Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Cyclops Shoots First

So today's post is actually a continuation of my previous post. Those of you that are getting tired of X-Men references are probably on the wrong blog, especially since I'm now midway through X-Men Evolution on Netflix. For the rest of you, here's some interesting things I learned about Cyclops from the X-Men while researching this post:
  1. Cyclops gets his powers from solar radiation (similar to Superman, but weaker because he's just a mutant human, not an alien).
  2. Cyclops used to be able to control his powers until he sustained a head injury as a child. The trauma caused him to lose control to the point that whenever he opens his eyes the beams come out. This is why in X-Men Evolution when Rogue absorbs his powers she doesn't need to wear his special sunglasses, since Rogue doesn't have the head injury and would therefore be able to control his powers.
  3. His beams hit with a concussive force (like a giant, long-range fist) rather than heat. This is different from Superman's heat vision, which is drawn in a way similar to Cyclops' optic blasts (as red beams coming from his eyes), but heats up and vaporizes what it hits rather than smashing it.
  4. Cyclops has a brother named Havok who shoots plasma out of his hands. For some reason his powers don't work against Cyclops and vice/versa. Ironically, his powers work very much like Superman's heat vision.
  5. In the comics, he doesn't marry Jean Grey first. Instead, one of the times Jean dies he marries Madelyne Prior, who looks just like Jean, has a son with her, and retires from the X-Men...... until Jean turns out to be alive again, at which point he ditches her and the kid, proving that comic book writers are all despicable human beings. To justify all this, they end up rewriting Madelyne as a clone of Jean Grey, a goblin queen, the daughter of Mr. Sinister, and various other explanations for why it was okay for Cyclops to dump her that were later retconned* because they were all terrible ideas. (This is why I prefer the cartoon and movie versions of most comic book franchises. The actual comic books tend to go for so long that they jump the shark, then nuke the fridge, then nuke a fridge that's jumping over a shark. The cartoons usually avoid most of the nastier retcons and horrible moral dilemmas because they have to stay kid friendly and only run for a few seasons anyway). 
  6. Cyclops' son is named Cable. For some reason Cable ends up living a thousand years in the future and has a "techno-organic virus" that gives the writers an excuse to draw him with an awesome metal arm and really cool futuristic guns that he actually uses to shoot things (One of my pet peeves is that more comic book characters don't use guns and conventional weapons). With the possible exceptions of Wolverine and Bishop, Cable may just be the baddest X-Man there is.
Cable gets first place because real men take care of baby girls
You'd think as Cable's dad that Cyclops would end up on the podium, right? Well, let's just say he gets an 'A' for effort.



*Comic books change their continuity a ridiculous amount. Aside from the fact that no one stays dead except for Captain America's sidekick Bucky, Jason Todd (the second Robin), and Uncle Ben from Spiderman, there's the fact that people's powers, costumes, and back-stories change from issue to issue. In the industry this is referred to as a retcon, which stands for retroactive continuity.  DC Comics is worse about this than Marvel, but they both do it.

Anyway, now that we have all that background we can continue the narrative I started in a previous post about what would happen if I woke up one day with Cyclops' powers. In our last issue, our intrepid hero was just finishing lunch at Professor Xaviers School for At-Risk Teens Gifted Youngsters when...

12:30pm: An alarm sounds in the building. Immediately all the faculty strip off their business suits, revealing awkward spandex costumes. I raise an eyebrow questioningly, and a furry blue German demon-elf tells me they tried switching to leather costumes for the movies but changed back when they discovered the spandex breathes better. He also whips out two swords and mutters something about how stupid it was that he didn't get to use them in the movies.

The wall to our left crumbles and Gandalf flies in wearing a red cape and helmet. He is followed by a nasty toad-man, a big fat guy, a guy with a flamethrower, and a bigger surly Canadian with sharp teeth and long fingernails (great, now I have to keep track of two animal-themed Canadians). Unfortunately, they're also wearing what look like spandex outfits. After recovering from the shock I catch a whiff of body odor that convinces me their outfits must be made of a cheaper material than spandex as it clearly does not breathe well.

