Superman Fucking Lois Lane

Superman Fucking Lois Lane




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Superman Fucking Lois Lane
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For the television series, see Superman & Lois . For the comic book series, see Superman: Lois and Clark .

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^ Stern, Roger (w), McLeod, Bob (p). "Secrets in the Night" Action Comics 662 (February 1991)

^ Superman (1978) Delete scene: Lois suspects and attempts to prove Clark is Superman by jumping out a window at the Daily Planet . Superman II (1980) Lois attempts to prove Clark is Superman by jumping into a river at Niagara Falls . Superman II: The Richard Donner Cut (2006) Lois suspects and successfully proves Clark is Superman, by shooting him with blank gun.

^ The Jerry Siegel & Joe Shuster Interview . Nemo: the Classic Comics Library No. 2. August 1983. p. 12.

^ "Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster Interview" . 20th Century Danny Boy. August 3, 2012 . Retrieved June 19, 2017 .

^ The Jerry Siegel & Joe Shuster Interview . Nemo: the Classic Comics Library No. 2. August 1983. p. 15.

^ The Jerry Siegel & Joe Shuster Interview . Nemo: the Classic Comics Library No. 2. August 1983. p. 14.

^ Letters to the Editor, Time magazine (May 30, 1988), pp. 6–7.

^ The Jerry Siegel & Joe Shuster Interview . Nemo: the Classic Comics Library No. 2. August 1983. p. 19.

^ The Jerry Siegel & Joe Shuster Interview . Nemo: the Classic Comics Library No. 2. August 1983. p. 11.

^ Ricca, Brad (2014). Super Boys: The Amazing Adventures of Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster – the Creators of Superman . St. Martin's Griffin. ISBN 978-1250049681 .

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^ Bailey, Michael (December 2002). "Doomsday: Ten Years Later" . Supermanhomepage.com . Retrieved June 29, 2017 .

^ Brady, Matt (November 28, 2008). "Geoff Johns: Telling Superman's Secret Origin" . Newsarama.com . Retrieved June 26, 2017 .

^ Katzman, Gregg (4 Mar 2013). "New Details on the Scott Snyder & Jim Lee SUPERMAN Series" . Retrieved 7 March 2013 .

^ "DC Convergence event brings back old DC Universe" . IGN. December 2, 2014.

^ Jurgens, Dan (w). Convergence: Superman 2 (May 2015), DC Comics

^ Yehl, Joshua (July 10, 2015). "Comic-Con: Lois and Clark Return For New Superman comic - With Their Son!" . IGN . Retrieved July 20, 2015 .

^ Schedeen, Jess (April 13, 2016). "11 Cool Things We Learned From DC's Rebirth Catalog" . IGN. Archived from the original on April 24, 2016 . Retrieved May 7, 2016 .

^ DIAZ, ERIC (September 7, 2016). "SUPERMAN OFFICIALLY REVEALS HIS SON JONATHAN KENT AS THE NEW SUPERBOY" . Nerdist. Archived from the original on 2016-09-09 . Retrieved November 2, 2016 .

^ Tomasi, Peter , Gleason, Patrick (w). Superman v4, 18-19 (March 2017), DC Comics

^ Jurgens, Dan (w). Action Comics 975-976 (March 2017), DC Comics

^ Bendis, Brian Michael (w). The Man of Steel v2, 4 (June 2018), DC Comics

^ Bendis, Brian Michael (w). The Man of Steel v2, 5 (June 2018), DC Comics

^ Bendis, Brian Michael (w). The Man of Steel v2, 6 (July 2018), DC Comics

^ Bendis, Brian Michael (w). Action Comics 1001 (July 2018), DC Comics

^ Bendis, Brian Michael (w). Superman v5, 6 (December 2018), DC Comics

^ "Up, Up and Awa-a-y! The Rise of Superman, Inc." by John Kobler, The Saturday Evening Post , June 21, 1941.

^ Harmon, Jim (1973). The Great Movie Serials: Their Sound and Fury . Routledge. pp. 206–215. ISBN 978-0-7130-0097-9 .

^ Christine A. Colón, Bonnie E. Field (2009), Singled Out , ISBN 978-1-58743-237-8

^ Tonguette, Peter (April 1, 2002). "Anti-Heroics: The Superman Films of Richard Lester" . Retrieved June 17, 2010 .

^ Dargis, Manohla (June 27, 2006). " 'Superman Returns' to Save Mankind From Its Sins" . The New York Times . Retrieved April 27, 2010 .

^ Scott Chitwood (May 5, 2006). "Superman Returns Set Visit - Part 6" . Superhero Hype! .

