, literally and figuratively.
Another crucial contribution by Robinson—arguably more important than the introduction of Robin
to the series—counterbalanced the upbeat sensibility of the kid sidekick and reclaimed Batman’s
“THANKS,
stature as a creature of the night (or at least kept one of his Bat-boots in that territory). By early OLD CHUM!”
spring 1940, Batman was popular enough to become the second DC Comics hero to earn his own
book. Batman #1 was a quarterly book, to be filled with sixty-four pages of his adventures and new Kid Sidekicks
antagonists. Robinson reached to the top shelf of his imagination:
PART 1: Truth, Justice, and the American Way 48
I wanted to create a villain that was worthy of Batman; Sherlock Holmes had Profes- hen Batman shared his
sor Moriarty, for instance. And I knew that good characters had some contradiction in secret identity with the
terms, so a villain with a sense of humor would be quite different and once I thought of young, orphaned Dick
a villain with a sense of humor, I thought of the Joker. In my family, one of my brothers Grayson in Detective
After that ennobling epigraph, the story spun into action: the
PART 2: Great Power, Great Responsibility 152
the war—it must have been a gratifying way of recounting old war puts it, “Everybody else that Steve Rogers had known and loved
stories; Kirby, in particular, had some combat exploits he must is either dead or a quarter-century older. He survived an era and
have been eager to exorcise. survived a war where his peers didn’t. There’s some traumatized
thing that I think Captain America hooked into and Lee and Kirby
Cap himself was not so lucky. Tortured by the guilt of were astute enough to understand that and really let it play out.”
letting Bucky die in his stead, he moaned over his partner’s demise Steve Rogers was, like his namesake Buck Rogers many decades
to a point that was almost unseemly; he was sometimes in danger before, a man literally out of his own time—always good for a
of becoming more like Dickens’s Miss Havisham than a fearless compelling tale—but he was also the symbol of America, so what
champion of democracy. He took on another partner, a teenager did that mean?
named Rick Jones, who was usually pestering the Hulk instead, Just as the country would attempt to regain its footing after Ken-
and groomed him to replace Bucky. Occasionally, Lee and Kirby nedy’s death, so, too, did Captain America try to regain his footing
took a break from the modern-day hand-wringing and returned to after his own rebirth. Within the next decade, he would confront his
some actual Captain America and Bucky tales from 1940, rewriting own obsolescence and his country’s at the same time. In one of Stan
and redrawing them with greatly improved graphics and dimension; Lee’s favorite lines, he had Marvel’s greatest iconic character ponder
they seemed to revel in a return to the less politically ambiguous his situation in a 1970 comic: “I’ve spent a lifetime defending the
days of the battle against Hitler. flag—and the law! Perhaps I should have battled less—and questioned
But the revived Captain America’s narrative potency came from more!”
his contemporary adventures. As comics historian Danny Fingeroth