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"Bill Steele" wrote in message
... *My* nitpick is that if Krypton posesses the knowledge of many galaxies it means interstellar travel is commonplace to them. Jor-El even says "Neither I nor my wife will leave Krypton." So there had to be zillions of Kryptonians all over the universe, so Kal-El isn't exactly the "last son of Krypton." And you'd think Earth would be a real popular vacation spot. The way they explained it in the comic books was the Krypton easily had the technology for space travel, but it was legally suppressed. Seems there had been a problem in the past with some would-be despots exiling political rivals into space. So what Jor-El was doing was highly illegal. -- Regards, Mike Combs ---------------------------------------------------------------------- By all that you hold dear on this good Earth I bid you stand, Men of the West! Aragorn |
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On Mon, 3 Jul 2006 13:25:47 -0500, "Mike Combs"
wrote: The way they explained it in the comic books was the Krypton easily had the technology for space travel, but it was legally suppressed. Seems there had been a problem in the past with some would-be despots exiling political rivals into space. So what Jor-El was doing was highly illegal. No matter the explanation, this is a major continuity gaffe that cannot be reconciled. If Krypton knew of 28 other [solar systems], and Jor-el as a private citizen had the means to send his son in a rocket to earth, Krypton should have been a thriving spacefaring society, and many of its people should have been off-world at the time of the explosion. |
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In sci.physics George Peatty wrote:
On Mon, 3 Jul 2006 13:25:47 -0500, "Mike Combs" wrote: The way they explained it in the comic books was the Krypton easily had the technology for space travel, but it was legally suppressed. Seems there had been a problem in the past with some would-be despots exiling political rivals into space. So what Jor-El was doing was highly illegal. No matter the explanation, this is a major continuity gaffe that cannot be reconciled. If Krypton knew of 28 other [solar systems], and Jor-el as a private citizen had the means to send his son in a rocket to earth, Krypton should have been a thriving spacefaring society, and many of its people should have been off-world at the time of the explosion. I can't believe I'm discussing the motivations of comic characters... Could be the Kryptonians were xenophobic and/or had little interest in anything outside of their society. How come the Europeans did extensive exploration and discovered (among other things) the New World and the Asians did not? The technologies were comperable. Hell, the Koreans had iron clad warships in the 14th century, long before the West had them. If they had had any interest in doing so, the Koreans could have wiped out both the Spanish and English fleets of the time. Yet they didn't. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
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In article , George Peatty
wrote: On Mon, 3 Jul 2006 13:25:47 -0500, "Mike Combs" wrote: The way they explained it in the comic books was the Krypton easily had the technology for space travel, but it was legally suppressed. Seems there had been a problem in the past with some would-be despots exiling political rivals into space. So what Jor-El was doing was highly illegal. No matter the explanation, this is a major continuity gaffe that cannot be reconciled. If Krypton knew of 28 other [solar systems], and Jor-el as a private citizen had the means to send his son in a rocket to earth, Krypton should have been a thriving spacefaring society, and many of its people should have been off-world at the time of the explosion. Ma Kent gets a line in the kitchen scene that hints there may be other Kryptonians who were off-planet at the time of the explosion. It's right before the "you're never alone" stuff. Even the Silver Age comics screwed this space-travel thing up all the time. Krypton was routinely visited by alien cultures, and Kryptonopolis even had a spaceport. It's not likely that a scientifically advanced culture capable of operating a spaceport would not have even rudimentary star travel; it would at least have borrowed the technology, if not develop it on its own. There was *some* near-space travel, though; for instance, Kryptonians lived on the moon that Jax-Ur blew up, and Kal-El's mother Lara was an astronaut in training. |
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![]() "Mike Combs" wrote in message ... "Bill Steele" wrote in message ... *My* nitpick is that if Krypton posesses the knowledge of many galaxies it means interstellar travel is commonplace to them. Jor-El even says "Neither I nor my wife will leave Krypton." So there had to be zillions of Kryptonians all over the universe, so Kal-El isn't exactly the "last son of Krypton." And you'd think Earth would be a real popular vacation spot. The way they explained it in the comic books was the Krypton easily had the technology for space travel, but it was legally suppressed. Seems there had been a problem in the past with some would-be despots exiling political rivals into space. So what Jor-El was doing was highly illegal. Post Crisis Krypton is 50 light years away from Earth, and the reason Kryptonians didn't leave the planet is that in earlier times they were afraid of contamination by foreign ideas and created a device to ensure they would remain 'pure'- the Eradicator. The Eradicator modified all Kryptonians genetically and the planet itself. Any alien who came to Krypton would die. Any Kryptonian who left Krypton would die. One of the things Jor-El discovered in his research was what the Eradicator had done and how to treat himself so his son wouldn't inherit that trait. And, 'cause I'm a geek... (and 