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What this lady thinks, basically https://t.co/CCi2emFS0L
Superman straight up threatening to murder people involved in gambling is insane to me. Gambling in the 40’s seems like it was a lot more of a moral issue than it is today, and there’s explicit criminal activity involved, but Superman just outright threatens killing them
Ah yes, gambling, as evil as stealing, murder, and tax evasion
MICHAEL WHERES THE TERRIFICS COME ON MICHAEL WHERE ARE THEY https://t.co/N6qJD73szG
Frank Cho gets rightly called out often for his overly cheesecakey art and his tasteless humor, but man… I love his art. It’s able to balance realism and cartoony fun so well, everything looks appealing…
I wish I had gotten a Plas one-shot or something from him.
This year, I’ve fallen in love three stories that are creative takes on the classic DC heroes, still recognizable but very unique in their own ways, set in the early 20th century, who fight against the powerful that have deep grasp over the real world cities they’re set in.
For Ultraverse… idk this Phantom Lady looking lass. As for Titans, if you meant Teen Titans I have to bring up Offspring. If you meant Greek Titans, Atlas seems cool https://t.co/NSRuF00aBg
I’d say Kyle Baker’s run from 2003, and The Terrifics. Both are at the opposite ends of the Plas spectrum, with Baker’s being a Golden Age tinged highly comedic and cartoony run (though a bit too satiric at times) and Terrifics being a great modern, adventurous superhero comic https://t.co/9lx4s9N6EA
It’s a very “in name only” kind of book, taking mostly the name and appearance (sort of) of the original Creeper. You won’t find Jack Ryder in this story. The Creeper here is surrealist artist Judith Baker (woman in red), who lives with her sister Madeline in 1920’s Paris.
…anyways stan Plastic Man, the barefoot toeless wonder https://t.co/PZhieitYww