The Death of Superman: Difference between revisions
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{{Infobox comics story arc |
{{Infobox comics story arc |
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|title = The Death of Superman |
|title = The Death of Superman |
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|image = superman75.jpg |
|image = superman75.jpg |
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|caption = {{Descript-cvr|[[Superman (vol. 2)|Superman]]|2|#75|Jan 1993}} |
|caption = {{Descript-cvr|[[Superman (vol. 2)|Superman]]|2|#75|Jan 1993}}<br/>Art by [[Dan Jurgens]] and [[Brett Breeding]]. |
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|publisher = [[DC Comics]] |
|publisher = [[DC Comics]] |
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|date = {{collapsible list|'''Over three arcs: |
|date = {{collapsible list|'''Over three arcs:<br>"Doomsday!"<br>December 1992—January 1993<br>"Funeral for a Friend"<br>January—April 1993<br>"Reign of the Supermen!"<br>June—November 1993 }} |
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|startyr = 1992 |
|startyr = 1992 |
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|Crossover = y |
|Crossover = y |
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|titles = {{collapsible list| |
|titles = {{collapsible list| |
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'''( |
'''("Doomsday!")'''<br> |
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*''[[Action Comics]]'' #684 |
*''[[Action Comics]]'' #684 |
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*''[[Superman (comic book)|Adventures of Superman]]'' #497 |
*''[[Superman (comic book)|Adventures of Superman]]'' #497 |
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*''[[Justice League|Justice League America]]'' #69 |
*''[[Justice League|Justice League America]]'' #69 |
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*''[[Superman vol. 2|''Superman]]'' |
*''[[Superman vol. 2|''Superman]]'' #74—75 |
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*''[[Superman: The Man of Steel]]'' # |
*''[[Superman: The Man of Steel]]'' #18—19 |
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'''( |
'''("A Funeral for a Friend")'''<br> |
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*''Action Comics'' # |
*''Action Comics'' #685—686 |
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*''Adventures of Superman'' # |
*''Adventures of Superman'' #498—500 |
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*''Justice League America'' #70 |
*''Justice League America'' #70 |
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*''Superman'' |
*''Superman'' #76—77, #83 |
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*''Superman: The Man of Steel'' # |
*''Superman: The Man of Steel'' #20—21 |
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'''( |
'''("Reign of the Supermen!")'''<br> |
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*''Action Comics'' # |
*''Action Comics'' #687—691 |
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*''Adventures of Superman'' # |
*''Adventures of Superman'' #501—505 |
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*''[[Green Lantern (comic book)|Green Lantern]]'' (vol. 3) #46 |
*''[[Green Lantern (comic book)|Green Lantern]]'' (vol. 3) #46 |
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*''Superman'' |
*''Superman'' #78—82 |
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*''Superman: The Man of Steel'' # |
*''Superman: The Man of Steel'' #22—26 |
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}} |
}} |
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|main_char_team = {{collapsible list| |
|main_char_team = {{collapsible list| |
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|sortkey = Death Of Superman |
|sortkey = Death Of Superman |
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"'''The Death of Superman'''" is an [[American comic book]] [[Crossover (fiction)|crossover]] event published by [[DC Comics]] in its [[Superman]]-related comics. The crossover was devised by editor [[Mike Carlin]] and the Superman writing team of [[Dan Jurgens]], [[Roger Stern]], [[Louise Simonson]], [[Jerry Ordway]] and [[Karl Kesel]]. "The Death of Superman" began in December 1992 and lasted until October 1993 and was published in ''[[Superman vol. 2|Superman]]'', ''[[Action Comics]]'', ''[[The Adventures of Superman]]'', ''[[Superman: The Man of Steel]]'', ''[[Justice League America]]'', and ''[[Green Lantern (comic book)|Green Lantern]]''. |
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The crossover was conceived after [[Warner Bros.]] ordered the Superman writing team to halt production on a story in which [[Clark Kent]] (Superman) and [[Lois Lane]] would be married until the television series ''[[Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman]]'' reached its wedding episode. While brainstorming for new ideas, Ordway jokingly suggested they should kill Superman; Carlin, reflecting on poor sales of the Superman books, decided it was the best option. "The Death of Superman" was written to surprise readers and show Superman is not invincible. |
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"'''The Death of Superman'''" is a 1992 [[comic book]] [[plot (narrative)|storyline]] that occurred mostly in [[DC Comics]]' [[Superman]] titles. The completed multi-issue story arc was given the title '''''The Death and Return of Superman'''''.<ref>{{cite news|title= Superhero Wages Battle To The Deaths|work= Sun Sentinel|date=November 20, 1992|url= http://articles.sun-sentinel.com/1992-11-20/news/9203010771_1_superman-dc-comics-lois-lane|accessdate=2010-10-16}}</ref> |
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"The Death of Superman" is divided into three parts. The first, "Doomsday!", chronicles Superman's deadly fight with the bloodthirsty monster [[Doomsday (DC Comics)|Doomsday]] and concludes with his apparent death. The second, "A Funeral for a Friend", depicts Superman's fellow superheroes and the rest of the world mourning to his death and [[Jonathan and Martha Kent|Jonathan Kent]]'s eventual [[heart attack]]. The final part, "Reign of the Supermen!", sees the emergence of four individuals claiming to be Superman and the original Superman's return. |
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In the story, [[Superman]] engages in battle to stop a killing spree with an immensely powerful and seemingly unstoppable creature of unknown origin named [[Doomsday (comics)|Doomsday]] across the [[United States]].<ref name="dc-doom">{{Cite book | last = Greenberger | first = Robert | contribution = Doomsday | editor-last = Dougall | editor-first = Alastair | title = The DC Comics Encyclopedia | page = 108 | publisher = [[Dorling Kindersley]] | place = New York | year = 2008 | isbn = 0-7566-4119-5 | oclc = 213309017 | postscript = {{inconsistent citations}}}}</ref> At the fight's conclusion, both combatants apparently die from their wounds in the streets of [[Metropolis (comics)|Metropolis]] in [[Superman (vol. 2)|''Superman'' (vol. 2)]] #75 in 1993. |
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When news broke that DC planned to kill off Superman, a beloved American [[pop icon]], "The Death of Superman" gained unprecedented coverage from the [[mainstream media]] and caused a sensation. The majority of the story's installments were bestsellers; issue #75, which features Superman's death, sold over six million copies and was the top selling comic book issue of 1992. Retrospective reviewers found the story powerful, with some calling it one of the best Superman stories. However, it has also received criticism, with some commentators dismissing it as little more than a [[publicity stunt]]. Many readers believed DC had permanently killed Superman and felt deceived when he was revived. |
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The crossover depicted the world's reaction to Superman's death in "'''Funeral for a Friend'''", the emergence of four individuals believed to be the "new" Superman, and the eventual return of the original Superman in "'''Reign of the Supermen!'''" |
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The story has been repeatedly adapted into various forms of media, including the novelization ''[[Superman: Doomsday & Beyond]]'' (1993) and the [[video game]] ''[[The Death and Return of Superman]]'' (1994). An loose [[Animation|animated]] adaptation of the film, ''[[Superman: Doomsday]]'', was released in 2007 and launched the [[DC Universe Animated Original Movies]] line. A [[The Death of Superman (film)|second animated adaptation]] will be released as a two-part film in 2018 and 2019 and will be more faithful to the original story. |
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The storyline, devised by editor [[Mike Carlin]] and the Superman writing team of [[Dan Jurgens]], [[Roger Stern]], [[Louise Simonson]], [[Jerry Ordway]] and [[Karl Kesel]], met with enormous success: the ''Superman'' titles gained international exposure, reaching to the top of the comics sales charts and selling out overnight. The event was widely covered by national and international news media. The storyline was loosely adapted into a 2007 animated film, ''[[Superman: Doomsday]]''.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.warnervideo.com/supermandoomsdaydvd/ |title=Superman Doomsday DVD Official Site (DC Universe) |publisher=Warnervideo.com |date= |accessdate=2011-02-03}}</ref> |
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==Publication history== |
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==Origins== |
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===Background=== |
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The story of ''The Death of Superman'''s conception goes back to the 1985 crossover ''[[Crisis on Infinite Earths]]''. Following that event, DC Comics [[reboot (fiction)|rebooted]] their continuity and relaunched the Superman character with the miniseries ''[[The Man of Steel (comics)|The Man of Steel]]'', written by [[John Byrne (comics)|John Byrne]]. However, due to disputes with DC, Byrne left the Superman books and was replaced by Roger Stern. While the stories continued from Byrne's revamp, sales slowly dropped. In an effort to attract female readers, the Lois Lane/Clark Kent/Superman love triangle, in place since 1938, was changed. In a development based on events in Byrne's revamp, Lois was already falling in love with Clark Kent, rather than with Superman. In a story arc titled "Krisis of the Krimson Kryptonite", Clark proposes to Lois; she accepts. Although the road was set for the marriage of Lois and Clark, an unforeseen event would change these plans. |
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[[Superman]] is a [[superhero]] appearing in [[American comic books]] published by [[DC Comics]]. He was created by [[Jerry Siegel]] and [[Joe Shuster]] in 1933 as a villain, but the duo retooled him as a hero, feeling he would be more marketable.<ref>{{cite news| first=Thomas|last=Andrae |title=Of Supermen and Kids with Dreams |newspaper=[[Nemo (magazine)|Nemo: The Classic Comics Library]] |issue=2 |publisher=Gary G. Groth |date=August 1983 |pages=6–19 |url=https://www.scribd.com/doc/322057953 |ref=harv}}</ref> Superman made his debut in [[Action Comics 1|''Action Comics'' #1]] on April 18, 1938,<ref>{{Cite book|last=Muir |first=John Kenneth |title=The Encyclopedia of Superheroes on Film and Television |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=kdMzAQAAIAAJ |access-date=2011-05-31 |date=July 2008 |publisher=[[McFarland & Co.]] |isbn=978-0-7864-3755-9 |page=539 |deadurl=no |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20111230134825/http://books.google.com/books?id=kdMzAQAAIAAJ |archivedate=December 30, 2011 }}</ref> to immediate success.<ref>{{cite book|last=Tye|first=Larry|date=2012|title=Superman: The High-Flying History of America's Most Enduring Hero|publisher=Random House New York|isbn=978-1-58836-918-5}}</ref> In 1939, Superman became the first superhero to headline his own comic book, ''[[Superman (comic book)|Superman]]''.<ref name="nerd">{{cite book|last1=Weldon|first1=Glen|title=The Caped Crusade: Batman and the Rise of Nerd Culture|date=2016|publisher=[[Simon & Schuster]]|isbn=978-1-4767-5669-1|url=https://www.amazon.com/Caped-Crusade-Batman-Rise-Culture/dp/1476756694|accessdate=10 September 2017}}</ref> Superman's comics take place within a [[shared universe]] called the [[DC Universe]], which also includes [[Batman]], [[Wonder Woman]], and the [[Flash (comics)|Flash]], among others. This allows plot elements, characters, and settings to [[Crossover (fiction)|cross over]] with each other.<ref name="cbrrebirth">{{cite web|last1=Ching|first1=Albert|title=EXCLUSIVE: Geoff Johns Details “Rebirth” Plan, Seeks to Restore Legacy to DC Universe|url=https://www.cbr.com/exclusive-geoff-johns-details-rebirth-plan-seeks-to-restore-legacy-to-dc-universe/|website=[[Comic Book Resources]]|accessdate=23 March 2018|date=February 18, 2016}}</ref> |
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In 1985, DC launched ''[[Crisis on Infinite Earths]]'', a crossover event that resulted in the DC Universe being [[Reboot (fiction)|rebooted]]. Superman was re-envisioned in the 1986 [[Limited series (comics)|limited series]] ''[[The Man of Steel (comics)|The Man of Steel]]'' by writer and artist [[John Byrne (comics)|John Byrne]]. The following year, Byrne [[Superman vol. 2|relaunched ''Superman'']] with a new first issue and the original ''Superman'' series was renamed ''The Adventures of Superman''.<ref name="visual">{{cite book |title = DC Comics Year By Year A Visual Chronicle|publisher=[[Dorling Kindersley]] |year=2010 |isbn= 978-0-7566-6742-9}}</ref> The relaunch was a major success for DC<ref name="Slugfest157">{{cite book |last=Tucker |first=Reed |date=October 2017 |title=Slugfest |location= [[New York City]]|publisher=[[Da Capo Press]]|page=157 |isbn=0306825473 |url=https://books.google.com/books/about/Slugfest.html?id=hoyYDgAAQBAJ&printsec=frontcover&source=kp_read_button#v=onepage&q&f=false}}</ref> and ''The Man of Steel'' #1 was the bestselling comic book issue of 1986.<ref name="Slugfest155">{{cite book |last=Tucker |first=Reed |date=October 2017 |title=Slugfest |location= [[New York City]]|publisher=[[Da Capo Press]]|page=155 |isbn=0306825473 |url=https://books.google.com/books/about/Slugfest.html?id=hoyYDgAAQBAJ&printsec=frontcover&source=kp_read_button#v=onepage&q&f=false}}</ref> Byrne spent two years on the Superman comics before leaving, becoming dissatisfied with DC's lack of "conscious support" for him and that the version of Superman which DC licensed for merchandising was contrary to Byrne's representation in the comic books.<ref name="cbrbyrne">{{cite web|last1=Thomas|first1=Michael|title=John Byrne: The Hidden Answers|url=https://www.cbr.com/john-byrne-the-hidden-answers/|website=[[Comic Book Resources]]|accessdate=17 April 2018|date=August 22, 2000}}</ref> |
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In 1992, the [[Superboy (TV series)|television series]] based on ''[[Superboy]]'' concluded after four seasons in syndication. However, producer [[Alexander Salkind]] was precluded from doing any further work on the series (he and son [[Ilya Salkind|Ilya]] had planned a series of telefilms to bring ''Superboy'' to an official end) after [[Warner Bros.]], the owner of DC Comics, reclaimed certain intellectual property rights he had been in possession of since 1978. Shortly thereafter, Warner Bros. began developing ''[[Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman]]'', a new series for [[American Broadcasting Company|ABC]] which was premised upon a romantic relationship between Lois Lane and Clark Kent/Superman. One of the ideas that arose during production was the wedding of Lois Lane and Clark Kent/Superman. Warner Bros. learned that DC Comics was planning a similar plot line in the ''Superman'' comic books, and as a result DC, Warner Bros., and the ''Superman'' writing staff came together and reached an agreement: the Lois and Clark wedding arc in the comic book would be put on hold, to resume once the ''Lois & Clark'' TV show reached its wedding episode. |
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After Byrne's departure, the Superman comics experienced a decline in sales.<ref name="polygonexplained"/> By 1992, they were only selling roughly 150,000 copies an issue,<ref name="postleap"/> despite the fact there were four Superman-focused comics being sold: ''Action Comics'', ''Superman'', ''The Adventures of Superman'', and ''[[Superman: The Man of Steel]]''. Therefore, a new Superman comic book issue debuted every week.<ref name="visual"/> The Superman writing team attempted to make the comics more appealing by increasing the romance between [[Clark Kent]] (Superman's civilian identity) and [[Lois Lane]]. Eventually, the writers had Kent proposed to Lan and reveal he was Superman, and began to plan a storyline about their marriage.<ref name="polygonexplained"/> Because of the close connection between each series, each's writing team regularly attended a "Superman Summit", where they would plan stories to occupy the comics.<ref name="vulturedoomsday"/> |
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With the original storyline set aside in the comic, an original event was needed to replace it. According to a documentary on ''[[Superman: Doomsday]]'', the ''Superman'' writing team members were miffed at having a year's worth of story planning put aside, and flustered for ideas. At the end of one meeting, ''Adventures of Superman'' writer [[Jerry Ordway]] suggested, jokingly, "Let's just kill 'im." The joke became a running gag in story meetings, but eventually gained traction with ''Superman'' group editor [[Mike Carlin]]. In the documentary film ''[[Look, Up in the Sky: The Amazing Story of Superman|Look, Up in the Sky! The Amazing Story of Superman]]'' Carlin states: "the world was taking Superman for granted, so we literally said 'let's show what the world would be like without Superman'." |
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===Conception and development=== |
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==Storyline== |
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[[File:10.14.12JerryOrdwayByLuigiNovi.jpg|thumb|left|alt=A middle-aged man with graying brown hair, a beard, glasses, and a [[Three Stooges]] shirt sitting at a table.|[[Jerry Ordway]] (pictured in 2012) jokingly suggested that DC should kill Superman]] |
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By 1992, while the Superman comics struggled, [[Warner Bros.]] (DC's owner) began developing ''[[Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman]]'', a television series for [[American Broadcasting Company|ABC]] which was premised upon a romantic relationship between Lane and Kent. One of the ideas that arose during production was the wedding of Lane and Kent. Warner Bros. learned that DC was planning the wedding in the Superman comic books, and as a result, DC, Warner Bros., and the Superman writing staff came together and reached an agreement: the wedding arc in the comic book would be put on hold, to resume once ''Lois & Clark'' reached its wedding episode. This did not happen until 1997. With the original storyline set aside in the comic, a new event was needed to replace it.<ref name="polygonexplained">{{cite web|last1=Polo|first1=Susana|title=The death and resurrection of Superman, explained|url=https://www.polygon.com/2017/11/14/16585682/superman-death-explained-comeback-resurrection|website=[[Polygon (website)|Polygon]]|accessdate=17 April 2018|date=November 14, 2017}}</ref><ref name="vulturedoomsday">{{cite web|last1=Riesman|first1=Abraham|title=How a Group of Desperate Comics Creators Hatched Doomsday, Superman’s Deadliest Foe|url=http://www.vulture.com/2016/03/history-doomsday-batman-v-superman.html|website=Vulture|accessdate=17 April 2018|date=March 29, 2016}}</ref> |
