#phm#ryland grace#rocky the eridian#project hail mary spoilers





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just need to clarify bc ppl cant look at pictures bc i've seen some discourse surrounding this but
Bruce NEVER aimed at Jason or intended to hurt him in the "batarang incident"
in the panel you can clearly see that the Batarang was thrown at the wall behind Jason and then it rebounded back
Bruce NEVER intended it to hit Jason.
now before you come at me with the "Bruce is Batman and Batman can never miss" bs, please understand that Bruce is not a god. He is no meta. He has no powers whatsoever. He is a human being.
In the end of the day, behind the skills, behind the symbol, behind the mission, behind the cowl, there is only a man.
A man who, at this moment, was very much distressed and was definitely going thru it™
not to mention that only a few pages before this scene, Bruce and Jason just watched Bludhaven gets destroyed. Keep in mind that Bruce has no clue whether or not Dick is alive or not rn.
Ofc jason is pretty shaken too at first (look at the baby's face sjfdsd thats his big brother oh my goshhh 😭💔) but he quickly shoves it under and starts to taunt Bruce
You guys have to realize that Bruce can become very suicidal and emotionally distressed when it comes to his kids, ESPECIALLY when it comes to Dick.
(like thats his first baby what do u expect?? also Jason bringing up his own death (something that was VERY traumatizing for Bruce) and using it to jab at Bruce was a very low blow.)
Bruce immediately wants to call off the fight and leave but Jason doesn't let him, fighting back harder than ever, and Bruce, left with no choice, has to play along.
And Bruce finally gets the upperhand and instead of using the moment to apprehend Jason, he tries to talk. Tries to address the guilt that has been laying heavy in him for years.
Jason is quick to say that it was not the case and that the real reason as to why hes upset is bc he feels like his death meant nothing. (which... is complete baloney. Jason had been haunting both Bruce and the narrative for a looong time lol.)
and then he presents the Joker and makes Bruce chose between him or the Joker. Tells him that he's going to kill the Joker and if Bruce wants to stop him he's going to have to kill him (to which Bruce vehemently says he would never do)
Bruce also goes on to say that his no-kill rule is something to prevent himself from being a killer BUT that is just his response.
I think the problem is that many comic readers don't know how to read comics...
In comics, you need to understand that just because a character says something, it doesnt mean its always true. This is one perfect example.
Yes this might be the reason Bruce believes is true, and while there is some level of truth behind it, its not the full picture. the real, more deeper reason behind his no-kill and no-gun rule is bc it's a trauma-response.
-Batman and Robin: Year One #8
Anywyas the reason I believe Bruce begged Jason not to kill the Joker wasn't because he wanted that man alive. Nopeeee. Bruce has tried to kill Joker manyyyyyy times before lol. He does not want that man alive I can tell you that.
The reason why he screamed "no" was because if Jason actually shot the Joker this would be the final nail in the coffin, the final proof that the Jason Bruce once knew was a thing of the past.
You need to understand that the Jason Bruce knew was a Jason who pulled his hand back and pleaded for the Joker's life.
-Detective Comics 570
So rn with the fear that his first kid is dead, the guilt of losing his second son, and seeing said son trying to do the very thing he stopped him from doing all those years ago... Bruce is in no proper headspace.
In distress (just look at the man's face) he throws a batarang at the wall, missing Jason completely.
And it was never meant to hit Jason.
we know this bc previously in the fight, Bruce threw two batarangs on purpose and still made sure it wasn't too fatal. Also that time Jason ducked to avoid getting hit.
So even if Bruce threw it on purpose here (which he didn't) it is safe to assume that Bruce thought Jason would duck once again which would make him drop the gun and the Joker... which is a win-win
Anyways the batarang hits the wall and rebounds back (completely unintentional btw) and it nicks Jason on the shoulder/neck. Jason, shocked, falls down clutching his neck while the Joker laughs.
AND before Jason or Bruce could react or fully process what happened, Joker blows them all up.
It’s implied that all three of them died in the explosion bc the next panel we see the universe colors showing up (they’re the same colors that was in the panel when Jason wakes up in his coffin after Superboy Prime’s punch)
TL;DR:
Bruce NEVER intentionally meant to hurt Jason and he was too emotionally distraught to fully judge his aim which lead to his batarang accidentally hitting Jason.
