Saturday, May 16, 2026

The Featured Cast

Before I turn to comics characters, I want to talk briefly about Dr. Zachary Smith (as portrayed by Lost in Space's permanent Guest-Star, Jonathan Harris).

"Is this REALLY necessary, my boy?"

Whenever you read any on-line discussion about Lost In Space, someone inevitably complains about Dr. Smith being useless. I can understand why they think this: certainly, his virtues are almost nonexistent, his skills debatable at best,  and his flaws are, if not endless, nearly bottomless.

Many people forget that originally Dr. Smith was an Air Force Colonel, the Jupiter program's head physician, and an expert enough combatant to knock out a military guard with one karate chop.  Over time, the show intentionally "forgot" all these details so that Dr. Smith would be as useless as possible. 

People focused on Dr. Smith's in-universe uselessness tend to overlook Dr. Smith's narrative purpose (other than as an "internal antagonist"): Dr. Smith was there to emphasize the HORROR of the situation.

And NO ONE has ever been better at emphasizing horror than Zachary Smith.

The Space Family Robinson (including Don West) are supernaturally brave.  It's kind of baked into the fact that they were chosen for the Alpha Centauri mission to begin with, and they are remarkably resolute in the face of each episode's new terrors. Dr. Smith is there to provide a "normal" (if frequently dramatic) reaction to the horrors they encounter (and of being lost in space generally).  People complain about Dr. Smith's goofy histrionics undercutting the seriousness of show.  But it is exactly that quality of Dr. Smith that SELLS THE DANGER.  It is, ironically, Dr. Smith who convinces you to take seriously the threats that might otherwise seem just goofy.  There is ZERO doubt that Dr. Smith is 100% terrified EVERY TIME and you cannot help but identify with it to some degree.  Dr. Smith's shrieking cowardice isn't a character flaws; it's his principal FEATURE.  If you miss that, you are missing much of the point of the series.

Similarly, many readers, too focused on imposing their own logic to "in-universe" situations, miss the narrative purpose of supporting characters (or of certain characteristics of some main characters).

The prime example of this is, of course, James Bartholomew Olsen.

"... again"?


I'm just going to assume that if you are reading this blog, you are already sufficient familiar with The Flaws of Jimmy Olsen.  Let's just say that Jimmy is somewhat ... impulsive.  And overconfident.  Such traits get him into Situations, ones that even his pal, Superman, is challenged to handle.

But that is not a "flaw" of Jimmy Olsen; that is the POINT of Jimmy Olsen.  It's not just a useful plot device that Jimmy's a congenital idiot with less impulse control than a toddler; it's essential metaphor.

Jimmy Olsen isn't merely "non-superhuman", he is painfully HUMAN.  Jimmy Olsen -- powerless, too impulsive for his own good, foolishly confident, oddly blasé when he finds himself in bizarre situations he has usually brought on himself -- IS humanity.  To ask "Why on earth is Superman pals with Jimmy Olsen?" is to ask "Why does Superman put up with humanity AT ALL?!"  Jimmy Olsen shows what makes Superman special.  It's not having superpowers; it's have superpowers and STILL caring about a self-destructive, short-sighted mess like Jimmy Olsen (and by extension the rest of us).  And Jimmy provides a benefit to Superman that almost no one else in-universe: by and large,  he treats Superman and Superman's life as NORMAL

Look, we all love Superman, but normal he ain't.

If Superman has one consistent fear, it's of being ostracized and abandoned.  There is nothing Superman -- who is really just Clark Kent, after all-- values more than being treated as normal.  The reason all his friends are work colleagues is because (other than his appearance) having a job is the most human thing about him.

Nothing says "I'm secretly afraid of being abandoned by my entire planet AGAIN" than naming your secret headquarters "The Fortress of Solitude".


There's a similar situation with Wonder Woman: the readers who deride classic Etta Candy as merely a "funny fat friend", an extended fat joke from a less enlightened era.  

Your crippling man-hungriness repulses me, Diana; and I am someone highly accepting of man-hungriness.


But they are missing the point of Etta Candy (especially all those writers who have her lose weight).  

Dieting Etta Candy is not Etta Candy at all.


As I pointed out twenty years ago, Etta Candy neither needs nor wants your permission to be herself.  Unlike Golden Age Wonder Woman, Etta is neither vain nor hung up on men.  

Shut up, Diana. I'm sick of your sanctimonious fat-shaming. Etta is not your "project".


