ludozman a écrit:Petite question pour ceux qui sont plus connaisseurs que moi : dans FOR THE MAN WHO HAS EVERYTHING, à la fin de l'histoire, quand Wonder Woman donne son cadeau à Superman,
pourquoi Superman court-il ranger une autre miniature dans un placard alors qu'elle précise bien qu'il est censé avoir rendu sa taille à la cité de Kandor ? Il n'est pas censé du coup ne plus avoir "l'original" ?
C'es un petit détail que j'ai pas trop compris.
Je ne suis pas un expert de l'histoire de Superman, et ce détail m'avait aussi intrigué.
M. Wikipedia m'a donné une partie de la réponse:
Kandor was once the capital of Krypton until it was shrunk and stolen by the supervillain Brainiac, several years before the planet was destroyed. Superman discovered the city in Brainiac's possession when the android came to Earth decades later to harvest more cities (Action Comics #242, July 1958) and rescued it, keeping it in his Fortress of Solitude while looking for a way to restore it to full size. It is later revealed the city had 6 million inhabitants when stolen. In return, the Kandorians provided the superhero with a place where he was an honored guest who was occasionally invited to participate in matters of local government, various professionals to assist him when asked and even occasionally assisted him in the outside with the Superman Emergency Squad who used an expanding gas that briefly grew them to a few inches tall.
Eventually (Superman #338, Aug 1979), Superman was able to restore the population to normal size and they settled on another planet that revolved around a red sun. Originally calling the planet New Krypton, the Kandorians decided to name their new homeworld Rokyn, which is the Kryptonian word for "gift from God" (Rokyn had first been revealed as existing in the 30th century in Adventure Comics #356, May 1967). Later it was revealed the planet was on a dimensional fault, which meant it would at times be sent to another dimension. Superman constructed a replica of the bottle-sized city to keep as a memento but was surprised when thousands of tiny aliens, fleeing the destruction of their home planet, moved into it (Superman #371, Aug 1982). When told the city's original name was Kandor, the aliens decided to call it that as well. On a trial basis, Superman restored two inhabitants to normal size to introduce them to life on Earth, but discovered that the population had a dangerous reaction to the planet's environment which transformed them into mindless, powerful and rampaging beasts who were difficult for Superman to control. As such, Superman decided that for the time being, the New Kandorians would have to remain in the bottled city with a carefully filtered atmosphere until that medical problem was solved.
Donc, effectivement, Superman a rendu sa taille à Kandor, mais en a construit une réplique en souvenir.
Et c'est cette réplique, désormais occupée par des aliens, qu'il a toujours chez lui.
Pourquoi agit-il comme ça devant Wonderwoman ?
J'imagine qu'il n'en a parlé à personne, un petit secret qu'il n'a pas envie d'expliquer (d'autant plus que cela n'avait pas très bien tourné quand il avait essayé de rendre leur taille aux aliens).
Sinon, elle est vraiment agréable cette version Urban, j'ai pris bcp de plaisir à me replonger dans ces histoires.
J'avais les fascicules VO, mais Urban a eu la bonne idée d'ajouter quelques suppléments intéressants sur la génèse de ces histoires, et sur l'histoire de Superman.
(totalement dispensable, mais saviez-vous qu'il y a eu une histoire de Superman dans un petit village peuplé d'irréductibles gaulois (Action Comics #579, 1986) ?)