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10 sur 10
Particularly amusing in an era when facts are regularly submitted, via highly ideological media outlets, to the Bizarro World treatment. Highly recommended.
 
Signalé
Mark_Feltskog | 2 autres critiques | Dec 23, 2023 |
In 1986 when DC decided to revitalize their moribund Superman franchise, Alan Moore, only given the assignment after threatening editor Julius Schwartz with death, scripted the ultimate tale that ended the nearly 50 years of Superman continuity. His classic story, penciled by legendary Superman artist Curt Swan, hit all the proper nostalgic notes complete with the final Lex Luthor-Brainiac team up, the Legion of Super-Heroes, Krypto, Lana Lang, Jimmy Olsen, and of course Lois Lane. It evens ends with a wink. This deluxe hardcover edition collects two additional excellent Moore-written Superman tales: "The Jungle Line" with art by Rick Veitch and "For the Man Who Has Everything" with [b:Watchmen|472331|Watchmen|Alan Moore|http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1238274511s/472331.jpg|4358649] co-creator Dave Gibbons.
 
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rickklaw | 6 autres critiques | Oct 13, 2017 |
This simply wasn't very good. Doesn't appear to be a very fitting end to an incredible run of more than 40 years.
 
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biggs1399 | 6 autres critiques | Jan 19, 2016 |
The last great Silver Age Superman story, period. While other stories do more in terms of spectacle this takes the route of simplicity. While it seems corny at some parts that changes quickly. The end is something that other writers have tried to outdo but all have failed. This really is the last word on the Silver Age Superman by one of the best writers of all time. The fact that he did what he did in one comic is remarkable.
 
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Kurt.Rocourt | 6 autres critiques | May 22, 2015 |
Printed in 1986 but drawn and written like a comic book from the 50's, a somewhat corny and superficial story from master of the dark and substantive Alan Moore, and the final issue for Silver Age Superman putting a bow on his story line after the confusing retcon effort Crisis on Infinite Earths, it should come as no surprise that Superman: Whatever Happened to the Man of Tomorrow is weird.

Though weird and written/drawn in a style I generally do not like, I enjoyed Alan Moore's effort quite a bit. The storyline is pretty basic, I mean, as basic as you can get when the broken corpose of Braniac merges with Lex Luthor to start an assault on the Fortress of Solitude with the help of villains from the future. Lots of Silver Age characters meet their end in this book, as Lois Lane in the future recounts the events leading up to Silver Age Superman vanishing forever.

Because this book is meant to be the capstone of Silver Age Superman, it fails to be really independent, even though it's collected together as a single bound book. Lots of references to characters I didn't know and events with which I was unfamiliar, including two colors of Kryptonite I had never heard of. As a result, I don't think I can recommend it for casual fans such as myself, at least not without Wikipedia handy.

It's a light-hearted and fun read, but it fails to deal with the magnitude of the events it portrays. Like Death of Superman and All-Star Superman, the subject is the demise of the Man of Steel. But unlike All-Star Superman, we are treated to almost none of Kal-el's thoughts as his approaches his own end. It's worth a read, but it requires research, and it's nowhere near the best Superman book I've read. Moore seems to feel more at home dealing with darker material like V for Vendetta and Watchmen, so this particular book always feels like something of a shallow knock-off at best or a toothless parody at worst.
 
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rodhilton | 6 autres critiques | Nov 14, 2014 |
I should probably rate this book 5 stars simply because Moore managed to write a superman story that I actually want to rate above 2 stars.
 
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swampygirl | 6 autres critiques | Dec 9, 2013 |
It's probably a little darker than the usual Superman comic since people (heroes and villains) actually die. I guess you'd expect that with Alan Moore at the helm. An interesting What If type comic.
 
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ptdilloway | 6 autres critiques | Nov 21, 2013 |
Fun remembering these stories from when I was a kid, but an entire volume of them begins to wear thin.
 
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JNSelko | 2 autres critiques | Jul 6, 2008 |
Anyone with any affection for the pre-Crisis (that is, pre-John Byrne) Superman will get a lot out of this story, which was intended as the "final issue" under the old continuity. For others, I'd recommend tackling the trade paperbacks that cover the decades first, because in it's proper context, "Whatever Happened..." is a four star tale in the old style.½
 
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EasyEW | 6 autres critiques | Aug 9, 2007 |
This am VERY STUPID book! It TOTAL JUNK! No one should am be reading it!
2 voter
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TimothyBurke | 2 autres critiques | Aug 8, 2006 |
10 sur 10