Friday, October 03, 2025

The New History of the DCU

Having just read the second and third issues of The New History of the DCU, I want to share my thoughts on this masterpiece of synoptic lore-spinning.  It is a tremendous, unenviable undertaking with impressive results, even if I don't agree with each decision made in the process.

I am delighted that the creators choose to represent the original Teen Titans with one of their most absurd adventures, where they fought giant disembodied body parts.




Well, that caption box packs a wallop. By describing Wonder Woman as a "born of clay and endowed with godly powers" in strongly rejects her new-ish "secret origin" as the daughter of Zeus in favor of her traditional origin.  But PERHAPS it is simply that Barry doesn't KNOW the secret origin?  That's my hope since I like Wonder Woman more as a demigod than as a Galatea.  It also embraces the concept (first offered by John Byrne, I believe) that there was a Wonder Woman in WWII, but that it was Diana's mother, Hippolyta.  I guess I'm not the only fan who wants to have his cake and eat it, too.


Bulletproof cape?  An understandable, if strained, attempt to soften the idea of letting a kid run into battle with gun-toting gangsters... as if he would ever actually get the chance to use the cape, WHICH FLOWS BEHIND HIM, to protect himself.

My feelings about Cyborg remain unchanged, by the way.

More cake having/eating.  This telling keeps Cyborg in the JLA's new initial adventure fighting Darkseid, but cleverly puts him in suspended animation afterwards,  keeping him out of the formal formation of the League with the Martian Manhunter after the battle against the Apellaxians and making him still young enough to be a Titan.  That is an impressive bit of legerdemain, accomplished with only one phrase.


Yes. I Ching and his contempt-filled relationship with pantsuit Diana Prince remains in continuity.  


Thank you for reasserting that Guy Gardner was a gym teacher. In Baltimore, by the way, which I suppose is where the ability to overcome great fear comes from.


I REALLY think we all could have done without Kobra, of which no one is fond and upon whom no significant continuity hinges.



Really? I had thought this was gone from continuity, as it certainly seems as though in current continuity Arthur and Mera just has their first child.  I would have to read more carefully, but perhaps this is something that DID happen, but then Unhappened due to Crisis, meaning Barry could still write about it knowingly, even though it has no longer happened.


Ambush Bug, who to my knowledge has zero fans (if he ever did) and zero importance to lore, REALLY should have just been left out of history.

ART FAIL.

I do not know who the lip-obsessed artist for this comic was.  But I DO know that the Phantom Stranger is not The Phantom and does NOT wear a mask.  His eye are simply shadowed by his hat. AND his eyes are not actually blank; they just APPEAR that way when he wears the hat, because he's the Phantom Stranger and doesn't have to make sense.


"Legends" was an under-remembered but great crossover (the one in which the Phantom Stranger keeps smack-talking Darkseid and Glorious Godfrey turns the common folk against superheroes).  I am glad to see it remembered here as well as its connection to the JLI.


I am touched to see this remembrance of a young Paul Kupperberg's X-men-like version of the Doom Patrol, including tentative hero Scott Fischer, who no one remembers was the first fatal victim of the Dominators' Gene Bomb, and Arani ("Celsius"), who claimed to be Niles Caulder's wife, and who sacrificed herself silently in battle when he returned and denied ever knowing her, which was one of the saddest and most mysterious plot resolutions I have ever seen.


Look, I know Barry Allen is a scientist, not a humanist, by trade. But I refuse to believe that Barry could write a sentence as clumsy as "Would that such deep tragedy limited itself to the stars, but no."  He's read too many comic books to write that poorly.


Wow. I'd almost forgotten The Ray.  So... where is he now?


I had forgotten that the Eradicator was the one who saved Superman.  It make sense; the Eradicator was focused on preserving Kryptonian stuff (including Kal-El). But I certainly didn't remember it.


Heh. "Slowly healed."  This is tacit acknowledgement that we can all forget about Bruce's love interest Shonda Kinsolving and her magical healing touch (which is what ACTUALLY happened).  I really think they just should have thrown  Wonder Woman's Purple Healing Ray into the mix; what are super friends for, after all?


Happy to see Static, of course, but... when are they going to take advantage of the opportunity to link him to Black Lightning?


