Stan Lee and His Version of Superman in Comic Art
By
Andrew Dyce
Published 18 minutes ago
Andrew Dyce is the Deputy Editor for ScreenRant's coverage of Marvel, DC, and all other comics. Whether superheroes, sci-fi, fantasy, or any other genre, Andrew's decade in the industry and countless hours of analysis on podcasts like the Screen Rant Underground, Total Geekall, The Rings of Power Podcast, Batman v Superman: By The Minute, and more has left its mark.
With over a decade spent at GameRant and ScreenRant, Andrew has made himself known as an outspoken fan and critic of film, television, video games, comics, and more.
Sign in to your ScreenRant account
Summary
Generate a summary of this story
follow
Follow
followed
Followed
Like
Like
Thread
Log in
Here is a fact-based summary of the story contents:
Try something different:
Show me the facts
Explain it like I’m 5
Give me a lighthearted recap
As the legendary mind behind Marvel superheroes like Spider-Man, Iron Man, the X-Men and more, DC fans can only dream of what Stan Lee could have created for the Justice League universe. Unfortunately, when he was given the chance to relaunch his version of Superman, the story Stan Lee actually imagined for the Man of Steel fell very, very short of his Marvel hits.
Stan Lee's Superman: A Controversial Change, From The Very First Page
The Man of Steel is Re-Imagined as 'A Kryptonian Clint Eastwood'
Stan Lee's version of Superman in Just Imagine DC Comics Art
This apparent 'dream come true' became a reality thanks to a special project from DC Comics, recruiting Stan Lee for a dozen one-shot comics, re-imagining some of DC's most iconic heroes. And in 2001's Just Imagine Stan Lee with John Buscema Creating Superman, a drastically different concept of the Kryptonian was unleashed upon the public... bearing almost no resemblance to the original, in any conceivable way.
Not necessarily an indictment on that premise alone, Lee's alterations are difficult to take at face value. Instead of the last child of a lost people, the facially-scarred "Salden" makes his first appearance obsessively lifting weights. Not for vanity, but because he is smaller and weaker than his fellow, augmented police officers. Caring less for heroics than "mopping up the slimeballs" of his homeworld, and reassuring his lover Lyella that "you, baby, provide all the excitement I need," the story begins off the expected course, and only picks up speed.
Stan Lee's Superman finds his wife Lyella murdered in DC's Just Imagine Comic Art
When a gangster named Gorrok breaks into Salden's home for some revenge, he instead finds Lyella, and perpetrates what might be the record-holder for shortest "fridging" of a female character in comics history. When describing the design process of the character in the same issue, artist Adam Hughes calls out a "Kryptonian Clint Eastwood" as Stan's concept for the hero, and this origin story checks every box.
As a cop who likes to get violent with "slimeballs" who deserve it, and with his lover murdered as revenge, Salden pursues Gorrok onto an experimental rocket. Despite Lee's tendency towards truly tragic origin stories and formative trauma, Salden leaves Krypton very much intact, with both hero and villain riding the rocket to Earth on a one-way trip. And things only get stranger from there.
Superman is Anything But A Heroic 'Boy Scout' in Stan Lee's Reboot
The Story Remains a Rare Miss From One of Comic's Greatest Creators
Stan Lee's Superman Travels to Earth in Just Imagine Comic Art
Some latitude or flexibility can be affored here, with Lee best known for creating superheroes in a world several decades' old at the time of Just Imagine. But the odd narrative really can't be understated: committing violence against almost every threat he encounters, and looking down upon humanity for its limited technology, it is cynicism, not hope, that defines Stan Lee's Superman.
After performing at a circus to earn some cash (naturally), Salden realizes money can't buy him a journey back to his home. He then decides to fight the forces of evil on this "planet of of clowns," so governments can commit money and resources to technology, instead. Redefining Superman's heroics as entirely self-serving is an odd choice, but it's one doubled-down upon when Lois Lane enters the picture. Not as a journalist pursuing the story of an alien visitor, but an agent eager to get him on The Tonight Show.
Stan Lee Version of Lois Lane Meets Superman in Comic Art
It would be an understatement to say that in 2025, re-imagining Lois Lane as a fame-minded talent agent (who knows her real challenge will be "keeping other girls away") is a problematic, even backwards idea. But even in 2001, much like Gorrok using his physical strength to dominate a primitive tribe of spear-wielding Pacific Islanders, eyebrows must have been raised (if not explicit concerns). Making it unsurprising that this project is not as well-known as a casual Marvel fan might assume.
A hero like the Man of Steel is legendary, iconic, and universal enough to demand reinvention, inviting even controversial reboots of who 'Superman' really is. But in the case of Stan Lee's Superman, the less said about it the better.
Headshot Of Stan Lee In The Los Angeles Premiere of 'Thor'
Follow
Followed
Stan Lee
Birthdate
December 28, 1922
Birthplace
New York, New York, USA
Notable Projects
The Avengers, Avengers: Infinity War, Iron Man
Height
5 feet 11 inches
Professions
Writer, Editor, Publisher, Producer, Actor
Expand
Collapse
Follow
Followed
Like
Share
Facebook
X
WhatsApp
Threads
Bluesky
LinkedIn
Reddit
Flipboard
Copy link
Email
Close
Thread
Sign in to your ScreenRant account
We want to hear from you! Share your opinions in the thread below and remember to keep it respectful.
Be the first to post Images Attachment(s) Please respect our community guidelines. No links, inappropriate language, or spam.Your comment has not been saved
Send confirmation emailThis thread is open for discussion.
Be the first to post your thoughts.
- Terms
- Privacy
- Feedback
8 hours ago
My Hero Academia’s Greatest Fight Clears Deku vs Shigaraki Hands Down
11 hours ago
Is Zootopia 2's Twist Good Enough To Distract From 1 Notable Criticism?
6 hours ago
There's Only One Star Wars TV Show Where Every Episode Is 10/10
13 hours ago
Marvel Kills Off 1 Avenger After Promising Their Team Would Return
More from our brands
James Gunn’s Complete DCU Timeline (So Far)
35 Best Sci-Fi TV Shows, Ranked
Which Smallville Episodes Can You Skip? The Best Way to Watch All 10 Seasons
How To Watch Every Superman TV Show: Your Streaming Guide to the Man of Steel’s Small Screen Appearances
Superman Movies in Order: How to Watch Chronologically and by Release Date
10 Best Superman Comic Endings of All Time, Ranked
DC: 13 Strongest Versions Of Superman, Ranked
Trending Now
One Piece Season 3 Is Officially Introducing A Straw Hat Pirate Long Before Their Anime Debut
Star Trek Confirms Captain Kirk’s Staggeringly High Kill Count
Nancy Makes A Great Point About Her Family In Stranger Things Season 5