Ratings8
Average rating3
Reviews with the most likes.
3 strong stars or 4 weak stars. It's a little better that the Joker story.
Lex Luthor is a humanitarian. He gives to charities, helps his employees with family problems, and does his best to make his city a better and more prosperous place.
Lex Luthor is an engineer, a spiritual descendent of Archimedes. He knows that, with a fulcrum and lever big enough, we could move the world. Move it out poverty, out of war, out of ignorance.
There's only one problem with Lex's vision: Superman. Superman, that pompous, arrogant alien who has come to his city and amazed the population. With Superman around, Lex sees, people don't want to lift themselves out of poverty. They're too busy watching the skies.
Lex Luthor understands sacrifice. He knows that you don't make omelettes without breaking eggs. He knows that, to stop Superman from blocking the potential of the human race, sacrifices will have to be made. He's willing to make those.
This isn't an entirely new way of looking at Lex (people call him “Mr. Luthor”, but really, he insists, call him Lex), but it's the most convincing look that I've ever seen at what motivates him as an antagonist, and why he's willing to go to such monstrous and villainous lengths to destroy Superman.
Luthor isn't a bad man. If it was't for superman, Lex would be the hero. In the real world, any of us would love to be Lex. Powerful, Smart, sexy.
But who can stand up in comparison to the Übermensch, the creature Nietzsche posited as a goal for humanity to set for itself. I say creature, because Superman is not Human. Humanoid? Yes, but not a man.
This is a story of a man, who should have been great, but was overshadowed by an outsider.
If you ever wondered what make Lex tick you need not any longer. Brian does not try and paint Lex as a hero. This is not an alternate timeline or Elseworld. This is just a perspective that I have not seen of Superman before. And boy does it rock. You understand Lex like never before. You see his ruthless streak like never before. And you finish the book wondering whether the new scheme of his could work. But if you think Superman is ignored in this one you could not be more wrong. So give it a whirl and open your eyes to the world of Luthor Man of Steel
Series
7 primary books8 released booksColección Novelas Gráficas DC Comics is a 9-book series with 7 primary works first released in 1971 with contributions by Mark Waid, Dan Curtis Johnson, and 12 others.
Series
1 primary bookLex Luthor: Man of Steel is a 0-book series first released in 2006 with contributions by Brian Azzarello.