Tags: punisher

Alex Giles

What defines a Superhero?

by Alex Giles Email

For as long as I can remember I have been using the term “Superhero” when speaking about a goody comic book character and in that time I have never really thought to myself ‘What defines a Superhero?’.

With the question ‘What defines a Superhero?, what I am asking is what makes a Superhero different from just a hero and what defines them, especially in the comic book world, what makes a Superhero different from all the others in a costume with a secret identity?

Here are entries for Superhero from the first two dictionaries I checked online.

Superhero:

“A fictional hero having extraordinary or superhuman powers; also: an exceptionally skilful or successful person”

And

“A benevolent fictional character with superhuman powers, such as Superman”

This doesn’t really give me enough to answer the question and is where I start to get confused. For instance when we talk about guys in the mould of Ghost Rider and The Punisher who are quite happy to kill for the great of good are they Superheroes? And what about like Magneto and people like him because when he turned all good and joined the X-Men team do we now call him a superhero even though he has killed so many people in the past because he WAS a Supervillain but then turned good?

I have been thinking about the question now for five days or so because I wrote the above last week before work got a hold of me.

I have managed (I think) to define what I would class as a ‘Superhero’, It may not be the ‘official’ view of what a Superhero is and I would highly imagine the definition of Superhero differs from each person to the next but here is what I broke mine into and what from now on I will use it to define a Superhero.

The first thing to take into account is that Superheroes don't necessarily have to have superpowers. Batman, Green Arrow, Nightwing to name just three don’t have superpowers, yes the all have amazing talents but no ‘actual’ superpowers and yet I would class all three as Superhero’s.

People like Punisher, Ghost Rider, and Magneto like I mentioned before do not in my eyes class as a Superhero because there are a few rules one has to have to get ‘Super’ added to that Hero part in my eyes.

The rules I am talking about are not many but I believe needed to define and help separate the Superhero from the hero.

First up and MOST importantly is the moral code and what they live by, when out fighting crime and doing the greater good, which options do they chose?
Sometimes the most honourable or heroes may have to be non heroic and walk away, they may have to chose an option they don’t want too and don’t like but for them It’s about doing the right thing no matter how much vengeance or revenge is there, no matter who it is every life is equal.

Second and last rule is that they have to have either a superpower or a special talent and use it to fight a good fight, use the power/talent to try and make earth and which ever other planets they are on a better place. Fight for Truth, Justice and Honour.

I could go on and define each of my two rules more but the article is getting on a bit and we all know I can waffle so ill stop it there.

I will finish by saying the list of people I used to call a superhero has about halved.

Regards

Muldwych

mikeybumchin

Mike's Library Hot Picks: The List

by mikeybumchin Email

I am Michael, prince of Eternia and defender of the secrets of Castle Sidekick. This is Gavin, my fearless friend. Fabulous secret powers were revealed to me the day I held aloft a comic book and said, “By the power of Sidekick! I have the power! “
Gavin became the mighty Bones, and I became Bum-Chin, the most powerful man in the universe!

[Ed- Hang on Mike, this makes me Battle Cat or even worse Cringer, you ride me?!]


Well that’s that done, on with the review. This week is a look back at a darker time for the Marvel universe; it’s a book set bang smack in the middle of Dark Reign. Once again it features a number of stories so I will be focusing on them each listing the writers and artists and giving information of what to pick up after each story and how we got to where the story starts.

The Book is “The List” it was published originally in 2009 and was collected in a nice book that has some great stories in it. When these stories originally came out I only picked up the Uncanny X-men version as it became clear that it was essentially a jumping on point book for other titles. The list is something that Norman “Green Goblin” Osborn creates to make life easier for him and contains the following things to do:

Neutralize Clint Barton (Hawkeye)
Eliminate Daredevil
Kill Namor
Kill Frank Castle (The Punisher)
Kill Nick Fury
Neutralize Bruce Banner (The Hulk)
Control The World
Kill Spiderman

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Gavin Jones

Eminem vs The Punisher. I know who my money is on.

by Gavin Jones Email

Link: http://www.rollingstone.com/rockdaily/index.php/2009/05/05/eminem-battles-the-punisher-in-special-edition-comic-book/

Eminem/Punisher: Last Kill

Eminem is back and don't we know it. He's been hitting the promo machine with full effect leaving no media untouched so of course we get a comic book version of the old Slim Shady. Marvel Comics has teamed up with Eminem and XXL magazine to celebrate his comeback album Relapse with an all-new Punisher story featuring Eminem and Punisher fan favourite The Barracuda titled Eminem/Punisher: Kill You.

The story is written by Fred Van Lente (The Amazing Spider-Man) with art duties being handled by one of my favourite photo-referencing artists Salvador Larroca (Invincible Iron Man). Ok the photo reference thing was cheap shot but anyone that listens to The Sidekickcast will know that I've had a problem with some of the work he's done on Iron Man as he uses inappropriate famous people as his reference for faces, notably Sawyer from Lost as Tony Stark. This title however should be a perfect fit for him, plenty of reference material in the form of Eminem and as long as Punisher doesn't look Peter Petrelli from Heroes we're all good.

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Gavin Jones

When Comics and The Law Collide

by Gavin Jones Email

Link: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/politics/4370072/New-pornography-laws-could-make-comic-books-illegal-claim-campaigners.html

Thanks to two new pieces of UK legislation your comic book collection could become illegal and titles you've been collecting for a long time could become banned. The Criminal Justice and Immigration Act and the Coroners and Justice Bill are set to ban images that are considered to be 'extreme', those that contain any kind of sexually violent or obscene acts from being published, esepecially those with children. At the outset this seems fair enough especially when you bring kids into the equation but it's the definitions of 'obscene' and 'sexually violent' that cause problems. How far does this go?

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