Showing posts with label Lois Lane. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lois Lane. Show all posts

Thursday, April 18, 2013

Three Reviews and a WooHoo!

Batwoman 19
A lot of little things add up to setup for the next issue and, I suppose, beyond. Nice byplay between Bette and Kate. But, like Bette, I am getting very tired of the DEO and Bones.

Nightwing 19
I wasn't sure how I felt about Tony Zucco being alive and Dick going to Chicago to hunt him down, but so far, this is going well, as in not at all well for Dick in a city as corrupt or moreso than Gotham and where costumed crimefighters are suspect at best. Dick is usually at his best when pushed to his limits and beyond, but really, the guy deserves a break or two, maybe even a relaxing vacation.

Red Hood and the Outlaws 19
Oh boy.James Tynion IV takes over the writing with this issue in what he promises is the beginning of a story arc that will threaten to pull the team apart and deal with some heavy issues in their lives and I'm happy to say this issue, one half of a two-issue story and setup for what's to come, really delivers. Still reeling from being kidnapped and tormented by the Joker and Damian's death, Jason returns to the home of the All-Caste and makes a decision that, well, let's just say that when Kori and Roy show up -- because no way they're leaving Jason on his own -- they're in for a real shock. Roy gets to expresses his fears early on re: Jason's importance in his life:
"These last few months working with the two of you... ...It's the first time in years my life has been worth living. We're good together. It can't be over. I won't let it be."
Now, seriously, this is the writing of someone who gets Roy, in any reality, because at his core, for all his surface confidence, even arrogance, Roy has big self-esteem issues and insecurities. I am really looking forward to seeing how the story unfolds over the next few months.

And now the WooHoo. From reading many other comics blogs today, I learned it was the 75th anniversary of Action Comics 1, the legendary comic that brought Superman and Lois Lane into the world. Lois was one of my first favorite comic book characters, all the way back to 1960 when I became a regular comics reader. Here's to another 75 years and I hope she and Clark/Superman get together in the current reality, even if I'm not reading it.

Sunday, December 30, 2012

Lois Lane

This post over at Stars and Garters about the worst in comics for the year has me very glad I'm not reading the Superman books, mainly for the ill treatment Lois Lane is receiving. I grew up reading Lois Lane and Supergirl. Kara was the one closest to my age, but she was an alien with powers I could never have. Lois was the human, a woman whose power came from within. A topnotch reporter with infinite curiosity. Sure, she was usually reduced to trying to prove Superman and Clark Kent were one and the same, but still... She had her own freaking book for years and other than Wonder Woman, who had powers, and briefly, Supergirl in the '70s, that just wasn't the norm and still isn't. Lois was and is iconic and to know she's being treated like dirt and that Clark is acting like a super D-bag is sad. Very sad.

Sunday, June 19, 2011

Superman and Lois Lane

I left this comment on this post, and thought I'd repeat it here.


One thing I love about Superman and Lois being married is that it shows a nice, happy marriage, which is a rare thing in comics. They're partners in every sense. The only other DC marriage that worked as well IMO is the one with the couple already married (and I sure do miss Ralph and Sue Dibny!) Even Barry and Iris doesn't have the dynamic that Superman and Lois have. 
The other thing I love about Superman and Lois being married is that it fits perfectly with his ideals and with his upbringing. He grew up in a loving home with the Kents. He witnessed a near perfect marriage firsthand. It makes sense for him to want that and when he meets Lois, he finds his lifemate/soulmate. It makes sense for them to be married.
Marriage does not have to be a jump the shark event. It just takes good writers to write a loving partnership and the Superman writers for the most part have done a great job with it.

And because it's Father's Day, the last time Roy and Lian were together...

Roy and Lian
This is how I remember them. This is always how I'll remember them. Roy Harper went through a lot in his life and it was discovering he was a father that finally gave him the purpose and stability he needed and craved. Here's to fathers everywhere, especially my own, on Father's Day.

