YOUTUBE TUESDAY FOR 09/21/2010

Welcome to another installment of YouTube Tuesday here at the Fortress of Baileytude!  Today I wanted to paste in some YouTube videos that feature one of my favorite episodes of Justice League Unlimited, which is titled Panic in the Sky!  I love JLU.  Not loved.  Love.  It is my favorite animated version of the DC Universe ever and this episode was part of a fantastic storyline that ran through the second season of that iteration of Justice League.

Outside of loving this episode I also wanted to post it because it has a great battle scene between Supergirl and Galatea.  Supergirl is about to be the focus of the latest in the line of the DCU animated films, Superman/Batman: Apocalypse, which comes out next week.  To fuel the excitement for that film I thought it would be cool to have some Supergirl for you seven days before the movie hits store shelves.

So I hope you enjoy this episode because it has some really awesome action sequences.

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uaKd4Gk9piE&feature=related

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gO62nMthuO8&feature=related

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PX-fH2NdfYI&feature=related

That’s all for today.  Come back tomorrow for…something.  I haven’t quite figured out what yet.

More to follow…

THE GIRLS OF STEEL WEEK DAY FOUR

Welcome to The Girls of Steel Week here at the Fortress.  For five days I want to celebrate the various characters that have been given the name Supergirl.  Instead of ranking them one to five I am going to go in chronological order, so sit back and enjoy the various Maids of Might that have been around DC Comics for over fifty years!

The Girls of Steel Week Day Four: Cir-El

I didn’t like Cir-El.

At all.

Not even a little.

Let’s go back to 2003 for a paragraph or two.    It’s the early part of the year and Superman got his very own 10 Cent Adventure just like Batman did and in that book we got our first glimpse of Cir-El, the  new Supergirl and I was put off immediately.  I didn’t like her.  She was annoying and to add insult to injury that book came out a month or so before the last issue of Linda Danver’s series hit the stands.  There is an old saying about not waiting and a body not being cold yet that springs to mind.  Superman: The Ten Cent Adventure was supposed to be the opening salvo in a bold new era of Superman and while I enjoyed the book on some levels in the end I felt like something was being foisted on me quite against my will.

And that goes to the heart of why I have such an issue with Cir-El.  When the Matrix version of Supergirl was introduced it was to little fanfare and became a sub-plot/mystery that ran for several months before we were given the lowdown on the character.  When they brought her back after a two year absence in 1992 her role in the Superman books was minor at first and evolved into something bigger.  When Linda Danvers was introduced there was some hype surrounding the first issue but Peter David took his time in establishing the character.  We got to know her over several months and then they started playing with her place in the Superman mythos of the time.

In both cases DC didn’t shove either characters in our faces and yelled, “HERE’S THE NEW SUPERGIRL!  ISN’T SHE AWESOME?” and that’s what it felt like with Cir-El.

I vividly remember thinking, many times in fact, “They canceled Peter David’s series for this?  Are you @#$%ing kidding me?”

The fact that her first appearance began what I call my “Vietnam” era of Superman reading and collecting doesn’t help either.  While I think that Joe Casey and Steven T. Seagle are both competent writers I was not a fan of their work on the Man of Steel.  The stories were uneven, the art was either inconsistent or just not to my liking.  I dig Scott McDaniel ‘s work when he’s drawing Nightwing or Batman, not when he is drawing Superman.  I was just flat out hating the books and in the midst of all of that was this new Supergirl that had a stupid costume and a lousy back story.

The thing is I am beginning to wonder if it was really her fault.  A character isn’t bad, what’s done with him or her is.  Maybe if things were going a little better in the Superman titles and I was enjoying the monthly grind of collecting I would have liked her more.  That’s not how it went though.  Instead we got a year or so of this character and not much to show for it.

I feel bad for Cir-El.

I really do.

She never really had a chance between the quality of the stories she appeared in and readers like me not accepting her because of how she was introduced.

