Action Comics #702 (August 1994)
Action Comics #702 (August 1994)
Bloodsport (not the black one, the anti-black one) returns, which means this is gonna be another distressingly violent issue, but hey, at least we get to see Superman hit a Nazi! Right off the bat, we start with Bloodsport mowing down a nice black family because he wants to, as he puts it, “Keep Metropolis Clean.” After the “Fall of Metropolis” storyline, the place is pretty messy, so I guess what he actually wants to do is Make It Clean Again, but I digress.
Meanwhile, Ron Troupe, who helped get rid of Bloodsport the last time he popped up, is working on an article in Lois Lane’s borrowed laptop, which is apparently the only working computer in Metropolis right now. When they hear about Bloodsport shooting people up on a bridge, Lois and Ron rush there and arrive right in time to watch Superman get owned by pink goo. Racist pink goo.
(New writer David Michelinie sure loves covering guys in goo, huh?)
Bloodsport recognizes Ron (so he can tell black people apart), who once again has a chance to shoot him but can’t bring himself to do it. Bloodsport is like “thanks, now I’ll kill you anyway” and shoots at Ron but ends up killing a police officer instead. She looked Latina, though, so I guess that’s still a win for him.
By the time Superman has freed himself from The Nazi Goo™, Bloodsport has left for “the largest African-American neighborhood in Metropolis,” and not precisely to experience the rich culture and cuisine. Once Superman gets there, Bloodsport teleports a bunch of automated guns all around him, which don’t look terribly intimidating to someone with bulletproof skin… until Bloodsport points them outwards, targeting random people in the neighborhood to keep Supes distracted while he goes off to do more hate crimes. I regret to inform you that this makes this racist asshole smarter than 90% of criminals Superman has fought.
While Superman deals with that, Ron, feeling guilty because that cop lady died due to his inability shoot guns, decides to fight Bloodsport through something he’s actually good at: journalism. And also by logging into Lois’ notebook without permission, but I’m pretty sure she’d understand (you’d think she would have gotten stronger passwords after Lex Luthor hacked her, though). Ron uses his own reporting and the dirt Lois recently dug up on Luthor to find out that all those guns Bloodsport can teleport on demand are currently being stored at the LexCorp tower. Luckily, it’s much easier to sneak in there since half the place got blown to shit.
The next time Bloodsport tries to teleport a gun to his hand, he gets something else: a handful of molten metal, courtesy of Ron. Turns out Ron can’t pull a trigger, but he’s perfectly capable of pulling the pin on a grenade.
Without his teleporting guns, Bloodsport is just a regular bigot in a silly costume. Superman doesn’t even deign himself to punch this worthless scum with his whole hand, since a finger will do.
Later, Clark compliments Ron on his bravery, but Ron says the real hero is everyone who goes through their day not being a racist asshole. Pretty low bar, Ron, but a nice sentiment.
NEXT: Zero Hour! Finally!
Creator-Watch:
As mentioned, this is the first issue written by Roger Stern’s replacement, David Michelinie, fresh off his long run in Spider-Man comics where, among other things, he co-created Venom, the character who still keeps him infrequently employed at Marvel. This is a bit more violent and darker than I like my Superman comics to be (not surprising from the guy who introduced Iron Man’s alcoholism and killed Aquaman’s Aquababy) – I’m not sure I like Clark smiling at the end when so many people died in the issue, including a little girl. At least he didn’t wink this time!
But, other than that, I think this is a solid done-in-one story and I appreciate having Ron actually contribute to the plot in a meaningful way. Michelinie clearly did his homework in regards to the continuity and seems to have a good handle on the characters, particularly Lois and Clark. Their interaction in this issue is kinda hokey, but come on, it’s Lois and Clark. They’re allowed to be hokey.
However, I do remember having one serious complaint about Michelinie’s run the first time I read it: an almost complete lack of Bibbo, which is unforgivable. We’ll see how accurate that impression is.
Plotline-Watch:
Bloodsport says he survived the explosion in his last appearance because the circuitry in his weapon teleporter got “jangled” and teleported him away. Wait, so he suffered a teleporter malfunction in a comic and didn’t become fused with his guns or something? Missed opportunity, if you ask me. At the very least he could have gained the ability to teleport at will, like a racist Nightcrawler. Maybe he could have inexplicably gained a German accent too.
Jimmy Olsen, who’s apparently been looking for Lucy Lane since he ditched her with some wannabe rocker girls during the Massacre storyline (that had to be days ago, right?), finally finds her with those same girls, but it’s okay because they’re friends now. Lucy tells tells Jimmy that the Riot Grrrls invited her to that charity concert for rebuilding Metropolis we’ve been hearing about lately, the mere mention of which seems to offend Jimmy. Don Sparrow says: “I want to believe Jimmy’s ‘whatchoo talkin’ bout Willis’ expression is due to his shared (with me) hatred of Jeb Friedman, the concern organizer.” That, or he remembered that the concert headliner, his old friend Babe, owes him $5.
I’ve been reading several DC comics published in August 1994 and this is one of the few that didn’t include any teasers for Zero Hour whatsoever (stuff like the future city in Green Lantern #54 or the dinosaurs in the latest issues of Guy Gardner: Warrior). At the time, some might have thought that having a full-on Nazi running around in the present could count as an anachronism but, uh, I think we’ve established by now that that’s sadly not the case…
Plug-Watch:
On the subject of Superman punching Nazis, I fully recommend our old pal Patrick Ryall’s “Superman vs. Bigots” column at The Avocado, where he goes over instances of Superman Family characters facing bigots across the ages, from the time Supes arrested Hitler in the '40s to the “Perry White vs. the Ku Klux Klan” issue from this era (which we haven’t covered yet, so spoilers). Good stuff!