In the "real" DCU, Lian is still alive and Roy is happily raising her. The current DCU is an alternate reality and the upcoming DCU is merely another alternate reality. I'd love to have this DCU back, but I know that['s probably impossible. I can hope only that a better DCU will be along in another year or so after the upcoming one crashes and burns. A gal can hope, right? ;)

Wednesday, December 21, 2005

A Few Thoughts on Lois Lane

I posted this in a comment on Written World, which I've just added belatedly to the sidebar, and thought I should share it here, too. And I thought I had linked here to Written World, since I added a sub for it to Bloglines, but I forgot the I didn't add the folder here because it includes a lot of art sites and such I didn't think fit the theme here. Anyway, the link's here now and this is what I had to say in answer to a wonderful post extolling Lois's virtues.

I grew up reading the Lois Lane comic book in the '60s. In that, Superman was the guest star. Quite often, Lois got herself into and out of trouble on her own in that book. The one I recall best is when she went after a fake medium. She exposed her (I think it was a woman) by learning how to write with her foot using chalk so she could fake out the medium with her own spirit messages on the blackboard on the floor during a seance. I spent hours trying to do that, write with chalk between my toes, just like Lois. Yeah, she was a role model. I was really happy she finally landed the man of her dreams. :)

So I read now what (mostly younger) comic fans have to say about Lois and other female comics characters with interest. They make good points re: how unfairly the females are often treated vs the males, yet I rarely notice such things. I consider myself a feminist, but I suppose, growing up with some things the norm, that a lot gets past me, especially if I'm caught up in the story. And there's the angst factor. I pay more attention to the male characters than the females, so the females who catch my attention are the ones that grab me forcibly, like Lois and Black Canary, Barbara Gordon, Kara Supergirl, Huntress (the original Helena Wayne more than the current one), Power Girl, and even Grace in Outsiders. True, Lois and even Kara weren't the most forceful characters, but they had a way of getting under my skin at an age where I could appreciate their resourcefulness.

I'm the same with TV shows and movies. I'd rather watch the men, though Xena and Gabby grabbed my attention, as did Aeryn on Farscape, and now Claudia Black is doing that again as Vala on Stargate SG-1. SG: Atlantis has Teyla and Battlestar Galactica has plenty of strong females to compete with the men for my attention, but the men are the ones I lust after and to be honest, I'd rather see them hurt or in trouble than the females. That ups the angst factor, after all, the whole hurt/comfort thing.

Men have been the traditional writers of comics, and maybe the damsel in distress has persisted because they don't know how to write women otherwise. Or maybe they subconsciously put them in a lesser role, even when the female is the star. Or maybe they're also into the angst factor, when you hurt the one you love.

It's not unheard of for writers to put their fav characters through hell and for readers to get off on it. How telling is it for me to admit I enjoyed the storyline that had Roy Harper shot, with all the fairly realistic for a comic book follow-up. Or the storylines with Wolverine being tortured, because I know he can heal, eventually.

And while there's a lot of truth to the whole women in refrigerators thing that Gail Simone brought up and there's also truth that when it happens to men (Tim Drake's father, for ex), the men are "feminized" or put in that damsel in distress role. Or that when male heroes die, it tends to be more heroic than when the female heroes die. But when it comes to killing civilains for impact, it seems to me that there simply are more female supporting characters to go around than males because traditionally, there have been more males in starring roles than females and more male writers than females and.... well, it does get a bit circular, doesn't it?

There are no easy explanations and sometimes, each case should be viewed separately, within its own context. And still, patterns emerge. I guess we just need more women writing mainstream comics. I wish sometimes, I'd been a more outgoing person back in the '70s when I walked into DC's offices looking for a job. I had no experience, nothing to offer, yet I wasn't pushy enough and didn't have the inclination or determination to work at it so I could get inside. Writing was something I'd done but had abandoned at that point, and it was another 6 or so years til I started again. To have women such as Devin Grayson and Gail Simone trusted with the main guys is great, and yet, Devin has let me down. I much prefered her writing on the supporting players, the Outsiders, Nightwing before the current storyline. In order to keep us in suspense, she's leaving too much out. She could take some lessons from Gail Simone in that regard. But I digress, something I do often.

I sometimes feel out of touch with current comics and current comics readers. I don't always see those nuances, or if I do, I can easily ignore them if I'm otherwise enjoying the comic. They're so much a part of me, I can forgive them almost anything, except a boring story or inept art. But the discussions do fascinate me.