Sigh.

Maybe I’ll like her more on the second go round.  I doubt it but there’s always a chance.

Well, that’s it for today.  Sorry this one turned out kind of depressing but that’s the way things work out sometimes.  Come back tomorrow for the last day of Girls of Steel Week where I talk about the current version of Kara Zor-El.

More to follow…

THE GIRLS OF STEEL WEEK DAY ONE

Welcome to The Girls of Steel Week here at the Fortress.  For five days I want to celebrate the various characters that have been given the name Supergirl.  Instead of ranking them one to five I am going to go in chronological order, so sit back and enjoy the various Maids of Might that have been around DC Comics for over fifty years!

(Quick note here on Day One before we really get into things; I feel kind of bad for using the image you see above.  Normally I don’t like using Ed Benes cheesecake images.  Sure he can draw a mean Superman and Batman and such but  nine times out of ten if he draws a panel or cover and there is a woman on that panel or cover she is shoving either her breasts or behind towards “the camera” and to me that is a bit gratuitous.  However my Photoshop skills are poor and this image proved too perfect not to use, so as semi-hypocritical as it may be this will be the image you see all week long.)

The Girls of Steel Week Day One: Kara Zor-El (Silver and Bronze Age)

The original Kara Zor-El is kind of an odd character for me because on one hand I really like the character but on the other hand I haven’t read a whole heck of a lot of her adventures.  Sure there were some stories featuring her in Superman: From the ’30s to the ’70s, which contained the very first Superman comics I ever read, and I have gone back and read various issues of Superman and Action Comics and Superman Family and Adventure Comics plus Daring New Adventures of Supergirl (which became just Supergirl with issue 13) but I don’t feel that I really know her all that well.  This makes liking the character problematic because I can’t point to specific stories and moments where I can say, “Yup, that’s it.  That’s why I like me some Kara-Zor-El.”

Continue reading THE GIRLS OF STEEL WEEK DAY ONE

HANDY PRE-CRISIS IMAGE

Ever wonder how all of the members of the Pre-Crisis Superman Family got to Earth?  Well here’s how it happened!

This is scanned from a postcard set I bought at the Superman Celebration in 2008.  I forget how much I paid for the set but it wasn’t a whole lot.  I may not be the biggest fan of the Silver and Bronze Age version of Superman but I love the heck out of things like this.  There was a lot of really nifty ideas and the mythology (for lack of a better term) that the editors and writers and artists created for the Man of Steel.  It may not be my cup of tea but it is still damn cool.

I hope everyone has a great weekend.  I am hoping to have a lot more content next week now that Back to School is pretty much over.

More to follow…

YOUTUBE TUESDAY FOR 08/10/2010

Welcome to another YouTube Tuesday!  This week I present the First Look at Superman/Batman: Apocalypse, the next in DC’s line of animated films.

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qywcjx1ISYs&feature=player_embedded

I re-read the story arc from Superman/Batman just yesterday and in addition to enjoying it more than I thought I would have on the second re-through and finding some problems with the story that I didn’t notice the first time I also found that there wasn’t all that much “fat” that you would have to cut for an animated version as opposed to Superman/Batman: Public Enemies.  It’s a pretty straightforward story and moves briskly, thanks mainly to Michael Turner’s two page spreads.  So while I am still very much in a wait and see position I am a little more on the positive side going in than the negative.

More to follow…

MORE SUPERMAN FAMILY COVERS

I am pressed for time this Friday, so all I gots today is some more of those Superman Family covers from that eBay lot I bought a few weeks back.  Before we get into that, though, I recommend you go check out this post from my buddy Shag’s Once Upon a Geek blog.  He has been posting house ads from DC circa 1987 and there are a few Superman related ones in there so go check it out for that and because it is an awesome blog.

And now…on to the covers.

More under the cut.

