Costumes, by Dennis O’Neil
My beloved has just been pushed out of a fourteenth story window and is plummeting toward certain doom. I must rescue her and I will – as soon as I change clothes…
We were discussing, last week, how superheroes are evolving and we agreed – didn’t we? – that, on the whole, with a few notable exceptions, they’re getting grimmer.
They also seem to be changing their taste in wardrobes. None of the current television superdoers wear anything more than normal clothing, albeit sometimes very spiffy normal clothing. Time was, and not so long ago, when…shall we call it unconventional garb was an indispensable part of the superhero thing. Capes, masks, tights, all kinds of bizarre raiment, often in the primary hues that were friendly to the aniline dyes and rather primitive printing presses used to color them.
It began, as did so much superheroish stuff, with Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster’s Superman. To the best of my knowledge, these pioneers never went on record regarding exactly why they chose this particular visual strategy, but it was a good idea. It gave the their character and immediate and utterly unmistakable image and it separated him from his ordinary brethren as a police uniform or priestly vestments separate the wearers from plain joes and janes, at least when performing unique services. As Peter Coogan wrote, Superman’s outfit “does proclaim his identity.” The costume was obviously a part of Superman’s appeal, and immediate success, and, being no fools, Siegel and Shuster’s army of imitators copied it.
Consider that, for now, the why of superhero costumes. As to the whence…
Very little of Superman, if anything, was absolutely original. (Very little, if anything, of anything is absolutely original.) Jerry and Joe had models from mythology, the Bible, the movies, the science fiction magazines. Joe once said that he was inspired by circus costumes. And other melodramatists had been putting funny clothes on their good guys for years, among them the guys who worked on the Buck Rogers newspaper strip, pulp magazine illustrators and Lee Falk, whose Phantom, although just an ordinary human, wore a mask and oddly cut-and-colored tights. About the Phantom, Will Murray says, “I remember Lee Falk telling me that the Phantom’s seminal costume was part Robin Hood and part medieval executioner.”
Obviously, costumed heroes were an idea whose time had come. (That subtracts nothing from Siegel and Shuster’s achievement; it was they who put the ingredients together in exactly the right way for a brand new medium, comic books, and putting the ingredients together is most of any creative endeavor.) I guess what we’re asking now is, are costumed heroes an idea whose time has gone? Has the genre become too sophisticated for this part of it’s yesterday?
Apparently, those who labor in television think so. None of video’s super folk wear stuff that couldn’t be gotten at an upscale mall. And at least one superhero movie, Unbreakable, did no more than nod to the convention of the costumed hero.
Let’s finish this discussion next week.
RECOMMENDED READING: Will Eisner Reader.
Dennis O’Neil is an award-winning editor and writer of comic books like Batman, The Question, Iron Man, Green Lantern and/or Green Arrow, and The Shadow, as well as all kinds of novels, stories and articles. The Question: Zen and Violence is on sale right now in trade paperback.
Good point, Denny. Costumes have been the hallmark of heroes historically, though some were for dramatic impact while others were a bit more utilitarian. I’m thinking of Batman for the latter. A dark creature of the night who relies heavily on the psychological tool of fear to subdue lawbreakers, and yet a few years after his introduction we get a rather odd counterpoint with Robin, the Boy Wonder, whose costume is a traffic light ensemble of red, yellow and green. Hardly the inconspicuous stuff of shadow.
I look forward to next week’s installment and I hope Marifran is doing well.
I've often found it more than odd that superheroes need a disguise to hide their identities yet chose to wear in most cases brightly colored garb to draw attention to themselves. Voyeurism at its best.The simple ones work the best for me, Superman, Batman, Captain Marvel. Or the ones with a motif, like the US flag, Wonder Woman, Captain America (the REAL one).Plus, they look great in four color. The ferret symndron, Bright and shiny.
As long as artists like to draw characters essentially naked, which they seem to be doing more and more, then costumes will be popular. Most of the ones today are pretty much just "painted on" anyway.
It’s amusing how television and film make a pretense they know how to handle superheroes better than the comics. Historically, comics have proven to be the source of inspiration and leaders in the storytelling arena while film and television is all too happy to capitalize on their appeal, while pretending they know how to do it better. The more notable successes they’ve had in handling comics related ventures, are those which have more respected the original comics form.
Superhero costumes appear to be an oddity but the superheroes themselves are oddities, and attempting to normalize them misses the point entirely. Based on this notion, I don’t believe that television and film will set any long-term standards, as comics have. These mediums are much more populist followers of trends than they are creative trend setters.
The comics will remain a more low key cauldron of creative forces setting the tone for what film and television aspire to achieve.