Stop ruining this scene with stupid hcs and fanon slop just to woobify Jason and evilize Bruce.
Even if Bruce is not your fav, understand that he was not in the right mind frame rn (he literally thinks Dick is dead atm) and made a mistake (throwing the batarang without aiming) which accidentally hurt Jason. and NO, he did not leave Jason to bled out on the floor--all three of them freaking died.
And later scenes both Jason and Bruce are completely fine with no wounds or scars (there is no "batarang scar" it was healed by the universe)
So yeah. I beg of you all... please stop spreading misinformation just bc u want angst and actual read the comic. There is plenty of angst in the comics btw.
Anyways. You are in a comic book fandom talking about comic characters. Read the freaking comics. Its not that hard to look at pictures. Bruce never aimed at Jason.
And remember... fanon ≠ canon.
Just bc you see it in your favorite fanfic doesnt mean it happened in the comic. Stop spreading misinformation and please actually engage in the source material. UTRH Jason was not a hero and THATS OKAY. You guys need to understand that a character can be in the wrong and its still okay to like them. (recommend clicking on underlined text btw)
Like seriously i swear that so many Jason fans need to get the same attitude of Superboy Prime fans which is "yeah he did that shit and i still love him"
Characters can be complex and just bc theyve done some stuff doesnt mean you need to agree with it. They can still bc your blorbo and if you meet irl you would slap them--these things can coexist.
Like you do not need to defend the man. Jason did some pretty bad stuff in his early RH years and its okay to admit it. He was in no way shape or form a hero when he came back--he didnt even take over the crime underground with good intentions. He didnt come back to make Gotham better, like fanfics like to say, he came back to control it (using the threat of death, mind you. His options was “either you do what I say or I kill you just like I did these eight men”)
Jason did not just kill rapists, he killed anyone that got in his way or whoever he deemed was necessary to fuel the city’s fear towards him.
And sure it worked in making Gotham a bit safer by lowering crime, but it wasn’t a good or safe place to be. Jason created a dystopian world, one he ruled with fear. Did it help? A little, sure. But a world ruled by fear and a world where freewill is smothered out is a world that is not good.
Say whatever you want to say, but thats not a very good thing for a hero to do lol. And yknow what?? Thats completely okay.
He wasn’t originally meant to be a hero. The tragedy of the character of Red Hood is because he’s almost everything Robin!Jason would despise.
You guys need to understand that just because he looked hot doing it doesn’t mean it's not messed up lol.
Be like a Superboy Prime fan and learn to develop the attitude of “yeah my man did that shit but i love him regardless” and if ppl don’t like Jason bc of his early years of RH? Their loss. He’s such a fun, complex character but to understand him, you need to approach his character with that complexity in mind.
But yeah. Just because Jason is your fav doesn’t mean you have to twist the narrative and create stuff that never happened (ex: Bruce ‘choosing’ Joker over Jason… like wth is that take 😭) to defend him. He’s not in the right here and that's okay. Now are we saying that we have to like Jason as evil? Uh no??? BUT just because you would like a more PG-rated, batfam-friendly, WFA-style Jason doesn’t mean you’re allowed to rewrite canon, invent motivations, or straight-up lie about other characters.
And if you're not gonna read the comics, at least take this post and understand that Bruce never aimed at Jason and Jason was in NO way in the right in this moment. (this all is coming from me, Jason's biggest fan: just look at my handle lol)
So yeah. If anyone ever gives a stupid take abt #that scene in UTRH, you got this post to shove their faces into 👍/lh
All panels, unless mentioned otherwise, are from Batman: Under The Red Hood
EDIT: just feel like I need to add this bc my tone's being misunderstood but this is NOT a pro-Bruce anti-Jason post. This is just a full explanation of what happened in this scene.
Both are in the wrong. (Jason pushing Bruce too far and Bruce throwing the batarang)
Both made mistakes and both do not deserve to be villainized bc of it.
