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{{trope}}
{{work}}
[[File:capeflag.jpg|frame]]
[[File:capeflag.jpg|frame]]
For some reason, killing off [[Superman]] is a popular idea. It may be because, being the [[The Cape|Ultimate Hero]], it is [[Crowning Moment of Awesome|awesome]] to see him make the [[Heroic Sacrifice|ultimate sacrifice]]. Maybe it's because he's normally [[Invincible Hero|invulnerable to nearly everything]] and so his death comes as a shock. Maybe it's a [[Messianic Archetype|Christ]] [[What Do You Mean Its Not Symbolic|allegory]]. Or maybe it's because some people can't stand the character and want to see him offed [[Status Quo Is God|even if only for a short while]]. Whatever the case, this has been done several times in various media over the decades.
For some reason, killing off [[Superman]] is a popular idea. It may be because, being the [[The Cape (trope)|Ultimate Hero]], it is [[Crowning Moment of Awesome|awesome]] to see him make the [[Heroic Sacrifice|ultimate sacrifice]]. Maybe it's because he's normally [[Invincible Hero|invulnerable to nearly everything]] and so his death comes as a shock. Maybe it's a [[Messianic Archetype|Christ]] [[What Do You Mean Its Not Symbolic|allegory]]. Or maybe it's because some people can't stand the character and want to see him offed [[Status Quo Is God|even if only for a short while]]. Whatever the case, this has been done several times in various media over the decades.


The first occasions were as "imaginary stories" (that is, set outside of the official [[Continuity]]) published during the [[Silver Age]] of comics.
The first occasions were as "imaginary stories" (that is, set outside of the official [[Continuity]]) published during the [[Silver Age]] of comics.


The final episode of ''[[Super Friends]]'' (aired in November 1985), was also titled "The Death of Superman", and opened with the funeral ceremony, featuring [[Burial in Space|the coffin being sent into the sun]]. [[Disney Death|He gets better -- he was only mostly dead.]] An earlier story from ''Challenge of the Superfriends'' also featured Superman (and the rest of the League) being killed.
The final episode of ''[[Superfriends]]'' (aired in November 1985), was also titled "The Death of Superman", and opened with the funeral ceremony, featuring [[Burial in Space|the coffin being sent into the sun]]. [[Disney Death|He gets better -- he was only mostly dead.]] An earlier story from ''Challenge of the Superfriends'' also featured Superman (and the rest of the League) being killed.


However, the most famous instance was the "Death of Superman" [[Story Arc]] in the Superman comics during the 1990s, and the animated movie (based on that story) titled ''[[Superman Doomsday]]'' that came out in 2007.
However, the most famous instance was the "Death of Superman" [[Story Arc]] in the Superman comics during the 1990s, and the animated movie (based on that story) titled ''[[Superman: Doomsday]]'' that came out in 2007.


''The Death of Superman'' is split into three parts:
''[[The Death of Superman]]'' is split into three parts:
* ''Doomsday!'' (November, 1992-January, 1993)
* ''Doomsday!'' (November, 1992-January, 1993)
* ''Funeral for a Friend'' (January-June,1993)
* ''Funeral for a Friend'' (January-June,1993)
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In this story, a monster named [[Names to Run Away From Really Fast|Doomsday]] comes out of nowhere and thrashes both Superman AND the [[Justice League of America]]. When it attacks Metropolis, Superman must [[World of Cardboard Speech|unleash all of his hidden power]] to stop it, killing Doomsday but also getting mortally wounded in the process. He dies in [[Lois Lane]]'s arms', while his ragged cape ended up hung on a pole as a sort of tragic flag: possibly the most effective visual ever seen in comic book history.
In this story, a monster named [[Names to Run Away From Really Fast|Doomsday]] comes out of nowhere and thrashes both Superman AND the [[Justice League of America]]. When it attacks Metropolis, Superman must [[World of Cardboard Speech|unleash all of his hidden power]] to stop it, killing Doomsday but also getting mortally wounded in the process. He dies in [[Lois Lane]]'s arms', while his ragged cape ended up hung on a pole as a sort of tragic flag: possibly the most effective visual ever seen in comic book history.