Now a self-plug: as mentioned in our post for the time-displaced Action #642, I’ve been putting together a sort of Superman '86 to '99 reading guide at my fav'rit current social media site (sorry, BlueSky), League of Comic Geeks, where I’m writing a short blurb about every issue from this era mentioning what’s special, noteworthy, or weird/funny about it. At first I was just copying a paragraph or two from our old posts and throwing in a “read more” link, hoping to drive more readers to the newsletter, but I’ve started rewriting them to be more like something you’d see in an episode guide or a book about the '86-'99 period… which is an intriguing idea. Anyway, here’s that reading guide link again, because this paragraph doesn’t have enough clickable words in it already: https://leagueofcomicgeeks.com/profile/mrmxy/lists/58097/superman-86-to-99-checklist-wip
Shouts Outs-Watch:
Nazi-punching shout outs to our supporters, Aaron, Chris “Ace” Hendrix, britneyspearsatemyshorts, Patrick D. Ryall, Bheki Latha, Mark Syp, Ryan Bush, Raphael Fischer, Kit, Sam, Bol, Dave Shevlin, and Dave Blosser! Join them (and get extra non-continuity articles; we’ve got some cartoon-related ones lined up) via Patreon or our newsletter’s “pay what you want” mode!
To see more of Don’s take on this issue, including his thoughts on Jimmy’s physique, keep reading!
Art-Watch (by @donsparrow):
We start with the cover, and it keeps the tradition of other Bloodsport covers where Bloodsport is firing a ridiculously high-calibre weapon. I know the cover text (which generally I dislike) is ironic in this context, but it still bugs me slightly—Bloodsport’s views are so poisonous, even as a villain I hate seeing them represented. But buckle up, because there’s a whoooooole lot of that in this issue.
Lucky for me I’m mostly here to focus on the art, and it’s good throughout, as upsetting and violent as some of the visuals are. The doomed, completely innocent family who are mowed down by gunfire on page 3 are very well drawn—and coloured—I love rim-lighting, and it’s rarely rendered in orange.
An odd thing happens on page 5, which you sometimes see—artists get so used to drawing everyone with superheroic proportions that even civilians get He-Man action figure physiques—this happens with Jimmy Olsen in that first panel (yes, another Superman song reference on a Jimmy Olsen t-shirt, this time it’s Crash Test Dummies being given a shout-out) looking pretty ‘roided out complete with obliques visible through his shirt. Not to say that I don’t think Jimmy’s in good shape, but typically he’s a bit more average in build, or so it seems in this suggestive pin-up by Jerry Ordway in 1988…
[Max: You have no idea the amount of research Don did to find that pin-up, which both of us remembered but couldn’t place (it turned out to be in the incredible Modern Masters: Jerry Ordway book by TwoMorrows), but it was 100% worth the effort.]
Moving on, the upside down takeoff on page 13 is well done. Jackson Guice’s Superman always seems to have slightly longer hair than how the other artists draw him, but it’s a consistent thing, so I can’t complain too much. There’s an unfortunately Michael Jackson-looking Superman grimace on page 18 (shamone), but by the end of the story, Superman’s extremely ticked face is a great panel.
SPEEDING BULLETS:
The Daily Planet offices are, apparently, very near Boring Plaza, named after longtime Superman great, Wayne Boring.
GODWATCH: Dig the beat cop, Marcy, characterizing Superman as an answer to prayer on page 8. As things go wrong in other places in the book, both Ron Troupe and Superman invoke the almighty in frustration or despair. Lastly, as Clark and Ron bond in their agreement that racism is gross and wrong, and share an amen.
Perhaps unsurprisingly, Bloodsport does not support the then-current Democratic President, Bill Clinton.
Same as the last time this Alexander Trent version of Bloodsport popped up, I find this an extremely troubling issue. I get that Bloodsport is a villain, and a dastardly one at that. But even so, I hate some of the words and views he’s sharing—words I don’t even want to type to repeat here—appearing in a Superman comic at all. With characters this heinous, we almost need an editorial box disclaiming Trent’s statements, as they go unchallenged in the narrative as the character monologues to himself. Similar to the last issue with Bloodsport, there’s an awful lot of carnage and innocent death for a comics code book, and it’s something I think the better Superman stories steer away from. It’s hard not to be bothered by the juxtaposition of a black family being gunned down discriminately against Lois and Clark comfortably flirting.
Kudos to Ron for figuring out where Bloodsport’s weapons cache was, but, like in the last appearance of this Bloodsport, I can’t help but wonder why Superman doesn’t try to ionize the air around Bloodsport using his heat vision, since it was so effective the first time he faced this kind of teleporter tactic. A single line of dialogue could have hand-waved it away, but it seems like a missed opportunity. [Max: True. I would have even taken a “Drat, can’t do that since I already did it in another issue! Gotta mix it up!”]
Some small irony that it was a clone war that reduced Metropolis to rubble in this issue, in the first issue from new Action Comics writer David Michelinie, who slinked away after kicking off the wildly controversial Clone Saga over in Spider-Man before joining DC Comics.
Any serviceman’s death in the line of duty is a tragedy, but this Carroll O’Connor looking sergeant must have been pretty close to his pension as it was, no? [Max: I think Bloodsport spared him, though… probably because he loves Archie Bunker so much.]
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