ALSO pls dont take this as a reason to not write fanfics. You're allowed to write whatever you want and are allowed to let your imagination roam. All my post is saying is that you all don't take canon and replace it with fanon
Starfire is one of the strongest energy users and has a bunch of potential, here’s why!
Starfire has been undermined throughout her existence in DC comics, with many adaptations of her toned down or not considered powerful. But if DC really used her potential, she could beat cosmic-level threats. Starfire’s origin starts with her being a warrior princess born on a planet named Tamaran. She leaves her planet to go to Earth and joins a group called the New Teen Titans, joining forces to create one of the most iconic groups in DC. Starfire can absorb solar energy and develop blasts called starbolts. Her abilities also consist of super strength, invulnerability, which is seen in her berserker state, an angered and nearly impossible-to-beat version of Starfire, and Omni-linguistics, energy blasts, flight, Tamaranean physiology, combat specialization, and energy absorption. Starfire’s potential reaches stellar possibilities, and here are some examples.
1. Stellar Body
Starfire’s solar absorption could allow for her body to be transformed into a state of energy or light, allowing her to destabilize nearby stars, weaken or absorb energy users, and increase her strength output as well as speed and endurance, she could go through fights for hours or days without getting tired, move faster than light, and lift forces comparable or surpassing superman.
2. Light Manipulation
Not sorcery, not witchcraft, but bending energy in its purest form, creating beams of light, constructs such as hard light restraints or solar restraints, photon spears, whips, wings, even capable of purifying dark forces, if green lantern can create constructs out of willpower, Starfire can shape stellar energy and radiation.
3. Emotional Based Energy Outputs
Starfire’s energy heavily relies on her emotions, her emotions regulate the severity of her power, love could turn her energy into a healing force, rage into destructive and emotionally harmful outputs, grief into heavy, gravity-collapsing fields of light, and feats that could be physically and emotionally devastating.
4. Emotion Manipulation/ Empathy
Since emotions are so crucial to her character it would only make sense to be able to influence other people's emotions through energy waves or touch similar to how Starfire can learn language through physical stimulation, she could learn things through touch, memories, or gain insight into events through visions like in the show Titans.
5. Psychic Powers
Starfire has been seen with psychic powers, trapping opponents in balls of energy, telepathic immunity, and her starbolts can have spiritual impacts, capable of internal vaporization, and attacking opponents on a psychic level, in Titans she also had psychic dreams and retrocognitive dreams and certain depictions, astral projection, expanding on this Starfire could adapt psychic abilities that match up to ravens, like emotional telepathy, emotional amplification, cosmic awareness and many more applications.
6. Tameranean Physiology (Adaptive)
Tamaraneans potential isn’t explored and it's been confirmed that Tamaraneans don’t even fully understand their own potential so it would make sense that Starfire adapts to make up for this, in battle she adapts to her situation, her energy could become more harmful, converting opposing energy, and being harder to harm.
Starfire’s potential hasn’t been explored yet unlike Superboy, the Flash, or other superheroes (I’ll get into why or my theory why in another post) but she deserves her place and deserves to be recognized for her potential. If you like the post don’t be afraid to show some love or even reblog it. Remember to be fabulous, strong, and stay hot! 🔥💋
Let’s talk Orientalism in Absolute Superman
My argument is not “Arab villains are bad” or “Ra’s al Ghul can’t be evil.”
My issue is with how the comic constructs him and what representational frameworks it draws from.
Orientalism is not just individual prejudice. It is a system of representation that frames the “East” as irrational, excessive, mystical, authoritarian, violent, primitive, and fundamentally different.
These patterns shape interpretation before a character even acts.
As Edward Said argues, representation does not simply reflect reality — it constructs meaning. Comics are especially important here because they rely heavily on visual shorthand and immediate recognition.
Characters are rapidly simplified into recognizable types: hero, monster, threat, savior, fanatic, victim.
And Absolute Superman very consciously constructs Ra’s as spectacle.
Look at how he is framed: hypermuscular, towering, looming over Superman. Heavily shadowed. almost inhumanly massive
The nudity matters too.
Ra’s is repeatedly drawn with large exposed areas of skin while Superman remains clothed and visually controlled. The body becomes spectacle.