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The writing team was enraged they had to put aside a year's worth of story planning and flustered for ideas;<ref name="doomsdaymovie"/> according to [[Louise Simonson]], the team essentially had to come up with something at the last minute.<ref name="vulturedoomsday"/> At the end of one meeting, ''Adventures of Superman'' writer [[Jerry Ordway]] jokingly suggested that they should just kill Superman.<ref name="polygonexplained"/><ref name="doomsdaymovie"/> The joke became a running gag in story meetings, but eventually gained traction with ''Superman'' group editor [[Mike Carlin]].<ref name="doomsdaymovie">{{cite AV media|date=November 25, 2008|title=[[Superman: Doomsday]] ''Disc Two: Special Features''|medium=Interview with the ''Superman'' writing team|publisher=[[Warner Bros.]]}}</ref> In the documentary film ''[[Look, Up in the Sky: The Amazing Story of Superman]]'', Carlin recalled, "the world was taking Superman for granted, so we literally said 'let's show what the world would be like without Superman'."<ref name="upinthesky">{{cite AV media|date=June 20, 2006|title=[[Look, Up in the Sky: The Amazing Story of Superman]]|medium=Interview with Mike Carlin|publisher=[[Warner Bros.]]}}</ref> [[Dan Jurgens]] was the one who officially pitched the idea.<ref name="comicbookjurgens">{{cite web|last1=Steinbeiser|first1=Andrew|title=Throwback Thursdays: Dan Jurgens Remembers The Death Of Superman|url=http://comicbook.com/2014/11/19/throwback-thursdays-dan-jurgens-remembers-the-death-of-superman/|website=ComicBook.com|accessdate=17 April 2018|date=November 20, 2014}}</ref> Ordway said he was shocked that DC allowed the project to proceed.<ref name="omnibus"/> [[Jon Bogdanove]] recalled the story "almost began to write itself, from the end backwards. It felt like a story that could make the readers care again, the way we had always cared about Superman."<ref name="omnibus"/> |
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===''Doomsday!''=== |
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[[File:Deathofsuperman.jpg|thumb|left|180px|Superman dies in [[Lois Lane]]'s arms, panel from ''Superman'' vol. 2, #75 (January 1993). Art by Dan Jurgens and Brett Breeding.]] |
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On the last page of several comics prior to ''Superman: The Man of Steel'' #18, a gloved fist is shown punching a steel wall, accompanied by the caption: "Doomsday is coming!" In that issue, Superman fights the Underworlders while a hulking figure in a green suit rampages through a pastoral field, deliberately killing a trusting songbird -and later a deer. This marks the first of seven issues in the "Doomsday!" story, which would continue through all four of the ''Superman'' books at that time, and one issue of ''[[Justice League International|Justice League America]]'', before culminating in ''Superman'' (vol. 2) #75. |
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Jurgens created the concept of a monster tearing apart [[Metropolis (comics)|Metropolis]] and an issue that was a single fight separately from "The Death of Superman"; the team eventually decided to combine the ideas with "The Death of Superman".<ref name="omnibus"/><ref name="vulturedoomsday"/><ref name="comicbookjurgens"/> Carlin had rejected the fight idea whenever Jurgens brought it up, feeling it would not be effective without a good story.<ref name="omnibus"/> The writers felt that Superman's foes relied too much on technology and intellect, and desired a villain who could take him on physically. The name "Doomsday" was chosen after the phrase "doomsday for Superman" was written on the whiteboard used for planning. Doomsday's design—a massive, muscular humanoid with bones ripping through his skin—was also from Jurgens; the team wanted the character to have a distinctive look, so they gave all artists a few minutes to create designs and voted for the one they thought was best. The team did not feel giving Doomsday an origin was important.<ref name="vulturedoomsday"/> Ordway recalled the most exciting part for him was exploring what the DC Universe would be like without Superman and had fun writing about peoples' reactions to his death.<ref name="omnibus"/> |
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The [[Justice League]] International ([[Guy Gardner (comics)|Guy Gardner]], [[Ted Kord|Blue Beetle]], [[Booster Gold]], [[Maxima (comics)|Maxima]], [[Fire (comics)|Fire]], [[Ice (comics)|Ice]], and [[Bloodwynd]]) responds to a call from a smashed big-rig outside of [[Bucyrus, Ohio]], and follows the trail of senseless destruction which leads them to a confrontation with the mysterious creature.<ref name="dc-doom"/> It systematically takes the team apart, starting by throwing a tree trunk through their aircraft and finishing by punching Booster Gold into the [[stratosphere]]. Booster Gold is caught in mid-air by Superman and declares "It's like [[End time|Doomsday]] is here", thus providing the monster with a name. |
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"The Death of Superman" was written to surprise readers: the writing team wanted to show readers that Superman was not invincible and could be killed by something other than [[Kryptonite]]. The eventual resurrection of Superman afterwards was also always planned and kept a secret. Simonson stated, "we had to sign nondisclosure agreements saying we couldn’t talk about it. We couldn’t reassure people that he was coming back.”<ref name="vulturedoomsday"/> The issues showing Superman's fight with Doomsday featured a "countdown" of panels: the first had four panels per page, while the second had three, the third had two, and the last simply comprised [[Splash page (comics)|splash pages]].<ref name="comalldeath">{{cite web|last1=Sims|first1=Chris|title=The Biggest Event Of All Time: 'The Death of Superman'|url=http://comicsalliance.com/tribute-death-of-superman/|website=[[ComicsAlliance]]|accessdate=18 April 2018|date=November 17, 2015}}</ref> |
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The Man of Steel arrives on the scene, having cut short a television interview with [[Cat Grant]] in ''Justice League America'' #69. He and the able-bodied League members follow the threat to the home of a single mother and her two children, where their battle with "[[Doomsday (comics)|Doomsday]]" destroys the house. The League attacks Doomsday with all their energy-projection powers; the only discernible effect is that much of his bodysuit is blasted or burned off. Doomsday again defeats the League, causes the house to explode into flames, and then leaps away. Superman follows, after saving the small family. Superman throws Doomsday into the bottom of a lake. After Doomsday escapes from the lake bed, he and Superman tear up a city street. Maxima then reenters the fray. [[Lois Lane]] and [[Jimmy Olsen]] are sent to cover the battle for television, while [[Lex Luthor]] (then masquerading as his non-existent son "Lex Luthor II") dissuades [[Supergirl (Matrix)|Supergirl]] from joining the fight. The fight continues at a gas station, where Maxima rips a light post from the ground; the sparks from the wiring ignite the leaking gasoline and the station is destroyed in a huge explosion. [[Guardian (DC Comics)|Guardian]] arrives after Doomsday leaves, finding Superman and Maxima, and offers his aid. |
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===Publication=== |
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Superman then follows Doomsday's trail of destruction (compared to that of a major tornado), waiting for an opportunity to attack. With the monster's rampage drawing closer, Lex Jr. convinces Supergirl that she is needed in [[Metropolis (comics)|Metropolis]] while Superman is fighting elsewhere. While demolishing an appliance store, Doomsday sees a TV commercial for a wrestling show being held in Metropolis, and after seeing a road sign for Metropolis heads in that direction. Superman engages him and throws him in the opposite direction, where he lands on the mountain housing [[Project Cadmus]]. They brawl throughout Habitat, a living forest connected to Cadmus, bringing most of it down. When the superhero Guardian arrives, Doomsday knocks him down and leaps toward Metropolis. |
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DC began to "aggressively" promote the story towards the end of 1992.<ref name="vulturedoomsday"/> The first reference to the story within the comics was placed in Simonson's ''Superman: The Man of Steel'' #17 (November 1992); after the issue's story, Doomsday's fist is shown repeatedly punching a wall.<ref name="visual"/> The crossover officially began the following issue, in which Doomsday is unleashed and begins to carve a brutal path of destruction across America.<ref name="vulturedoomsday"/> ''Superman'' #75 (January 1993) contained Superman's fight to the death with Doomsday,<ref name="vulturedoomsday"/> and was sold in a [[polybag]] with a black armband.<ref name="visual"/> In May 1993, DC published a special issue, ''Newstime: The Life and Death of The Man of Steel'', compiling fictional news stories about Superman's death and funeral.<ref name="io9">{{cite web|last1=Whitbrook|first1=James|title=What Happened the Last Time Superman Died|url=https://io9.gizmodo.com/what-happened-the-last-time-superman-died-1770501148|website=[[io9]]|accessdate=17 April 2018|date=April 12, 2016}}</ref> Following the funeral, all the Superman comics went on hiatus for three to four months, ending with the release of ''The Adventures of Superman'' #500 (June 1993).<ref name="cbr500">{{cite web|last1=Ginocchio|first1=Mark|title=Gimmick or Good? – Adventures of Superman #500|url=https://www.cbr.com/gimmick-or-good-adventures-of-superman-500/|website=[[Comic Book Resources]]|accessdate=17 April 2018|date=June 14, 2013}}</ref> "The Death of Superman" concluded in October 1993 with ''The Adventures of Superman'' #505, in which Superman returns to Metropolis.<ref name="adventures505">{{cite journal|last1=Kessel|first1=Karl|title=Reign of the Superman!|journal=[[The Adventures of Superman]]|date=October 1993|issue=505|publisher=[[DC Comics]]}}</ref> |
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==Synopsis== |
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Doomsday is driven below ground, where he ruptures gas and electrical mains, leveling Newtown, a large section of Metropolis. Supergirl goes to Superman's aid, but a single punch from Doomsday knocks her to the ground, her form destabilized. [[Professor Hamilton|Professor Emil Hamilton]] and [[Bibbo Bibbowski]], Superman's allies, fire a laser cannon at Doomsday, but it does not harm him. The local police open fire on Doomsday, but again, he is not harmed. Superman returns to the fight and eventually it leads to the heart of the city. |
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==="Doomsday!" (December 1992—January 1993)=== |
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[[File:Deathofsuperman.jpg|thumb|right|[[Superman]] dies in [[Lois Lane]]'s arms, panel from ''[[Superman vol. 2|Superman]]'' #75 (January 1993). Art by [[Dan Jurgens]] and [[Brett Breeding]].]] |
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* Issues: ''[[Action Comics]]'' #684; ''The Adventures of Superman'' #497; ''Justice League America'' #69; ''[[Superman: The Man of Steel]]'' #18—19; ''Superman'' #74—75 |
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* Writers: [[Dan Jurgens]]; [[Louise Simonson]]; [[Roger Stern]]; [[Jerry Ordway]] |
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* Pencillers: Dan Jurgens; [[Jon Bogdanove]]; [[Tom Grummett]]; [[Jackson Guice]] |
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* Inkers: [[Brett Breeding]]; Doug Hazelwood; Dennis Janke; Denis Rodier; [[Rick Burchett]] |
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The [[Justice League]] International ([[Guy Gardner (comics)|Guy Gardner]], [[Ted Kord|Blue Beetle]], [[Booster Gold]], [[Maxima (comics)|Maxima]], [[Fire (comics)|Fire]], [[Ice (comics)|Ice]], and [[Bloodwynd]]) responds to a call from a smashed big-rig outside of [[Bucyrus, Ohio]] and encounter a bloodthirsty monster in a green bodysuit that systematically takes the team apart, starting by throwing a tree trunk through their aircraft and finishing by punching Booster Gold into the [[stratosphere]]. Booster Gold is caught in midair by Superman and compares the monster's rampage to [[end time]]s, thus providing it with the name Doomsday. |
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Superman and Doomsday lay into each other with everything they have, while the former is increasingly exhausted and injured from the fight that he is on the verge of collapse. They strike each other with so much force that the shockwaves from their punches shatter windows. At the struggle's culminating moment in front of the ''[[Daily Planet]]'' building, each fighter lands a massive blow upon his opponent. The two titans collapse and moments later, in the arms of a frantic Lois Lane, Superman succumbs to his wounds and seemingly dies. Jimmy, Ice and Bloodwynd are also present at the end, with Jimmy bitterly photographing the iconic images of Superman's fall.<ref name="dc-doom"/> |
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Superman, having cut short a television interview with [[Cat Grant]], and the remaining League members follow the threat to the home of a single mother and her two children. They engage Doomsday, destroying the house in the process. The League attacks Doomsday with all their energy-projection powers; the only discernible effect is that much of his bodysuit is burned off, revealing Doomsday's rough skin with bones ripping through. Doomsday again defeats the League, causes the house to explode into flames, and then leaps away. Superman follows, after saving the family. |
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The climactic event happened in ''Superman'' (vol. 2) #75. The issue only contains 22 panels, and every page was a single panel, which was a structure building on the previous issues - ''Adventures of Superman'' #497 was done entirely with four-panel pages, ''Action Comics'' #684 with three, and ''Superman: The Man of Steel'' #19 with two. The entire story was immediately collected into a [[Trade paperback (comics)|trade paperback]] and titled ''The Death of Superman''. |
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Superman throws Doomsday into a lake. After escaping from the lake bed, Doomsday and Superman tear up a city street. Maxima then reenters the fray. Lois Lane and [[Jimmy Olsen]] are sent to cover the battle for television, while Superman's archenemy [[Lex Luthor]] (masquerading as his non-existent son "Lex Luthor II") dissuades [[Supergirl (Matrix)|Supergirl]] from joining the fight. The fight continues at a gas station, where Maxima rips a light post from the ground; the sparks from the wiring ignite the leaking gasoline and the station is destroyed in a huge explosion. [[Guardian (DC Comics)|Guardian]] arrives after Doomsday leaves, finding Superman and Maxima, and offers his aid. |
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===''Funeral for a Friend''=== |
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[[File:Funeral of Superman.jpg|thumb|right|170px|DC Comics' casts pays tribute to The Man of Steel. Art by [[Dan Jurgens]].]] |
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The funeral that followed featured many of Superman's fellow heroes and friends, including most of the [[Justice League|Justice League of America]], and a [[mausoleum]] was built in Metropolis in honor of the Man of Steel. During this time, every hero in the [[DC Universe]] (even [[Guy Gardner (comics)|Guy Gardner]] and [[Green Arrow]], neither of whom had ever personally gotten along with him) sported a black arm band featuring the S-Shield logo. Some time later, [[Project Cadmus]] stole Superman's body from his mausoleum, which had been ironically provided by his longtime foe [[Lex Luthor]], who said that if he could not kill Superman, then he at least wanted to bury him. It was hypothesized that they were attempting to clone him. The body was recovered by [[Lois Lane]] and [[Supergirl (Matrix)|Supergirl]]. |
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Superman follows Doomsday's trail of destruction, waiting for an opportunity to attack. With the monster's rampage drawing closer, Luthor convinces Supergirl that she is needed in [[Metropolis (comics)|Metropolis]] while Superman is fighting elsewhere. While demolishing an appliance store, Doomsday sees a commercial for a wrestling show being held in Metropolis and heads for the city. Superman engages him and throws him in the opposite direction, where he lands on the mountain housing [[Project Cadmus]]. They brawl throughout Habitat, a living forest connected to Cadmus, bringing most of it down. |
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The stories after the funeral often dealt with the emotions felt by the general public as well as specific characters entwined within Superman's world, including Lois Lane, [[Clark Kent]]'s parents, and even a number of [[supervillain]]s. The contemporary real-life [[President of the United States]] and [[First Lady of the United States|First Lady]], [[Bill Clinton|Bill]] and [[Hillary Clinton]], were also included in a scene during the funeral. With Superman gone, crime rises up again and the costumed heroes of Metropolis rise to fill in as protectors. [[Supergirl]], [[Gangbuster (DC Comics)|Gangbuster]], [[Thorn (comics)|Thorn]], and even Team Luthor, a Lexcorp-sponsored team, all tried but were not sufficient. Meanwhile, [[Ma and Pa Kent|Jonathan Kent]] took the death of his adoptive son the hardest and as a result suffered a heart attack. At this point, all Superman comic titles went on a three-month hiatus. |
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When Guardian arrives, Doomsday knocks him down and leaps toward Metropolis. Doomsday is driven below ground, where he ruptures gas and electrical mains, leveling Newtown, a large section of Metropolis. Supergirl goes to Superman's aid, but a single punch from Doomsday knocks her to the ground. [[Professor Hamilton|Professor Emil Hamilton]] and [[Bibbo Bibbowski]], Superman's allies, fire a laser cannon at Doomsday, but it does not harm him. The local police open fire on Doomsday, but again, he is not harmed. Superman returns to the fight and eventually it leads to the heart of the city. |
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The story (minus the epilogue) was also collected into trade paperback form. Rather than using the banner title ''Funeral for a Friend'', the title used for the collection was ''World Without a Superman''. |
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Doomsday and an exhausted Superman fight each other with everything they have. They strike each other with so much force that the shockwaves from their punches shatter windows. At the struggle's culminating moment in front of the ''[[Daily Planet]]'' building, both lay a massive blow upon each other, killing Doomsday and mortally wounding Superman. In the arms of a frantic Lane, Superman succumbs to his wounds and dies. Jimmy, Ice, Bloodwynd, and Guardian are also present at the end, with Jimmy bitterly photographing the images of Superman's fall. |
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===''Reign of the Supermen!''=== |
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[[File:Reign of Supermen-.jpg|thumb|right|Promotional images for ''Reign of the Supermen!'']] |
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==="A Funeral for a Friend" (January—April 1993)=== |
