Hero Worship
Five pages.
Let me recount that; yup, five pages. Daredevil 38-40 has a
total of 66 pages, and yet Daredevil himself is only in costume for
five of those pages. Three pages in issue 38, none in 39, and two in
40.
Well I'll be damned! Brian Michael Bendis has done it again. He's
proven me wrong.
Not too long ago, I reminisced about the days when I thought all comics
had to be superhero comics. Books like Box Office Poison,
Beg the Question, Ghost World, Shutterbug Follies,
and Schizo were foreign to me. And though I was slowly but
surely being introduced to the DC/VERTIGO library, nothing seemed
capable of changing my opinion.
Then along came Brian Michael Bendis, he who spun my world upside down.
Thanks to Powers and Ultimate Spider-Man, I was already
familiar with Brian's work before he jumped over to Daredevil.
My stack of Daredevil comics was growing taller and taller month
after month, but I found that I wasn't reading them. I use the same
excuses for not keeping up with my comic book readings as I do for not
writing as much as I should: "I'm busy." "I've gotta prep for my
class." "I'm tired." "I just wanna relax tonight." Blah! Blah!
Blah!
So when I finally dug into the stack, I couldn't believe what I had
been missing. Yeah, the book was good, to say the least. But that's
not what I'm talking about. Brian was writing a superhero comic with
Tarantino-like dialog. You know, that so-real-it-hurts type of dialog.
The kind you'd swear you heard on the street just the other day. That
kind. And I was like, "Whoa! I didn't know a comic could be written
like this!" It was a shock to say the least.
So by having superheroes talk like you and me, Bendis proved me wrong
for the first time. I couldn't believe that heroes could talk about
other things than what superpowers they have and how their powers work.
The second time he did, however, was a bit more shocking. I mean, the
title character only appearing in costume for five pages over three
issues is unheard of! Then again, Matt Murdock (aka Daredevil) surely
couldn't defend a client while wearing his trademarked red tights, now
could he.
But that's what everyone in the Marvel Universe wants to see.
After being outted as Daredevil in a local tabloid, Matt's struggles
have been nothing but uphill. Things are tough enough with villains
attacking his office, the media camped out in his front lawn, friends
either with him or against him in his decision to deny the truth, a
legal battle against said tabloid. On top of all that, Luke Cage (aka
Cage, aka Power Man) has asked Murdock to defend a fellow outted
superhero: accused cop killer Hector Ayala (aka The White Tiger).
Because everyone wants Matt's head on a spike, Matt knows full well
that Hector will be found guilty despite his innocence.
Here's where Bendis proves me right: we are a sick, demented,
sadistic lot. And so are the people inside these three comics he's
scripted. They're written so closely to us that they even lust for the
moment when they can destroy their heroes. We love nothing more than
to see them fall from grace. As a collective we raise them up on a
pedestal -- be it celebrities, police officers, athletes, Presidents,
whoever -- and when the time is right (after our use for them has run
out), we yank the rug out from under them.
A white police officer shoots and kills an armed African-American
suspect that (unbeknownst to him) is also a college-bound honor
student. Now, for the next three, four weeks all cops are
likened to the Nazis. No matter that these are the same police
officers that, just the day before, busted-up a multi-million dollar
drug ring. Now, we say with no proof but tons of false confidence,
"They must be on the take."
Michael Jordan, arguably the greatest basketball player to ever live,
would lead the Chicago Bulls to six championships in only eight years.
He would retire and come back twice, and some would say he betrayed
Chicago when he not only became part owner of the Washington Wizards
but eventually he would don their uniform and play for a team that was
not the Bulls. As if this "betrayal" were not enough for us, an affair
would come out. Michael -- Mister Nike, Mister Gatorade, Mister
Haynes, seemingly perfect father to his three children, seemingly
perfect husband to his wife -- was now a philanderer. Everything #23
had accomplished on those hard wood floors was tarnished.
Two words: Bill Clinton. Need I say more?
So why should it be a surprise that superheroes, at some point in their careers, would have their star fall? And when you're that high up,
when people see you as a god, as a protector, untouchable, you can bet
your last dollar that your star is going to fall hard. And for what
reason? Simple: our enjoyment.
19 March 2003