jonesthecurl wrote:Symmetry wrote:muy_thaiguy wrote:Symmetry wrote:muy_thaiguy wrote:Speaking of comic heroes Sym, other than John Constantine (whom I'm only vaguely familiar with), do the British have any DC/Marvel heroes or equivalents?
The Captain Britain series is being produced by Marvel, it seems.
Outside of DC and Marvel, there's Judge Dredd, of course. It sort of depends what you mean though. Doctor Who comes to mind, James Bond, perhaps.
Judge Dredd is British?!
I blame Sylvester Stalone for THAT mix up.
And I assume Captain Britain is the British version of Captain America?
Sort of, but granted powers by Merlin, if I remember right.
Well, here's the thing, it depends what you mean by a British superhero. Based in Britain? Created by a Brit? From a comic?
V from V for Vendetta is another one. Alan Moore and Neil Gaiman produced a lot of great comics between them, with some great heroes, and antiheroes.
But yeah, Dredd is from a British comic book.
Big Benn, Strontium Dog, Marvelman (and the marvelman family), the whole of MI13. Thunderbolt Jaxxon, Archie the Robot, the Steel Claw. That's off the top of my head.
The problem is what is considered a British superhero. Plenty of Brits create superheroes. Plenty of superheroes are British. Some are kinda ambiguous- they're comic book heroes, but are they superheroes?
Judge Dredd is British created and via a British comic, but he's in a post-apocalyptic America. John Constantine is a Brit, created by a Brit, but for DC, an American company, although I think that was for their Vertigo division.
So, anyway, some others that may or may not be British- Rorschach, Ozymandias and Dr Manhattan (Watchmen), Jesse Custer (Preacher), Dream and Death (of the Endless- Sandman), Spider Jerusalem (Transmetropolitan). Basically anything that Warren Ellis, Garth Ennis, Neil Gaiman, or Alan Moore have created could be considered British.
the world is in greater peril from those who tolerate or encourage evil than from those who actually commit it- Albert Einstein