Continue reading MORE SUPERMAN FAMILY COVERS

ACQUISITIONS – 07/07/2010

While I have stopped buying the monthly Superman titles I haven’t stopped working on my Superman collection.  These posts are meant to show off those acquisitions.

About eight years ago I made a concerted effort to build up my Pre-Crisis Superman collection.  It was an era that I had never given much thought to or wanted to focus on but I figured if I was going to be a fan of the character I should try to learn as much as I could about all of his incarnations.  Of all of the titles that have been hard to find Superman Family has been one of the toughest.  I don’t know if the print runs were low or what but it’s hard to find them, hard to find them at a good price and hard to find them in good condition.  A week or so back I lucked into a lot on eBay that fit both the good price and the good condition criteria.  It was a 20 or so issue lot mainly in the 190’s and 200’s of the book.  I scanned all of the covers and over the course of a few posts I’ll share them here because some of are quite awesome.

Continue reading ACQUISITIONS – 07/07/2010

FROM CRISIS TO CRISIS EPISODE 28: OCTOBER 1988

FCTC_Ep_028

Episode 28: October 1988

Welcome to the twenty-eighth episode of From Crisis to Crisis: A Superman Podcast!  This podcast has a simple premise; examine just about every Superman comic published between Man of Steel #1 in 1986 to Adventures of Superman #649 in 2006 in an informative and hopefully entertaining format.

Part index.  Part commentary.  Part history lesson.  All podcast.

Michael and Jeffrey wrap up the Supergirl Saga this month and discuss one of the most controversial moments in the Post Crisis Superman era, which happened during the cover date of October 1988.  In Superman #22 the Man of Steel makes the most difficult decision of his life.  In Adventures of Superman #445 the amazing Brainiac returns and this time he is not taking prisoners.  Actually he does take prisoners, but he is definitely more powerful and more dangerous.  Jeff and Mike end the show with four listener e-mails.

Michael might be speaking out of turn, but the hosts of From Crisis to Crisis hope you have a happy, safe and satisfying Thanksgiving.

You can subscribe to the show in two ways. First there is the RSS Feed and there is also theiTunes link .

If you want to comment on the show or contact the hosts you can always private message Mike and Jeff, at the Superman Homepage, leave comments here or at the Homepage or here or email them by clicking this link.  All questions, concerns, fears, trepidations and cheap shots are welcome. The guys will try to incorporate e-mails into the episodes once the show gets rolling.

Seriously, let us know what you think.

FROM CRISIS TO CRISIS EPISODE 27: SEPTEMBER 1988

FCTC_Ep_027

Episode 27: September 1988

Welcome to the twenty-seventh episode of From Crisis to Crisis: A Superman Podcast!  This podcast has a simple premise; examine just about every Superman comic published between Man of Steel #1 in 1986 to Adventures of Superman #649 in 2006 in an informative and hopefully entertaining format.

Part index.  Part commentary.  Part history lesson.  All podcast.

Michael and Jeffrey begin their discussion of what is quite possibly the most important storyline to hit the Superman books since Man of SteelThe Supergirl Saga Parts 1 and 2 went down in the books with the cover date September 1988 and while it marked the beginning of the end of the John Byrne era of Superman it also marks the beginning of one of the bests runs of Superman ever.

Yes, we’re biased here.

In addition to giving you the lowdown on just who the mysterious Supergirl that has been popping  up over the past few months is and calling back to the story that went down in Superman #8 and Action Comics #591 Mike and Jeff also give in to listener demand and somewhat begrudgingly discuss Superman: The Earth Stealers.

No e-mails this week but they will return next time.

You can subscribe to the show in two ways. First there is the RSS Feed and there is also theiTunes link .

If you want to comment on the show or contact the hosts you can always private message Mike and Jeff, at the Superman Homepage, leave comments here or at the Homepage or here or email them by clicking this link.  All questions, concerns, fears, trepidations and cheap shots are welcome. The guys will try to incorporate e-mails into the episodes once the show gets rolling.

Seriously, let us know what you think.