The proportions push beyond ordinary humanity into something monstrous and mythic: heavy muscles, exaggerated size, animalistic posture, overwhelming physical presence and dominance.
That matters because Orientalist depictions of Arab/Muslim men have historically framed them as barbaric, hyperviolent, sexually excessive, patriarchal and physically threatening. The body itself becomes coded as danger.
This isn’t accidental visual design. It’s part of a long representational history.
Ra’s also isn’t framed as a psychologically grounded person so much as an archetype. He becomes less a psychologically grounded person and more a ritualistic, prophetic archetype; eternal, imposing, almost inhuman. Meanwhile Superman is framed as emotionally readable, illuminated, morally centered, rational and humanized. The contrast is intentional.
Ra's characterization becomes symbolic instead of personal.
That’s why the resurrection imagery matters too Lazarus pits, ritual language, dynastic authority and rebirth imagery. He becomes less a political actor and more an immortal Eastern patriarch archetype.
Another issue is how systemic problems become displaced onto Ra’s specifically. The comic gestures toward environmental collapse, inequality, global instability and authoritarian systems but these issues become condensed into ONE racialized body.
So instead of engaging structurally with those problems, the narrative transforms them into individualized evil. Ra’s becomes a symbolic container for extremism, apocalypse, overpopulation discourse, authoritarianism and irrational violence.
This is especially important because many of the ideas attached to him (population control, eco-authoritarianism, necropolitics) have real historical roots in Western political systems too. But the comic relocates them entirely into an “Eastern” villain figure.
That displacement matters. It obscures structural accountability by making one racialized body carry the weight of multiple global anxieties.
And these portrayals do not exist in isolation.
The American media has a long history of constructing Arabs and Muslims through spectacle, threat, mysticism, and dehumanization, especially post-9/11.
My point is not that the media cannot portray Arab villains. My point is that media can be visually compelling while still reproducing representational patterns worth critically examining.
TF2 ISSUE 7 SPOILERS //
Alright alright I know everyones going crazy over the ending of the comic (I am too) but I don't see this moment talked about enough and how beautifully done it is.
We start with the Administrator: The man who took everything from her is finally dead. She reigns victory. She is now living alone in peace, leaving flowers for each and every gravestone that was left before Zepheniah Mann's passing. The gravestones left before him are carved out beautifully, time and effort put into each and every one of them. The Administrator even lays out the roses so they look like they're grown out around the gravestones.
And here we have Zepheniah Mann's grave. A slab of rock with only his initials carved into it. The other gravestones are large, extravagant, and have their full names carved into them. Zepheniah's remains small; little thought put into it.
The gravestone wasn't even for him in the first place. It was for whichever of his son's died first, whichever one failed him. He himself didn't put much care into the gravestone, so why should he deserve anything better? In the end, he was treated the way he treated others. He was the failed son.
The Administrator leaves the stems of the roses out for him. She just places them there, no thought put into it seemingly. But there is SO much thought in this very moment. She had everything planned out from the very beginning.
Every day, she watched as the man grew older and older. She was there for his passing, and as far as we can tell, she caused his death. She leaves out roses for each and every grave, except for his. She leaves the stems. To her, he doesn't deserve the flower, he deserves the thorns. They aren't placed with care like the other flowers had been, they are simply put down. She gives him exactly what he deserves.
The atmosphere has suddenly lost that beautiful lighting and vibrant colours, the sky has become more gray and dreary. The Administrator is waking up more devastated, putting less time and effort into her daily life. The stems are turning brown, wilting under her eyes. She cares less. She seems relatively unaffected by the things around her. She gets stung by a bee, but doesn't seem to care. However that last panel says everything. She's growing tired of doing the same thing day in and day out. The cycle of depression is a tiring one. Soon enough you realize: is it even worth it? After all of this, after I finally got the one thing I wanted. But what now?
The scene is now almost completely devoid of colour. The weather is gloomy, and the Administrator looks like she has been bedridden for a while. She has taken the gravestone into her bedroom, now having to wake up to the reminder that he's dead and gone, she got what she wanted. But at what cost? There's nothing left to do anymore. She set herself out for one goal and one goal only her entire life. What was the point anymore?
