Simon_Jester wrote: ↑2017-11-21 04:41am
I may have communicated poorly. I was thinking
specifically about the class of story that sums up as "Our Hero loses many of their usual resources, and has to triumph through cleverness where they would usually triumph through force."
The core story of the
Odyssey (that is, Odysseus's adventures) is basically this, for example. Odysseus is a Greek king with a strong force at his command. He starts out with a ship, a fleet, and a way home; he loses first the third, then the second, then the first, and finally is transported home by the mercy of the gods, with few allies to reclaim his kingdom.
It's easy to write stories in that vein for Batman, harder for Superman. Not
impossible, but clearly enough harder to be relevant.
Ironically, Silver Age stories were all *about* that. One of the big laughs about Superman 'he just beats his foes in one punch and always knows what to do,' thing is his stories used to be primarily logic puzzles or moral quandaries.
That and just having freakin' weird stuff happen.
Double irony- Silver Age Batman stories were largely trying to ape Superman stories by having him deal with lots of weird stuff because they didn't know what else to do with him, he only moved back to what we're talking about more in the 70s.
Elheru Aran wrote: ↑2017-11-21 10:59am
Batgirl actually got better in the New 52 reboot. One of the more controversial moves as Oracle had become a pretty popular and well rounded character in her own right. Both Supergirl and Barry are also back.
Which is another thing about comics, one thing that helps characters out (at least the popular ones) is that you know if they get a writer or artist that's terrible... it's all a wash sooner or later and the company will try to return it to the status quo. Grant Morrison put Batman through some major gyrations, and that was popular in its own way but also widely disliked, but then Scott Snyder pulled the book back to a more 'normal' version of the Dark Knight. Of course, with less popular characters, this can sink the comic entirely, but one can be pretty confident DC is never going to let go of Batman.
Personally I found her nu52 take too dark until the Batgirl of Burnside era.
And I like that they've returned Cassandra to the fold.
Btw, while I agree with the, 'if something has a bad take, it'll eventually go away,' thing normally holds true, I'll add it's often not a return to the status quo. Modern Batgirl is so so much more than when Babs was originally Batgirl, and takes parts from both her Oracle stint (obviously) and parts of the Batgirls that came after. Comics is always changing, sometimes obviously, sometimes subtly.
Vendetta wrote: ↑2017-11-21 05:41am
Although really what it refers to is the tendency of stories to have bad things happen to female characters in order to provide motivation for male characters. A story where Wonder Woman loses her powers and wins anyway is not a problem, a story where Wonder Woman loses her powers and that is the impetus for Batman to win* is bad.
* JLA Act of God. Which can fuck off and die in a fire.
Ahh, that was horrible! Not just for WW, all the powered heroes were turned to serve how cool Batman is, but it had the story (1) have her convert to Catholicism, 'cause, and (2) ignore she's already worked as a non-powered martial arts hero! Her skills could stand to be broadened, learning detective work would be good, getting grapple line gear and such, but Diana can seriously just hit the beat five seconds after losing her powers.