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Following a three-month hiatus on the Superman titles, all of them were relaunched. Four new heroes emerged in Superman's place, one in each title, each claiming in some way to be Superman. The story of ''The Adventures of Superman'' #500 followed Jonathan Kent into the afterlife. In a possible hallucination, he convinced Superman's soul to come back with him to the living. The only "evidence" that this was not a hallucination was the fact that shortly after Jonathan reawoke, four individuals arrived in Metropolis claiming to be Superman, accompanied by Lois visiting Superman's grave and realizing that his body had vanished. This storyline was known as ''Reign of the Supermen!''. |
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* Issues: ''Action Comics'' #685—686; ''The Adventures of Superman'' #498—500; ''Justice League America'' #70; ''Superman'' #76—77, #83; ''Superman: The Man of Steel'' #20—21 |
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* Writers: Dan Jurgens; Louise Simonson; Roger Stern; Jerry Ordway; [[Karl Kesel]]; [[William Messner-Loebs]] |
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* Pencillers: Jon Bogdanove; Tom Grummett; Jackson Guice; Dan Jurgens; [[Dennis Janke]]; [[Denis Rodier]]; [[Walt Simonson]]; [[Curt Swan]] |
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* Inkers: Brett Breeding; Doug Hazelwood; Dennis Janke; Denis Rodier; Rick Burchett; Mike Machlan; [[Ande Parks]]; [[Josef Rubinstein]]; Trevor Scott; Walter Simonson |
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The world is stunned and traumatized by Superman's death. A [[mausoleum]] is built in Metropolis in his honor, provided by Luthor, who says that if he could not kill Superman, then the least he wants is to bury him. His funeral is attended by nearly every single superhero, as well as some [[supervillain]]s and [[Bill Clinton|Bill]] and [[Hillary Clinton]]. Every hero, even those who did not get along with him, wear a black arm band featuring Superman's [[Superman logo|S-shield]] logo. After the funeral, Project Cadmus steals Superman's body from his mausoleum, allegedly to clone him. The body is recovered by Lane and Supergirl. |
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Each of the Supermen were designed with ideas taken from some of the monikers that Superman is often associated with. The four new heroes were: |
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With Superman gone, the [[crime rate]] rises and the costumed heroes of Metropolis rise to fill in as protectors. Supergirl, [[Gangbuster (DC Comics)|Gangbuster]], [[Thorn (comics)|Thorn]], and a team funded by Luthor all try but are insufficient. [[Jonathan and Martha Kent|Jonathan Kent]], Superman's adoptive father, takes his death the hardest, and begins to lose himself in memories. One night, while reading a newspaper story written by Lane in honor of Superman, Jonathan begins to feel responsible for his son's death and has a [[heart attack]] in his wife Martha's arms. |
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* [[Steel (John Henry Irons)|The Man of Steel]]: John Henry Irons was an ironworker and an ex-weapons designer for the military who wears a suit of armor and wields a hammer. Of the four, he is the only one who did not claim the name of Superman, but rather that he represented the spirit of Superman and continued his legacy. The Man of Steel appeared in ''[[Superman: The Man of Steel]]'', starting with #22. He later changed his name to just "Steel". |
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* [[Hank Henshaw|The Man of Tomorrow]], also called the Cyborg Superman, arrived with augmented Kryptonian technology. He is scientifically "proven" to be Superman, but claims amnesia in explanation to his part-mechanical nature. The Cyborg Superman appeared in [[Superman (vol. 2)|''Superman'' (vol. 2)]], starting with #78. After he was eventually revealed as former [[NASA]] astronaut [[Hank Henshaw]], he became a major supervillain. |
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* [[Superboy (Kon-El)|The Metropolis Kid]], who hated being called [[Superboy]], is a reckless teenage [[cloning|clone]] of Superman. This Superman appeared in ''[[Superman (comic book)#1986 revamp|The Adventures of Superman]]'', starting with #501. Of the three Supermen with super powers, he was the only one that did not claim to be the real one. He is the result of the brief time Cadmus attempted to clone Superman. He later had a career as [[Superboy]], and was the Kryptonian name "Kon-El" and the civilian identity of "Connor Kent". |
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* [[Eradicator (comics)|The Last Son of Krypton]] was a visored, energy-powered alien who dealt with criminals lethally. The Last Son of Krypton appeared in ''[[Action Comics]]'', starting with #687. He claims to have the memories of the original Superman, but his emotional distance makes Lois uncertain. He later was discovered to be [[Eradicator (comics)|the Eradicator]], a reformed Superman enemy.<ref name="dc-erad">{{Cite book | last = Wallace | first = Dan | contribution = Eradicator | editor-last = Dougall | editor-first = Alastair | title = The DC Comics Encyclopedia | page = 116 | publisher = [[Dorling Kindersley]] | place = New York | year = 2008 | isbn = 0-7566-4119-5 | oclc = 213309017 | postscript = {{inconsistent citations}}}}</ref> |
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==="Reign of the Supermen!" (June—November 1993)=== |
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The first issue for each of the new heroes featured a cardstock cover and a poster of the new hero. |
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[[File:Reign of Supermen-.jpg|thumb|right|Promotional images for "Reign of the Supermen!"]] |
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* Issues: ''Action Comics'' #687—691; ''The Adventures of Superman'' #501—505; ''[[Green Lantern (comic book)|Green Lantern]]'' #46; ''Superman'' #78—82; ''Superman: The Man of Steel'' #22—26 |
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* Writers: Dan Jurgens; Louise Simonson; Roger Stern; Karl Kesel; [[Gerard Jones]] |
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* Pencillers: Jon Bogdanove; Tom Grummett; Jackson Guice; Dan Jurgens; [[M. D. Bright]] |
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* Brett Breeding; Doug Hazelwood; Dennis Janke; Denis Rodier; [[Romeo Tanghal]] |
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While in a coma, Jonathan meets Superman in the afterlife and convinces him to come back to life, before reawakening. Coinciding with this is the arrival of four men—[[Steel (John Henry Irons)|Steel]], the [[Cyborg Superman]], [[Superboy (Kon-El)|Superboy]], and [[Eradicator (comics)|Eradicator]]—who claim to be Superman and Lane's discovery that his grave is empty. Steel and Superboy are quickly disproven, but the Cyborg and Eradicator both seem to recall memories Superman had. Hamilton tests the Cyborg and states he is the real Superman. In actuality, Eradicator stole Superman's body and placed it in a regeneration matrix in the [[Fortress of Solitude]], drawing on his recovering energies to power himself. |
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The first half of the ''Reign of the Supermen!'' story focuses on each of the Supermen “resuming” his duty as protector of Metropolis and gaining acceptance from the public. Of the four, the reader very quickly learns that neither the cloned Metropolis Kid nor the armored Man of Steel are the real Superman. The Cyborg Man of Tomorrow and the Last Son of Krypton were easily bought in by the people as the possible real Superman since Lois questioned both of them, and both recalled memories which Clark Kent had. Cyborg was even tested by Dr. Hamilton who stated that the Cyborg appeared to be the real Superman. |
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The matrix breaks open and Superman emerges, although he has been weakened. The Cyborg helps [[Mongul]] destroy [[Coast City]] in an effort to kill Superboy and begins to build Engine City in its ruins. Superboy escapes and asks Steel to help him fight the Cyborg. A giant armored suit rises from the harbor and Superboy and Steel attack it. Damaged, the suit falls apart, revealing Superman. Superman, Steel, Superboy, and Supergirl travel to Engine City and attack. During the fight, the Cyborg launches a missile at Metropolis with the intent of destroying it and putting a second Engine City in its place. Superboy manages to stop the missile before it strikes Metropolis. |
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In actuality, the Last Son of Krypton stole Superman's body and put it in a regeneration matrix in the [[Fortress of Solitude]], drawing on his recovering energies to power himself, as bright light blinded him. It is revealed that the Last Son is, in actuality, the Eradicator, an ancient Kryptonian weapon, and the Cyborg is the deranged consciousness of [[Hank Henshaw]], which used Superman's birthing matrix to create a physical duplicate of his body.<ref name="dc-erad"/> |
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[[Hal Jordan]] returns to find Coast City, his hometown, destroyed. Devastated, Jordan immediately attacks Engine City and fights Mongul, shattering Steel's hammer across Mongul's face. Meanwhile, Eradicator joins the fight and shields Superman from Kryptonite gas. The gas interacts with Eradicator before passing into Superman, allowing Superman to regain his powers but causing Eradicator to die. Superman then attacks the Cyborg and destroys his body. Supergirl uses her powers to reconstruct Superman's original costume, and they return to Metropolis. |
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[[File:Superman1993.jpg|thumb|left|Superman, Steel ([[John Henry Irons]]), and [[Superboy (Kon-El)|Superboy]] from the "''Reign of the Supermen!''" storyline, 1993. Cover to ''Adventures of Superman'' #504 by [[Tom Grummett]].]] |
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==Reception== |
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The regeneration matrix eventually broke open, and the original Superman emerged, greatly depowered, but alive. Meanwhile, the Cyborg helped [[Mongul]] destroy [[Coast City]], believing he killed the Last Son in the explosion, and captured Superboy, holding him in Engine City, a towering construct erected where Coast City once stood. Superboy escaped and flew back to Metropolis to get the Man of Steel to help him fight the Cyborg. Before he could tell the whole story, however, a giant Kryptonian Battlesuit rose out of the harbor and the two heroes attacked it. After suffering heavy damage, the suit opened, revealing a still-weak Superman, who had used it to walk all the way back from the Fortress of Solitude. Despite his weakened state, he quickly joined the other Supermen in attacking Engine City, with some help from [[Supergirl (Matrix)|Supergirl]]. Upon his revelation, he acknowledged himself as the real Superman (the fourth person at this point to claim that title, as Steel never claimed the name of Superman). When asked by [[Lois Lane]] what made him any different from the other Supermen, he responded with "''How about... To Kill a Mockingbird?''" (Clark Kent's favorite movie, and something he shared with only those closest to him). Though she remained hesitant, Lois mentally acknowledged that this was something only the real Clark Kent would know. During the battle of Coast City, the Cyborg launched a devastating missile at Metropolis, with the intent of destroying it and putting a second Engine City in its place. Superboy managed to grab onto the missile as it launched, riding it all the way to Metropolis, which he narrowly saved from destruction. |
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===At release=== |
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As DC did not make the fact that Superman would be revived at the end public, many fans believed "The Death of Superman" had permanently killed Superman, a beloved American [[pop icon]].<ref name="vulturedoomsday"/> Thus, the story attracted unprecedented coverage from the [[mainstream media]]; [[NPR]] reviewer Glen Weldon stated "news outlets like ''[[Newsweek]]'', ''[[People (magazine)|People]]'', and New York's ''[[Newsday]]'' pounced upon the 'story.'"<ref name="nerd"/> Jurgens later stated he did not anticipate the media coverage and also recalled that the first news story about it he saw was on ''[[NBC Nightly News]]''.<ref name="comicbookjurgens"/> Mark Potts (''[[The Washington Post]]'') speculated the event was simply a [[publicity stunt]], but nonetheless was interested what a world without Superman would be like.<ref name="postleap">{{cite web|last1=Potts|first1=Mark|title=Superman's Last Leap|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/lifestyle/1992/09/05/supermans-last-leap/c1e53279-756f-47f3-b230-07b18c507907/?utm_term=.fb781763c6f4|website=[[The Washington Post]]|accessdate=18 April 2018|date=September 5, 1992}}</ref> |
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''[[Saturday Night Live]]'' parodied "The Death of Superman" in the eighth episode of its [[Saturday Night Live (season 18)|18th season]]. The sketch depicts Superman's funeral being attended by the cast of DC, as well as several characters from [[Marvel Comics]]. [[Black Lightning]] ([[Sinbad (comedian)|Sinbad]]) tries to enter the funeral, but no one knows him even though he claims to have taught Superman how to fly.<ref name="denofgeeksnl">{{cite web|last1=Jasper|first1=Gavin|title=Saturday Night Live: The 10 Best Superhero Skits|url=http://www.denofgeek.com/us/tv/saturday-night-live/168373/saturday-night-live-the-10-best-superhero-skits|website=[[Den of Geek]]|accessdate=18 April 2018|date=January 13, 2018}}</ref> Jerry Siegel, who in 1961 had predicted Superman would eventually be killed, met with Carlin to tell him that he was very impressed by "The Death of Superman".<ref name="omnibus">{{cite book|last1=Jurgens|first1=Dan|title=The Death and Return of Superman Omnibus|date=September 12, 2007|publisher=[[DC Comics]]|isbn=1401215505}}</ref> |
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[[Green Lantern]] [[Hal Jordan]] had returned from space to find his hometown destroyed. He immediately attacked Engine City and fought Mongul, shattering the Man of Steel's hammer across his face. Meanwhile, the Last Son/Eradicator joined the fight after recovering in the Fortress and shielded Superman from the Cyborg's lethal [[Kryptonite]] gas. The gas interacted with the Eradicator as it passed through and into Superman, returning his powers rather than killing him.<ref name="dc-erad"/> The Eradicator's body degenerated into a lifeless husk, and the Cyborg looked for Superman's body in the debris and Kryptonite mist. Superman blindsided him with an attack using his super strength, and he punched a hole right through the Cyborg. He destroyed his body, but his consciousness survived. Supergirl used the remnants of the black Kryptonian suit to recreate Superman's traditional costume, and the group returned to Metropolis. Later on, Superman, Supergirl and Lois collaborated to film Clark Kent's rescue, Supergirl using her shapeshifting powers to pose as Clark Kent and create the impression that Clark had been trapped in an underground bunker in Doomsday's initial attack, able to sustain himself on supplies in the bunker but unable to escape until Superman returned and was able to contribute his X-ray vision to the rescue effort. |
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The attention the story got caused "The Death of Superman" to become an unforeseen success. Comic book retailers ordered five million copies of ''Superman'' #75 in advance, and many people who had never read comics bought the issue in hopes of it becoming an expensive collector's item.<ref name="nerd"/> DC shipped between 2.5 and three million copies of the issue when it was released on November 17, 1992 and it sold out across America. Issue #75 brought in a total of {{USD}}30 million during its first day on sale<ref>{{cite web|last1=Miller|first1=John Jackson|title=The 1900s: 10 biggest events from 100 years in comics|url=http://www.cbgxtra.com/default.aspx?tabid=42&view=topic&forumid=34&postid=6606|website=[[Comic Buyer's Guide]]|accessdate=18 April 2018|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20071026061211/http://www.cbgxtra.com/default.aspx?tabid=42&view=topic&forumid=34&postid=6606|archivedate=October 26, 2007|date=December 12, 2005}}</ref> and ultimately sold more than six million copies.<ref name="nerd"/> The first installments of "Reign of the Supermen!" were the top five best-selling comic books for the month.<ref>{{cite news | last = | first= | date = June 1993 | title = Wizard Market Watch | work = [[Wizard (magazine)|Wizard]] | issue = 22 | pages = 134–5}}</ref> ''Superman'' #75 was the bestselling comic book issue of 1992<ref name="1992Sales">{{cite web | first=|last=|url=http://www.comichron.com/monthlycomicssales/1992.html |title=1992 Comic Book Sales Figures |publisher=The Comics Chronicles |accessdate= December 6, 2012|archiveurl=https://www.webcitation.org/6Ci71oFWW |archivedate= December 6, 2012 |deadurl=no}}</ref> and the four bestselling issues of 1993 were Superman-related.<ref name="1993Sales">{{cite web | first=|last=|url=http://www.comichron.com/monthlycomicssales/1993.html |title=1993 Comic Book Sales Figures |publisher=The Comics Chronicles |accessdate= December 6, 2012|archiveurl=https://www.webcitation.org/6Ci6jkCOt |archivedate= December 6, 2012 |deadurl=no}}</ref> |
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Again, like the previous two storylines, the collected edition of ''Reign of the Supermen!'' did not use its original title; DC Comics instead chose to use ''The Return of Superman''. |
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===In later years=== |
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==Aftermath== |
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In the years since its release, some commentators have dismissed "The Death of Superman" as little more than a publicity stunt to give the Superman comics a brief surge in sales and have contended it caused a decline in the comic book industry.<ref name="nerd"/><ref name="omnibus"/><ref name="cbr500" /> Indeed, each series' sales immediately declined following Superman's resurrection<ref name="nerd"/> and many fans felt they had been deceived when he was revived.<ref name="vulturedoomsday"/> This frustration was mocked in "[[Worst Episode Ever]]", the eleventh episode of ''[[The Simpsons]]''{{'}} [[The Simpsons (season 12)|twelfth season]], in which [[Nelson Muntz]] holds the comic ''The Death Of [[Sad Sack]]'' and declares "this better not be another fake-out", in reference to the angry reaction to the revival.<ref name="Scully">[[Mike Scully|Scully, Mike]]. (2009). Commentary for "[[Worst Episode Ever]]", in ''[[The Simpsons]]: The Complete [[The Simpsons (season 12)|Twelfth Season]]'' [DVD]. [[20th Century Fox]].</ref> |
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''[[ComicsAlliance]]'' writer Chris Sims believed that most people bought ''Superman'' #75 just to see Superman's death,<ref name="comalldeath"/> while Weldon speculated its sales were propelled by hopes it would become valuable.<ref name="visual"/> Sims recalled that when he worked in a comic book store in 2009, some customers were shocked that DC was still publishing Superman comics, as they did not read the story's conclusion.<ref name="comalldeath"/> Stern denied "The Death of Superman" was a publicity stunt, believing the sensation was caused only because it was a good story: "The word got out on a slow news day, and the media storm that followed was greater than anything we could have hoped for. But it was all thanks to the story's power."<ref name="omnibus"/> |
