Saskatoon StarPhoenix

The glasses come off

Superman’s secret identity won’t be a secret anymore

- DAVID BETANCOURT

It’s not a bird. It’s not a plane. And what writer Brian Michael Bendis really wants you to know is — it’s not a trick.

Superman will reveal his secret identity to the world next month in the pages of his self-titled series from DC Comics. No more non-prescripti­on glasses and combing back the S-curl to blend in with the society he protects. No more slouching. No more phone booths. (Well, it’s likely been a while since he’s used one of those.) But Superman is coming clean, and Bendis says the new storyline he wrote will be a lasting change for the Man of Steel.

“There’s no Kryptonite. There’s no Mister Mxyzptlk (a magical, reality-altering foe). There’s no magic amulet. No Bizarro,” Bendis said emphatical­ly. “It’s a hero who gave a lot and needs a little something for himself.”

The biggest moment for Superman since he was killed in the early 1990s begins to take root in Superman No. 17 (illustrate­d by Kevin Maguire), on sale in print and digitally. Issues No. 18 (on sale Dec. 12) and No. 19 (January), both illustrate­d by Ivan Reis and Joe Prado, will deal with Superman’s opening up to the world and the aftermath.

Next year, DC will also publish two one-shot issues, Superman: Heroes in January, and Superman: Villains, that will show the impact of Superman’s decision from the perspectiv­e of DC’S biggest names both good and evil.

The decision was not an easy one — this is Bendis’s first potentiall­y polarizing creative decision at DC since he made the move from Marvel Comics in 2017. He said DC’S top brass had to give approval, but don’t fall for the notion that this is the end of Clark Kent.

“I get why people would immediatel­y think ... that Clark Kent just goes away,” Bendis said. “Clark Kent is a huge part of who (Superman) is. It’s who he grew up as. He’s not giving it up. He’s sharing it with people.”

This isn’t the first secret-identity revelation Bendis has been a part of. He unmasked Daredevil years ago at Marvel, a decision that stayed with the character for years — and Bendis points out that the world didn’t end. Some would say the storytelli­ng in Daredevil after the moment was better for it.

“I can only speak to my own track record that things aren’t done for shock. They’re done for story,” Bendis said. “And the only way to do that is to tell the story.”

Bendis also notes that with today’s younger fans, secret identities just aren’t as big a deal as they were to previous generation­s of comic book fans, adding many associate hiding who you really are with online trolling.

“You have to remember most secreted identities today don’t exist in comics,” Bendis said. “People with secret identities (today) are people online who talk crap.”

When asked if he sees a future scenario where this monumental Superman moment is reversed and Clark Kent’s glasses are dusted off, he confidentl­y says no.

“I have to be careful with my wording, but, you know, this is Warner Bros., and they don’t do things willy-nilly and this was approved,” Bendis said. “They said ‘Go for it. We see what you’re doing. We get it.’ It takes (Superman) into a place we would like to take him.”

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DC ENTERTAINM­ENT

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