There's so much to unpack in these panels, I doubt I've even scraped the surface of this. She's lost all emotion, the next few panels showing that she doesn't believe there's a point in living anymore. It's a terrifying thought, setting your entire life up to do one specific thing, getting that thing done, and then having nothing else left to live for. It's such a well-done portrayal of how depression can destroy you from the inside out.
Revenge is sweet, but it has a bitter aftertaste.
The running gag of Cass knocking out Steph is so funny.
She’s like “girl ur in my way” or “girl shits getting serious, don’t want u getting hurt”.
It’s really funny and cute. Poor Steph tho, lol. - legit at one point Steph complains that Cass broke her jaw lmao.
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Hey Look At This Comic: Calvin and Hobbes
I liked the idea of putting some more daily strip comics into my rss reader, and gocomics DOES post old strips in sequence every day (keeping archival materials in lively circulation 👍), and there IS a site that generates an rss feed for gocomics (they don't provide rss feeds themselves because they want you to subscribe 👎) so, I added the current Nancy run to my feed, alongside Peanuts and Calvin and Hobbes. a few days later it paid off big time with this strip:
I love this strip, but it's a bit weird, isn't it? I'm sure some people read the way you're "supposed to" move panel to panel in a typical comic: left to right across the top strip, then the middle, then the bottom. Easy. I didn't, though. My eyes darted across the page, circled around the upper left hand panels, before zipping to the big point of interest on the page: that big panel of Calvin's teacher as a great pink alien monster! the second panel in strip two, the view through the spaceship porthole of the alien landscape, got orphaned, turned into something I glanced at after the fact as I pieced the sequence back together.
which might just be how comics reading actually goes, in practice. more recent theories of comics, particularly ones coming out of the Franco-Belgian tradition, suggest we take in the page as a whole first before diving in panel by panel. that bottom left corner is also kind of a privileged position on the page, with a beautifully lumpy and toothy monster filling up almost the whole frame. no wonder my eye was drawn there "ahead of sequence"!
is that a mistake? one of my friends, when I posed the question, thought so, that the strip means to build up to that point but the page composition encourages you to read ahead. She also, intriguingly, suggested to me that even though we enter the strip seeing the whole page, we induce a kind of forgetfulness in ourselves so that we don't get spoiled. when we see the monster, do we already know it's there while experiencing it for the first time? (hypnosis, she suggested to me, is "merely a set of circumstances to help the mind do a set of things that it already does every day".)
others corroborated the weird reading orders but suggested it was deliberate. for Sarah, the whole left side of the page draws your eye down compositionally, from Spaceman Spiff's (Calvin's alter ego) gloved hands on the wheel, down to the Z shaped mesa, to the monster. this cuts out almost two thirds of the comic! but for her and a few other friends, that made sense: Calvin is daydreaming in class, and the point where his teacher pops up in front of him to demand his attention is a moment of concrete interest in a hazy sea of nonlinear sensation. another friend drew a diagram of an even weirder reading pattern:
actually, I think this makes some sense. theorist Thierry Groensteen's notion of "braiding" in comics suggests that we're constantly recomposing comics in our brains, not just panel by panel, but over the whole corpus of panels, looking for rhymes and resonances and ways the story relates to itself. it feels a little like panels 2 and 3 rhyme, to me. the frames are long and thin more than any of the others, they both have this prominent horizon line, and they both sit on top of panels 4 and 5. they relate to each other, to the point where I see how you could jump from one to the other, then back up the page and over! if I understand Groensteen right, he's not suggesting we necessarily jump around the page this way, I don't want to put words in his mouth, but I do think one of the implications of braiding and of taking in the whole page is that we might get off track and start wandering through time and space... which is exactly what Calvin is doing, after all.
I love that the actual joke of the strip hinges on these two little panels buried at the bottom of the page: the only shot not from Calvin's point of view, of him looking frazzled after Mrs Wormwood's dressing down, and then a little panel of him holding the book. that's braiding too: we understand the previous and future panels because we draw an analogy between all the perspectives we've seen elsewhere of hands (or claws) and get that Calvin is drifting into a daydream again, taking on a new role. the scenario shifts, and the color scheme changes to a complimentary one (red to green), but both daydreams are much more powerful, on the page, than the interruption by reality.
how do you read the page?
you can read more reviews in the Hey Look At This Comic tag and support me on Patreon.