Why are we not allowed to erase this? Other than complicating Lex's backstory (and making some powerful real-world allusions), it has zero impact on continuity and causes considerable headaches.  Like, does the Secret Service still protect ex-prez Lex?


Well, whatever else, Jean Loring is still crazy!



12 comments:

  1. Ambush Bug has at least two fans. One of which hopes that his detective agency is based in Danny the Street, who IS a street again with the assistance of Bunker.

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  3. "That's my hope since I like Wonder Woman more as a demigod than as a Galatea."

    I've seen more than a couple people complain that her having a father detracts from her woman-ness. I guess I get it in the abstract, but does anyone say of Simone Biles: "She really is an inspiration to women! Shame she has a dad though, otherwise she'd be perfect."

    One other thing I'd keep from new 52 WW but also improve upon: how Amazons reproduce. The new 52 version is, three times a century the Amazons go out in canoes, find a ship from the world of men, mate with them, then kill them. My improvements:

    1) It's not three times a century; it's every so often, as the spirit moves them. Otherwise Amazons would emerge in 33-year waves where everyone has the same birthday.

    2) They don't set out to kill the sailors; the only problem is that their dating practices often lead to misunderstandings and culture clashes. In particular, if both the men and women demand to be in control, and neither is entirely opposed to violence to enforce their control, well. But on those occasions when the sailors know how to accept a gift, the Amazons simply leave and the sailors return home with a faraway look they can't explain.

    3) Tales of Sirens, Calypso, etc generally come from mythology built around actual encounters with Amazons.

    - HJF1

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  4. I've got a story idea for Sholly Fisch: Scooby-Doo Meets the Phantom Stranger.

    Here's my take on it: the gang is investigating a haunted mansion where there is actual magic afoot, which also draws the Phantom Stranger. The gang assumes the Phantom Stranger is the bad guy just from the name, and they even trap him in a net at one point.

    The actual magic in the mansion is a demonic presence that encourages the worst aspects of a person's character, and feeds off them. As with many good PS stories, PS directly battles the magical element while the mortal bystanders operate on some sort of moral / ethical level (for example Shaggy finds his courage to quash his cowardice) which weakens the magical threat.

    - HJF1

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    1. Scooby-Doo (et al.) worked with the Phantom Stranger in "Scooby-Doo! Team-Up" #13, JAN2016 (along with Deadman) https://dc.fandom.com/wiki/Scooby-Doo!_Team-Up_Vol_1_13?file=Scooby-Doo+Team-Up+Vol+1+13.jpg

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  5. HJF1 -- I never understood that business about Amazons killing the fathers of their children. It's stupidly brutal and unnecessary, as you point out, when they can just do what they need and send the man on his way. Themyscira is still protected by magic. I know the Amazons aren't really dedicated to "peace" these days but making sailors disappear is going to generate more investigations than just letting them brag about their encounters in bars and have everyone think they are drunk/crazy.

    The Phantom Stranger art looks like Michael Allred to me and no, he does not wear a mask. Why would he? He has no secret identity to protect.

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  6. "with the assistance of Bunker." ?! THAT is a story I want to know more of.

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    1. Honestly, it was his "brick-ish" power and the facts that he is both gay and a bit of a deep cut in DC lore. Now that I think about it, Danny the Street could join Bunker's JLGay (as I recall it was called) and Ambush could play the grumpy tenant, because of all the happy-time partying keeping him up at night. I don't know who could write a grumpy AB, though...

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  7. Scipio - thanks!

    Bryan L - in the new 52 WW story, I thought that we were going to learn that the Jesuit priest who wrote of the encounters had a horribly biased and warped take on it. I mean, what else would you expect? But then Azzarello confirmed that yes that's what really happened. Way to take things in the worst possible direction when the much better direction is right there for you.

    - HJF1

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    1. Azzarello is not known for his gentility.

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  8. I’m not a fan of Ambush Bug the character. I’m a big fan of the Ambush Bug comics Keith Giffen and Robert Loren Fleming made, however. With Giffen passed, there’s no need to put him in another comic.

    - Mike Loughlin

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  9. I should think that Ambush Bug, whose only power is teleportation, living on Danny the Street, whose only power is teleportation, would be redundant.

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