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===Superman=== |
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During the time Superman spent in stasis recovering in the Fortress of Solitude, his hair grew to shoulder length. Even after reclaiming his title as the one true Superman, he kept his hair long and this was how he was depicted for much of his appearances in the 1990s comics. Before his wedding with Lois, he cut his hair. |
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Aside from this, "The Death of Superman" has been generally seen favorably. Sims called the event DC's greatest success of the 1990s and one of the definitive Superman stories, noting while killing off an important comics character was not an original idea, "The Death of Superman" seemed more ambitious and had a greater legacy.<ref name="comalldeath"/> Steve Morris (''[[Comics Beat]]'') also thought it had a major impact, saying it had "strong storytelling and a simple, if well-done, central narrative."<ref name="beatrev"/> Morris said the story was well planned, especially considering the fact it could have easily misfired.<ref name="beatrev">{{cite web|last1=Morris|first1=Steve|title=Review: The Death of Superman|url=http://www.comicsbeat.com/review-the-death-of-superman/|website=[[Comics Beat]]|accessdate=18 April 2018|date=February 20, 2013}}</ref> Brian Salvatore (''Multiversity Comics'') thought the story was effective and "present[ed] some pretty compelling arguments for why Superman is the greatest superhero of all time, without ever really coming out and saying that." He also praised the characterization for forcing Superman not to predict the movements of Doomsday, and rather rely on pure instinct.<ref name="multicomicsdeathrev">{{cite web|last1=Salvatore|first1=Brian|title=The Death of Superman|url=http://www.multiversitycomics.com/reviews/the-death-of-superman/|website=Multiversity Comics|accessdate=18 April 2018|date=February 21, 2017}}</ref> |
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Up until the ''Death of Superman'' event, DC Comics writers lived on a fixed set of rules when it came to how the Post-Crisis Superman's powers were portrayed. This was changed upon his return. The change could be traced to when the Eradicator transformed Kryptonite energy into something that would re-power the revived Superman (to a greater degree of powers than he had prior to his "death"). In a battle with [[Lobo (DC Comics)|Lobo]], Superman discovered he could survive the vacuum of space indefinitely, something the Post-Crisis Superman could not do before his "death". He also noticed his strength had increased. Although this was part of a subplot involving Superman's powers growing out of control as he absorbed too much solar energy, the depiction of his power was not as consistent as before. |
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Not all reviewers have been as positive. Chad Nevett (''[[Comic Book Resources]]'') called the story boring and jumbled (comparing issue #75 to "more of trading cards that intend to tell a story than an actual comic story") and viewed it as just another typical event crossover.<ref name="cbrreread">{{cite web|last1=Nevett|first1=Chad|title=The Reread Reviews — The Death of Superman|url=https://www.cbr.com/the-reread-reviews-the-death-of-superman/|website=[[Comic Book Resources]]|accessdate=18 April 2018|date=November 1, 2009}}</ref> Morris did criticize its subplots (calling them nonsensical) and felt Doomsday was terribly designed, disagreeing with Sims that it was a definitive Superman story.<ref name="beatrev"/> Salvatore felt it had missed opportunities and criticized the Justice League's role in the story, comparing them to punching bags. Both Salvatore and Nevett thought Doomsday came out of nowhere,<ref name="multicomicsdeathrev"/><ref name="cbrreread"/> and Nevett joked he was a "walking plot device" rather than a true villain.<ref name="cbrreread"/> |
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===The surviving Supermen=== |
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The Metropolis Kid (who later accepted the name "[[Superboy (Kon-El)|Superboy]]") and The Man of Steel (whose name became simply "[[Steel (John Henry Irons)|Steel]]") went on to become recurring characters in the DC Universe, each eventually getting his own monthly title. |
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===Legacy in comics=== |
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* Superboy was a member of The Ravers, [[Young Justice]], the [[Legion of Super-Heroes]], and the [[Teen Titans]], before perishing in ''[[Infinite Crisis]]''. He was brought back to life in ''[[Final Crisis: Legion of Three Worlds]]''. He eventually discovered that he is a Kryptonian/Human hybrid clone, created from the [[DNA]] of Superman and [[Lex Luthor]]. |
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"The Death of Superman" had an immediate effect on DC's comics. After its success, DC began a series of events that resulted in its most iconic heroes being killed or disabled.<ref name="nerd"/> [[Batman]] followed shortly afterward, with the "[[Batman: Knightfall|Knightfall]]" crossover, followed by [[Wonder Woman]], Green Lantern, [[Green Arrow]], and the Flash.<ref name="visual"/> Green Lantern's event, "[[Emerald Twilight]]", in which he turned into the villain [[Parallax (comics)|Parallax]], was directly caused by events that occurred during "The Death of Superman".<ref name="polygonexplained" /> "With the industry in freefall," wrote Weldon, "it didn't matter much to DC that death/disabling stunts offered only brief sales spikes."<ref name="nerd"/> |
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* Steel appeared as a character in the [[DC animated universe]], as well as [[Steel (1997 film)|his own film]], and became a member of the [[Justice League]]; he also briefly became a true superhuman, no longer relying on outside sources (i.e. the armor) to provide his powers, and somewhat of a scientist figure and fatherly figure for the also artificially empowered [[Infinity, Inc.#Infinity Inc. (vol. 2, 2007 - 2008)|Infinitors]], powerless again but able to provide counseling, technical expertise, and support. |
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* The [[Eradicator (comics)|Eradicator]] became leader of a new team of [[Outsiders (comics)|Outsiders]] for a while and his current status is that he is allied with Markovia after Geo-Force (Prince Brion) declares an agreement was signed between himself and the Eradicator to be allies during the 'New Krypton/War of The Supermen' storyline, resulting in Markovia being shunned by the world at large as a result of New Krypton's recent actions and its peoples holding protests from this result. |
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* The [[Hank Henshaw|Cyborg Superman]] becomes a recurring nemesis in the ''Superman'' and ''Green Lantern'' titles, leading and upgrading the former cybernetic patrol organization known as the [[Manhunters (DC Comics)|Manhunters]] and joining the [[Sinestro Corps]] as a field officer, hoping to be rid of his [[immortality]]. |
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The characters established during "The Death of Superman"—Doomsday, Steel, Superboy, and the Cyborg Superman—would all become recurring characters in DC's comics. Superboy and Steel both received their own [[ongoing series]] after the story's conclusion<ref name="visual"/> and Steel went on to star in his own movie, in which he was portrayed by Superman fan [[Shaquille O'Neal]].<ref name="comallsteelmovie">{{cite web|last1=Sims|first1=Chris|title=ComicsAlliance Reviews 'Steel' (1997), Part One|url=http://comicsalliance.com/comicsalliance-reviews-steel-1997-part-one/|website=[[ComicsAlliance]]|accessdate=19 April 2018|date=June 11, 2012}}</ref> Superboy remained a fixture of the DC Universe until he was killed in ''[[Infinite Crisis]]'' (2005—2006).<ref name="visual"/> The Cyborg Superman became a recurring nemesis of Superman and Green Lantern.<ref name="visual"/> Doomsday's origin story was explored in ''[[Superman/Doomsday: Hunter/Prey]]'' (1995)<ref name="vulturedoomsday"/> and the character returned in later storylines, most notably in "[[Reign of Doomsday]]" (2011), which heavily references "The Death of Superman" and features Doomsday hunting down Steel, Superboy, Eradicator, and the Cyborg Superman.<ref name="reigndidio">{{cite web|last1=Phegley|first1=Kiel|title=REIGN OF THE DOOMSAYERS: Dan DiDio|url=https://www.cbr.com/reign-of-the-doomsayers-dan-didio/|website=[[Comic Book Resources]]|accessdate=19 April 2018|date=February 2, 2011}}</ref> |
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===Supermen of America=== |
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The character Mitch Anderson was introduced during the ''Doomsday!'' arc. Originally a huge fan of Guy Gardner, The Man of Steel saved Mitch's family as Gardner was unable to do so at the time during Doomsday's rampage. He also befriended Jimmy Olsen and [[Bibbo Bibbowski|Bo "Bibbo" Bibbowski]] during Superman's funeral. After Superman's return, Anderson gathered survivors of Doomsday's rampage at the site where the creature first emerged to share their experiences through the Internet, to which Superman also responded. The Man of Steel answered Mitch and other survivors of his experiences with the murderous creature along the details of Doomsday's origins to them. Mitch later developed a metahuman power of [[List of powers in superhero fiction#Magnetokinesis|magnetokinesis]] and became the superhero Outburst. Desiring to follow Superman's example as a way to return the favor to the Man of Steel, Anderson formed the superhero team [[Supermen of America]], although the fate of the team hasn't been revealed after they were attacked by [[OMAC (comics)|OMACs]] during ''[[Infinite Crisis]]''. |
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In 2011, DC relaunched its entire comics line in an initiative called [[the New 52]], which revamped the DC Universe and erased certain events. Superman was altered considerably, being shorter-tempered and was no longer in love with Lois Lane.<ref name="new52">{{cite web|last1=Rogers|first1=Vaneta|title='What If You Missed the NEW 52' - SUPERMAN|url=https://www.newsarama.com/28246-what-if-you-missed-the-new-52-superman.html|website=[[Newsarama]]|accessdate=19 April 2018|date=March 3, 2016}}</ref> However, "The Death of Superman" remained intact in the new DC Universe.<ref name="issue32">{{cite journal|last1=Johns|first1=Geoff|title=The Men of Tomorrow, Chapter One: Ulysses|journal=[[Superman (comic book)|Superman]]|date=June 25, 2014|volume=3|issue=32|publisher=[[DC Comics]]}}</ref> |
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===Death in comics=== |
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Superman's deathlike manner set into motion a series of resurrections in the [[DC Universe]]. [[Green Arrow]], [[Flash (Barry Allen)|Barry Allen]], [[Jason Todd]], [[Donna Troy]], [[Elongated Man]], [[Hal Jordan]], [[Metamorpho]], [[Batman]], and others have experienced [[comic book death]]s and resurrections. These events have been attributed to the door between life and death being kept open since Superman died. |
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==Adaptations== |
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As a Kryptonian, Superman's alien genetic material enables him to absorb sunlight and perform superhuman feats. Superman survived his death by entering into a hibernation-like state and the Eradicator's use of him as a "conduit" by which he could absorb solar energy "restarted" Superman's body, compared by some writers to a Kryptonian version of the [[mammalian diving reflex]] involving solar energy restoring his body to life (although sources such as Professor Hamilton and Batman have noted that available evidence suggests that the remaining energy reserves in Superman's body when he died would have actually "run down" before the Eradicator took his body, suggesting that other factors may have contributed to his resurrection). |
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[[Roger Stern]] wrote a novelization of "The Death of Superman", ''The Death and Life of Superman'', in 1993 (hardcover {{ISBN|0-553-09582-X}}; paperback {{ISBN|0-553-56930-9}}). A young adult book was written by [[Louise Simonson]] under the title ''[[Superman: Doomsday & Beyond]]'' and released at the same time as the hardcover of ''Death and Life''. It features cover art by [[Alex Ross]] ({{ISBN|0-553-48168-1}}). |
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A [[video game]] based on the story, ''[[The Death and Return of Superman]]'', was developed by [[Blizzard Entertainment]] and [[Sunsoft]] and released in 1994 for the [[Super Nintendo Entertainment System]] and 1995 for the [[Sega Genesis]]. ''The Death and Return of Superman'' is a [[Side-scrolling video game|side-scrolling]] [[beat 'em up]] in which the player controls Superman, Superboy, Steel, Eradicator, and the Cyborg Superman as they attempt to save Metropolis. ''[[Nintendo Life]]''{{'}}s Dave Cook considered it the game that "finally [gave] Superman the video game justice he deserves in what is undoubtedly one of his most celebrated stories"<ref name="nlifegame">{{cite web|last1=Cook|first1=Dave|title=Feature: Batman V Superman In The Battle Of The Nintendo Games|url=http://www.nintendolife.com/news/2016/03/feature_batman_v_superman_in_the_battle_of_the_nintendo_games|website=[[Nintendo Life]]|publisher=[[Gamer Network]]|accessdate=20 April 2018|date=March 24, 2016}}</ref> and ''[[IGN]]''{{'}}s Greg Miller called it one of his favorite games and said it was what inspired him to become a video game journalist.<ref name="millerfavgame">{{cite web|last1=Miller|first1=Greg|title=Greg Miller's Top 10 Games of All Time|url=http://www.ign.com/articles/2014/02/10/greg-millers-top-10-games-of-all-time|website=[[IGN]]|publisher=[[Ziff Davis]]|accessdate=20 April 2018|date=February 10, 2014}}</ref> |
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A later encounter with a villainous sentient sun from the future known as "Solaris" would reveal a future where Superman is still alive approximately 830,000 years in the future, leading him to speculate that death may never come for him. |
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In the wake of "The Death of Superman", Warner Bros. acquired the rights to produce [[Superman in film|Superman films]]. It hired [[Jon Peters]] to write a script for a sequel to ''[[Superman IV: The Quest for Peace]]''. The film, called ''Superman Reborn'', would have heavily borrowed from "The Death of Superman", including the fight-to-the-death between Superman and Doomsday. However, Warner Bros. disliked the script due to its similar [[theme (arts)|themes]] to ''[[Batman Forever]]'' (1995). Later script rewrites altered the story considerably and the film ultimately never came to fruition.<ref name="Hughes">{{cite book|last1=Hughes|first1=David|title=The Greatest Sci-Fi Movies Never Made|date=2008|publisher=Titan Books|location=London|isbn=9781845767556|edition=1st revised and expanded}}</ref> |
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Jonathan Kent, during his [[near death experience]], explained to Clark's soul how, being a Kryptonian, he could never die, or at least that he could die only after much more grievous injuries than a simple beating: he merely accepted his death because his human upbringing instilled in him a strong sense of human mortality, to which he conformed. Once he accepted and embraced his alien makeup, he was able to refuse death and lead his father back to the land of the living. |
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In 2007, an [[animation|animated]] adaptation, ''[[Superman: Doomsday]]'', was released [[direct-to-video]].<ref name="igndoomsday">{{cite web|last1=Monfette|first1=Christopher|title=Superman Doomsday DVD Review|url=http://www.ign.com/articles/2007/09/18/superman-doomsday-dvd-review|website=[[IGN]]|publisher=[[Ziff Davis]]|accessdate=20 April 2018|date=September 18, 2007}}</ref> ''Superman: Doomsday'' is only loosely based on "The Death of Superman"; in order to fit it within a 75-minute runtime, the story was condensed and greatly altered.<ref name="dcblogannounce">{{cite web|last1=Beedle|first1=Tim|title=The Death and Return of Superman Gets a Two-Part Animated Movie|url=https://www.dccomics.com/blog/2017/07/21/the-death-and-return-of-superman-gets-a-two-part-animated-movie|publisher=[[DC Comics]]|accessdate=16 April 2018|date=July 21, 2017}}</ref> The film was a commercial success<ref name="visual"/> and started the [[DC Universe Original Animated Movies]] line of direct-to-video releases.<ref name="dcblogannounce"/><ref name="geeksmith">{{cite web|last1=Mclaughlin|first1=Robert|title=How Superman became Will Smith’s adversary|url=http://www.denofgeek.com/us/movies/superman/14641/how-superman-became-will-smith%E2%80%99s-adversary|website=[[Den of Geek]]|accessdate=21 April 2018|date=July 17, 2009}}</ref> |
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===''Emerald Twilight''=== |
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The consequences of the destruction of Coast City in "''Reign of the Supermen!''" would, in turn, lead to DC Comics revamping Green Lantern. After an issue which established that several key members of Hal Jordan's supporting cast had survived the destruction of Coast City (due to them being out of town helping [[Carol Ferris]] save her estranged mother), DC moved directly into the controversial storyline "''[[Emerald Twilight]]''". ''Emerald Twilight'' saw Hal Jordan have a complete mental breakdown after his attempt to rebuild Coast City with his power ring resulted in his being ordered to return to [[Oa]] for punishment for breaking the rule of using his power ring for personal gain. In response, Jordan would destroy the [[Green Lantern Corps]] and absorb the power of the Corps' Main Power Battery into himself, becoming "[[Parallax (comics)|Parallax]]". This, in turn, would lead to the introduction of [[Kyle Rayner]], as Hal's replacement as Green Lantern and ''[[Zero Hour (comics)|Zero Hour: Crisis in Time!]]'', which featured Jordan as the main villain. |
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''[[Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice]]'' (2016) draws narrative elements from "The Death of Superman". In the film's climax, Lex Luthor uses forbidden Kryptonian genetic engineering projects to combine [[General Zod]]'s corpse with his own DNA, causing Doomsday's creation. Using a Kryptonite spear, Superman stabs Doomsday, but Doomsday stabs Superman in return with a bone spur emerging from his right wrist after Wonder Woman cut off the monster's hand, resulting in both combatants dying in the battle.<ref name="ewbvs">{{cite web|last1=Franich|first1=Darren|title=Death of Superman returns|url=http://ew.com/article/2016/03/28/death-superman-returns/|website=[[Entertainment Weekly]]|accessdate=20 April 2018|date=March 28, 2016}}</ref> |
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===The Wedding=== |
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Even after Superman had returned to life, plans for Lois and Clark's wedding took some time to develop. The relationship between the two became rocky and for a time they separated. [[Mr. Mxyzptlk]] saw that as wrong, and tried to reunite them, but was finally persuaded to let them work things out by themselves. Finally in 1996, tying into the wedding of Lois Lane and Clark Kent in the ''[[Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman]]'' television series, Lois returns to Metropolis and rekindles her romance with Clark. The two set in motion their plans for a wedding and are married in ''[[Superman: The Wedding Album]]''. |
