fajrdrako: (Default)
[personal profile] fajrdrako
I really enjoyed what [livejournal.com profile] latxcvi has to say about Smallville in her LJ here.

Among other things, she says: "at the end of the day, if you asked me why I signed up in the first place and what it is that keeps me coming back, it's the stories of Clark and Lex becoming." So I thought about that, and I thought: that's not true for me. It ought to be true, but what I love is Clark and Lex being, not the becoming.

It isn't a matter of quality. [livejournal.com profile] adamlizz and I were discussing that the other day: while I agree that there are badly-written episodes of Smallville and some appalling bits, there are also some wonderful episodes and superb bits - superb on several levels. And while it may be imperfect, it's the only thing on TV these days that is holding my attention - and earning my love.

See, I never liked Superman or Lex Luthor. I read Superman and loved it when I was about 9 or ten years old; and Adventure Comics featuring Superboy was my favourite series. But then I discovered Marvel comics (with Fantastic Four #4 and that was that. I read no DC at all for a few decades, until someone pointed out to me what good stories I'd missed, especially in various incarnations of Batman. Englehart and Rogers. O'Neill and Adams. I'd missed all that.

I even read some magnificent Superman stories, like the Paul Chadwick one about the man trying to kill himself at Christmas, and Alan Moore's retrospective that happened just before Crisis. Then I got heavily into Legion of Super-Heroes and loved Kal-El, though the era in which I was a Legion fan coincided with the era where Superboy didn't exist. Go figure. I still love that story, though, where Ultra Boy went to Smallville and thought Pete Ross was Superboy.

Years went by and I still didn't like Superman: a character too good to be anything but dull, too American, too easy, too untroubled, too simple of mind and morality. Lex Luthor didn't even register on my interest-scale. The world of comics held the likes of Magneto. Why bother with Lex Luthor? I saw a couple of Superman movies, I saw a few episodes of Lois and Clark and the show on Superboy where I really thought the kid playing Clark was cute and remember nothing else. I still didn't like Superman and once had an interesting conversation with Mike Carlin on the subject of why: essentially, I was annoyed by the hypocrisy of his standing for 'truth' and yet lying to everyone he knew about who he was, preventing any kind of intimacy or trust from building in his life.

Now: Smallville. There is so much I love about the show, and various things I hate, because they conflict with the things I love. I love many of the characters: Clark, Lex, Lionel, Chloe, Martha, Jonathan. I love some of the stories very much indeed. And I loved the first season relationship between Clark and Lex. I loved the Clex. I loved the sense of personal teasing, the ties between them.

But this isn't the Clark Kent (or Superman or Kal-El) that I had always known, and it's not the same Lex Luthor. Not by a long shot. It's something new.

That's where I have a quandary.... No, not even a quandary, because it isn't a choice. It's a paradox, a cognitive dissonance that I don't know what to do with. See, what they are becoming, what they are going to become, is presumably the Man of Steel and his arch-nemesis. And much as I may be enjoying the ride now, I live in horror of Lex being less sexy, less smart, less mesmerizing. I live in horror of Clark resolving his internal conflicts in a way I don't want.

I live in fear of the breach.

It's a show that I know will betray my love.

I'm not sure what to do about that, except to enjoy the ride as long as I can, and write fic that shapes the themes to my taste, and read fic that does the same.

I don't want the innocent farmboy to grow up. I want Clark to be beautiful and fresh, and I want Lex to be charming and way too clever for his own good. I don't want the troubled millionaire to go to the bad. I want the love between them to flourish, not to grow into hate.

I know I will ultimately be out of luck. I'm hoping it all happens in an interesting way, not like the Lex-Helen romance (which I thought appalling in its effect on Lex) but like a journey with twists and turns and psychological twists.

For the time being, I can only quote
[Error: Irreparable invalid markup ('<ljuser="latxcvi">') in entry. Owner must fix manually. Raw contents below.]

I really enjoyed what <lj site="livejournal.com" user="latxcvi"> has to say about Smallville in her LJ <a href="http://www.livejournal.com/users/latxcvi/115387.html">here</a>.

Among other things, she says: "at the end of the day, if you asked me why I signed up in the first place and what it is that keeps me coming back, it's the stories of Clark and Lex becoming." So I thought about that, and I thought: that's not true for me. It ought to be true, but what I love is Clark and Lex <i>being</i>, not the becoming.

It isn't a matter of quality. <lj site="livejournal.com" user="adamlizz"> and I were discussing that the other day: while I agree that there are badly-written episodes of <i>Smallville</i> and some appalling bits, there are also some wonderful episodes and superb bits - superb on several levels. And while it may be imperfect, it's the only thing on TV these days that is holding my attention - and earning my love.

See, I never liked Superman or Lex Luthor. I read <i>Superman</i> and loved it when I was about 9 or ten years old; and <i>Adventure Comics featuring Superboy</i> was my favourite series. But then I discovered Marvel comics (with <i>Fantastic Four</i> #4 and that was that. I read no DC at all for a few decades, until someone pointed out to me what good stories I'd missed, especially in various incarnations of <i>Batman</i>. Englehart and Rogers. O'Neill and Adams. I'd missed all that.

I even read some magnificent Superman stories, like the Paul Chadwick one about the man trying to kill himself at Christmas, and Alan Moore's retrospective that happened just before <i>Crisis</i>. Then I got heavily into <i>Legion of Super-Heroes</i> and loved Kal-El, though the era in which I was a Legion fan coincided with the era where Superboy didn't exist. Go figure. I still love that story, though, where Ultra Boy went to Smallville and thought Pete Ross was Superboy.