Naturally, [[DC Comics]] was [[Like You Would Really Do It|NOT]] planning on really killing off one of their main [[Cash Cow Franchise|most famous characters]] permanently: it was a [[No Such Thing As Bad Publicity|publicity stunt]] to boost sales, and the plan was to soon bring him back. However, the general media picked up the story and ran with it, and a lot of people believed it. This is because, at the time, this thing ''hadn't'' been done to death; this story may have been the [[Trope Codifier]] for the [[Comic Book Death]].
Naturally, [[DC Comics]] was [[Like You Would Really Do It|NOT]] planning on really killing off one of their main [[Cash Cow Franchise|most famous characters]] permanently: it was a [[No Such Thing as Bad Publicity|publicity stunt]] to boost sales, and the plan was to soon bring him back. However, the general media picked up the story and ran with it, and a lot of people believed it. This is because, at the time, this thing ''hadn't'' been done to death; this story may have been the [[Trope Codifier]] for the [[Comic Book Death]].


''The Death of Superman'' arc happened by accident: originally, the then-current Superman writing were going to get Superman and Lois Lane married; however, ''[[Lois and Clark|Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman]]'' was already green-lit at ABC, and the producers of the show wanted the wedding to happen first on the show. Forced to come up with a new storyline to replace "The Wedding" arc, Jerry Ordway, the then-current writer for ''The Adventures of Superman'', jokingly said at the next meeting, "Let's just kill 'im!" Normally, the other writers would laugh it off, but this time, they would do the deed.
''The Death of Superman'' arc happened by accident: originally, the then-current Superman writing were going to get Superman and Lois Lane married; however, ''[[Lois and Clark|Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman]]'' was already green-lit at ABC, and the producers of the show wanted the wedding to happen first on the show. Forced to come up with a new storyline to replace "The Wedding" arc, Jerry Ordway, the then-current writer for ''The Adventures of Superman'', jokingly said at the next meeting, "Let's just kill 'im!" Normally, the other writers would laugh it off, but this time, they would do the deed.
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* '''The Man of Steel ([[Steel]]):''' A [[Race Lift|black]] hero wearing a suit of [[Powered Armor]]. He was the only one to both admit he was NOT Superman from the start ''and'' not actively claim the name for himself. [[Meaningful Name|John Henry Irons]] merely wanted to keep the spirit of Superman alive (although there were hints that he may have been literally serving as an anchor for Superman's soul).
* '''The Man of Steel ([[Steel]]):''' A [[Race Lift|black]] hero wearing a suit of [[Powered Armor]]. He was the only one to both admit he was NOT Superman from the start ''and'' not actively claim the name for himself. [[Meaningful Name|John Henry Irons]] merely wanted to keep the spirit of Superman alive (although there were hints that he may have been literally serving as an anchor for Superman's soul).


Each of these characters was allowed to star in one of Superman's then current titles for a few months. It was eventually revealed that the real Superman was {{spoiler|none of them, he wasn't even dead but rather in [[Suspended Animation]]}} and in fact the {{spoiler|Cyborg Superman}} was a ''villain'', with {{spoiler|Mongul}} as his [[The Dragon|Dragon]]. whom the others had to team up to stop. Superman was soon [[Back From the Dead]] afterwards, and (very infamously) came back with a ''mullet'', which [[Dork Age|lasted four maddening years]]. The Superman [[Legacy Hero|legacy carriers]] stuck around for other stories, with two of them ([[Superboy]] and [[Steel]]) even getting their own series. Steel would also appear in ''[[Superman the Animated Series]]'' and ''[[Justice League Unlimited]]''.
Each of these characters was allowed to star in one of Superman's then current titles for a few months. It was eventually revealed that the real Superman was {{spoiler|none of them, he wasn't even dead but rather in [[Suspended Animation]]}} and in fact the {{spoiler|Cyborg Superman}} was a ''villain'', with {{spoiler|Mongul}} as his [[The Dragon|Dragon]]. whom the others had to team up to stop. Superman was soon [[Back from the Dead]] afterwards, and (very infamously) came back with a ''mullet'', which [[Dork Age|lasted four maddening years]]. The Superman [[Legacy Hero|legacy carriers]] stuck around for other stories, with two of them ([[Superboy]] and [[Steel]]) even getting their own series. Steel would also appear in ''[[Superman: The Animated Series]]'' and ''[[Justice League Unlimited]]''.


