Watsons Bay House
Cardboard Cubby House
Courtyard House 2
Australian Peacekeeping Memorial
UTS Broadway
Ashfield House
Gold Coast
Elizabeth Bay Apartment

Alan Moore on Super Heroes in an interview at The Quietus:

I’m interested in the superhero in real life, but not the comic book version. I’ve had some distancing thoughts about them recently. I’ve come to the conclusion that what superheroes might be — in their current incarnation, at least — is a symbol of American reluctance to involve themselves in any kind of conflict without massive tactical superiority. I think this is the same whether you have the advantage of carpet bombing from altitude or if you come from the planet Krypton as a baby and have increased powers in Earth’s lower gravity. That’s not what superheroes meant to me when I was a kid. To me, they represented a wellspring of the imagination. Superman had a dog in a cape! He had a city in a bottle! It was wonderful stuff for a seven-year-old boy to think about. But I suspect that a lot of superheroes now are basically about the unfair fight. You know: people wouldn’t bully me if I could turn into the Hulk.


Related posts:

  1. Zero gravity art research
  2. Visualisation of all of earths air and water as spheres shown at the same scale as Earth
  3. Floating Utopias, by China Melvielle
  4. Planet Soap

Posted by Marcus Trimble on Jul 27 2010 Discuss

Leave a Reply

More?

You are viewing a single post from Super Colossal. If you want the FULL DEAL. Well, click here.