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In 2017, DC announced a two-part animated adaptation, ''[[The Death of Superman (film)|The Death of Superman]]'' and ''Reign of the Supermen'', to be released as part of the DC Universe Original Animated Movies line in late 2018 and early 2019.<ref name="cbrfirstlook">{{cite web|last1=Matadeen|first1=Renaldo|title=Death of Superman Animated Film Debuts First Image|url=https://www.cbr.com/first-look-death-superman-animated-movie/|website=[[Comic Book Resources]]|accessdate=16 April 2018|date=February 25, 2018}}</ref> The new adaptation will be more faithful to the original story; according to DC's Tim Beedle, the film is "much less condensed and will include many of the fan-favorite moments from the story that were left out of ''Doomsday''."<ref name="dcblogannounce"/> |
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===''Superman/Doomsday: Hunter/Prey'' and ''Superman: The Doomsday Wars''=== |
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In the three-issue miniseries ''Superman/Doomsday: Hunter/Prey'' (1994), Superman journeys to [[Apokolips]] and Calaton to find [[Doomsday (comics)|Doomsday]]'s body. Assisted by [[Waverider (comics)|Waverider]], he confronts [[Darkseid]] and [[Hank Henshaw]], finds that his killer is still alive, and discovers the details of Doomsday's origin as a genetically-engineered lifeform created by the Kryptonians of the distant past, inspiring the planet's interest in genetic engineering. Doomsday is carried to the end of time, where, it was hoped, the entropy destroying all existence would destroy him. In ''Superman: The Doomsday Wars'' (1998), Doomsday's mind is under the influence of [[Brainiac (character)|Brainiac]], forcing Superman to fight two of his most powerful enemies at once in order to rescue [[Lana Lang]]'s newborn child. With Brainiac's intellect, Doomsday easily defeats the current Justice League before Superman is able to force Brainiac's mind out of Doomsday and trap Doomsday in four teleporters, each of which is locked in a perpetual loop, preventing Doomsday from ever attempting escape, as there was never more than 25% of him in one place. |
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=== ''Wonder Woman'' #111-115 === |
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Doomsday was brought back, in clone form, during John Byrne's Wonder Woman run. During the arc, scientist Doctor Julian Lazarus, who had devised a means of creating copies of living beings from video footage, tried to create a new body for his son, who had died in an accident that he blamed himself for, Lazarus convinced that he had preserved his son in the computer system (his colleagues were convinced that he had just created a copy of what he thought his son should be, but he was too insane from grief to be reasoned with). He had provided his son with recordings of various superhero battles that he could 'play' as though they were a video game, but these had resulted in his son recreating the Barry Allen Flash and [[Sinestro]]-both currently assumed to be dead-to 'attack' the city in the belief that he was only playing a game, with his father only learning what his son was doing after he created a clone of Doomsday. Wonder Woman was only just able to defeat this clone with the aid of the disguised Hercules and the new Wonder Girl; Superman learned of the creature's rampage, but was too far away to get there before Wonder Woman destroyed the duplicate and he decided to avoid asking for details due to the potential awkwardness of his recent break-up with Lois Lane. |
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===''Superman: The Man of Steel'' #75=== |
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''Superman: The Man of Steel'' #75 served as a tribute/satire of the original Doomsday storyline. [[Louise Simonson]] is the credited writer, but penciller [[Jon Bogdanove]], seeing the opportunity to express his sense of humor, re-wrote it with Simonson's blessing. During a regular visit to Earth, Mr. Mxyptlk is angered when Superman, now married to Lois Lane, introduces Mxyptlk to Lois and refers to him as a harmless villain. To prove Superman wrong, Mxypltk resurrects Doomsday and fights the monster, in a parody of the ''Superman'' (vol. 2) #75 fight. Superman and Lois are forced to watch as Doomsday and Mxyptlk fight to the death, at which point instead of the afterlife, the fifth dimension imp ends up in the "real world", where he is met by DC Comics editor Mike Carlin and promptly returned to the comic world, where he is scolded by Superman for his action and forced to leave Earth, having "proven" his toughness. |
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===''Superman: Day of Doom''=== |
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[[File:Superman Day of Doom 4.jpg|upright|thumb|''Superman: Day of Doom'' #4 (2003). Written and penciled by Dan Jurgens and inked by Bill Sienkiewicz.]] |
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Writer/penciller [[Dan Jurgens]], with inker [[Bill Sienkiewicz]] revisited Superman's battle with Doomsday in the 2003 miniseries ''Superman: Day of Doom'', exploring how the event affects those who knew the fallen hero and introducing a new villain, [[N.R.G.-X (DC Comics)|Remnant]]. This dark tale is reprinted in a trade paperback. |
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In the days before the anniversary of Superman's death, Ty Duffy, ''[[Daily Planet|The Daily Planet]]''s staff reporter, retraces Superman's cross-country battle with Doomsday; Duffy resents the assignment. During the investigation, a mysterious figure also follows Doomsday's cross-country path and commits a series of murders and destructions along the way. Duffy discovers that many of Superman's rogues have claimed to have created [[Doomsday (comics)|Doomsday]] and many survivors of Doomsday's rampage and [[Coast City]]'s destruction he interviewed express hatred for the hero. He ultimately comes face-to-face with the Man of Steel himself and reveals to Superman that his father committed suicide because of losses suffered connected with the battle with Doomsday. Duffy reproaches Superman, telling him that thousands have died due to his battle with Doomsday, but people rarely ever acknowledge their deaths, as they prefer to focus on Superman's revival, feeling that Superman's resurrection cheapened awareness of the others who died in Doomsday's rampage and the holocaust of Coast City. Although Superman disagrees, he carries considerable guilt over the deaths caused because he could not stop Doomsday earlier. |
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On his way home, Duffy is kidnapped by Remnant, who wishes to show the world that Superman is evil. He intends to stage terrorist acts at the locations where Doomsday rampaged, including ''[[Daily Planet|The Daily Planet]]'', by planting a bomb within a van parked on the exact spot where the battle ended. Superman rescues Duffy, along with [[Perry White]], who was also captured by the villain, and the building. Despite the victory, flyers announce that Superman is not a messiah, but rather the devil incarnate; the villain disappears. Superman approaches Duffy, and challenges him to not back off from the tough questions. The Man of Steel tells Duffy he will be waiting for the conclusion of his article, and also asks him another one; if Superman was not around, would there be fewer Doomsdays (monsters seeking to confront Superman) or more [[Coast City]]s (a disaster that only happened because Superman was not there)? |
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===Imperiex War=== |
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During the [[Our Worlds at War|Imperiex War]], Doomsday was released from the teleportation matrix and his mind 'reprogrammed' by [[Manchester Black]] with the goal of unleashing him against the [[Imperiex]] probes, Black altering Doomsday's mind so that his usual hatred of Superman was redirected against Imperiex. Despite his hatred of Doomsday, Superman fought alongside him to defeat various probes, but Doomsday was finally incinerated down to his skeleton by Imperiex-Prime, Superman only escaping the same fate thanks to Darkseid teleporting him to safety. |
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===''Superman'' (vol. 2) #175=== |
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Following the War, Doomsday's body was retrieved and his restoration accelerated by Lex Luthor as part of a deal with Darkseid. Eventually released on the anniversary of his original defeat by Superman as a 'test drive', it was soon revealed that Doomsday has evolved intelligence and intends to kill Luthor. Without any aid from his allies, Superman defeats the monster at Washington D.C., exploiting the fact that Doomsday's new intelligence also gives him a fear of death that he had previously lacked. |
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===The Doomsday Protocol=== |
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[[Batman]], with the aid of Superman, devised a measure made after the Man of Steel recovered from his first battle with Doomsday, that, when the Justice League or any other superhero groups encounter a Doomsday Level Threat, a group of heroes, authorities and military forces would contain it within a proximity after clearing all civilians within it. If Superman and the rest fall, the Doomsday Protocol, which is a dimensional projecting bomb, will commence by sending the threat to the [[Phantom Zone]] after detonating it.<ref>''Action Comics'' #825</ref> Despite Doomsday and other powerful individuals such as [[Superboy-Prime]]'s recurring appearances, Batman's measure has yet to be used. |
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===''Batman: Under the Hood''=== |
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The Batman storyline,"[[Batman: Hush|Hush]]," implies that Batman, whose life has been defined by tragedies, has become obsessed with the possibility of resurrection since Superman's return, which the story arc "[[Batman: Under the Hood|Under the Hood]]" confirms. When more allies such as Green Arrow, and later his protégé Jason Todd also return from their graves, Batman seeks to learn how to bring back the dead in hope he may be able to resurrect his loved ones.{{issue|date=May 2015}} |
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===''Infinite Crisis''=== |
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During ''[[Infinite Crisis]]'', Batman told Superman that the last time he inspired anyone was when he died.<ref>''Infinite Crisis'' #1 (October 2005)</ref> Later, the Golden Age/Earth-2 Superman, [[Superman (Earth-Two)|Kal-L]], fought and defeated Doomsday alongside the modern [[Superman]] during the Battle of Metropolis, after the villains rescue Doomsday specifically because they wish him to lead the assault on the city.<ref>''Infinite Crisis #7'' (May 2006)</ref> |
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===''Legion of 3 Worlds''=== |
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In ''[[Final Crisis: Legion of 3 Worlds]]'', [[Superboy (Kon-El)|Superboy]] (who had been killed battling [[Superboy-Prime]]) is resurrected in the 31st Century by the [[Legion of Super-Heroes]] using the same regeneration matrix that resurrected Superman, although it took a thousand years to restore Superboy. |
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===''Blackest Night''=== |
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During the ''[[Blackest Night]]'' event, the anniversary of Superman's original battle with Doomsday has become a day of remembrance honoring the deaths of superheroes and those they have failed to save. During the [[Black Lantern Corps]]' universal invasion, the demon [[Nekron]], the Lord of the Black Corps, reveals that he allowed the Eradicator's successful reviving of the Man of Steel so that the demon would have a sleeper agent with other resurrected individuals. Superman's previous status as deceased allows Nekron's black power ring to transform Kal-El into an undead Black Lantern under the demon's commands. Superboy (Kon-El) (who also has the previous status as deceased, resulting from his battle with [[Superboy-Prime]]) also becomes a Black Lantern with Kal-El.<ref>''Blackest Night'' #5 (January 2010)</ref> Superman is eventually freed by a [[White Lantern Corps|white ring]], while Wonder Girl is able to free Superboy by using the fact that his past self's corpse is 'still' in the regeneration matrix, confusing the ring into leaving Superboy's finger so that [[Krypto]] can destroy it. |
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===''The Tomorrow Memory''=== |
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[[File:Dan Jurgens by Gage Skidmore.jpg|right|thumb|Dan Jurgens, one of the pencilers/writers of ''The Death of Superman'']] |
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In 2010, Dan Jurgens revisited ''The Death of Superman'' saga once more on a ''Booster Gold'' storyline, involving Booster Gold's attempts to thwart a time-traveling assassin, Sondra Crain, from murdering Hank Henshaw before he becomes the villain he is destined to be. Even though the hero successfully saved Henshaw, Booster also questions himself if he should have left him to die in order to save the lives he would eventually murder. Elsewhere, Booster's sister, Michelle, is in Coast City at a point in the past before Henshaw's future self's citywide attack and Booster is forced to have Michelle abandon her lover on orders from Rip Hunter, Booster's future son.<ref>''Booster Gold'' #28-29 (March April 2010)</ref> |
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===''Justice League: Generation Lost''=== |
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"The Death and Return Of Superman" storyline was evoked by writer Judd Winnick in ''[[Justice League: Generation Lost]]'' to justify/explain away JLI financier [[Maxwell Lord]]'s descent into villainy. In the series, it is revealed that Max's mother (with whom it is revealed that he had a quasi-incestuous relationship) was living in Coast City when the city was destroyed, causing him to become bitter and ultimately be the reason behind the betrayal of the superhero community and the Justice League.<ref>''Justice League: Generation Lost'' #20</ref> |
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===''Reign of Doomsday''=== |
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In the 2011 ''[[Reign of Doomsday]]'' crossover, Doomsday returns and attempts to hunt down and capture the four Supermen who were created in the aftermath of Superman's demise. Prior to facing off against Superman, Doomsday battles [[Supergirl (Kara Zor-El)|Supergirl]] and the [[Justice League]], a situation that editor [[Eddie Berganza]] noted resembled the initial ''The Death of Superman'' issue where Doomsday fought the League before his confrontation with Superman.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.comicbookresources.com/?id=31061&page=article |title=REIGN OF THE DOOMSAYERS: Eddie Berganza, Pt. 2 |publisher=Comic Book Resources |date= |accessdate=2011-04-02}}</ref> |
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===The New 52=== |
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In 2013's ''Action Comics'' #16, Lois Lane and Jimmy Olsen meet at Superman's memorial statue (now depicted in his updated costume), per Clark Kent's request. It is known that three years ago, Superman died on what is known as "Doomsday" before returning from the dead to defeat the enemy that had killed him. The day was remembered due to the red sun radiation in the air and a rainfall of blood. Even though the story itself never names the enemy that killed Superman, it is implied the day itself is known as Doomsday, and the creature and/or enemy that killed Superman is nameless. The book ends with the appearance of Superman's new nemesis, Super-Doomsday, a creature formerly known as Superdoom that is also sharing his name with the day he appeared, as anointed by the "Little Man". |
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Following the death of the New 52 Superman of Kryptonite poisoning, the pre-''[[Flashpoint (comics)|Flashpoint]]'' Superman-trapped in this timeline following ''[[Convergence (comics)|Convergence]]''-attempts to recover his other self's remains to take them to the Fortress of Solitude, with the goal of restoring him to life in the same way that he was restored after his battle with Doomsday, but when he and [[Lana Lang]] arrive at the Fortress, a search of its archives reveals that there is no regeneration matrix in the Fortress, leaving Superman with no way to bring his counterpart back from the dead, ultimately leaving him as the new successor. |
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In ''[[DC Rebirth]]'', the actions of Mister Mxyzptlk result in a new timeline being created combining the histories of the pre-''Flashpoint'' and ''New 52'' Supermen into one, with the new history including Superman's death and resurrection after his battle with Doomsday. |
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==Audience and media response== |
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''The Death and Return of Superman'' storyline sold exceptionally well and, since it was intertwined through numerous different comic series (including ''[[Action Comics]]'', ''[[Superman (comic book)|Superman]],'' ''Superman: The Man of Steel,'' and ''[[Adventures of Superman (comic book)|Adventures of Superman]]'', among others), brought in millions of readers to DC Comics. Superman's creator, [[Jerry Siegel]] himself, who in 1961 had predicted the Man of Steel's death in an "imaginary story," met with then Superman editor [[Mike Carlin]] to tell him that he was very impressed by ''his'' version of it.<ref>[http://theages.superman.nu/History/DeathAndReturn.php The Death and Return of Superman] at ''Superman Through the Ages''</ref> The first five installments of "Reign of the Supermen!" were the top five best-selling comic books for the month.<ref>{{cite news | last = | first= | date = June 1993 | title = Wizard Market Watch | work = [[Wizard (magazine)|Wizard]] | issue = 22 | pages = 134–5}}</ref> |
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The cover of ''Superman'' (vol. 2) #75 (shown above in infobox) became an iconic image: Superman's tattered cape wrapped around a pole, marking the spot where Superman died. (Certain prints of ''Superman'' #75 contained a black armband with the familiar "S" symbol adorning it.) DC shipped between 2.5 and 3 million copies of ''Superman'' #75, with most stores selling out of the issue on the day of its release.<ref>Miller, John Jackson. [http://www.cbgxtra.com/default.aspx?tabid=42&view=topic&forumid=34&postid=6606 "Nov. 17, 1992: A $30 Million Day — and the Days After,"] "The 1900s: 10 biggest events from 100 years in comics," CBGXtra.com (Dec. 12, 2005).</ref> This became the best-selling comic book issue of all time. [[Mike Carlin]] denied that Superman's death was intended to be a publicity stunt — rather, journalists at the time did not understand how modern comic book stories tend to play out, and they wrongly reported that Superman's death was permanent, causing a sensation.<ref>{{harvp|Daniels|2004|p=168}}: ""Characters die every day in comics. This is old news to us. If it had been a new idea, I would have been worried about it, but this really is one of our cliché stories," said Mike Carlin. [...] Yet to the mainstream press, whose reporters perhaps didn't realize that modern comics told stories over many months, an issue that ended with the Man of Steel dead meant that he intended to stay that way."</ref> |
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==Criticism== |