The storyline also had a huge impact on [[Green Lantern]]. {{spoiler|The Cyborg Superman}} turned out to be a villain collaborating with {{spoiler|Mongul}} to prepare Earth to be converted into a [[War World]] (basically like a Death Star). He started by annihilating [[Green Lantern|Hal Jordan's]] home town of Coast City, while Jordan was in space. When Jordan returned, his grief drove him into his controversial turn as [[Face Heel Turn|Parallax]].
The storyline also had a huge impact on [[Green Lantern]]. {{spoiler|The Cyborg Superman}} turned out to be a villain collaborating with {{spoiler|Mongul}} to prepare Earth to be converted into a [[War World]] (basically like a Death Star). He started by annihilating [[Green Lantern|Hal Jordan's]] home town of Coast City, while Jordan was in space. When Jordan returned, his grief drove him into his controversial turn as [[Face Heel Turn|Parallax]].
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The animated movie is more or less the same as the comics arc (especially the death sequence) but with the exclusion of the Justice League and the Superman wannabes (except for an (adult) clone), probably to make the story simpler (or for licensing reasons.)
The animated movie is more or less the same as the comics arc (especially the death sequence) but with the exclusion of the Justice League and the Superman wannabes (except for an (adult) clone), probably to make the story simpler (or for licensing reasons.)


Prior to the ''Superman: Doomsday'' movie, the ''[[Justice League]]'' animated series episode "Hereafter" did an homage to this story as well, in which Superman is (apparently) disintegrated by one of Toyman's weapons. The Man of Steel is mourned and buried (symbolically, they had no body to inter) by the other heroes, the people of Metropolis, and [[Antagonist in Mourning|even Lex Luthor]]. Then the episode takes a turn for the bizarre when [[Nineties Anti Hero|Lobo]] shows up, demanding to fill Superman's place in the Justice League. Then the action skips forward 3000 years to reveal that Supes wasn't killed, but blasted forward in time. [[Bad Future|Future Earth is a red-sunned wreck]], and a depowered Superman must team up with Vandal Savage--now the sole survivor of humanity--to rebuild a time machine to send Supes back.
Prior to the ''Superman: Doomsday'' movie, the ''[[Justice League]]'' animated series episode "Hereafter" did an homage to this story as well, in which Superman is (apparently) disintegrated by one of Toyman's weapons. The Man of Steel is mourned and buried (symbolically, they had no body to inter) by the other heroes, the people of Metropolis, and [[Antagonist in Mourning|even Lex Luthor]]. Then the episode takes a turn for the bizarre when [[Nineties Anti-Hero|Lobo]] shows up, demanding to fill Superman's place in the Justice League. Then the action skips forward 3000 years to reveal that Supes wasn't killed, but blasted forward in time. [[Bad Future|Future Earth is a red-sunned wreck]], and a depowered Superman must team up with Vandal Savage--now the sole survivor of humanity--to rebuild a time machine to send Supes back.


Doomsday also showed up in this series, in the episodes "A Better World" and "The Doomsday Sanction", but was revealed to be an {{spoiler|altered clone of Superman}} and doesn't get to kill Superman.
Doomsday also showed up in this series, in the episodes "A Better World" and "The Doomsday Sanction", but was revealed to be an {{spoiler|altered clone of Superman}} and doesn't get to kill Superman.


''Probably'' not related to the [[Crash Test Dummies]]' first hit single, "[[wikipedia:Superman's Song|Superman's Song]]", but considering the story arc began a year after the song was released, who knows?
----
=== This [[Comic Book]] provides examples of: ===