Gandalf and Captain Picard start debating whether humankind would be more tolerant of mutants if they were vigilantes or terrorists. Before I can ask for his autograph and ask how Bilbo is doing Professor X uses his telepathy to insist I stop calling him Captain Picard and explains that his debate partner is Magneto, the Master of Magnetism, who is far less friendly to short people than Gandalf. At that moment, Logan (the "good" Canadian) busts in and jumps toward the helmeted guy, whose name I've already forgotten. The magnet guy (Magnesium? Magenta? Magna Carta?) flicks his hand and sends him crashing into the wall. Everyone shakes their heads awkwardly like this has happened before. Logan then brushes himself off and joins our side, and each team forms a line on either side of the room. Just as I'm convinced there's going to be an epic battle with lasers and explosions and cool guitar music in the background, Magnolia flicks his hand again and a foosball table rolls into the center of the room. Everyone cheers as Captain Pic.... Xavier proceeds to narrowly defeat Magnetroid 5-4. After a bunch of robots come in to magically repair the wall (just like always happens off-screen in '90s TV shows), we all stop for a photo:



2:30pm - After our harrowing adventure with Magna-Doodle and his henchmen, we get a call from the local police station about a bank robbery. We pile into a Humvee and head off to intercept the robbers. Within a half hour we've foiled the bank robbery and a few cars who cut us off may or may not have ended up smoking on the side of the road with optic-blast-shaped holes in their sides.

3:15pm - Jessica and I spend a half hour brainstorming battle cries and one liners. We discard most of them, but decide to keep "Well apparently," *puts on sunglasses* "looks can kill." (yeeeaaaahhhhh!)

6pm - Dinnertime. As a special treat, the Avengers are our dinner guests. Iron Man tries to get me to do some welding until the unfortunately credible Dr. Banner steps in and explains the difference between optic blasts and heat vision. I commit some kind of faux pas by asking Captain America to sign some trading cards I got from Gambit. The room gets really quiet and Thor mutters something about the son of Cole. Jessica spends most of the meal chatting with Black Widow about where she gets her boots.

7pm - We get a flight home in the X-Jet. The in-flight movie is The Wedding Planner, starring Jennifer Lopez and Matthew McConaughey. By the end Storm and Shadowcat are asleep and Wolverine is bawling. Apparently it's his second favorite movie after Hitch.

10pm - We have some trouble putting Tori to sleep as she keeps levitating a foot above her crib for some reason. After the day we've had we're too tired to care, so we just drape a blanket over her and she falls asleep that way.

11:45pm - Tori wakes up crying. For some reason her voice is different, everything in the room is levitating, and her shadow is shaped like a bird that's on fire. I change her diaper and she falls uneventfully back asleep.



I hope you've enjoyed this trip to the depths of nerdiness. I'll leave you with a discussion question: If you could be any of the X-Men, which would you be? How would you change your costume, if at all? Let us know in the comments.

Also, since no one has submitted anything for our Baby Avengers challenge, here's my version of the Baby Justice League in the hopes it will garner us some submissions:






4 comments:

  1. I don't see why Captain Picard hides his true identity. Who is he fooling??

    Were there any appearances from Catwoman or the wife of Jesse from Full House?

    I'd like to hear more about this apparently shameful episode of road-rage and unbridled laser-discharge that overcame you!

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  2. Seriously his name is cable? I sware all this time I thought it was Caleb. Why are super heros allowed to name their kids dumb stuff? It's a good thing he looks so awesome or he would have gotten made fun of more

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  3. Cable is just his superhero name. His real name is Nathan Christopher Summers. If you don't like those names then maybe you should take it up with your brothers Nate and Chris. :)

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  4. Also, in response to Kevin: I had a really awesome comment that took 20 minutes to write and had lots of awesomeness in it, but the browser logged me out and lost the comment when I clicked save, so I'll try and reconstruct it:

    Catwoman appeared briefly. She and Shadowcat had an epic cat-themed comic-book-character battle with Sabretooth and Cheetah. The winner of the fight? The Gotham City Dairy and Yarn coalition.

    Jesse's wife from full house did not make an appearance, but the dead wife of Danny Tanner did, and she teamed up with Batman's dead mother in issue #47: "Who haven't we brought back from the dead yet?" to defeat Xena, who for some reason had turned evil and become a zombie (or would it be Xombie?).

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