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Plastic Man, R.I.P. (4 comments)

Plastic Man, R.I.P.

Friday, December 04, 2009 - 12:00 AM


I come here to praise Plastic Man, not to bury him

Blackest Night JLA #39 saw C-List Superhero Vibe resurrected as a Black Lantern zombie who moves quickly to snuff the flame of one of the most unique and underestimated characters in the DC universe, Plastic Man.

A fittingly ignoble end to a character who has been poorly mistreated by DC writers for years.

Plastic Man was created by comics legend Jack Cole in Police Comics #1, which hit newsstands in August 1941. The character was acquired by DC Comics when they bought Police Comics publisher Quality Comics in 1956.

Superman himself has only a few years on Plas, making his first appearance in 1938.

In his Quality Comics premiere, he was a crook named Patrick "Eel" O'Brian who fell into a vat of unidentified acid running away from night watchmen during a failed heist attempt. Revived by a monk and healed in a monestary, O'Brien discovers that the acid bath endowed him with rubbery powers. In Post-Crisis continuity, the dip in the acid bath remained, although the monks were written out of the story.

Plastic Man has anchored a couple self-titled series for DC, and he has starred in his own Saturday morning cartoon series. In The Dark Knight Strike Again scribe Frank Miller indicated that Batman himself feared Plastic Man as the most powerful superhero on the planet.

Unfortunately, DC has never shared that lofty opinion. And more's the pity, where good storytelling is concerned. Plastic Man is that perfect combination of humor and adventure that made Stan Lee's Spider-Man a blockbuster sucess. It's the very thing that's carrying Deadpool through multiple titles over in the Marvel univse. Plastic Man is a formidable hero, with a power set that is tailor-made to allow any writer/artist team to really stretch (pun intended) their creative muscles. Much like Green Lantern, the more imaginative the create team is in allowing the character to use his powers, the better the story is. And Plastic Man can be written in a very humorous tone without sacrificing the story -- especially if they'd follow the lead of my pal Phil Foglio who wrote insanity right into Plas' character (sound like a mercenary you know?).

In short, Plastic Man is a tremendous character with truckloads of potential, and he's never really gotten his due in the DCU.

Now, I know. Death is never final in comics. And in the Blackest Night arc, this is going to be particularly true. I think mass resurrections are going to become part of a universe-wide retcon that DC has in mind. We'll see Bruce Wayne return as Batman... Arthur Currey as Aquaman...

And, if they have any sense at all, Eel O'Brien will return as Plastic Man.

And maybe this time, he'll get a little respect.

CaffeinatedRamblings
CaffeinatedRamblings

goon

From: Winnipeg

Posts: 46

Registered:
Apr 2009
Re: Plastic Man, R.I.P. (Score: 1)
posted Friday, December 04, 2009 - 01:12 AM (#50376)

Until we see a Black Lantern ring on Plastic Man, I won't believe he's dead.
I mean, ripping his heart out? Unless I'm mistaken, I seem to recall him being frozen and shattered at one point....and if he recovered from that, I'm sure he'll recover from this.


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Splinky
goon

Posts: 26

Registered:
Nov 2006
Re: Plastic Man, R.I.P. (Score: 1)
posted Friday, December 04, 2009 - 09:26 AM (#50381)

One thing I learned in my years reading DC Comics is that when the B-listers take over the Justice League, it means the writers are planning a massacre.

You can't kill off the League when it's Superman, Batman, and Wonder Woman. But when your lead characters are Vixen, Red Tornado, and Plastic Man, people are gonna bleed. Just remove everybody who's not expendable and let the slaughter begin.

Incidentally, this is exactly what happened to Vibe back in the 80's.


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remdog
goon

From: Columbus

Posts: 25

Registered:
Jul 2008
Re: Plastic Man, R.I.P. (Score: 1)
posted Saturday, December 05, 2009 - 03:15 AM (#50394)

As it was mentioned before, I don't think this is gonna be a big deal. Plastic Man's nigh indestructable, and immortal. I don't see how he's gonna let a little paltry thing like getting his heart torn out keep him down long. Now I don't read Blackest Night, but he could be the way out of this mess.


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CatJuggling
goon

Posts: 10

Registered:
Aug 2009
Re: Plastic Man, R.I.P. (Score: 1)
posted Monday, December 07, 2009 - 12:50 PM (#50417)

Put me in the camp of "That's not enough to stop Plastic Man!" Especially with the rubber heart comment. I mean, is it even really disconnected?

That said, after reading your notes about his original origin three days ago, I can't get the idea of an Elsworld out there with a monastery trained, kung-fu master Plastic Man out there. Maybe with less camp (hey it is an elseworld). You could even leave Phil Foglio's brain chemistry cannon intact, compensating with a meditative, enlightened state for good measure.


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