Tuesday, August 31, 2010

The One-Panel Critics: How Much Does Kryptonite Cost?

The first assignment I'm giving my students in this year's iteration of the graphic novel course is to read A Contract With God alongside a comic book that could have been on the stands when Eisner's book was first published. And this time, because I have seventy students in two section of the class, I can't rely on the Joe Stinson Collection, so I'm having everyone read a single issue of Superman published late in 1978.

In Superman #331, we visit a jail that has been specially designed to house super-villains (the Atomic Skull, the Parasite, and Metallo, possibly with Terra-Man on his way). Each of them dwells in a small box (with a cot and a few vaguely delineated furniture-like objects). Each cell is specially engineered to prevent the escape of that specific villain. (Also, the boxes are draining the villains' powers into special devices that another super-villain will use, but that's neither here nor there.)

Here's Metallo, chillin' in his crib, as it were. Aren't cyborgs cute in slacks?



And why does he still have a chunk of Kryptonite powering his robot body?



... Well, since Kryptonite is harmless to humans, I'm sure that it won't pose any sort of problem in the future.



Oh, and also KRYPTONITE IS CHEAPER THAN RADIUM.

(Radium, by the way, currently costs something like $25,000 per gram. That's expensive, sure, but it seems to imply that you could incapacitate Superman for about the same price as a year's tuition at some snooty colleges.)

The radioactive fragments of an exploded planet light-years away from us cost less than $25,000 per gram.

This is the sort of thing you would only write if (a.) you didn't think your audience was paying very close attention, and (b.) you didn't care what kind of mess you were leaving for other writers who might arrive after you. Thank you, Martin Pasko.

Actually, I suppose it's also possible that Kryptonite is just more efficient, as a power source, than radium — or that Kryptonite lasts longer and therefore needs to be replaced less frequently. But that's not quite what our jail warden seems to be saying.

I don't have much else to say about this. But let's just mark it as another entry in the "comics are dumb" file.

6 comments:

  1. I think they worked out a way to synthesize Kryptonite from green Jell-O.

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  2. Yeah, I think that was Richard Pryor's idea.

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  3. Or keepingthe kryptonitein place is less expensive then replacing it since the kryptoniteis already there.Bird in the hand and all

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  4. I have about 400 grams of kryptonite and wishes to sell it to any buyer around the world who is interested.

    Contact infor

    davidhenryvc@gmail.com

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  5. I have a piece of kryptonite off the set of Superman idk what movie for sure I just know it was off a big wall of kryptonite that was in the movie and I'm wondering how much it would be worth you can contact me at Sebastian.melendez00@gmail.com

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