Years went by and I still didn't like Superman: a character too good to be anything but dull, too American, too easy, too untroubled, too simple of mind and morality. Lex Luthor didn't even register on my interest-scale. The world of comics held the likes of Magneto. Why bother with Lex Luthor? I saw a couple of Superman movies, I saw a few episodes of <i>Lois and Clark</i> and the show on <i>Superboy</i> where I really thought the kid playing Clark was cute and remember nothing else. I still didn't like Superman and once had an interesting conversation with Mike Carlin on the subject of why: essentially, I was annoyed by the hypocrisy of his standing for 'truth' and yet lying to everyone he knew about who he was, preventing any kind of intimacy or trust from building in his life.

Now: <i>Smallville</i>. There is so much I love about the show, and various things I hate, because they conflict with the things I love. I love many of the characters: Clark, Lex, Lionel, Chloe, Martha, Jonathan. I love some of the stories very much indeed. And I loved the first season relationship between Clark and Lex. I loved the Clex. I loved the sense of personal teasing, the ties between them.

But this isn't the Clark Kent (or Superman or Kal-El) that I had always known, and it's not the same Lex Luthor. Not by a long shot. It's something new.

That's where I have a quandary.... No, not even a quandary, because it isn't a choice. It's a paradox, a cognitive dissonance that I don't know what to do with. See, what they are <i>becoming</i>, what they are going to become, is presumably the Man of Steel and his arch-nemesis. And much as I may be enjoying the ride now, I live in horror of Lex being less sexy, less smart, less mesmerizing. I live in horror of Clark resolving his internal conflicts in a way I don't want.

I live in fear of the breach.

It's a show that I know will betray my love.

I'm not sure what to do about that, except to enjoy the ride as long as I can, and write fic that shapes the themes to my taste, and read fic that does the same.

I don't want the innocent farmboy to grow up. I want Clark to be beautiful and fresh, and I want Lex to be charming and way too clever for his own good. I don't want the troubled millionaire to go to the bad. I want the love between them to flourish, not to grow into hate.

I know I will ultimately be out of luck. I'm hoping it all happens in an interesting way, not like the Lex-Helen romance (which I thought appalling in its effect on Lex) but like a journey with twists and turns and psychological twists.

For the time being, I can only quote <ljuser="latxcvi">: <i>I still love it, though. Perhaps unreasonably, but there you have it.</i>

Date: 2003-09-06 03:37 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fajrdrako.livejournal.com
Comic books have always been my thing - and I was mightily in love with Supergirl, maybe still am, though I don't know or understand the current incarnations of the character.

I think you've pinpointed something in the Smallville situation for me - I never accepted the DC comics fanon outcome of the Clark-Lex relationship, so I am bothered when the show seems to gravitate towards it, while in so many ways it's an AU so very different from comics continuity that any exact reflection is impossible. In my mind, Lex is good, and will continue to love Clark and be loved by him, and that cannot change.

Date: 2003-09-06 06:25 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jkluge.livejournal.com
I really hope it will go that way, but I agree with you that it most likely won't. :-( Poor dear. I know how heartbreaking that can be. Fans, thank God, are so good, though, at altering "reality" (or "eventualities") -- I'll hope for some incomparably good AU's for you!

Date: 2003-09-07 07:44 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fajrdrako.livejournal.com
Thank you fo the though! You know, in other fandoms I am more accepting of AUs, but in Smallville I like Smallville canon and stories that stick close to it. It may be that I see departures from TV canon as being approaches to comic book canon - so that ironically, if and when the TV canon comes closer to comic book canon, I'll be wanting Smallville AUs that are more like first season canon.

Which is there is my head as a place to write from, anyway.

Date: 2003-09-07 01:25 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ryui.livejournal.com
The producers seemed to put a great deal of effort into making their own canon (no flight, no tights, and all that). This certainly isn't the old, now dead Superboy (who was childhood friends with Lex until Lex blasted his hair off), and it's certainly not current DC canon where Clark and Lex meet as adults. Smallville is its own universe, and they've emphasized that in their complete recharacterization of key characters (Lana, Jonathon, intro of the wonderful Lionel)...so why are they so obsessed with the "evil Lex" outcome and current DC comic canon? If they're so interested in creating their own canon, why tie themselves to another? It's not as if the Superman legend has gone through about a dozen distinct versions. They should get a backbone and take on the future all by themselves, without alternate canon to push them along.

Date: 2003-09-07 01:27 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ryui.livejournal.com
that should be "It's not as if the Superman legend hasn't gone through about a dozen distinct versions." Nice double negative makes that make sense.

Date: 2003-09-07 07:32 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fajrdrako.livejournal.com
A dozen versions is a *conservative* estimate. So true! I'm not sure there is a real "DC SUperman" canon any more, it's been changed so often.

Date: 2003-09-07 07:34 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fajrdrako.livejournal.com
Smallville is its own universe

Absolutely, and no reason Lex couldn't remain an ambiguous but heroic figure.

I wish they would take this approach. I just wish.

Profile

fajrdrako: (Default)
fajrdrako

October 2023

S M T W T F S
1234567
891011121314
151617181920 21
22 232425262728
293031    

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Mar. 24th, 2026 09:03 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios