The Continuing Death Of Superhero Secret Identities

The secret identity is dying.

In superhero stories the secret identity allowed the superhero the ability to walk the streets without being mobbed by fans, enemies, and people demanding help for the lamest things. It protects loved ones from being attacked by supervillains or some average crook who wants to hold your sister hostage until you steal some diamond for him. It’s also good drama. How can the hero save the day and protect his secret identity, or if you’re a character like Spider-Man, how does needing to protect your identity interfere with your personal life?

However, I’m noticing more and more that in addition to losing the capes today’s heroes are losing the masks. Tony Stark lost his secret identity in one of the lamest ways they could, a back-up story in which Tony puts on his armor during a party to save a dog from traffic. New characters are missing them as well. If I could find a misstep with the new hotness in indie comics, the Rippaverse, it would be the lack of characters with secret identities. Alphacore are basically supercops, and that’s fine. However, Isom just appears to be a different name while I’m not sure Yaira has an alternate name. We’re probably missing her last name: Yaira Johanson or something. So far none of the announced Except heroes have masks, and we haven’t seen a supervillain yet. They’ve tried killing Superman’s alter-ego, Spider-Man’s alter-ego, and less and less Marvel heroes have them. The Villains Of Valley View maintain secret identities and they’re supposed to be villains in hiding. Usually a supervillain is only exposed when they’re arrested and put on trial because the villain doesn’t get the same rights as a hero.

So what’s the purpose of a secret identity and why are modern creators tossing them out with capes? I already did an overview of the purpose, but let’s dive into that and then get into why they’re dying.

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“Yesterday’s” Comic> Red Skull: Incarnate #5

This is where I make a joke about the cover but right now I’m trying to remember getting the comic on ComiXology.

Red Skull: Incarnate #5

FINAL ISSUE

POSSIBLY ALSO JUST Red Skull #5

Marvel Comics (January, 2012)

WRITER: Greg Pak

ARTIST: Mirko Colak

COLORIST: Matthew Wilson

COVER ART: David Aja

LETTERER: Clayton Cowles

ASSISTANT EDITOR: John Denning

EDITOR: Alejandro Arbona

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BW’s Daily Video> Redemption Arcs Skipping The Arc

Okay, here me out before you press play. Yes, the host’s politics are blatant as are some of the insults, and there’s a lot more swearing on top of that than you get from your average BW posting. If that bothers you, come back later. I’m reviewing a comic followed by a full article later tonight. However, this is an otherwise good discussion of what makes a bad redemption arc with examples of both good and bad villain reforms, so I’m using it.

Catch more from Lily & Mikala Orchard on YouTube

 

 

Chapter By Chapter> Batman: Knightfall part 3 chapter 8

Chapter By Chapter (usually) features me reading one chapter of the selected book at a time and reviewing it as if I were reviewing an episode of a TV show or an issue of a comic. There will be spoilers if you haven’t read to the point I have, and if you’ve read further I ask that you don’t spoil anything further into the book. Think of it as a read-along book club.

PART 3: KnightsEnd

The end is in sight. All stories end sometime, even the good ones like this. Last time Bruce was ready to put on the costume but the name and persona doesn’t seem to be in his head. Hurry up, Bruce!

That is one thing that O’Neil has brought up thematically in this book: the hero identity. In these days where superhero names, identities, and code names are now treated as “mantles” so this or that creator can use the marketing of a big name to push their character (and often their social issues), it feels like the hero identity has been further nullified. Over in the Marvel universe the concept of secret identities seem to be slowly disappearing and there are writers and/or editors at DC that seem to be trying to do the same thing there. This seems like a good topic on it’s own so I’ll save it and get back on topic.

We’ve seen in this book that Bruce puts a lot of stock in those names. If Tim is in the Robin costume, he’s Robin. When Bruce was disguised as Sir Hemingford Grey he insists on being called by that name and keeping up the persona and speech patterns. It speaks to Bruce’s mindset. He’s Batman in the cape and cowl but Bruce out of it, lending more credience to my rejection of “Bruce Wayne is the mask”. Jean Paul is calling himself Batman now that he’s in the outfit, but he’s corrupting what it means to be Batman because he hasn’t rejected the part of him that became Azrael. He’s Azrael in a Batman themed armor but he’s holding on to that identity as the only one that matters. Is he even thinking of himself as Jean Paul anymore? On the plus side it helps maintain a secret identity without slipups. Say if Batman has to save Tim and friends and Tim doesn’t have a chance to change costumes, thus not changing identities. In Bruce’s mind Batman is saving Tim, not Bruce saving Robin or any other combination. It’s probably what helps Bruce keep “public Bruce” and “Batman” separate, and he’s not the only one. Look at the various defenses of Clark Kent and you’ll see what I mean. Even with me, “Troy A” is the penname I use in my comics while “ShadowWing Tronix” has become my reviewer identity. It’s more mindset than the performed personalities, though if you get too into the roles you get the recent take on Moon Knight in the comics.

Will any of that play into this chapter? Let’s dive in and see.

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“Yesterday’s” Comic> Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #17

The “First Ronin” draft didn’t go over as well as “The Last Ronin”.

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #17

Mirage Publishing (November, 1988)

“Distractions”

WRITERS: Eric Talbot & Kevin Eastman

ARTIST: Eric Talbot

LETTERER: Steve Lavigne

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BW’s Daily Video> Is The Open World Dead?

Don’t watch the first few minutes while eating, but it goes away. Also: swearing.

Don’t bother looking for Yahtzee Croshaw on The Escapist channel anymore. Due to backstage drama he and a bunch of former contributors can now be found on the Second Wind YouTube channel. I have a few more Zero and Extra Punctuation videos in the backlog I’ll try to get through soon.

BW’s Programming Note> I Hate When I Do This To Me

Yesterday I came up with two good ideas that isn’t another comic about the actor strike that isn’t just about how the film crew can get back to work. Because I thought I made a comment in the comic about how the film crew, who will get nothing out of the writer and actor strikes can finally get back to work, have been out of work for months between the two strikes, and may not even be able to go back to work because projects have been canceled or downsized. Just as well. I was having trouble figuring out how to do that in four panels.

Of course there were those other two good ideas I lost because yesterday I was busy with this week’s Clutter Report, where I redid my main computer work area…again. It’s not as bad as redoing the art area for how often I’ve messed with it but it’s still me not being satisfied with an arrangement and taking time away from projects I haven’t done or completed yet.

This week we’re almost done with Batman: Knightfall at Chapter By Chapter and the first season bible for Transformers: Beast Machines is only a bit further behind before we get to season two. We’ll see what other ideas I forget during the week. Have a great week, everyone.