^ Saunders, Emma (February 1, 2011). "BBC News - Film invasion of the Super-Brits" . BBC . Retrieved February 2, 2011 .

^ Vilkomerson, Sara (March 27, 2011). "Amy Adams to play Lois Lane in Superman " . Entertainment Weekly . Archived from the original on November 28, 2015 . Retrieved March 28, 2011 .

^ "David S. Goyer And Zack Snyder On Man Of Steel's Secrets" . empireonline.com. June 18, 2013.

^ Empire magazine . March 2013. pp.70

^ Empire magazine. June 2013. pp.73

^ Jump up to: a b Wallace, Dan (2013). Man of Steel: Inside the Legendary World of Superman . Insight Editions. p. 45. ISBN 978-1608871810 .

^ Wallace, Dan (2013). Man of Steel: Inside the Legendary World of Superman . Insight Editions. p. 44. ISBN 978-1608871810 .

^ Lowman, Rob (July 6, 2013). " 'Man of Steel' moves the franchise focus to the comic books of the 1980s and later" . Los Angeles Daily News . Retrieved March 8, 2016 .

^ "WB Announces 10 DC Comics Movies" . October 15, 2014 . Retrieved 18 October 2014 .

^ Justice League: The Official Collector's Edition . Titan magazines. November 2017.

^ Sintumuang, Kevin (March 19, 2021). "Zack Snyder Answers Every Question You Have About His Justice League Cut" . Esquire .

^ BREZNICAN, ANTHONY (March 18, 2021). "Zack Snyder Explains That Enigmatic Justice League Ending" . Vanity Fair .

^ Murray, Noel (June 10, 2013). "Barely a superhero show, Adventures Of Superman was a surprise success" . A.V. club . Retrieved October 29, 2013 .

^ Tucker, Ken (December 8, 1995). "Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman" . Entertainment Weekly . Archived from the original on 2008-05-06 . Retrieved October 10, 2015 .

^ O'Connor, John J. (April 9, 1995). "TELEVISION VIEW; That Man In a Cape Is Still Flying" . The New York Times . Retrieved August 20, 2010 .

^ "The Best TV Couples of All Time" . TV Guide . Retrieved June 25, 2012 .

^ Byrne, Craig, (Season 5 Companion) pp.124-127

^ Byrne, Craig, (Season 6 Companion) pp. 124-127

^ Rachel Thomas (September 2008). "Interview with Erica Durance (Lois, 'Smallville')" . About.com . Archived from the original on September 22, 2015 . Retrieved October 18, 2008 .

^ Goldberg, Lesley (August 22, 2018). "Superman and Lois Lane Join The CW's DC Crossover Event" . The Hollywood Reporter . Retrieved August 22, 2018 .

^ Holbrook, Damian (November 9, 2018). "First Look: Lois & Clark Are the Supercouple of the Arrowverse 'Elseworlds' Crossover (PHOTO)" . TV Insider .

^ " 'Superman & Lois' TV Series With Tyler Hoechlin & Elizabeth Tulloch In The Works At The CW" . Deadline Hollywood . October 28, 2019.

^ Ramos, Dino-Ray (February 8, 2021). " 'Superman & Lois' Cast And Showrunner Talk Bringing Cinematic Groundedness To Arrowverse – TCA" . Deadline Hollywood . Retrieved February 9, 2021 .

^ Agard, Chancellor (February 22, 2021). "How Superman & Lois brings the Man of Steel mythos down to earth — and into a new era" . Entertainment Weekly .

^ Barrier, Michael (1999). Hollywood Cartoons . Oxford University Press. pp. 303–305 . ISBN 0-19-516729-5 .

^ Beck, Jerry (1994). The 50 Greatest Cartoons . Turner Publishing. ISBN 1-878685-49-X .

^ "IGN's Top 25 Comic Book TV Shows" . IGN . December 14, 2011. Archived from the original on 2012-01-08 . Retrieved October 4, 2014 .

^ Del Rosario, Alexandra (May 19, 2021). " 'My Adventures With Superman': Jack Quaid-Fronted Animated Series Gets Two Season Order From HBO Max & Cartoon Network" . Deadline .

^ Mermaids . Orion Pictures. December 14, 1990.

^ Deeply Dippy . Tug. March 9, 1992.

^ "The Race". Seinfeld . NBC. December 15, 1994.

^ "The Face Painter". Seinfeld . NBC. May 11, 1995.

^ "Super Hero". Sabrina, the Teenage Witch . ABC. January 21, 2000.

^ Lois Lane . Ark 21 Records. 2001.