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Although ''Superman'' (vol. 2) #75 became a bestseller for DC Comics, some contend it also helped bring about a decline in the comic book industry. Many readers felt they had been deceived when Superman remained "dead" for less than a year before being brought back to life. Fans were disappointed with what they saw as a mere publicity stunt and did not continue reading the books for the pre-ordained return. A large part of the sales from ''Superman'' (vol. 2) #75 were from non-fans who wanted the issue as a collectible investment. Due to the massive number of books printed (except for the platinum editions), it is unlikely to ever be valuable. Retailer and columnist [[Chuck Rozanski]] cites the sales of this book as an example of the [[speculator boom of the 1990s]], which ended in the [[bust of the speculator market]].<ref>[[Rozanski, Chuck]] (2013). [http://www.milehighcomics.com/tales/cbg127.html "Death of Superman Promotion of 1992"]. [[Mile High Comics]]. Retrieved May 3, 2015.</ref> |
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==Reading order== |
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* Prologue: Approaching Doom |
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** ''Superman: The Man of Steel'' #17 "Here Be Monsters" (Nov-92) |
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** ''Superman'' vol. 2 #73 "Time Ryders" (Nov-92) |
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** ''Adventures of Superman'' #496 "Truth and Consequences" (Nov-92) |
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** ''Action Comics'' #683 "The Trail of the Jackal" (Nov-92) |
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* Act 1: Doomsday! |
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** ''Superman: The Man of Steel'' #18 "Doomsday! Part One" (Dec-92) |
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** ''Justice League America'' #69 "Down for the Count" (Dec-92) |
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** ''Superman'' vol. 2 #74 "Countdown to Doomsday!" (Dec-92) |
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** ''Adventures of Superman'' #497 "Under Fire" (Dec-92) |
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** ''Action Comics'' #684 "...Doomsday is Near!" (Dec-92) |
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** ''Superman: The Man of Steel'' #19 "Doomsday is Here!" (Jan-93) |
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** ''Superman'' vol. 2 #75 "Doomsday!" (Jan-93) |
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* Act 2: Funeral for a Friend |
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** ''Adventures of Superman'' #498 "Death of a Legend" (Jan-93) |
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** ''Justice League America'' #70 "Grieving" (Jan-93) |
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** ''Action Comics'' #685 "Re:Actions" (Jan-93) |
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** ''Superman: The Man of Steel'' #20 "Funeral Day" (Feb-93) |
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** ''Superman'' vol. 2 #76 "Metropolis Mailbag II" (Feb-93) |
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** ''Adventures of Superman'' #499 "Grave Obsession" (Feb-93) |
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** ''Action Comics'' #686 "Who's Buried In Superman's Tomb?" (Feb-93) |
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** ''Superman: The Man of Steel'' #21 "Ghosts" (Mar-93) |
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** ''Superman'' vol. 2 #77 "The End" (Mar-93) |
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** ''Adventures of Superman'' #500 "Life After Death!" (Jun-93) |
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** ''Legacy of Superman'' #1 "The Legacy of Superman" (Mar-93) |
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** ''Supergirl & Team Luthor'' #1 "The Future of Metropolis" (Apr-93) |
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* Act 3: Reign of the Supermen! |
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** ''Action Comics'' #687 "Born Again" (Jun-93) |
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** ''Steel Annual'' #2 "Spilled Blood" (Jun-95) |
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** ''Superman: The Man of Steel'' #22 "Steel" (Jun-93) |
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** ''Superman'' vol. 2 #78 "Alive" (Jun-93) |
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** ''Adventures of Superman'' #501 "The Adventures of Superman... When He Was a Boy!" (Jun-93) |
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** ''Action Comics'' #688 "An Eye for an Eye" (Jul-93) |
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** ''Superman: The Man of Steel'' #23 "Ambush!" (Jul-93) |
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** ''Superman'' vol. 2 #79 "Prove it." (Jul-93) |
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** ''Superman Annual'' vol. 2 #5 "Myriad!" (Jul-93) |
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** ''Adventures of Superman'' #502 "Boy Meets Girl" (Jul-93) |
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* Act 4: The Return of Superman |
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** ''Action Comics'' #689 "Who Is The Hero True?" (Jul-93) |
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** ''Superman: The Man of Steel'' #24 "Impact!" (Aug-93) |
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** ''Superman'' vol. 2 #80 "Deadly Alliance" (Aug-93) |
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** ''Adventures of Superman'' #503 "Line of Fire!" (Aug-93) |
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** ''Action Comics'' #690 "Lies & Revelations" (Aug-93) |
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** ''Superman: The Man of Steel'' #25 "The Return!" (Sep-93) |
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** ''Superman'' vol. 2 #81 "Resurrections" (Sep-93) |
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** ''Adventures of Superman'' #504 "Assault on Engine City!" (Sep-93) |
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** ''Action Comics'' #691 "Secret Weapon" (Sep-93) |
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** ''Superman: The Man of Steel'' #26 "Blast Off!" (Oct-93) |
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** ''Green Lantern'' #46 "Death City" (Oct-93) |
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** ''Superman'' vol. 2 #82 "Back For Good!" (Oct-93) |
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** ''Adventures of Superman'' #505 "Reign of the Superman!" (Oct-93) |
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** ''Superman'' vol. 2 #83 "Epilogue: On The Edge" (Nov-93) |
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==In other media== |
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===Television=== |
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* The [[Bruce Timm]] animated series ''[[Justice League (TV series)|Justice League]]'' has an episode entitled "A Better World", in which the Justice League was tricked and captured by the [[Justice Lords]], who took their place. At the same time, Doomsday arrives from outer space in a meteor. In one scene, both the Justice Lord Superman and Doomsday punched each other out at the same time, resulting in a shockwave which destroyed several buildings. However, this did no damage to Doomsday and only nearly knocked out the alternate Superman. In the end, the alternate Superman used his heat vision to [[Lobotomy|lobotomize]] him.{{cn|date=April 2018}} |
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===Film=== |
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{{references|section|date=April 2018}} |
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* By the time ''The Death of Superman'' hit the newsstands, Warner Bros. had gained the rights to produce a fifth ''Superman'' film from [[Alexander Salkind]]. The studio selected Superman's death as the storyline for the film, and [[Jon Peters]] came in as the producer, following the success of the ''[[Batman]]'' franchise, which he had also produced. From 1994 to 1998, projected film adaptations of ''The Death of Superman'' storyline faced numerous problems with the script process. Writers proposed major changes to the character, including the absence of the Superman costume, and the lack of the power of flight. One of the writers, [[Kevin Smith]], said, "The thing that bothered me about [writer] Greg Poirier’s draft: they were trying to give Superman angst. They had Clark Kent going to a psychiatrist at one point. Superman’s angst is not that he doesn’t want to be Superman. If he has any [angst], it’s that he can’t do it all; he can’t do enough and save everyone...Batman is about angst; Superman is about hope."{{cn|date=April 2018}} |
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* ''Superman Reborn,'' retitled ''Superman Lives'', was slated for release on July 4, 1998, directed by [[Tim Burton]] and with [[Nicolas Cage]] to portray Superman. However, following the box office disappointment of ''[[Batman & Robin (film)|Batman & Robin]]'' and other development problems, the project was scrapped. |
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* At Comic-Con '06, [[Bruce Timm]] announced that he would produce the ''Death of Superman'' story as a Direct-To-DVD (or DTV) project, which was titled ''[[Superman: Doomsday]]'', with [[Adam Baldwin]] as The Man of Steel, with [[Anne Heche]] as Lois Lane, and [[James Marsters]] as Lex Luthor. During an interview with Newsarama.com, Timm explained that the story would cover the entire trilogy of ''The Death of Superman'', ''World Without a Superman'', & ''Reign of the Supermen!''. However, it was necessarily simplified, since the film runs only 75 minutes. A trailer released in June 2007 showed a slightly altered animation style from that of the [[DC animated universe]]. Lois and Superman have a relationship, but the Man of Steel has not revealed his identity to Lois until the end of the film, even though she already knows. Some of the major changes and differences include the absence of [[Lex Luthor|Lex Luthor II]] and [[Supergirl (Matrix)|Supergirl]] in the film; the presence of a similar [[Lex Luthor]] to that of the post-[[Crisis on Infinite Earths|Crisis]] version - the corrupt tycoon of [[LexCorp]]; the fight between Superman and Doomsday occurring at night (instead of during the day, as it did in the comics); Luthor creating Cyborg Superman as a clone; and fewer Supermen. The film was screened twice at the San Diego Comic-Con '07 as a special sneak preview on Thursday, July 26. Both reactions and reviews were well received. The DTV film was released on September 18, 2007. It made its U.S. broadcast premiere on the [[Cartoon Network]] Saturday, July 12, 2008, at 9:00 pm EST. |
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* While not present directly in the DTV film ''[[Superman/Batman: Public Enemies]]'', it is alluded to at one point, where Batman tells Superman "It's your funeral" and Superman says he already had one. |
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*''[[Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice]]'' draws on elements from ''The Death of Superman''. The climax of the film sees Batman, Superman and Wonder Woman fighting Doomsday, here the product of Lex Luthor using forbidden Kryptonian genetic engineering projects to combine General Zod's corpse with his own DNA to create a forbidden 'deformity', with Doomsday absorbing and generating bursts of energy to grow even stronger as the fight progresses. Using a kryptonite spear, Superman stabs Doomsday, but Doomsday stabs Superman in return with a bone spur emerging from his right wrist after Wonder Woman cut off the monster's hand, resulting in both combatants dying in the battle. |
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* In ''[[Suicide Squad (film)|Suicide Squad]]'', there is a man selling black T-shirts and armbands with the red Superman symbol outside the restaurant that Amanda Waller enters at the beginning of the film, mirroring events in ''Funeral for a Friend''. |
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* In the film ''[[Justice League (film)|Justice League]]'', Superman returns from the dead; publicity photos showed him with longer hair and wearing a black Superman suit<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.joblo.com/movie-news/set-visit-everything-you-need-to-know-about-zack-snyders-justice-league-228|title=SET VISIT: EVERYTHING YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT ZACK SNYDER'S JUSTICE LEAGUE|publisher=Joblo|last=Bumbray|first=Chris|date=June 21, 2016}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.instagram.com/p/BJI-eYSgRR8/|title=Instagram photo by Henry Cavill • Aug 15, 2016 at 6:58pm UTC|publisher=}}</ref>, but this scene does not appear in the final film. As in the comics, he was brought back to life via the Kryptonian healing pod, but where the comics had him placed in this pod by the Eradicator, in the film his corpse is retrieved by Batman's new 'team'-consisting of Batman, Wonder Woman, [[Flash (Barry Allen)|Flash]], [[Aquaman]], and [[Cyborg (comics)|Cyborg]]-and placed in the healing bath, with Cyborg interfacing with the Kryptonian ship and charging Superman's rebirth through a [[Mother Box]] that was left on Earth centuries in the past and is reactivated by a charge of lightning from the Flash. The process leaves Superman initially mentally disorientated, to the point that he attacks the other heroes in response to Aquaman's agitation and Cyborg's systems automatically going on the defensive, but before he can kill Batman, Lois Lane is driven to the scene by Alfred, her presence calming Superman and convincing him to leave with her so he can heal and fully regain his memories. |
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* In July 2017, [[Warner Bros.]] announced ''[[The Death of Superman (film)|The Death of Superman]]'' and ''Reign of the Supermen'' animated films in the DC Universe original movies line. The two-part animated film will be released in 2018 and 2019.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.dccomics.com/blog/2017/07/21/the-death-and-return-of-superman-gets-a-two-part-animated-movie|title=The Death and Return of Superman Gets a Two-Part Animated Movie|last=Beedle|first=Tim|date=July 27, 2017|work=DC Comics|access-date=}}</ref> [[Jerry O'Connell]], [[Rosario Dawson]], [[Nathan Fillion]], [[Christopher Gorham]], [[Matt Lanter]], [[Shemar Moore]], [[Jason O'Mara]] and [[Rocky Carroll]] will be reprising their roles as Superman, Wonder Woman, Green Lantern, The Flash, Aquaman, Cyborg, Batman and [[Silas Stone]], [[Rebecca Romijn]] will voice [[Lois Lane]], [[Rainn Wilson]] as [[Lex Luthor]], and [[Patrick Fabian]] as [[Hank Henshaw]].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.tvinsider.com/676471/the-death-of-superman-movie-jerry-oconnell-rebecca-romijn-rainn-wilson/|title='The Office,' 'The Librarians' & More TV Faves Join 'The Death of Superman'|publisher=TVInsider|author=Damian Holbrook|date=March 26, 2018}}</ref> |
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===Video games=== |
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* A [[scrolling]] [[beat 'em up]] [[video game]] called ''[[The Death and Return of Superman]]'' was released by [[Blizzard Entertainment]] and [[Sunsoft]] for the [[Super Nintendo Entertainment System]] and [[Sega Mega Drive]]. |
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* The Containment Suit that Doomsday appeared in is featured as an alternate suit for him in ''[[Injustice: Gods Among Us]]''. Also, as a hidden [[Easter egg (media)|easter egg]], under certain circumstances in the Fortress of Solitude stage, Doomsday, as he appears in ''The Death of Superman,'' can be seen in the background. |
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* Solar Suit Superman appears a playable character variant in ''[[Lego Batman 3: Beyond Gotham]]''. |
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===Music=== |
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* The 2007 album ''[[The Lost Chords find Paolo Fresu]]'' by jazz musician [[Carla Bley]] includes the track "Death of Superman/Dream Sequence No. 1: Flying". |
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===Novels=== |
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* [[Roger Stern]] adapted the ''Death of Superman'' storyline into a novel, entitled ''The Death and Life of Superman'', in the summer of 1993. It was released in hardcover form and then in paperback a year later. (Hardcover {{ISBN|0-553-09582-X}}, Paperback {{ISBN|0-553-56930-9}}) A young adult version book was written by [[Louise Simonson]] under the title ''[[Superman: Doomsday & Beyond]]'' and released at the same time as the hardcover of ''Death and Life''. It features cover art by [[Alex Ross]], his first sale to DC. Both are fairly faithful to the core details of the original storyline, with their only major omission being the absence of [[Hal Jordan]] during the final battle in Coast City. |
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===Radio=== |
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* [[Dirk Maggs]] produced an audio dramatization of the story for [[BBC Radio 5 (former)|BBC Radio 5]], entitled ''Superman: Doomsday & Beyond!'' (retitled ''Superman Lives!'' in the U.S.), featuring [[Stuart Milligan]] as Superman/Clark Kent/Kal-El & the Eradicator, [[William Hootkins]] as Lex Luthor, [[Lorelei King]] as Lois Lane, Vincent Marzello as Jimmy Olsen, [[Garrick Hagon]] as Jonathan Kent, [[Kerry Shale]] as Connor Kent/Kon-El/Superboy & Hank Henshaw/Cyborg Superman, Eric Meyers as Guy Gardner, Denica Fairman as Maggie Sawyer, Liza Ross as Supergirl, [[Burt Kwouk]] as Doctor Teng, and Leon Herbert as Dr. John Henry Irons/Steel with original music by [[Mark Russell (composer)|Mark Russell]]. |
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===Parodies=== |
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* Around the same year when the Death of Superman storyline was occurring, ''[[Saturday Night Live]]'' parodied this in the style of a funeral. Attendees of the funeral were [[Jimmy Olsen]], [[Lois Lane]], [[Perry White]], [[Lex Luthor]], [[Batman]] & [[Dick Grayson|Robin]], [[Flash (comics)|Flash]], [[Aquaman]], [[John Stewart (comics)|Green Lantern]], [[Hawkman]] & [[Hawkgirl]], [[Penguin (character)|Penguin]], [[Catwoman]], characters from [[Marvel Comics]] ([[Mister Fantastic]], [[Hulk (comics)|Hulk]], [[Spider-Man]], and [[Storm (Marvel Comics)|Storm]]) and an assortment of unfamiliar characters. When Green Lantern asks why Lex Luthor is at the funeral, Lex Luthor states that Superman was a worthy adversary, even though he is glad that Superman is gone. Batman & Robin, Perry White and Hulk (alongside Mister Fantastic and Spider-Man) were the speakers at the funeral. [[Black Lightning]] (portrayed by [[Sinbad (actor)|Sinbad]]) tries to enter the funeral, but no one knows him even though he claimed to have taught Superman how to fly. After the characters from Marvel Comics were done speaking, Jimmy Olsen takes the stand, stating that he had heard from the Chief of Police that the [[Legion of Doom (DC Comics)|Legion of Doom]] was attacking Metropolis Civic Arena and thinks that this would have been a job for Superman. Batman states that they will have to try to carry on without him as he leads those who can fly, those who have super strength and anyone who can rotate the Earth on its axis into battle to do it for Superman. As the heroes leave, Black Lightning is seen pillaging some of Aquaman's shrimp as Lois wonders where Clark Kent is. |
