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Derek's Continuity Corner:
"Far From Home"

Though they would become a group with one of the most devoted followings in all of comics, the Legion of Super-Heroes pretty much started out as the Legion of Super-D***s.

In Adventure Comics #247, the home of Superboy, young Clark Kent met a strange teen taunting him about his secret identity. Later while flying around as Superboy, another teen called him "Clark." Or maybe it was vice versa - it's been a while.

At any rate, it turned out that these teens (and more) were from 100 years in the future - later amended to 1,000 years - and members of an elite club of super-powered youths. They had traveled back in time to extend membership in their club for only one penny and the further purchase of fourteen reel-to-reel tapes.

Superboy did actually have to pass a little initiation test, which called for feats of derring-do and acts of heroism and were all rigged to make him think he'd failed. Faster than Superboy could say "thank you, Cosmic Boy, may I have another?" the group revealed the ruse and welcomed him with open arms, as at the time, they were all humanoid.

That changed as audiences got more sophisticated (as in, they grew up and still read comics), but for most of the sixties the team featured members from all over the galaxy yet all still looked human. The two exceptions were Brainiac 5, featured in "Far From Home," who had bright green skin and a taste for purple turtlenecks, and the tragic Ferro Lad.

A mutant before (or a thousand years after) it was fashionable, Earthman Andrew Nolan was able to transform his body to iron. The trade-off for this ability was a hideous non-human face, which he masked - get it? A Man in an Iron Face Under an Iron Mask. He stands out in Legion history for two reasons: he was created by the 13-year-old Jim Shooter, the regular Legion writer who took his time letting DC know that he was actually 13, and because Ferro Lad was the first Legionnaire to die, in the tale that introduced "Far From Home" villains the Fatal Five.

When the interstellar menace known as the Sun Eater approached our system, the United Planets teamed the Legion with the galaxy's most powerful villains: the Emerald Empress, Tharok, Mano, the Persuader (who rarely actually tried to persuade anybody of anything) and Validus. The hope was that this ragtag team would have some ability in their arsenal that would stop the Sun Eater from devouring, well, the sun.

Brainiac 5 and Tharok reasoned that the thing had to be blown up from the inside, and Superboy volunteered to fly into its heart and explode the nuclear device. Believing that the mission would be fatal and that Superboy was a greater inspiration than he, Ferro Lad tricked him, took the bomb, and blew himself and the Sun Eater to smithereens.

Behind the walls of sleep, however, Ferro Lad rested uneasily, and his ghost appeared at least one more time, later to be joined by other fallen Legionnaires such as Invisible Kid and Chemical King, whose deaths were predicted by Shooter in a Superman story featuring an adult Legion.

Supergirl joined the Legion, too, which, true to this week's episode, sparked one of the greatest unrequited loves in comics history. Brainiac 5 was so smitten and so unable to express himself, that he once even built a perfect android duplicate of Kara Zor-El in his sleep, running away with her for a romantic getaway.

They flew too close to a cosmic storm, and only the timely intervention of the real Supergirl saved Brainy from disintegration. A sympathetic Kara listened and watched as her sex droid doppelganger explained the depth of Brainiac 5's obsession to him.

Awkward.

Both Superboy and Supergirl got their minds wiped whenever they returned to the twentieth century, so that they wouldn't be able to affect their futures with any knowledge of the Legion's past. Brainiac 5 not only loved a girl dead a thousand years previously, but every time he saw her, he could have told her how she died.

Heck, the Legion even made Lana Lang an honorary member without telling her that, of course, their substitute member, Laurel Kent, was a descendant of Superman and Lois Lane.

They didn't even tell Superboy that one until he tried to date her.

After the Crisis, however, when Superboy was wiped from continuity, DC went through backflips to revamp Legion history. It turned out that their enemy the Time Trapper had created a "pocket universe" with a Superboy in it, that was really the place the Legion had been going to visit. When they accidentally traveled back into their real history and discovered a Superman clueless as to who they were, the whole jig was up.

The repercussions of that revelation actually weren't that bad, though the Pocket Superboy sacrificed himself, an action that eventually rolled around to the creation of a new Supergirl, but�if I haven't explained that one before, I'm not going to do it now. Stick with the animated series' explanation.

After Zero Hour, however, the Legion did officially reboot, merging their energies with those of cloned younger selves that caused a whole new 30th Century. Yes, it was confusing, though some of the stories told in the wake of that were exciting and gripping and �most people thought they were just too confusing to even give them a chance. So last year DC relaunched the Legion again under the aegis of Mark Waid and Barry Kitson, a book which has not only been absolutely rockin' and absolutely accessible, but which just last month changed its title to �Supergirl and the Legion of Super-Heroes. For reasons that some think they know, DC will no longer have a Superboy.

Of odd note: the other Legionnaire given a speaking part in this episode is Bouncing Boy, better known as Chuck Taine, a fat kid who accidentally drank an experimental formula that turned him into a human beach ball. No. Really. Weep not for him, though, for he ended up marrying Duo Damsel - you fill in the joke there.

In the 80's, the Fatal Five's Validus was revealed to be the son of Legionnaires Lightning Lad and Saturn Girl, stolen at birth by Darkseid.

And�hey, let's make that it for this week, okay?

Derek McCaw

 

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