^ Invincible . Virgin Records. August 27, 2001.

^ 100 Ways . Jive/Zomba. February 24, 2004.

^ Superman . V2 Records. June 20, 2005.

^ Love Fight . All Around the World Records. June 16, 2006.

^ Superman . Star Trak Records. October 3, 2006.

^ Love the Way You Lie . Interscope Records. June 25, 2010.

^ "Lois Lane" . YouTube . November 15, 2012. Archived from the original on 2021-12-14.

^ Superhero . 2013.

^ Lois Lane . January 8, 2013.

^ "To Lois" . YouTube . May 15, 2015. Archived from the original on 2021-12-14.


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Superman and Lois Lane are a fictional couple and the first superhero comic book romance. Created by writer Jerry Siegel and artist Joe Shuster , both characters including Superman's alter ego, Clark Kent, first appeared in DC Comics' Action Comics #1 (June 1938). They have remained in a complicated relationship ever since. A supercouple , they are among the best known fictional couples and have appeared in multiple media adaptations.

The characters' relationship was based for a long time in a love triangle in which Clark was interested in Lois who was smitten with the superhero Superman. Clark, unable to reveal to Lois that his mild-mannered demeanor was a ruse, was unable to compete for Lois' affection. The irony being he was his own rival in that Clark and Superman are, in fact, the same person. This love triangle and the dual identity were originally conceived in 1934. Following John Byrne 's 1986 reboot, The Man of Steel , Clark's character became not only the more dominant personality of the Clark Kent/Superman character but also more outgoing, aggressive, and assertive. This allowed a more natural romance to develop between Lois and Clark.

In the 1990s, Clark proposed marriage to Lois and revealed his identity as Superman to her. [1] [2] They began a long engagement, which was complicated by the death of Superman , a breakup, and several other problems. The couple finally married in Superman: The Wedding Album (Dec. 1996). Clark and Lois' biological child in DC Comics canon was born in Convergence: Superman #2 (July 2015), a son named Jon Kent , who eventually becomes Superboy .

Lois is the character most prominently featured with Superman, she appears in virtually every Superman comics and media adaptations and continues to be an essential part of the Superman mythos. Across decades of comics and other media adaptations, in some stories, Lois knows or suspects that Clark is Superman, sometimes this is explored for humour or plot development. [3]

The characters, Superman/Clark Kent and Lois Lane, were created by Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster . Superman was conceived as being like the ideal Hollywood romantic hero of the time, portrayed in films by actors such as Douglas Fairbanks , Clark Gable , and Rudolph Valentino . [4] Siegel and Shuster were both fans of silent film actor Douglas Fairbanks, his movies The Mark of Zorro (1920), Robin Hood (1922), and The Black Pirate (1926) became a huge influence on their writing and art on the Superman character. [5] The idea of making Superman a visitor from another planet was inspired by Edgar Rice Burroughs ' John Carter of Mars stories. [6] Clark Kent's character grew out of Siegel and Shuster's own personal lives. His name is the combined names of actors Clark Gable and Kent Taylor . Clark Kent's demeanor was based on Harold Lloyd . [7] Lois Lane was inspired by actress Glenda Farrell 's portrayal of the fictional reporter Torchy Blane in a series of films. Siegel took her name from actress Lola Lane . Shuster based Lois Lane's physical appearance on a model name Joanne Carter . [8] Carter later married co-creator Jerry Siegel in 1948.

If you're interested in what made Superman what it is, here's one of the keys to what made it universally acceptable. Joe and I had certain inhibitions...which led to wish-fulfillment which we expressed through our interest in science fiction and our comic strip. That's where the dual-identity concept came from, and Clark Kent's problems with Lois. I imagine there are a lot of people in this world who are similarly frustrated. Joe and I both felt that way in high school, and he was able to put the feeling into sketches. That's why I say it's a universal theme, and that's why so many people could relate to it. [9]

—Siegel and Shuster on what made Superman continue to be popular over decades.