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* A [[The Death and Return of Superman (film)|short comedic film]] by [[Max Landis]] has the writer-director telling the history and the comic book with exaggerated re-enactments in between his narration. [[Elijah Wood]] and [[Mandy Moore]] appear in the film as Cyborg-Superman and Lois Lane, respectively. Also in cameos are [[Simon Pegg]] as the narrator's father, director [[John Landis]], and Max Landis' fictional child is played by director [[Ron Howard]]. |
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* The ''[[The Simpsons|Simpsons]]'' episode, "[[Worst Episode Ever]]", parodies the storyline when Nelson, holding a copy of a comic ''The Death Of [[Sad Sack]]'' (a parody of the World War II comic) says "This better not be another fakeout", parodying people's reaction's to the revival of Superman at the time. |
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==Merchandise== |
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===Board games=== |
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* In August 2011 [[Wizkids]] (owned by [[National Entertainment Collectibles Association|NECA]]) released an expansion set of the collectible miniatures game [[HeroClix]], titled ''Superman'' that contained a large variety of Superman-related heroes and villains. As part of this set, there were five game pieces that were directly related to ''The Death of Superman'' storyline. A [[Doomsday (comics)|Doomsday]] piece was released that showed the first appearance of Doomsday in his green containment suit with one arm tied behind his back. There were the four ''Reign of the Supermen!'' pieces, Steel, Eradicator, Superboy and the Cyborg Superman, each of which were featured in their costumes from that storyline. Each of these pieces gains a bonus on the defeat of a piece named Superman in a game. Finally, among the many Superman pieces in the set, there was a piece that featured long hair, the black suit and the crystal matrix from the ''Reign of the Supermen!'' storyline.{{citation needed|date=August 2015}} |
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===Action figures=== |
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* In 1995, [[Kenner]] released an [[action figure]] line based on the ''Death of Superman'' era, called Superman: Man of Steel. This featured the first action figures of characters such as the long-haired Superman, Superboy, Steel, Doomsday, [[Conduit (comics)|Conduit]], and the ''[[ToyFare]]'' exclusive [[Eradicator (comics)|Eradicator]]. It also corresponded with the [[Batman: Knightfall#Action figures|Legends of Batman]] collection, which was largely based on Batman ''[[Elseworlds]]'' and the ''[[Batman: Knightfall|Knightfall]]'' saga. Man of Steel ran for two series but was canceled in mid-1996 with various products showcased at [[American International Toy Fair|Toy Fair]] '96 that would go unreleased.<ref>[http://www.toymania.com/archives/smos/ Superman: Man of Steel] Raving Toy Maniac. Retrieved 8-07-2014.</ref>{{better source|date=August 2015}} |
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==Awards== |
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The trade paperback ''The Death of Superman'' received the [[Comics Buyer's Guide Fan Award]] for Favorite Reprint Graphic Novel or Album for 1992. The storyline of ''Reign of the Supermen!'' won the ''Comics Buyer's Guide'' Award Favorite Comic Book Story for 1992. |
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{{Portal|1990s}} |
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==References== |
==References== |
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{{reflist |
{{reflist}} |
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==External links== |
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* [http://www.warnervideo.com/supermandoomsdaydvd/ ''Superman: Doomsday'' Official Website for the ''Superman Doomsday'' DVD ] |
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* [http://myspace.com/supermandoomsdaymovie ''Superman: Doomsday'' Official MySpace profile for the ''Superman Doomsday'' movie] |
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* [http://www.milehighcomics.com/tales/cbg127.html "''Death of Superman''" Promotion of 1992] |
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* [http://www.supermanhomepage.com/comics/post-crisis-classic-reviews/c-review-classicpostcrisis.php?topic=c-review-cl-deathofsupes Review and summary of every issue in sequence for the "''Death of Superman''" storyline] (by Neal Bailey) |
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* [https://web.archive.org/web/20110405061341/http://www.worldofsuperheroes.com/news/the-day-superman-died/ "Death of Superman" - The day Superman died] |
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{{Superman publications}} |
{{Superman publications}} |
Revision as of 00:19, 21 April 2018
"The Death of Superman" | |||
---|---|---|---|
Publisher | DC Comics | ||
Publication date | List
| ||
Genre | |||
| |||
Main character(s) | |||
Creative team | |||
Writer(s) | List
| ||
Penciller(s) | List
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Inker(s) | List
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Editor(s) | Mike Carlin | ||
The Death of Superman | ISBN 1-56389-097-6 | ||
World Without a Superman | ISBN 1563891182 | ||
The Return of Superman | ISBN 1563891492 | ||
The Death and Return of Superman Omnibus | ISBN 1401215505 |
"The Death of Superman" is an American comic book crossover event published by DC Comics in its Superman-related comics. The crossover was devised by editor Mike Carlin and the Superman writing team of Dan Jurgens, Roger Stern, Louise Simonson, Jerry Ordway and Karl Kesel. "The Death of Superman" began in December 1992 and lasted until October 1993 and was published in Superman, Action Comics, The Adventures of Superman, Superman: The Man of Steel, Justice League America, and Green Lantern.
The crossover was conceived after Warner Bros. ordered the Superman writing team to halt production on a story in which Clark Kent (Superman) and Lois Lane would be married until the television series Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman reached its wedding episode. While brainstorming for new ideas, Ordway jokingly suggested they should kill Superman; Carlin, reflecting on poor sales of the Superman books, decided it was the best option. "The Death of Superman" was written to surprise readers and show Superman is not invincible.
"The Death of Superman" is divided into three parts. The first, "Doomsday!", chronicles Superman's deadly fight with the bloodthirsty monster Doomsday and concludes with his apparent death. The second, "A Funeral for a Friend", depicts Superman's fellow superheroes and the rest of the world mourning to his death and Jonathan Kent's eventual heart attack. The final part, "Reign of the Supermen!", sees the emergence of four individuals claiming to be Superman and the original Superman's return.
When news broke that DC planned to kill off Superman, a beloved American pop icon, "The Death of Superman" gained unprecedented coverage from the mainstream media and caused a sensation. The majority of the story's installments were bestsellers; issue #75, which features Superman's death, sold over six million copies and was the top selling comic book issue of 1992. Retrospective reviewers found the story powerful, with some calling it one of the best Superman stories. However, it has also received criticism, with some commentators dismissing it as little more than a publicity stunt. Many readers believed DC had permanently killed Superman and felt deceived when he was revived.
The story has been repeatedly adapted into various forms of media, including the novelization Superman: Doomsday & Beyond (1993) and the video game The Death and Return of Superman (1994). An loose animated adaptation of the film, Superman: Doomsday, was released in 2007 and launched the DC Universe Animated Original Movies line. A second animated adaptation will be released as a two-part film in 2018 and 2019 and will be more faithful to the original story.
Publication history
Background
Superman is a superhero appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics. He was created by Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster in 1933 as a villain, but the duo retooled him as a hero, feeling he would be more marketable.[1] Superman made his debut in Action Comics #1 on April 18, 1938,[2] to immediate success.[3] In 1939, Superman became the first superhero to headline his own comic book, Superman.[4] Superman's comics take place within a shared universe called the DC Universe, which also includes Batman, Wonder Woman, and the Flash, among others. This allows plot elements, characters, and settings to cross over with each other.[5]
In 1985, DC launched Crisis on Infinite Earths, a crossover event that resulted in the DC Universe being rebooted. Superman was re-envisioned in the 1986 limited series The Man of Steel by writer and artist John Byrne. The following year, Byrne relaunched Superman with a new first issue and the original Superman series was renamed The Adventures of Superman.[6] The relaunch was a major success for DC[7] and The Man of Steel #1 was the bestselling comic book issue of 1986.[8] Byrne spent two years on the Superman comics before leaving, becoming dissatisfied with DC's lack of "conscious support" for him and that the version of Superman which DC licensed for merchandising was contrary to Byrne's representation in the comic books.[9]
After Byrne's departure, the Superman comics experienced a decline in sales.[10] By 1992, they were only selling roughly 150,000 copies an issue,[11] despite the fact there were four Superman-focused comics being sold: Action Comics, Superman, The Adventures of Superman, and Superman: The Man of Steel. Therefore, a new Superman comic book issue debuted every week.[6] The Superman writing team attempted to make the comics more appealing by increasing the romance between Clark Kent (Superman's civilian identity) and Lois Lane. Eventually, the writers had Kent proposed to Lan and reveal he was Superman, and began to plan a storyline about their marriage.[10] Because of the close connection between each series, each's writing team regularly attended a "Superman Summit", where they would plan stories to occupy the comics.[12]
Conception and development
By 1992, while the Superman comics struggled, Warner Bros. (DC's owner) began developing Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman, a television series for ABC which was premised upon a romantic relationship between Lane and Kent. One of the ideas that arose during production was the wedding of Lane and Kent. Warner Bros. learned that DC was planning the wedding in the Superman comic books, and as a result, DC, Warner Bros., and the Superman writing staff came together and reached an agreement: the wedding arc in the comic book would be put on hold, to resume once Lois & Clark reached its wedding episode. This did not happen until 1997. With the original storyline set aside in the comic, a new event was needed to replace it.[10][12]
The writing team was enraged they had to put aside a year's worth of story planning and flustered for ideas;[13] according to Louise Simonson, the team essentially had to come up with something at the last minute.[12] At the end of one meeting, Adventures of Superman writer Jerry Ordway jokingly suggested that they should just kill Superman.[10][13] The joke became a running gag in story meetings, but eventually gained traction with Superman group editor Mike Carlin.[13] In the documentary film Look, Up in the Sky: The Amazing Story of Superman, Carlin recalled, "the world was taking Superman for granted, so we literally said 'let's show what the world would be like without Superman'."[14] Dan Jurgens was the one who officially pitched the idea.[15] Ordway said he was shocked that DC allowed the project to proceed.[16] Jon Bogdanove recalled the story "almost began to write itself, from the end backwards. It felt like a story that could make the readers care again, the way we had always cared about Superman."[16]
Jurgens created the concept of a monster tearing apart Metropolis and an issue that was a single fight separately from "The Death of Superman"; the team eventually decided to combine the ideas with "The Death of Superman".[16][12][15] Carlin had rejected the fight idea whenever Jurgens brought it up, feeling it would not be effective without a good story.[16] The writers felt that Superman's foes relied too much on technology and intellect, and desired a villain who could take him on physically. The name "Doomsday" was chosen after the phrase "doomsday for Superman" was written on the whiteboard used for planning. Doomsday's design—a massive, muscular humanoid with bones ripping through his skin—was also from Jurgens; the team wanted the character to have a distinctive look, so they gave all artists a few minutes to create designs and voted for the one they thought was best. The team did not feel giving Doomsday an origin was important.[12] Ordway recalled the most exciting part for him was exploring what the DC Universe would be like without Superman and had fun writing about peoples' reactions to his death.[16]
"The Death of Superman" was written to surprise readers: the writing team wanted to show readers that Superman was not invincible and could be killed by something other than Kryptonite. The eventual resurrection of Superman afterwards was also always planned and kept a secret. Simonson stated, "we had to sign nondisclosure agreements saying we couldn’t talk about it. We couldn’t reassure people that he was coming back.”[12] The issues showing Superman's fight with Doomsday featured a "countdown" of panels: the first had four panels per page, while the second had three, the third had two, and the last simply comprised splash pages.[17]
Publication
DC began to "aggressively" promote the story towards the end of 1992.[12] The first reference to the story within the comics was placed in Simonson's Superman: The Man of Steel #17 (November 1992); after the issue's story, Doomsday's fist is shown repeatedly punching a wall.[6] The crossover officially began the following issue, in which Doomsday is unleashed and begins to carve a brutal path of destruction across America.[12] Superman #75 (January 1993) contained Superman's fight to the death with Doomsday,[12] and was sold in a polybag with a black armband.[6] In May 1993, DC published a special issue, Newstime: The Life and Death of The Man of Steel, compiling fictional news stories about Superman's death and funeral.[18] Following the funeral, all the Superman comics went on hiatus for three to four months, ending with the release of The Adventures of Superman #500 (June 1993).[19] "The Death of Superman" concluded in October 1993 with The Adventures of Superman #505, in which Superman returns to Metropolis.[20]
Synopsis
"Doomsday!" (December 1992—January 1993)
- Issues: Action Comics #684; The Adventures of Superman #497; Justice League America #69; Superman: The Man of Steel #18—19; Superman #74—75
- Writers: Dan Jurgens; Louise Simonson; Roger Stern; Jerry Ordway
- Pencillers: Dan Jurgens; Jon Bogdanove; Tom Grummett; Jackson Guice
- Inkers: Brett Breeding; Doug Hazelwood; Dennis Janke; Denis Rodier; Rick Burchett
The Justice League International (Guy Gardner, Blue Beetle, Booster Gold, Maxima, Fire, Ice, and Bloodwynd) responds to a call from a smashed big-rig outside of Bucyrus, Ohio and encounter a bloodthirsty monster in a green bodysuit that systematically takes the team apart, starting by throwing a tree trunk through their aircraft and finishing by punching Booster Gold into the stratosphere. Booster Gold is caught in midair by Superman and compares the monster's rampage to end times, thus providing it with the name Doomsday.
Superman, having cut short a television interview with Cat Grant, and the remaining League members follow the threat to the home of a single mother and her two children. They engage Doomsday, destroying the house in the process. The League attacks Doomsday with all their energy-projection powers; the only discernible effect is that much of his bodysuit is burned off, revealing Doomsday's rough skin with bones ripping through. Doomsday again defeats the League, causes the house to explode into flames, and then leaps away. Superman follows, after saving the family.
Superman throws Doomsday into a lake. After escaping from the lake bed, Doomsday and Superman tear up a city street. Maxima then reenters the fray. Lois Lane and Jimmy Olsen are sent to cover the battle for television, while Superman's archenemy Lex Luthor (masquerading as his non-existent son "Lex Luthor II") dissuades Supergirl from joining the fight. The fight continues at a gas station, where Maxima rips a light post from the ground; the sparks from the wiring ignite the leaking gasoline and the station is destroyed in a huge explosion. Guardian arrives after Doomsday leaves, finding Superman and Maxima, and offers his aid.
Superman follows Doomsday's trail of destruction, waiting for an opportunity to attack. With the monster's rampage drawing closer, Luthor convinces Supergirl that she is needed in Metropolis while Superman is fighting elsewhere. While demolishing an appliance store, Doomsday sees a commercial for a wrestling show being held in Metropolis and heads for the city. Superman engages him and throws him in the opposite direction, where he lands on the mountain housing Project Cadmus. They brawl throughout Habitat, a living forest connected to Cadmus, bringing most of it down.
When Guardian arrives, Doomsday knocks him down and leaps toward Metropolis. Doomsday is driven below ground, where he ruptures gas and electrical mains, leveling Newtown, a large section of Metropolis. Supergirl goes to Superman's aid, but a single punch from Doomsday knocks her to the ground. Professor Emil Hamilton and Bibbo Bibbowski, Superman's allies, fire a laser cannon at Doomsday, but it does not harm him. The local police open fire on Doomsday, but again, he is not harmed. Superman returns to the fight and eventually it leads to the heart of the city.
Doomsday and an exhausted Superman fight each other with everything they have. They strike each other with so much force that the shockwaves from their punches shatter windows. At the struggle's culminating moment in front of the Daily Planet building, both lay a massive blow upon each other, killing Doomsday and mortally wounding Superman. In the arms of a frantic Lane, Superman succumbs to his wounds and dies. Jimmy, Ice, Bloodwynd, and Guardian are also present at the end, with Jimmy bitterly photographing the images of Superman's fall.
"A Funeral for a Friend" (January—April 1993)
- Issues: Action Comics #685—686; The Adventures of Superman #498—500; Justice League America #70; Superman #76—77, #83; Superman: The Man of Steel #20—21
- Writers: Dan Jurgens; Louise Simonson; Roger Stern; Jerry Ordway; Karl Kesel; William Messner-Loebs
- Pencillers: Jon Bogdanove; Tom Grummett; Jackson Guice; Dan Jurgens; Dennis Janke; Denis Rodier; Walt Simonson; Curt Swan
- Inkers: Brett Breeding; Doug Hazelwood; Dennis Janke; Denis Rodier; Rick Burchett; Mike Machlan; Ande Parks; Josef Rubinstein; Trevor Scott; Walter Simonson
The world is stunned and traumatized by Superman's death. A mausoleum is built in Metropolis in his honor, provided by Luthor, who says that if he could not kill Superman, then the least he wants is to bury him. His funeral is attended by nearly every single superhero, as well as some supervillains and Bill and Hillary Clinton. Every hero, even those who did not get along with him, wear a black arm band featuring Superman's S-shield logo. After the funeral, Project Cadmus steals Superman's body from his mausoleum, allegedly to clone him. The body is recovered by Lane and Supergirl.
