Administrator's note: this thread was split from this one. -all the people at Superman Through the Ages
Here's some things I love:
- Giving TELLE a hard time

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Even though I wasn't quoted above (why won't anybody ever quote me? ) I can't help thinking some of this is directed at myself, resident Crusty Curmudgeon of STTA since...well, since before there was a forum (I started my crankery back on the KAL-L mailing list!).
If so, tough! I reserve the right to hate everything, and by the way stay off my lawn and turn down that music.
But I think a little perspective is necessary here. This site was started as an antidote to the 90s-era Superman and DC's edict that nothing before 1986 mattered. Rao made no secret that this site was for Pre-Crisis Superman lovers, and went out of his way to avoid acknowledging the character then in print.
Since then, a lot of positive things have happened at DC and Rao has been great about devoting attention and support to all of them. There may be some cranky forum fussbudgets who are never happy about anything, but I think what we've seen at STTA as an institution is the reverse of what you describe. Rather than a gradual descent into grumpiness and closed-mindedness, we have in fact seen a gradual thawing towards today's DC and a celebration of positive developments in Superman's world. Eight years ago this site treated Superman as a figure of nostalgia...today there are boards devoted to the latest titles.
You are absolutely right. STTA's focus is directed onto Superman's history, and it is very, very reassuring and downright great that finally, we have something to see that is a continuation of that history, spirit and tradition instead of being in denial or embarassment of it.
It's good to know that Superman is good enough of a character that his history is, not just worth preserving, but worth having as an active thing that influences who he is today.
At the same time, could I get people to lay off INFINITE CRISIS? At least for the reasons that have been given so far. The source of all the perceived problems with INFINITE CRISIS is that that a flawed way of thinking about it (and by proxy, a lot of works like it) is present.
I don't agree that a light-dark spectrum exists. Another spectrum should be instituted for superheroes, where the things that make them likeable are present on an axis with "The Children's Brain" on one side, and "Teenager's Brain" on the other.
Let me explain.
Good superhero work can be produced that has an emphasis on plausibility, and good work can be produced that has an emphasis on innocence and charm.
The problem with cynicism about encroaching darkness is, it does not make the concession that superhero comics can't be gutsy, hardboiled H. Rider Haggard adventure stuff and "science fiction" focused.
In other words, targeting the "Edgar Rice Burroughs" audience (or at least appealing to this aspect of our mentality): adolescents looking for wish-fulfillment projections, adventure stories, unlimited power and unlimited sexuality. The sort of things that make TARZAN and CONAN THE BARBARIAN such a delight, the thing that makes just about every teenager go through a Robert A. Heinlein phase (which in my case never ended).
On the other hand, we have the Carl Barks mentality, which is valid too, personified in ALL STAR SUPERMAN, with an emphasis on Roald-Dahlesque "gee, look at this" concepts, characterization that is intentionally simplified to appeal to base emotions, and a charming detachment from cause and effect (e.g. the "This chariot flies because it is the will of Zeus" effect).
Both types of stories overlap because there's an appeal to the exotic and the abnormal. Uncle Scrooge travels to the Australian outback to prospect for gold, and Tarzan finds a lost city deep in darkest Africa. Both types of stories are very different, but they are united by the fact we like them for the same reason. It is a credit to superheroes that in the same genre, it's big enough for Carl Barks and Edgar Rice Burroughs. One type of story appeals to the kid in all of us, and the other appeals to the teenager in all of us. It should be noted that neither Carl Barks nor Burroughs insulted their audience's intelligence, despite the fact that one was writing for children and the other for teenagers.
Instead of Otto Binder on one end and Frank Miller on the other, a new, more appropriate standard ought to be considered, with Geoff Johns and Kurt Busiek on one side, emphasizing action-adventure elements combined with strong characterization (readable to everyone, but has the most appeal to teenagers), and Grant Morrison on the other with his ASS.
What people point to "darker" comics is just bad writing. This is why continuity is so important: characters have to behave consistently with how they have been previously depicted as behaving. The reason something like Howard Chaykin's TWILIGHT is so nauseating (which has the DC space heroes depicted as sleazy sex fiends) is not because moral or immoral behavior IN AND OF ITSELF has value, but because Tommy Tomorrow, Adam Strange and the others would never do that sort of thing or behave as they were shown in that miniseries.
Ignoring continuity is bad writing. THAT's the problem, not so-called darkness, at least as such. Ignoring the basic tenets of storytelling too (having things not really happen, in other words) is bad writing, too.
The same problem can be seen on the "Children's Brain" side of things too, though not as visibly. Remember Marvel Comics's STAR Comics line? Was there ever a more saccharine, unreadable piece of pap than GET ALONG GANG, MADBALLS, or TERRY OF THE FUTURE or whatever the hell his name was? Both "bad" comics like say, Grell's LONGBOW HUNTERS and MADBALLS are unreadable for the exact same reason: they underestimate the desires and intelligence of the audience. For Grell, it's that he thought all teenagers want to read in an action-adventure book are pointed arrows getting faceless crooks, and for GET ALONG GANG, that all kids want to look at are colorful, distracting, hypnotic cartoon characters that sit around and blink.
And while we're on the subject: violence and death does not in and of itself make something unreadable. Heck, who doesn't love Conan's bathed-in-testosterone antics? Let me be upfront: I LOVE violence. I love it when Tarzan wrestles carnivorous apes and there's a macho pop when he snaps the bull ape's neck with his bare hands, and Conan the Barbarian swings his longsword and decapitates many a member of the Aquilonian Castle Guard. I love how in Homer, all those Greek guys just gush like fire hoses when big bronze picksticker spears burst into their sides. I love creature movies, because I like to see giant snakes eat idiot teenagers.