DC’s KINGDOM COME: MESHING UP THE PULPIT AND THE COMIC BOOK

PART 2: WHEN BIG QUESTIONS ARE RAISED ON THE PULPIT OF THE ARTS

“The meek would [indeed] inherit the earth…but God didn’t account for the mighty”

-Dodds to Minister at hospital bedside

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What a powerful way to begin the story. Kingdom Come, like the Dark Knight Returns series (i.e. the comic books) came in a multi-part series. The setting of KC is in a dystopian future where the heroes have come into the fore and have demonstrated to the ordinary, regular person that power is everything. This is seen in how reckless they have become in how they dish out justice to criminals and villains; a matter that had brought one of DC’s main characters, Batman to loggerheads with Superman–another one of DC’s top heroes.

Bruce Wayne (Batman’s alter ego), broken, aged and disenchanted with the current state of affairs, criticizes Superman for his failure to be an example. Bruce goes on to state that because of Clark Kent’s (Superman’s alter ego) failure to mentor the growing number of young heroes who had taken it upon themselves to fight crime, that he is to blame for the social unrest that has taken over the world. With the revelation that Superman’s failure has resulted in global consequences, Bruce wages war on Clark, declaring that he is unfit to lead. With Batman’s aides and allies by his side, they take up arms declaring the end of the reign of the unchecked forces and combat them.

Meanwhile, Dodds looks on as the embodiment of God’s wrath in the DCU (DC Universe), the Spectre, prompts him to look on from a distance and judge the actions of these vastly powerful beings. Therein lies the crux of the story, does absolute power in the name of fighting for good necessarily bring security? For as the narrative shows the reader, all this came about when one young hero of this alternate timeline decided to murder the Joker in cold blood after a court proceeding. But this act alone made many question whether men and women who empowered vastly like Superman were truly equal.

Many were in fear wondering if truly, the Law would apply to such beings. For as Dodd’s rightly asks, “Does the Law apply to those with immense power? With those more privileged than others?” Jail them, they can break out. Threaten them and with their bare hands, they can kill you. Ignore their actions, and there is civil unrest. Confront them and danger looms like a shadow?

Is it truly possible to speak out against injustice in this world. Because, if so, how terrifying is it to be the average mortal who is given the power to sway things in his favor given the power of the Wrath of God. How terrifying it is too for when God’s people pray so are they made like Dodd’s for they are in his position, demonstrating that truly, the meek will reclaim and not only inherit the earth.

-END

DC’s KINGDOM COME: CONTROL AND THE IMAGE FACTOR

PART I: INTRODUCTION TO THE POWER OF SPEAKING TO SOCIETY’S ISSUES THROUGH COMICS

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Hey everyone, as some of you have already noticed, I have two separate blogs running concurrently right now. I apologize if it has caused some confusion but I am here to tell you that it happened by accident. But, since it has happened, I’ll work with this. I’ll use either for my posts but I know you’ll still have a blast taking this journey with me. Now, for the matter at hand, for the issue concerning DC’s Kingdom Come comic book, let’s get right on to it shall we?

DC, home of the world’s most iconic superheroes. It actually seems to me that the more it seems we get older (fan or not) we still get to hear some commotion about their characters; whether it be Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman, the Flash, Cyborg…e.t.c. We encounter them from nearly everything we can see, feel or hear. Whether it be You Tube, TV, cinema, comics, newspaper articles or blogs like this one (wink wink, nudge nudge) we can’t escape them. Odd, right? Why should these things that we should discard as childish be of such relevance and entertainment value, especially to adults?

DC’s Kingdom Come is one of the graphic novels that has been hailed by many fans as well as critics over history as a classic comic book tale. I do not want to spoil the narrative of the comic and give its best parts but I feel that it has a great value, seeing that it comes right off the Bible’s Sermon on the Mount: A sermon that has been recorded as being spoken by Jesus and here’s the gist of it, “Blessed are the meek, for they shall inherit the earth.”