Etta isn't "fat" because she lacks willpower; she could be thinner,  but trying to have a Wonder Woman physique isn't where her values lie.  

Etta knows her value doesn't come from others.

Etta's purpose isn't to be laughed at; it is to be admired because she doesn't HAVE to be a runway model to be vivacious, popular, and effective.

Batman has a misunderstood supporting character; it's must less obvious, but I think it's just as important. The character is Bat-Girl (the real one, I mean).

SPOILER ALERT:
She's a heroine.


So many versions of Barbara "Batgirl" Gordon integrate her fully into the "Bat-family".  It takes a variety of forms.  In some media/contintuities, she has a romantic relationship with Dick Grayson (or even Bruce!) or she operates out of the Batcave with her efforts being coordinated by Batman as leader of the Bat-family.  To me, this misses the point of the characters. Specifically, to BE independent of Batman.

Whose baby ARE you, anyway?


The Batman'66 show, of all versions, got it right.  Batman and Robin never knew who Batgirl was, but they appreciate her cooperation and her professionalism and never tried to control her.

There's was not an entangling alliance.

Even when Barbara Gordon switched from being Batgirl to being Oracle, she wasn't "Batman's resource".  She was depicted as an independent operator and a resource for the entire superhuman community.  The independence of Batgirl made her a feminist role model (in a way that man-crazy Wonder Woman never actually was), the logical successor of the original Batwoman and Bat-Girl.

Remember them...?

Now only modern Batwoman serves that role and it's undercut rather severely by the fact that Batwoman is Bruce Wayne's cousin and so is quite literally part of the Batfamily.




I am sure the attempts to be "inclusive" of Batgirl in the Batfamily are well-meant; no one wants to dismiss or diminish Barbara Gordon as a character.

Well; almost no one.

But doing so does diminish her as an entity inspired by yet still independent of Batman. This is why I have always resisted fandom's relentless "shipping" of Barbara Gordon and Dick Grayson.

That and sartorial considerations.

I am myself am (somewhat) guilty of this type of mistake.  No one has been more critical of Silver Age Aqualad than I.

Because he is a big-headed, purple-eyed freaky menace.


But even in my blinding detestation of Aqualad (who was always useless in-universe), I intuited his narrative purpose: making Aquaman look cool.  When Aqualad was freaking out, Aquaman retained his composure.  When Aqualad thought they were doomed, Aquaman remained hopeful. When Aqualad could see no way out, Aquaman found a simple solution.

Or at least the Silver Age's idea of "simple".


I have been similarly critical of Iris West. a.k.a., The Meanest Woman Alive.  But her in-universe flaw is a narrative feature: she shows that Barry Allen is The Most Patient Man Alive.  Which explains how he, the Flash, can live in world where literally everyone is much slower than he is.

Hal Jordan's legendary bone-headedness is certainly a flaw, but it has a narrative function: it highlights the fact that his defining features aren't intelligence or planning, but rather fearlessness and willpower.  

For about the sound of one hand clapping.  
What does it mean for Hal Jordan's mind to go blank?


Now, you might think these are insufficient or inappropriate virtues to determine who wields a power ring, but you are not the Silver Age Guardians of the Universe.

And who are we to doubt the wisdom of beings with their superior sense of color coordination?



I could go on, but I've covered most of the icons and I think you catch my drift.  Next time you feel critical of the flaws of a particular character, stop to consider whether those are part of their narrative function.  Or do so right now in the comments!



Tuesday, May 12, 2026

Batwheels

Well, I had PLANNED to hate Batwheels.  Which I finally started to watch this week.

My plan failed. It failed utterly.

I suppose I was expecting some eXtreme mecha-nonsense.  I was wrong. 



Adam West voicing the original Batman? Too delightful!

Most adorable Ace ever.

The Arrowplane and Batwing are best friends.
Green Arrow and Batman are not.

Depicting the Riddler as black was an ingenious update of his traditional look and I am now rooting for this change to become mainstream.

The music (the show is filled with it) is fun and provides leitmotifs for the various characters; the opening theme's homage to the Neal Hefti Batman theme is just one example.  

The characterization is expert.  The various Bat-vehicles have their own personalities; they aren't merely carbon copies of their owners.  They have different abilities and so must work as a team.  Their origin story even makes (comic book) sense: the Bat-family was captured, so the Batcomputer AI installed AI in the vehicles to go rescue them.