{{tropelist}}
* [[Affirmative Action Legacy]]: Sort of with the African American Steel. He didn't outright want to replace Superman, but just wanted to keep his spirit alive.
* [[Affirmative Action Legacy]]: Sort of with the African American Steel. He didn't outright want to replace Superman, but just wanted to keep his spirit alive.
* [[Back From the Dead]]: Superman, he can't stay dead forever.
* [[Back from the Dead]]: Superman, he can't stay dead forever.
* [[Badass Long Hair]]: Supes came back with [[Fan Nickname|The Super-Mullet]] that he wore for a good portion of the nineties. He cut it back to his traditional spitcurl when he got married to Lois.
* [[Badass Long Hair]]: Supes came back with [[Fan Nickname|The Super-Mullet]] that he wore for a good portion of the nineties. He cut it back to his traditional spitcurl when he got married to Lois.
* [[Cash Cow Franchise]]: The compiled first part of the arc, called "The Death of Superman", is the best-selling graphic novel of all time.
* [[Cash Cow Franchise]]: The compiled first part of the arc, called "The Death of Superman", is the best-selling graphic novel of all time.
* [[The Dark Age of Comic Books]]
* [[The Dark Age of Comic Books]]
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* [[The Hero Dies]]: One of the most iconic examples ever.
* [[The Hero Dies]]: One of the most iconic examples ever.
* [[Heroic Sacrifice]]: How Supes goes out.
* [[Heroic Sacrifice]]: How Supes goes out.
* [[I Am Not Left Handed]]: Superman kills Doomsday by not holding back against him.
* [[I Am Not Left-Handed]]: Superman kills Doomsday by not holding back against him.
* [[Legacy Hero]]: Superman gets four of them.
* [[Legacy Hero]]: Superman gets four of them.
* [[Mutual Kill]]: Supes and Doomsday
* [[Mutual Kill]]: Supes and Doomsday
* [[Nineties Anti Hero]]: Both Cyborg Superman and the Eradicator are pastiches of this 90's trend. {{spoiler|Only the Eradicator plays this straight. Cyborg Superman (aka Hank Henshaw) is a villain.}}
* [[Nineties Anti-Hero]]: Both Cyborg Superman and the Eradicator are pastiches of this 90's trend. {{spoiler|Only the Eradicator plays this straight. Cyborg Superman (aka Hank Henshaw) is a villain.}}
* [[Red Skies Crossover]]: The arc affected everyone on The [[DC Universe]]'s Earth, seeing as how their [[Big Good]] had just been killed. It got a nod in the lead-up to the [[Batman (Franchise)|Batman]] arc ''[[Knightfall]]''.
* [[Red Skies Crossover]]: The arc affected everyone on The [[DC Universe]]'s Earth, seeing as how their [[Big Good]] had just been killed. It got a nod in the lead-up to the [[Batman]] arc ''[[Knightfall]]''.
* [[Wham! Shot]]: Lois is shown holding a dying Superman in her arms after he faces Doomsday, and Matrix failed to provide backup support. She begs him to hold on until the paramedics come, as he murmurs if Doomsday is defeated. Jimmy Olsen stands in the background, hesitating on photographing this moment.
* [[Younger and Hipper]]: [[Superboy]] is a pastiche of this type of trend.
* [[Younger and Hipper]]: [[Superboy]] is a pastiche of this type of trend.