'cause 'Man of Steel' limited series and 'World of Kypton' limited series are my bibles... The Eradicator stuff came later in the regular comics) Once upon a time Krypton was verdant and vastly technologically advanced. They maintained their bodes by using clones (kept in suspended animation- meat, not people) for replacement. A kryptonian mother had some /ideas/ about a proper wife for her son, and had one of her clones brought out of suspended animation and allowed to develop a mind and a personality and was presented as an ordinary Kryptonian girl. Until that was done (in secret) no Kryptonian had even the idea that it was remotely possible under any circumstances for the spare parts repositories to actually become people. This was discovered and publicized and the **** hit the fan. Most Kryptonians considered it a unique case and wanted to maintain the statues quo. A small group called 'Black Zero' considered all of Kryptonian society to be cannibalistic and that all Krypton should be punished for its horrendous sins. A civil war started. 1000 years later it finally ended. By that time Krypton was a barren desert. The last battle of the war was fought againt the very man who had started it (the son, who had been thought to have died in the first battle) and who had been building a weapon that would destroy the planet. He was killed, and the weapon destroyed. By this time more than just the planet had been sterilized- the Kryptonians themselves now had sterile souls. They lived their lives in their life support suits that kept them healthy and was a barrier to the world, and lived in vast towers that kept them seperate from each other. They didn't even need to meet to reproduce- cell samples were taken and grown in artifical wombs. They had the power to make Krypton green again, but they didn't bother because they didn't care. Jor-El was very much a throwback. He was emotional and vibrant and curious, and he was the only Kryptonian like that. His curiosity led him to investigate and discover many things that had been forgotten in the archives (the civil war, the weapon destroyed at the end, and the Eradicator, among other things). Hos emotionalism also led him to fall in love with the woman who was chosen to be the mother of his child. Unfortunately part of the reason he discovered these things was in the course of investigating a mysterious radiation sickness that was killing millions. The weapon hadn't been destroyed. It may not even have been damaged. It's function was to transmute Krypton's core into a radioactive element that when built to critical mass would annhilate the planet. He had his son's birthing matrix attached to an experimental rocket model he'd built and sent to a planet he thought would be best for him. There wasn't time for anything else once he discovered what was happening and any other Kryptonian leaving the planet would have been killed by the Eradicator effect anyway. The Eradicator itself had been removed from the planet hundreds of thousands of years before. (not by a Kryptonian obviously, but by the alien missionary who had been the initial target of the Eradicator, and whose preaching had been the motivation for its creation. Ironically the Eradicator didn't work on him) Eventually Superman gains possession of the Eradicator and brings it to Earth, when in it's attempts to preserve Krypton by recreating the lost planet on Earth it is what actually creates Superman's Fortress of Solitude. (of course it has to be slapped down when it tries to turn humans into Kryptonians and Earth into another Krypton. All the Kryptonian technology Superman has traces its origin to the Eradicator. It created the Fortress, it brought the artifacts from Krypton through the Phantom Zone to the Fortress to begin with, and it created the robots that maintain the Fortress. You'll notice there's a /slight/ problem regarding the other Kryptonians who are a hallowed part of the mythos- they can't exist. Yeah... .... .... .... When Superman 'died' the government tried to clone him. The early cloning technology had created the Bizarros, but the new stuff (predicated on modifying human DNA to resemble Kryptonian DNA since Kryptonian DNA couldn't be cloned directly) created 'Superboy'. Foolishly, the writers have not used this concept to explain and justify the existance of other 'Kryptonians'. It could be used for a Supergirl, Beppo the super-monkey, and even Streaky the super-cat. *Anything*. Oh well... |
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![]() Shawn Wilson wrote: The Eradicator itself had been removed from the planet hundreds of thousands of years before. (not by a Kryptonian obviously, but by the alien missionary who had been the initial target of the Eradicator, and whose preaching had been the motivation for its creation. Ironically the Eradicator didn't work on him) Eventually Superman gains possession of the Eradicator and brings it to Earth, when in it's attempts to preserve Krypton by recreating the lost planet on Earth it is what actually creates Superman's Fortress of Solitude. (of course it has to be slapped down when it tries to turn humans into Kryptonians and Earth into another Krypton. All the Kryptonian technology Superman has traces its origin to the Eradicator. It created the Fortress, it brought the artifacts from Krypton through the Phantom Zone to the Fortress to begin with, and it created the robots that maintain the Fortress. You'll notice there's a /slight/ problem regarding the other Kryptonians who are a hallowed part of the mythos- they can't exist. Yeah... ... ... ... When Superman 'died' the government tried to clone him. The early cloning technology had created the Bizarros, but the new stuff (predicated on modifying human DNA to resemble Kryptonian DNA since Kryptonian DNA couldn't be cloned directly) created 'Superboy'. Foolishly, the writers have not used this concept to explain and justify the existance of other 'Kryptonians'. It could be used for a Supergirl, Beppo the super-monkey, and even Streaky the super-cat. *Anything*. Oh well... All of that is pretty cool. Is this information parcelled out over multiple issues and/or years of Superman in dribs and drabs as they thought of it, or is it in fairly concise storyline? I'd be interested in reading that graphic novel. I don't follow the storylines of comics very closely (despite starting to read comics again after a two decade hiatus), so I'm curious if the extended Superman family still exists. The supermonkey, superhorse, supersecond-cousin-once-removed-on-his-mother's-side stuff always struck me as silly. Doug |