The versions of the human characters are impressive, in some cases nearly definitive.  The awkwardness between strong silent Batman (voiced, believe it or not, by Ethan Hawke!) and playful wise-acre Green Arrow.  A Duke Thomas version of Robin that I immediately wanted to see in comics (when IS the last time anyone saw Duke Thomas?!).  Wayne Knight as King Tut, driving the Carcophagus?  I'm sold!   

The characters learn lessons, help one another overcome fears and limitations; it's a great show for kids to acquire life lessons.  Reviewers seem to think it's for pre-schoolers; it seems to me a bit fast and complex for pre-schoolers.  There are a lot of references that go over the heads of young folk; the Penguin makes a Hindenburg joke in one episode and there are few pre-schoolers who've seen the Hindenburg broadcast.

I'm no pre-schooler, but I'm enjoying it. Perhaps you will, too.

Saturday, May 09, 2026

He Controls the Vertical

Voice acting messes with my head.

It changes how you see the world when it hits you that animated Hawkman 

"Let's get 'em, Skreel!"

is also 


The Outer Limits' "Control Voice".

More generally, actor Vic Perrin.


Friday, May 08, 2026

Animal Man's Arm

In Animal Man #2, Buddy "Animal Man" Baker loses an arm.


I remember the moment, having read the comic when it came out.  It was quite shocking, indeed.  

In the next issue, however, Buddy got better, as characters often do.  Unlike many characters, however, Buddy does so on panel and as a function of his superpower (the power to copy the abilities of nearby animals).


The solution is elegant and simple -- earthworms are everywhere -- and yet demonstrates how absurd and impactful Buddy's powers are (not a lot of heroes can casually REGROW an arm). 


But there is loose thread here.  One I expected the writer to follow up on at some point (instead of rambling on with post-modernistic talking foxes and the like).


Buddy's arm wasn't atomized; it was separated whole from his torso and is lying nearby.

When Buddy used the earthworm power, it seems possible that THE ARM WOULD START TO REGROW THE REST OF HIM.


Naturally, that would take longer than Buddy "just" regrowing an arm.  But it seems quite within the realm of the possibility that a second Animal Man would, at some point, turn up, the result of his severed arm doing the earthworm thing.

And yet it remains an unvisited idea, now buried under multiple universal reboots.

Wednesday, May 06, 2026

Superman's Gym?

 Today was the day it occurred to me that when Superman works out

--

if he DOES work out, and you would think he would 



--

he must do so...

in the Bottle City of Kandor.




Monday, May 04, 2026

The Wit and Wisdom of Wild Dog

As I have written about before, Wild Dog -- that is, the René Ramirez version of him played on the TV show Arrow by actor and natural comedian Rick Gonzalez -- is one of my favorite comic book characters.

If I had a daughter, I would definitely name her "Hossette".

I'd wager that most people who even know who Wild Dog is know him only as The Ramirez Version, since the original (The "Jack Wheeler" Version) has appeared almost never in comics.  

I believe that his appearances in Cave Carson Has A Cybernetic Eye may equal or exceed all the rest of his appearances combined. Sadly, even the joy that is Wild Dog doesn't make reading Cave Carson Has A Cybernetic Eye worth the effort.

As linked above, we have discussed Wild Dog before.  But there is something we never pointed out.  Although The René Ramirez version was known for his dry wise-cracking the original Jack Wheeler was a man of few words.

Just like the Fleischer version of the Man of Steel, who, if a recall correctly, does not actually say a single word in costume.  He is a man of Action (Comics).

How few? Enough that I can give you all of them from his original four-point mini-series. Here in this post.

In the first issue, Wild Dog says:

nothing. At all.  There's an emergent hostage situation and we see Wild Dog leap into action, arming himself quickly and leaping into his vehicle to go to the rescue.

The Red Rover.

But there's no dialog from him, despite prompting.



He's a tad chattier in the next three issues. But not much.

This is perhaps his best quote.

Browning is well-known manufacturer of weaponry.  And fishing gear.  But there is no evidence that Wild Dog enjoys fishing.

His inner dialog is especially pithy.  This is his only visible thought in the entire series.

Not sure that's dialog exactly, but it is an utterance.

Sarcasm is his native language.  That's a characteristic the René Ramirez retained.

Here he is imitating the voice of a conspirator he has already captured, in order to lure the co-conspirators to their doom.

This is the first part of his big speech;

and that's the second part.

And that's it. Now, his secret identity, Jack Wheeler has plenty of dialog; conversations with friends and authorities, an extended flashback origin.  But AS WILD DOG he says only what you see here. If you want a hero of action, not of words, Wild Dog is your hero!