== The Death of Superman has been referenced in: ==
== The Death of Superman has been referenced in: ==
* ''[[Dragonball]]'' (which borrowed heavily on the Superman mythos): Goku was killed off at the conclusion of the Cell Saga with the intention of ending the series there and implying a [[Changing of the Guard]]. ([[Executive Meddling]] resulted in a bringing the character back.)
* ''[[Dragon Ball]]'' (which borrowed heavily on the Superman mythos): Goku was killed off at the conclusion of the Cell Saga with the intention of ending the series there and implying a [[Changing of the Guard]]. ([[Executive Meddling]] resulted in a bringing the character back.)
* ''[[Shortpacked (Webcomic)|Shortpacked]]'': Resident [[Jerkass]] Mike [http://shortpacked.com/comic/book-1-brings-back-the-80s/03-customer-protection-rackets/a-35/ makes] a [[Too Soon]] joke about the then-recent death of Pope John Paul II, referencing the Reign of the Supermen.
* ''[[Shortpacked]]'': Resident [[Jerkass]] Mike [http://shortpacked.com/comic/book-1-brings-back-the-80s/03-customer-protection-rackets/a-35/ makes] a [[Too Soon]] joke about the then-recent death of Pope John Paul II, referencing the Reign of the Supermen.
* This ''[[Wonderella]]'' [http://nonadventures.com/2007/06/16/the-death-of-wonderella/ comic]
* This ''[[Wonderella]]'' [http://nonadventures.com/2007/06/16/the-death-of-wonderella/ comic]
* ''[[FoxTrot]]'': Jason and Paige [[Take That|draw mean comic strips about each other]], including strips saying the other caused Superman's death.
* ''[[FoxTrot]]'': Jason and Paige [[Take That|draw mean comic strips about each other]], including strips saying the other caused Superman's death.
{{quote| '''Paige in Jason's strip:''' He saw me in a bathing suit.<br />
{{quote|'''Paige in Jason's strip:''' He saw me in a bathing suit.
'''Jason in Paige's strip:''' I told him we were related. }}
'''Jason in Paige's strip:''' I told him we were related. }}
* "Superman's Song", by the Crash Test Dummies, is essentially a eulogy to the fallen hero.
* "Superman's Song", by the Crash Test Dummies, is essentially a eulogy to the fallen hero.
{{quote| Superman never made any money<br />
{{quote|Superman never made any money
For savin' the world from Solomon Grundy<br />
For savin' the world from Solomon Grundy
And sometimes I despair<br />
And sometimes I despair
The world will never see another man like him. }}
The world will never see another man like him. }}
** Although the song was released a full year before the Death of Superman storyline even took place.
** [[Older Than They Think|Although the song was released a full year before the Death of Superman storyline even took place.]] Perhaps the story arc is a reference to the song, maybe?
** So this is literally a [[Too Soon]] moment!
** So this is literally a [[Too Soon]] moment!
* Parodied in a ''[[Deadpool]]'' storyline called "Funeral for a Freak", some ten years after the event.
* Parodied in a ''[[Deadpool]]'' storyline called "Funeral for a Freak", some ten years after the event.


{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}
[[Category:{{PAGENAME}}]]
[[Category:The Nineties]]
[[Category:The Nineties]]
[[Category:Superman (Franchise)]]
[[Category:DC Comics Series]]
[[Category:DC Comics Series]]
[[Category:The Death Of Superman]]
[[Category:Superman]]
[[Category:Trope]]
[[Category:Super Title Index]]
{{DEFAULTSORT:Death of Superman, The}}

Latest revision as of 16:22, 5 September 2022

For some reason, killing off Superman is a popular idea. It may be because, being the Ultimate Hero, it is awesome to see him make the ultimate sacrifice. Maybe it's because he's normally invulnerable to nearly everything and so his death comes as a shock. Maybe it's a Christ allegory. Or maybe it's because some people can't stand the character and want to see him offed even if only for a short while. Whatever the case, this has been done several times in various media over the decades.

The first occasions were as "imaginary stories" (that is, set outside of the official Continuity) published during the Silver Age of comics.

The final episode of Superfriends (aired in November 1985), was also titled "The Death of Superman", and opened with the funeral ceremony, featuring the coffin being sent into the sun. He gets better -- he was only mostly dead. An earlier story from Challenge of the Superfriends also featured Superman (and the rest of the League) being killed.

However, the most famous instance was the "Death of Superman" Story Arc in the Superman comics during the 1990s, and the animated movie (based on that story) titled Superman: Doomsday that came out in 2007.

The Death of Superman is split into three parts:

  • Doomsday! (November, 1992-January, 1993)
  • Funeral for a Friend (January-June,1993)
  • Reign of the Supermen! (June-October, 1993)

In this story, a monster named Doomsday comes out of nowhere and thrashes both Superman AND the Justice League of America. When it attacks Metropolis, Superman must unleash all of his hidden power to stop it, killing Doomsday but also getting mortally wounded in the process. He dies in Lois Lane's arms', while his ragged cape ended up hung on a pole as a sort of tragic flag: possibly the most effective visual ever seen in comic book history.

Naturally, DC Comics was NOT planning on really killing off one of their main most famous characters permanently: it was a publicity stunt to boost sales, and the plan was to soon bring him back. However, the general media picked up the story and ran with it, and a lot of people believed it. This is because, at the time, this thing hadn't been done to death; this story may have been the Trope Codifier for the Comic Book Death.

The Death of Superman arc happened by accident: originally, the then-current Superman writing were going to get Superman and Lois Lane married; however, Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman was already green-lit at ABC, and the producers of the show wanted the wedding to happen first on the show. Forced to come up with a new storyline to replace "The Wedding" arc, Jerry Ordway, the then-current writer for The Adventures of Superman, jokingly said at the next meeting, "Let's just kill 'im!" Normally, the other writers would laugh it off, but this time, they would do the deed.