One of the things that interests me the most about the original Winter Soldier arc is just how personal the intention behind Project: Winter Soldier was.
When I read issue 5 of Brubaker's run for the first time, it seemed almost like it was just a filler issue to pad out the arc and introduce some exposition about the new, shadowy villain. One of those many war flashbacks, because the run had been focusing pretty heavily on events of the past. Then, later issues completely recontextualized it. Not to say it's not complete exposition, because it is, but there's a lot more weight to it on a reread.
For as much as a tragedy this is in-universe, the reckless loss of life, it sort of just seems like a typical villain backstory/motivation. Then you get a few issues further in the arc, and you finally learn who the Winter Soldier is.
Honestly, I find it a little strange that Karpov only appears/is named a handful of times, because issue 11 very firmly establishes him as the Winter Soldier's primary architect. It also very firmly establishes that, while there is a lot of value that the KGB/Department X got out of the Winter Soldier, one of the most pressing reasons that they even turned him into their assassin was because Karpov had a grudge against Captain America. Not in the broader "people got killed because of your intervention/the intervention of superhumans like you" sense, but specifically because Captain America "shamed" him and made him feel inferior.
Essentially, Codename: Winter Soldier exists as a means for Karpov to heal/put right his wounded pride. Forcing this American icon to serve and kill for those who were offended by him (those who later became his nation's enemy), was a more symbolic gesture than it was a practical one. On top of that, one of Karpov's final orders before his death was that the Winter Soldier be decommissioned, turning him into nothing more than an "abandoned experiment."
Bucky is, of course, a talented assassin as the Winter Soldier, but because he's artificially loyal to Department X and not naturally, he is not an efficient agent for them by any means. Ensuring that he stayed stable was a constant concern for those who wanted to use him as their weapon. They only started putting him in cryogenic stasis around 1958 (or 1957 depending on the source, but 1958 is the more recent citation), and it's approximately the same for the frequent memory wipes & implementation.
But frankly, no matter how talented the Winter Soldier is with espionage and murder, the only thing that made him a truly valuable investment to the KGB was Karpov's grudge. I suspect that if Karpov hadn't ordered him decommissioned, Department X and the KGB would have stopped reviving him and sending him out to do their work anyways; realistically, the constant memory wipes to curb his "instability" must have been expensive (time-wise and resources-wise), as would have been the cryogenic stasis and maintenance. At some point, the cost to keep him serviceable to the KGB would have outweighed his value as their operative.
(And that is, of course, not even touching on the political state of the Soviet Union in the late 80s.)
Even later on, when Aleksander Lukin revives Bucky to retrieve the Cosmic Cube from the Red Skull, it is both because he was Karpov's protege (following his will), and because he is making an enemy of Captain America and SHIELD with his mission. It all returns to that same old grudge and the symbolism it allows for. Lukin sends the Winter Soldier to go out and kill Jack Monroe/Nomad (because he had been one of the people to take up the role of Captain America's Bucky when Steve and James were presumed KIA). Using the Comic Cube, he plagues Cap with visions of the day that he and Bucky died/went into the ice. He has the Winter Soldier kidnap Sharon Carter, who would- and did- recognize him as Bucky, and who would tell Steve about it.
(Do note how one of Lukin's intentions involve having Steve "suffer" for a little while longer, and how he assumes that the Winter Soldier's "personal feelings" are the reason he suggests killing Steve, when, to a brainwashed Bucky, it's actually just a matter of practicality.)
With the Winter Soldier, his greatest value to his superiors is consistently in the fact that he was affiliated with Captain America. Of course, he offers them value in the sense of being a tremendously talented assassin and covert agent, but that's not a resource they were exactly hurting for (the Red Room, for example). Arguably, he was a valuable lab rat too, with Project: Winter Soldier partially being a prototype for the Red Room and Wolf Spider programs, but *that* was done to take his undying loyalty and turn it into something malleable.