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madcougar 02-19-14 11:35 AM

Comic books that have made you cry
 
Anyone who watches Comic Book Men may have seen cast regular Mike Zapcic confess he cried when he read the death of Jean Grey (he was 12, but still). He got a lot of crap from the other guys on the show.

This got me to thinking... has a comic book ever made me cry. I've been reading comic books for 25 years and I'm sure it's happened more than once, but the only story I can remember making me cry was "What Ever Happened to the Cape Crusader" by Neil Gaiman from 2009. I recall weeping like a little bitch at the end of that one.

Anyone else?

fujishig 02-19-14 12:45 PM

Re: Comic books that have made you cry
 
I know you tie it into a tv show, but from the title alone I was a bit confused.

I don't remember actually crying, but I probably did in Crisis when Supergirl died. Barry, eh, but Supergirl!

I was shocked by Jean Grey too. But nowadays nobody stays dead in comics, so it's hard to feel emotional when there are no lasting repercussions. The last death I really remember was papa Knight in Starman.

We3

Berserk (manga): it's basically just a longform tale of being miserable in general, but man the Griffith flashback arc (which is where the anime comes from) really shows the rise and fall of the Band of the Hawk.

Vinland Saga (manga)

PhantomStranger 02-19-14 12:59 PM

Re: Comic books that have made you cry
 
The death of Barry Allen in Crisis. A little part of me died that day, it was so shocking to my young mind. DC could have easily sacrificed a second-stringer like Aquaman, but they had to kill my favorite DC hero at the time.:sad: It took me years to accept Wally as the Flash.

The only other one I can think of is Alan Moore's magnificent send-off for the real Superman, in Superman: Whatever Happened to the Man of Tomorrow? I don't think we've ever really seen that character again from DC and it was a love letter to the hero most responsible for keeping the industry afloat for many years. DC really should have let Moore run wild with a Superman series, he proved on Supreme he understood the character better than anyone actually working at DC.

The Valeyard 02-19-14 01:09 PM

Re: Comic books that have made you cry
 
I cried more for Supergirl's death than The Flash's during the Crisis.

Rorschach's death also made me tear up. “No. Not even in the face of Armageddon. Never compromise.” That just blew me away.

Recent comics - When the shadow image of Jean Grey talked Cyclops-Phoenix down at the end of Avengers Vs. X-Men.


Can't really think of any other time off the top of my head.

Hokeyboy 02-19-14 01:16 PM

Re: Comic books that have made you cry
 
The death of Krypto in Alan Moore's "Whatever Happened To The Man Of Tomorrow". Hits me every time.

I can't read Maus without getting choked up on more than one occasion.

There are some REALLY emotional moments in "Strangers In Paradise"... but then I have this weird crush-on-a-literary figure thing going on with Francine.

stingermck 02-19-14 01:40 PM

Re: Comic books that have made you cry
 
Death of Supergirl got to me. I was about 7 and the cover freaked me out with Superman crying.

GI Joe 155, didn't make me cry, but it was a powerful issue with the first time narration by Snake Eyes about life in the miltary.

Jacoby Ellsbury 02-19-14 02:16 PM

Re: Comic books that have made you cry
 
Are you girls being serious?

Trevor 02-19-14 02:19 PM

Re: Comic books that have made you cry
 
I'm not going to read this thread closely for fear of spoilers. I'm an emotional weakling every since my father died, I well up at commercials at least once a week. But with comics I think it's ingrained in me to expect a resurrection or other 'trick' on any death. I remember being upset by the two biggie deaths in Crisis, and I'm pretty sure Alan Moore's last Superman story got me teary once or twice.

John Pannozzi 02-19-14 02:42 PM

Re: Comic books that have made you cry
 
The end of Whatever Happened to the Caped Crusader by Neil Gaiman left me all teary-eyed.

fujishig 02-19-14 02:43 PM

Re: Comic books that have made you cry
 

Originally Posted by PhantomStranger (Post 12017660)
The death of Barry Allen in Crisis. A little part of me died that day, it was so shocking to my young mind. DC could have easily sacrificed a second-stringer like Aquaman, but they had to kill my favorite DC hero at the time.:sad: It took me years to accept Wally as the Flash.

Barry was a second stringer. Leading up to Crisis, the long running Trial of the Flash storyline seemingly killed his ongoing series, and he retired (and was cancelled) shortly before Crisis, I think he was living in the future or something like that. It seemed like Wally was going to take up the mantle anyway, even if Barry didn't die. So it's not like they took a character at the height of his popularity. Even though the tv show was Barry, that was years after Crisis IIRC.

Maxflier 02-19-14 02:48 PM

Re: Comic books that have made you cry
 
I haven't cried and can't see myself ever crying over the death of a superhero in a comic since they never stay dead. I guess the closest I have come would be in Superman: Earth One when his cat dies. It was very cool and touching the way he goes about burying it.

madcougar 02-19-14 03:26 PM

Re: Comic books that have made you cry
 

Originally Posted by Hokeyboy (Post 12017700)
There are some REALLY emotional moments in "Strangers In Paradise"... but then I have this weird crush-on-a-literary figure thing going on with Francine.

It's a testament to Terry Moore that I too had a mad crush on Francine.

The Valeyard 02-19-14 03:28 PM

Re: Comic books that have made you cry
 

Originally Posted by fujishig (Post 12017870)
Barry was a second stringer. Leading up to Crisis, the long running Trial of the Flash storyline seemingly killed his ongoing series, and he retired (and was cancelled) shortly before Crisis, I think he was living in the future or something like that. It seemed like Wally was going to take up the mantle anyway, even if Barry didn't die. So it's not like they took a character at the height of his popularity. Even though the tv show was Barry, that was years after Crisis IIRC.

