#3954: Superman – Zero Hour

SUPERMAN — ZERO HOUR

DC MULTIVERSE (McFARLANE)

In the ‘50s, DC rebooted its super hero line, starting with the introduction of the second Flash, Barry Allen.  In the ‘60s, they brought back the original Flash, Jay Garrick, establishing the existence of a Multiverse. Through the ‘60s and ‘70s, that Multiverse grew, and in the ‘80s, DC decided it had grown too much, and consolidated everything down to one single universe in Crisis on Infinite Earths.  For all of their plans to simplify, Crisis brought with it all manner of complications and odd loose ends. In the ‘90s, DC made one of a number of attempts at rectifying those issues with Zero Hour, another crossover to end all crossovers.  DC’s two top heroes, Superman and Batman, were both rather fresh off of some upsets to their status quos.  Superman had died and returned, with the major lasting remnant at that point being his ‘90s-tastic mullet.  It’s a great way of getting an extra variant out of the Man of Steel, and that’s the case today!

THE FIGURE ITSELF

Superman — Zero Hour is part of the latest round of “Page Punchers” from McFarlane’s DC Multiverse line (officially under the DC Direct banner).  He’s paired off with a Crisis Joker, and he’s the standard release, with Zero Hour’s secondary antagonist Extant as the unadvertised Red Platinum chase.  This is the second time we’ve gotten mullet Superman, following up on the Collector’s Edition one that got stupid expensive a while back.  The figure stands 7 1/2 inches tall and he has 37 points of articulation.  As has become the formula for most Supermen from McFarlane in the last year, this figure is built on the Earth-2 Superman base body.  It’s by far the best take McFarlane’s had, and it’s a good, solid classic Superman body, so I can’t really fault it’s continued use.  He gets a new head sculpt, sporting that oh-so-important mullet.  It’s a strong sculpt, feeling consistently the same guy as the Silver Age Superman, but looks a bit older and more defined.  The hair’s got a good, dynamic flow to it.  Something with less of a dynamic flow, however, is the figure’s cape.  It’s a cloth one, like the others on this body, but for whatever reason, they’ve omitted the wire in the lining this one, meaning it just sort of hangs their flat.  It’s especially odd because the stitch on the cape clearly is designed with a wire in mind; it’s just not there.  The cape also sits back too far at the shoulders, which is especially notable given how his cape was usually pretty flared at the shoulders during this era.  His color work is a bit darker than the Silver Age version, which is accurate to the comics from the time, and looks pretty good and unique from the others.  Superman is packed with two pairs of hands, one in fists, the other in open gesture, and basic display stand, a collector card, and a copy of Zero Hour #4, which is, oddly, the first issue of the crossover.  It’s really prone to damage, because the paper’s really thin, but it’s an entertaining enough read.

THE ME HALF OF THE EQUATION

Since I came into collecting in the ‘90s, my first Superman line was Man of Steel, so the mullet is kind of etched into my brain as a signature look for the character.  I missed the last mullet Superman at retail, and the only time I saw him he was crazy expensive.  Since I’m just sort of keeping up with the new Supermen as they hit now, I was on board for this guy when he was shown off.  He sold out super quick, but GameStop came through for me again.  I don’t love the cape, but otherwise, he’s a fun little variant on a tried and true formula for a Superman figure.