With Superman gone, the crime rate rises and the costumed heroes of Metropolis rise to fill in as protectors. Supergirl, Gangbuster, Thorn, and a team funded by Luthor all try but are insufficient. Jonathan Kent, Superman's adoptive father, takes his death the hardest, and begins to lose himself in memories. One night, while reading a newspaper story written by Lane in honor of Superman, Jonathan begins to feel responsible for his son's death and has a heart attack in his wife Martha's arms.
"Reign of the Supermen!" (June—November 1993)
- Issues: Action Comics #687—691; The Adventures of Superman #501—505; Green Lantern #46; Superman #78—82; Superman: The Man of Steel #22—26
- Writers: Dan Jurgens; Louise Simonson; Roger Stern; Karl Kesel; Gerard Jones
- Pencillers: Jon Bogdanove; Tom Grummett; Jackson Guice; Dan Jurgens; M. D. Bright
- Brett Breeding; Doug Hazelwood; Dennis Janke; Denis Rodier; Romeo Tanghal
While in a coma, Jonathan meets Superman in the afterlife and convinces him to come back to life, before reawakening. Coinciding with this is the arrival of four men—Steel, the Cyborg Superman, Superboy, and Eradicator—who claim to be Superman and Lane's discovery that his grave is empty. Steel and Superboy are quickly disproven, but the Cyborg and Eradicator both seem to recall memories Superman had. Hamilton tests the Cyborg and states he is the real Superman. In actuality, Eradicator stole Superman's body and placed it in a regeneration matrix in the Fortress of Solitude, drawing on his recovering energies to power himself.
The matrix breaks open and Superman emerges, although he has been weakened. The Cyborg helps Mongul destroy Coast City in an effort to kill Superboy and begins to build Engine City in its ruins. Superboy escapes and asks Steel to help him fight the Cyborg. A giant armored suit rises from the harbor and Superboy and Steel attack it. Damaged, the suit falls apart, revealing Superman. Superman, Steel, Superboy, and Supergirl travel to Engine City and attack. During the fight, the Cyborg launches a missile at Metropolis with the intent of destroying it and putting a second Engine City in its place. Superboy manages to stop the missile before it strikes Metropolis.
Hal Jordan returns to find Coast City, his hometown, destroyed. Devastated, Jordan immediately attacks Engine City and fights Mongul, shattering Steel's hammer across Mongul's face. Meanwhile, Eradicator joins the fight and shields Superman from Kryptonite gas. The gas interacts with Eradicator before passing into Superman, allowing Superman to regain his powers but causing Eradicator to die. Superman then attacks the Cyborg and destroys his body. Supergirl uses her powers to reconstruct Superman's original costume, and they return to Metropolis.
Reception
At release
As DC did not make the fact that Superman would be revived at the end public, many fans believed "The Death of Superman" had permanently killed Superman, a beloved American pop icon.[12] Thus, the story attracted unprecedented coverage from the mainstream media; NPR reviewer Glen Weldon stated "news outlets like Newsweek, People, and New York's Newsday pounced upon the 'story.'"[4] Jurgens later stated he did not anticipate the media coverage and also recalled that the first news story about it he saw was on NBC Nightly News.[15] Mark Potts (The Washington Post) speculated the event was simply a publicity stunt, but nonetheless was interested what a world without Superman would be like.[11]
Saturday Night Live parodied "The Death of Superman" in the eighth episode of its 18th season. The sketch depicts Superman's funeral being attended by the cast of DC, as well as several characters from Marvel Comics. Black Lightning (Sinbad) tries to enter the funeral, but no one knows him even though he claims to have taught Superman how to fly.[21] Jerry Siegel, who in 1961 had predicted Superman would eventually be killed, met with Carlin to tell him that he was very impressed by "The Death of Superman".[16]
The attention the story got caused "The Death of Superman" to become an unforeseen success. Comic book retailers ordered five million copies of Superman #75 in advance, and many people who had never read comics bought the issue in hopes of it becoming an expensive collector's item.[4] DC shipped between 2.5 and three million copies of the issue when it was released on November 17, 1992 and it sold out across America. Issue #75 brought in a total of US$30 million during its first day on sale[22] and ultimately sold more than six million copies.[4] The first installments of "Reign of the Supermen!" were the top five best-selling comic books for the month.[23] Superman #75 was the bestselling comic book issue of 1992[24] and the four bestselling issues of 1993 were Superman-related.[25]
In later years
In the years since its release, some commentators have dismissed "The Death of Superman" as little more than a publicity stunt to give the Superman comics a brief surge in sales and have contended it caused a decline in the comic book industry.[4][16][19] Indeed, each series' sales immediately declined following Superman's resurrection[4] and many fans felt they had been deceived when he was revived.[12] This frustration was mocked in "Worst Episode Ever", the eleventh episode of The Simpsons' twelfth season, in which Nelson Muntz holds the comic The Death Of Sad Sack and declares "this better not be another fake-out", in reference to the angry reaction to the revival.[26]
ComicsAlliance writer Chris Sims believed that most people bought Superman #75 just to see Superman's death,[17] while Weldon speculated its sales were propelled by hopes it would become valuable.[6] Sims recalled that when he worked in a comic book store in 2009, some customers were shocked that DC was still publishing Superman comics, as they did not read the story's conclusion.[17] Stern denied "The Death of Superman" was a publicity stunt, believing the sensation was caused only because it was a good story: "The word got out on a slow news day, and the media storm that followed was greater than anything we could have hoped for. But it was all thanks to the story's power."[16]
Aside from this, "The Death of Superman" has been generally seen favorably. Sims called the event DC's greatest success of the 1990s and one of the definitive Superman stories, noting while killing off an important comics character was not an original idea, "The Death of Superman" seemed more ambitious and had a greater legacy.[17] Steve Morris (Comics Beat) also thought it had a major impact, saying it had "strong storytelling and a simple, if well-done, central narrative."[27] Morris said the story was well planned, especially considering the fact it could have easily misfired.[27] Brian Salvatore (Multiversity Comics) thought the story was effective and "present[ed] some pretty compelling arguments for why Superman is the greatest superhero of all time, without ever really coming out and saying that." He also praised the characterization for forcing Superman not to predict the movements of Doomsday, and rather rely on pure instinct.[28]
Not all reviewers have been as positive. Chad Nevett (Comic Book Resources) called the story boring and jumbled (comparing issue #75 to "more of trading cards that intend to tell a story than an actual comic story") and viewed it as just another typical event crossover.[29] Morris did criticize its subplots (calling them nonsensical) and felt Doomsday was terribly designed, disagreeing with Sims that it was a definitive Superman story.[27] Salvatore felt it had missed opportunities and criticized the Justice League's role in the story, comparing them to punching bags. Both Salvatore and Nevett thought Doomsday came out of nowhere,[28][29] and Nevett joked he was a "walking plot device" rather than a true villain.[29]
Legacy in comics
"The Death of Superman" had an immediate effect on DC's comics. After its success, DC began a series of events that resulted in its most iconic heroes being killed or disabled.[4] Batman followed shortly afterward, with the "Knightfall" crossover, followed by Wonder Woman, Green Lantern, Green Arrow, and the Flash.[6] Green Lantern's event, "Emerald Twilight", in which he turned into the villain Parallax, was directly caused by events that occurred during "The Death of Superman".[10] "With the industry in freefall," wrote Weldon, "it didn't matter much to DC that death/disabling stunts offered only brief sales spikes."[4]
The characters established during "The Death of Superman"—Doomsday, Steel, Superboy, and the Cyborg Superman—would all become recurring characters in DC's comics. Superboy and Steel both received their own ongoing series after the story's conclusion[6] and Steel went on to star in his own movie, in which he was portrayed by Superman fan Shaquille O'Neal.[30] Superboy remained a fixture of the DC Universe until he was killed in Infinite Crisis (2005—2006).[6] The Cyborg Superman became a recurring nemesis of Superman and Green Lantern.[6] Doomsday's origin story was explored in Superman/Doomsday: Hunter/Prey (1995)[12] and the character returned in later storylines, most notably in "Reign of Doomsday" (2011), which heavily references "The Death of Superman" and features Doomsday hunting down Steel, Superboy, Eradicator, and the Cyborg Superman.[31]
In 2011, DC relaunched its entire comics line in an initiative called the New 52, which revamped the DC Universe and erased certain events. Superman was altered considerably, being shorter-tempered and was no longer in love with Lois Lane.[32] However, "The Death of Superman" remained intact in the new DC Universe.[33]
Adaptations
Roger Stern wrote a novelization of "The Death of Superman", The Death and Life of Superman, in 1993 (hardcover ISBN 0-553-09582-X; paperback ISBN 0-553-56930-9). A young adult book was written by Louise Simonson under the title Superman: Doomsday & Beyond and released at the same time as the hardcover of Death and Life. It features cover art by Alex Ross (ISBN 0-553-48168-1).
A video game based on the story, The Death and Return of Superman, was developed by Blizzard Entertainment and Sunsoft and released in 1994 for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System and 1995 for the Sega Genesis. The Death and Return of Superman is a side-scrolling beat 'em up in which the player controls Superman, Superboy, Steel, Eradicator, and the Cyborg Superman as they attempt to save Metropolis. Nintendo Life's Dave Cook considered it the game that "finally [gave] Superman the video game justice he deserves in what is undoubtedly one of his most celebrated stories"[34] and IGN's Greg Miller called it one of his favorite games and said it was what inspired him to become a video game journalist.[35]
In the wake of "The Death of Superman", Warner Bros. acquired the rights to produce Superman films. It hired Jon Peters to write a script for a sequel to Superman IV: The Quest for Peace. The film, called Superman Reborn, would have heavily borrowed from "The Death of Superman", including the fight-to-the-death between Superman and Doomsday. However, Warner Bros. disliked the script due to its similar themes to Batman Forever (1995). Later script rewrites altered the story considerably and the film ultimately never came to fruition.[36]
In 2007, an animated adaptation, Superman: Doomsday, was released direct-to-video.[37] Superman: Doomsday is only loosely based on "The Death of Superman"; in order to fit it within a 75-minute runtime, the story was condensed and greatly altered.[38] The film was a commercial success[6] and started the DC Universe Original Animated Movies line of direct-to-video releases.[38][39]
Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice (2016) draws narrative elements from "The Death of Superman". In the film's climax, Lex Luthor uses forbidden Kryptonian genetic engineering projects to combine General Zod's corpse with his own DNA, causing Doomsday's creation. Using a Kryptonite spear, Superman stabs Doomsday, but Doomsday stabs Superman in return with a bone spur emerging from his right wrist after Wonder Woman cut off the monster's hand, resulting in both combatants dying in the battle.[40]
In 2017, DC announced a two-part animated adaptation, The Death of Superman and Reign of the Supermen, to be released as part of the DC Universe Original Animated Movies line in late 2018 and early 2019.[41] The new adaptation will be more faithful to the original story; according to DC's Tim Beedle, the film is "much less condensed and will include many of the fan-favorite moments from the story that were left out of Doomsday."[38]
References
- ^ Andrae, Thomas (August 1983). "Of Supermen and Kids with Dreams". Nemo: The Classic Comics Library. No. 2. Gary G. Groth. pp. 6–19.
{{cite news}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - ^ Muir, John Kenneth (July 2008). The Encyclopedia of Superheroes on Film and Television. McFarland & Co. p. 539. ISBN 978-0-7864-3755-9. Archived from the original on December 30, 2011. Retrieved 2011-05-31.
{{cite book}}
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- ^ a b c d e f g h Weldon, Glen (2016). The Caped Crusade: Batman and the Rise of Nerd Culture. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-1-4767-5669-1. Retrieved 10 September 2017.
- ^ Ching, Albert (February 18, 2016). "EXCLUSIVE: Geoff Johns Details "Rebirth" Plan, Seeks to Restore Legacy to DC Universe". Comic Book Resources. Retrieved 23 March 2018.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j DC Comics Year By Year A Visual Chronicle. Dorling Kindersley. 2010. ISBN 978-0-7566-6742-9.
- ^ Tucker, Reed (October 2017). Slugfest. New York City: Da Capo Press. p. 157. ISBN 0306825473.
- ^ Tucker, Reed (October 2017). Slugfest. New York City: Da Capo Press. p. 155. ISBN 0306825473.
- ^ Thomas, Michael (August 22, 2000). "John Byrne: The Hidden Answers". Comic Book Resources. Retrieved 17 April 2018.
- ^ a b c d e Polo, Susana (November 14, 2017). "The death and resurrection of Superman, explained". Polygon. Retrieved 17 April 2018.
- ^ a b Potts, Mark (September 5, 1992). "Superman's Last Leap". The Washington Post. Retrieved 18 April 2018.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Riesman, Abraham (March 29, 2016). "How a Group of Desperate Comics Creators Hatched Doomsday, Superman's Deadliest Foe". Vulture. Retrieved 17 April 2018.
- ^ a b c Superman: Doomsday Disc Two: Special Features (Interview with the Superman writing team). Warner Bros. November 25, 2008.
- ^ Look, Up in the Sky: The Amazing Story of Superman (Interview with Mike Carlin). Warner Bros. June 20, 2006.
- ^ a b c Steinbeiser, Andrew (November 20, 2014). "Throwback Thursdays: Dan Jurgens Remembers The Death Of Superman". ComicBook.com. Retrieved 17 April 2018.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Jurgens, Dan (September 12, 2007). The Death and Return of Superman Omnibus. DC Comics. ISBN 1401215505.
- ^ a b c d Sims, Chris (November 17, 2015). "The Biggest Event Of All Time: 'The Death of Superman'". ComicsAlliance. Retrieved 18 April 2018.
- ^ Whitbrook, James (April 12, 2016). "What Happened the Last Time Superman Died". io9. Retrieved 17 April 2018.
- ^ a b Ginocchio, Mark (June 14, 2013). "Gimmick or Good? – Adventures of Superman #500". Comic Book Resources. Retrieved 17 April 2018.
- ^ Kessel, Karl (October 1993). "Reign of the Superman!". The Adventures of Superman (505). DC Comics.
- ^ Jasper, Gavin (January 13, 2018). "Saturday Night Live: The 10 Best Superhero Skits". Den of Geek. Retrieved 18 April 2018.
- ^ Miller, John Jackson (December 12, 2005). "The 1900s: 10 biggest events from 100 years in comics". Comic Buyer's Guide. Archived from the original on October 26, 2007. Retrieved 18 April 2018.
- ^ "Wizard Market Watch". Wizard. No. 22. June 1993. pp. 134–5.
- ^ "1992 Comic Book Sales Figures". The Comics Chronicles. Archived from the original on December 6, 2012. Retrieved December 6, 2012.
{{cite web}}
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ignored (|url-status=
suggested) (help) - ^ "1993 Comic Book Sales Figures". The Comics Chronicles. Archived from the original on December 6, 2012. Retrieved December 6, 2012.
{{cite web}}
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- ^ a b c Morris, Steve (February 20, 2013). "Review: The Death of Superman". Comics Beat. Retrieved 18 April 2018.
- ^ a b Salvatore, Brian (February 21, 2017). "The Death of Superman". Multiversity Comics. Retrieved 18 April 2018.
- ^ a b c Nevett, Chad (November 1, 2009). "The Reread Reviews — The Death of Superman". Comic Book Resources. Retrieved 18 April 2018.
- ^ Sims, Chris (June 11, 2012). "ComicsAlliance Reviews 'Steel' (1997), Part One". ComicsAlliance. Retrieved 19 April 2018.
- ^ Phegley, Kiel (February 2, 2011). "REIGN OF THE DOOMSAYERS: Dan DiDio". Comic Book Resources. Retrieved 19 April 2018.
- ^ Rogers, Vaneta (March 3, 2016). "'What If You Missed the NEW 52' - SUPERMAN". Newsarama. Retrieved 19 April 2018.
- ^ Johns, Geoff (June 25, 2014). "The Men of Tomorrow, Chapter One: Ulysses". Superman. 3 (32). DC Comics.
- ^ Cook, Dave (March 24, 2016). "Feature: Batman V Superman In The Battle Of The Nintendo Games". Nintendo Life. Gamer Network. Retrieved 20 April 2018.
- ^ Miller, Greg (February 10, 2014). "Greg Miller's Top 10 Games of All Time". IGN. Ziff Davis. Retrieved 20 April 2018.
- ^ Hughes, David (2008). The Greatest Sci-Fi Movies Never Made (1st revised and expanded ed.). London: Titan Books. ISBN 9781845767556.
- ^ Monfette, Christopher (September 18, 2007). "Superman Doomsday DVD Review". IGN. Ziff Davis. Retrieved 20 April 2018.
- ^ a b c Beedle, Tim (July 21, 2017). "The Death and Return of Superman Gets a Two-Part Animated Movie". DC Comics. Retrieved 16 April 2018.
- ^ Mclaughlin, Robert (July 17, 2009). "How Superman became Will Smith's adversary". Den of Geek. Retrieved 21 April 2018.
- ^ Franich, Darren (March 28, 2016). "Death of Superman returns". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved 20 April 2018.
- ^ Matadeen, Renaldo (February 25, 2018). "Death of Superman Animated Film Debuts First Image". Comic Book Resources. Retrieved 16 April 2018.