Yeah. After his trial, Barry went into the future to "live happily ever after" with Iris. The entire DCU thought he was MIA so they were in the process of trying to find him before the Crisis hit.

Wally wasn't going to replace Barry at that point because he was having problems with his powers. Every time he ran, he was killing himself. This was fixed at the end of the Crisis before he took the Flash mantle.

There was no reason to resurrect Barry Allen as the Flash during Final Crisis (outside of Silver Age fans being in charge of DC). His death was poignant and hammered home that the Silver Age was over. Wally more than replaced him.

Supermallet 02-19-14 03:54 PM

Re: Comic books that have made you cry
 
Sandman got me multiple times. Strangers in Paradise as well. A few moments in the Alan Moore run of Swamp Thing.

I've never cried for the death of a big name superhero because they're all such obvious gimmicks.

I remember when Marvel announced their Ultimate comics and one of the things they said was that people who died in those comics would stay dead. IIRC, they killed off Beast early in the run of Ultimate X-Men, and I was like, "Okay! They're really taking this to new places. Then they brought him back a year later. Fuggedaboutit.

fujishig 02-19-14 04:16 PM

Re: Comic books that have made you cry
 

Originally Posted by Supermallet (Post 12017947)
Sandman got me multiple times. Strangers in Paradise as well. A few moments in the Alan Moore run of Swamp Thing.

I've never cried for the death of a big name superhero because they're all such obvious gimmicks.

I remember when Marvel announced their Ultimate comics and one of the things they said was that people who died in those comics would stay dead. IIRC, they killed off Beast early in the run of Ultimate X-Men, and I was like, "Okay! They're really taking this to new places. Then they brought him back a year later. Fuggedaboutit.

Have you read Ultimate Spider-man? Or (done much worse) ultimatum?

ddrknghtrtns 02-19-14 06:46 PM

Re: Comic books that have made you cry
 
Seeing and imagining Krypto slowly die of kryptonite poison in Whatever Happened To The Man of Tomorrow is tough. Especially since he came back to be by his master's side during his greatest hour of need.

Mike Long 02-19-14 07:20 PM

Re: Comic books that have made you cry
 
I can't think of a comic book story which made me cry, but in the late 80s, a person with physical deformities wrote a letter to The Uncanny X-Men stating that they really identified with Nightcrawler and his issues. That really tore me up.

Hokeyboy 02-19-14 07:51 PM

Re: Comic books that have made you cry
 
Earth-2 Supes reuniting with Lois at the end of the original Crisis, after he was told she was erased from existence entirely... that was a bigtime touching moment.

Hokeyboy 02-19-14 07:52 PM

Re: Comic books that have made you cry
 
OH FUCK! Speaking of which, I forgot about Astro City 1/2. That one goes right for the jugular...

Crocker Jarmen 02-19-14 08:55 PM

Re: Comic books that have made you cry
 
Issue 12 of The Invisibles, "Best Man Fall", which I consider one of the best comics of all time. Issue one of The Invisibles features an action scene where the hero battles it out with a bunch of prison soldiers. "Best Man Falls", published a year later, recounts the life of one of these anonymous, "action fodder" characters, from childhood to his death.

I also cried over a story in an early issue of Drawn and Quarterly by Carol Taylor about her mother's memories of an earlier child who died. It wasn't so much the death of the child that makes the story emotional, but the ending, how Taylor's mother has finally found the strength to speak about this after decades and accept her greif. A beautiful piece of work, in both its story telling and art. Probably the finest thing Drawn and Quarterly has ever published.

movieguru 02-19-14 09:19 PM

Re: Comic books that have made you cry
 

Originally Posted by PhantomStranger (Post 12017660)
The death of Barry Allen in Crisis. A little part of me died that day, it was so shocking to my young mind. DC could have easily sacrificed a second-stringer like Aquaman, but they had to kill my favorite DC hero at the time.:sad: It took me years to accept Wally as the Flash.

The only other one I can think of is Alan Moore's magnificent send-off for the real Superman, in Superman: Whatever Happened to the Man of Tomorrow? I don't think we've ever really seen that character again from DC and it was a love letter to the hero most responsible for keeping the industry afloat for many years. DC really should have let Moore run wild with a Superman series, he proved on Supreme he understood the character better than anyone actually working at DC.

Wasn't "whatever happened to the Man of Tomorrow" just an "imaginary tale" and not part of the silverage Superman continuity?

Greg MacGuffin 02-19-14 09:42 PM

Re: Comic books that have made you cry
 

Originally Posted by movieguru (Post 12018307)
Wasn't "whatever happened to the Man of Tomorrow" just an "imaginary tale" and not part of the silverage Superman continuity?

Aren't they all? ;)

Spiderbite 02-19-14 09:50 PM

Re: Comic books that have made you cry
 
I had never cried at a comic book until recently. I was reading The Walking Dead compendium and turned the page when
Spoiler:
Carl got shot in the head. I was so shocked and stunned I just bawled like a baby. Having a 9 year old son likely contributed a lot of the emotion I felt but I don't want to take anything away from the book.
. I have never felt such emotion after reading a comic book like I did then.

Apple Gooncha 02-19-14 10:25 PM

Re: Comic books that have made you cry
 
A handful here and there but the one that really stands out is We3.

ddrknghtrtns 02-19-14 10:39 PM

Re: Comic books that have made you cry
 

Originally Posted by movieguru (Post 12018307)
Wasn't "whatever happened to the Man of Tomorrow" just an "imaginary tale" and not part of the silverage Superman continuity?

The story takes place post COIE. It even ties up a few loose ends from the regular series. I still wonder why they did not include his robots?

The Supergirl and LOS part comes as a close second of being really tough to not stop and take a moment before reading again.


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