Reign of the Supermen

DC then decided to milk the story a bit more, and extended it to last nearly a year, with the rather inventive idea of having not one but FOUR people showing up and claiming to be a resurrected Superman. These were:

  • The Man of Tomorrow (Cyborg Superman): A cyborg version of Superman, whose DNA was a match for the original's and whose mechanical parts were Kryptonian tech; he claimed amnesia about how he was repaired, and other parts of his past.
  • The Last Son of Krypton (The Kryptonian Eradicator): A vigilante with a personality similar to the one Superman had demonstrated in an earlier arc, where he (under the influence of a Kryptonian artifact called The Eradicator) became ruthlessly logical.
  • The Metropolis Kid (Superboy): A reckless, fame-seeking teenage (assumed) clone created by a secret government project. He cheerfully admits to being a clone, and plans to become Superman's successor. "Don't ever call me Superboy!"
  • The Man of Steel (Steel): A black hero wearing a suit of Powered Armor. He was the only one to both admit he was NOT Superman from the start and not actively claim the name for himself. John Henry Irons merely wanted to keep the spirit of Superman alive (although there were hints that he may have been literally serving as an anchor for Superman's soul).

Each of these characters was allowed to star in one of Superman's then current titles for a few months. It was eventually revealed that the real Superman was none of them, he wasn't even dead but rather in Suspended Animation and in fact the Cyborg Superman was a villain, with Mongul as his Dragon. whom the others had to team up to stop. Superman was soon Back from the Dead afterwards, and (very infamously) came back with a mullet, which lasted four maddening years. The Superman legacy carriers stuck around for other stories, with two of them (Superboy and Steel) even getting their own series. Steel would also appear in Superman: The Animated Series and Justice League Unlimited.

The storyline also had a huge impact on Green Lantern. The Cyborg Superman turned out to be a villain collaborating with Mongul to prepare Earth to be converted into a War World (basically like a Death Star). He started by annihilating Hal Jordan's home town of Coast City, while Jordan was in space. When Jordan returned, his grief drove him into his controversial turn as Parallax.

Later stories brought back Doomsday as well, who was revealed to have been created as an experiment on Krypton and buried on Earth long ago. However he hasn't been quite as menacing since then, probably because he no longer has a story-backed reason to be (see also Generic Doomsday Villain, a trope which he named).

The entire arc including The Death, Funeral, and Reign are often referred to officially as The Death and Return of Superman, taking into consideration his return after several months.

The animated movie is more or less the same as the comics arc (especially the death sequence) but with the exclusion of the Justice League and the Superman wannabes (except for an (adult) clone), probably to make the story simpler (or for licensing reasons.)

Prior to the Superman: Doomsday movie, the Justice League animated series episode "Hereafter" did an homage to this story as well, in which Superman is (apparently) disintegrated by one of Toyman's weapons. The Man of Steel is mourned and buried (symbolically, they had no body to inter) by the other heroes, the people of Metropolis, and even Lex Luthor. Then the episode takes a turn for the bizarre when Lobo shows up, demanding to fill Superman's place in the Justice League. Then the action skips forward 3000 years to reveal that Supes wasn't killed, but blasted forward in time. Future Earth is a red-sunned wreck, and a depowered Superman must team up with Vandal Savage--now the sole survivor of humanity--to rebuild a time machine to send Supes back.

Doomsday also showed up in this series, in the episodes "A Better World" and "The Doomsday Sanction", but was revealed to be an altered clone of Superman and doesn't get to kill Superman.

Probably not related to the Crash Test Dummies' first hit single, "Superman's Song", but considering the story arc began a year after the song was released, who knows?

Tropes used in The Death of Superman include:

The Death of Superman has been referenced in:

Paige in Jason's strip: He saw me in a bathing suit.
Jason in Paige's strip: I told him we were related.

  • "Superman's Song", by the Crash Test Dummies, is essentially a eulogy to the fallen hero.

Superman never made any money
For savin' the world from Solomon Grundy
And sometimes I despair
The world will never see another man like him.