posted
Most super-hero costumes are, to one degree or another, silly. It's just one more thing that requires suspension of disbelief in order to enjoy the genre. A good design can help the audience accept this element. A bad design can help the whole house of cards topple down. No character is immune...the super-heroes who've lasted for decades tend to have more than a few gaudily-dressed skeletons in their closet.
Take poor Black Canary...I had a subscription to Detective Comics at the time this outfit was introduced. It had a cover devoted to it, Batman and Green Arrow beaming at Dinah's new look. Both of them secretly glad no one decided they'd look better with pirate boots, a headband, wing epaulets and billowy sleeves. Her original outfit was politically incorrect, it's true...but that was rather the point. She was a vigilante who used her beauty as a distraction.
The most distracting thing about this costume? Wondering where she found those boots, man.
Over at Marvel, we have Spider-Man during his unlamented "Clone" period. Ben Reilly (then portrayed as being the "real" Peter Parker, back again after years away) showed the first big clue something was off in his story by fighting crime wearing a hoodie. Gotta love the huge, off-center Spider symbol. It shows he's X-TREME, doods!
What are your favorite examples? Super-heroes from any media are acceptable.
Posts: 6689 | Registered: Jan 2005
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quote:Originally posted by Enigmatic: Tante, the only conceivable response I have to that would be right here.
--Enigmatic
hehe, I was reading that one just today. What really baffles me is why is the joker making more plans when he was arrested in the previous panel?
Posts: 2489 | Registered: Jan 2002
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posted
From the far future we have Magnus, Robot Fighter. No offense meant to the late, great Russ Manning, but the tiny chain metal mini-skirt was quite frankly the biggest obstacle to Magnus becoming more popular.
Posts: 6689 | Registered: Jan 2005
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