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![]() "trike" wrote in message ups.com... All of that is pretty cool. Is this information parcelled out over multiple issues and/or years of Superman in dribs and drabs as they thought of it, or is it in fairly concise storyline? I'd be interested in reading that graphic novel. Dribs and drabs over a period of years in various places. Krypton as a sterile society and a sterile planet was in the 'Man of Steel' limited series, as was Bizarro as a failed cloning attempt. Krypton's civil war and the doomsday device and Jor-El's discovery thereof were in 'World of Krypton' limited series. The Eradicator and every thing associated with it were a number of issues in the regular series, as was Superboy and his cloning technique. (note- when John Byrne rebooted Superman a number of projects and ideas were conceived at that time. The 'Man of Steel' limited series (as opposed to the ongoing comic) was the origin and basics, and then later three other limited series fleshed out the details- World of Krypton (good), World of Smallville (crap), and World of Metropolis (ok)) I don't follow the storylines of comics very closely (despite starting to read comics again after a two decade hiatus), so I'm curious if the extended Superman family still exists. Not really. Some elements exist and there have been clumsy attempts to make them work, but they didn't. It started with a normal dog that was named Krypto, but wasn't actually Superman's pet (just a dog, named by a Superman fan). He eventually ended up as Superboy's pet, then was written out. Later Superman acquired (from an alternate dimension) a super powered Krypto who eventually ended up as Superboy's pet (yes, again) (and Superboy was being fostered by the Kents, which could have been an excellent way to have Superboy stories (Superman didn't put on a costume until he was an adult in post-Crisis continuity) except they had already established his character as too much of a punk to suddenly be transformed into a goody-two shoes). There have been multiple attempts at Supergirl (yes, multiple different characters all named Supergirl and associated with Superman), all of which have been pathetic. (sadly they *have* a much more interesting (and much better character) super powered nice girl they hardly do anything with- Mary Marvel) Cat, monkey, horse and whatever have not be reintroduced as far as I know. The supermonkey, superhorse, supersecond-cousin-once-removed-on-his-mother's-side stuff always struck me as silly. Definitely, but it was *fun*. A lot of that stuff was fun because it was silly. It can be worked into modern continuity and modern sensibility with little effort, but the writers haven't. We already know the chief cloner in the DC universe (Dabney Donovan) is a loon. Why not use Superman DNA techniques to make a super horse? He's made weirder things. A handful of animals, and handful of people, and we have the original family without violating the Superman is unique and the sole survivor of Krypton rule. You could even have 'kryptonian' villains. They could have kept the one kind of Kryptonite *and* introduced red kryptonite by merely having red Kryptonite be a creation of Mxyzptlk, but they missed that boat too. (which is a damn shame because they literally came thisclose to doing it by having Mxyzptlk create a 'red kryptonite' that didn't do anything at all in one story) I think Superman could be retconned in ways that don't change existing post-Crisis continuity much, but which does recreate much of the silver age mythos. Modern comics need more fun and sillyness anyway. You might see a trade paperback called 'Superman Birthright' out there which purports to be his origin. Ignore it entirely. They tried to align the comics and the Smallville TV series by giving Superman a more Smallville like backstory, but they changed too many things that had been incredibly firmly established in the process (like making Superman and Lex Luthor contemporaries *and* classmates when it has been crystal clear for 20 years that Lex is an entire generation older and they didn't meet until Superman came to Metropolis). Lex was elected *President* and they aren't saying Clark is nearly 40 for christssake. I have only read comics sporadically for several years now. I was deep into it for about ten years (starting right after Crisis) but they all went to hell about the same time. (I used to *love Spider-Man until all the clone bull**** and every story being 'how can we make Peter even more miserable now?') |
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In article . com,
"trike" wrote: I don't follow the storylines of comics very closely (despite starting to read comics again after a two decade hiatus), so I'm curious if the extended Superman family still exists. The supermonkey, superhorse, supersecond-cousin-once-removed-on-his-mother's-side stuff always struck me as silly. Nearly all origin stories are silly, because they're thought up after marketing decides they need a character. Hard water fumes indeed! Mary Marvel, despite being thought up by marketing, was an interesting exception, especially as reimagined for the Power of Shazam series. |
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