On the conception of Superman's dual identity, Jerry Siegel said in the 1983 Nemo magazine interview: "That occurred to me in late 1934, when I decided that I'd like to do Superman as a newspaper strip. I approached Joe about it, and he was enthusiastic about the possibility. I was up late one night, and more and more ideas kept coming to me, and I kept writing out several weeks of syndicate scripts for the proposed newspaper strip. When morning came, I had written several weeks of material, and I dashed over to Joe's place and showed it to him. [This was the story that appeared in Action Comics #1, June, 1938, the first published appearance of Superman.] You see, Clark Kent grew not only out of my private life but also out of Joe's. As a high school student, I thought that some day I might become a reporter, and I had crushes on several attractive girls who either didn't know I existed or didn't care I existed. As a matter of fact, some of them looked like they hoped I didn't exist. It occurred to me: What if I was real terrific? What if I had something special going for me, like jumping over buildings or throwing cars around or something like that? Then maybe they would notice me. That night when all the thoughts were coming to me, the concept came to me that Superman could have a dual identity and that in one of his identities he could be meek and mild, as I was, and wear glasses, the way I do. The heroine, who I figured would be a girl reporter, would think he was some sort of a worm, yet she would be crazy about this Superman character who could do all sorts of fabulous things. In fact, she was real wild about him, and a big inside joke was that the fellow she was crazy about was also the fellow whom she loathed. By coincidence, Joe was a carbon copy [of me]." [10]

Jerry Siegel objected to any proposal that Lois discovers Clark Kent is Superman because he felt that, as implausible as Clark's disguise is, the love triangle was too important to the stories appeal. Siegel stated: "If Lois should ACTUALLY learn Clark's secret, the strip would lose about 75% of its appeal—the human interest angle. I know that a formula can possibly prove monotonous through repetition but I fear that if this element is removed from the story formula that makes up SUPERMAN, that this strip will lose a great part of its effectiveness." [11]

Superman/Clark Kent and Lois Lane first appeared in Action Comics #1 (June 1938), other than the fact that Superman had been rocketed to Earth as an infant, his complex backstory had yet to develop. The very first story includes a sequence in which Clark behaved in a cowardly fashion, leaving Lois to defend herself against an aggressive man, from whom Superman later saves her. From then on, Clark was established as a shy man attracted to Lois, while she was interested in his heroic alter ego, Superman. This remained the status quo in the comics for decades, though Lois did warm up to Clark for the most part; yet their relationship couldn't really advance with Lois left out of Clark's secret and the Clark Kent persona is a disguise. [12]

As early as the 1940s, Lois began to suspect that Clark Kent was Superman, the first such story appears in Superman #17 (July–August 1942) in a story titled "Man or Superman" by Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster. Across decades of comics, Lois would suspect Clark is Superman and tries to prove it, but Superman always thwarts her. [13] This theme became particularly pronounced in the 1950s and 1960s comics. In the Bronze Age of Comic Books , Lois became more of a heroic figure, more independent of Superman and was less interested in his secret identity.

The first official DC Comics story where Superman marries Lois Lane (not dreams, hoaxes or imaginary tales, but in DC canon ) was in Action Comics #484 (June 1978). [14] In this 40th anniversary of Superman issue, a wizard wanted to rid the world of Superman but had no idea that Superman had a secret identity. Clark, with no memory of being Superman and therefore no need to pretend to be a coward. The new take charge Clark Kent, who was fearless and bold, became very attractive to Lois Lane—proving that it was more about attitude and personality than superpowers that attracted her to Superman. Lois and the new Clark began dating, fell in love and eventually, he proposed the couple got married. On their honeymoon, when Lois saw Clark caught in a crossfire that should have killed him, but left no mark on him, she began to suspect he was really Superman. Lois tried to cut a lock of his hair, the scissors broke. As much as she loved Clark with no memory of being Superman, Lois knew that the world needed Superman and found the wizard who had cast the spell and had him reverse it. Clark remembered he was Superman but also his marriage to Lois. He took Lois to the Fortress of Solitude and married her again in a Kryptonian ceremony as Superman. From that point on, Lois and Clark/Superman of the alternate universe known as Earth-Two remained married in DC Comics. This version of the character stars in The Superman Family comic book in the series Mr. and Mrs. Superman , which feature the adventures of the Earth-Two Superman and his wife, Lois Lane Kent. The couple later appeared in the 2005 Infinite Crisis limited series.

In the main DC universe, things stay the same, Lois was still not allowed to discover Superman's dual identity. She loved Superman, but he said he belonged to the world and couldn't commit to anyone. In 1985, the DC universe went through a revamp with the Crisis on Infinite Earths limited series. The purpose of the year-long event was to get rid of some character histories, conflicting continuity, and overlapping worlds.

In the 1986 two-part story Whatever Happened to the Man of Tomorrow? by Alan Moore and Curt Swan , that told the final tale of Superman (which was being rebooted following the events of Crisis on Infinite Earths , before his modern introduction in the John Byrne series). [15] The story is a frame story set ten years after Superman was last seen, where Lois Lane recounts the end of Superman's career to a reporter. The story includes numerous attacks against Superman by his enemies, the public revelation of his secret identity as Clark Kent, and a number of deaths of his friends. At the end of th
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