I’m swallowing my superhero fatigue in a desperate bid to clean out my hard-drive and make room for all the stuff I want to see in the not-too-distant future – which means that June is superhero month!
Either way, it’s long past time for me to wrap up the Arrowverse, of which there are still half-a-dozen shows I haven’t finished yet. By my reckoning I have one season of Supergirl, two of Batwoman, three of Legends of Tomorrow, three of The Flash and one of Black Lightning left to go. Oh, and the entirety of Superman and Lois. And was Stargirl ever part of this continuity?
When things ends before you’re given the chance to catch up with them, you inevitably lose a degree of investment, but I’m nothing if not a completist.
I also tackled the DC Animated Movie Universe, which is quite a mouthful, so we’ll go with DCAMU henceforth, though thankfully there were only four more to watch before their conclusion.
And yet while watching Superman getting killed by Doomsday for the third time, and Clark admit his true identity to Lois for what felt like the millionth, I realized that these types of stories are most akin to the King Arthur and Robin Hood legends in how they’re retold over the years. The origins of superhero stories are obviously not as ambiguous (I mean, they’re printed right there on the page) but we’re still dealing with a number of characters with set personalities and familiar stories that get adapted, readapted, rebooted and changed around until certain elements feel set in stone.
Robin Hood has an archery contest, the quarterstaff fight on the bridge, saving the poacher, helping someone marry their love, and rescuing someone from the gallows in the same way that X-Men has Wolverine struggle to remember his past, Jean Grey becoming the phoenix, someone returning to the past from a dystopian future, and Xavier’s School for Gifted Children getting blown up.
The Holy Grail was nowhere to be seen in the earliest King Arthur stories, but is now an essential part of any retelling. But is Percival the knight who finds it? Or Galahad? Or Bors? Different writers told different versions, and later versions handle the discrepancies by having all of them go on the Grail Quest.
This is type of storytelling is unique only to legends and comic book adaptations, and it’s quite fascinating to witness, as it’s the same story with the same characters every time… but not.
On another note, I realized I’m not hugely attached to superheroes. They were present in my childhood, but like The Wizard of Oz, were so American in nature that I never really felt a deep investment. This meant I wasn’t that phased about Zack Snyder’s dark-n-edgy take on the material, as it’s just another variation on the old stories – though I could understand why some people were upset. But as I said about Peter Pan in April, at some point you have to do something different, or else we’re just going to end up with twenty thousand identical adaptations.
(Though having said that, I watched Justice League Dark: Apokolips this month and was not ready for how grim that was gonna get).




