MAD About DC, The Ultimate Superhero Takedown, Arrives April 1

Peter Paltridge

Well-Known Member
Staff member
There’s a rumor going round that, should Netflix acquire Warner Bros, they would divest of MAD Magazine. Why, I don’t know…and it is just a rumor, so it hopefully isn’t true. If such an event does happen, then at least they made the most of their corporate synergy while they still had it: presenting MAD About DC, the ultimate tribute to Batman, Superman and the entire universe in the office next door. One of MAD’s earliest parodies was “Superduperman,” a comic that actually attracted lawyers from DC (back when they were far from family). They were taken to court, but the judge and jury sided with MAD, resulting in a landmark case that has defined legal protection for parody for decades since. You could say that, in that sense, MAD owes everything to DC…for suing them! So how will they honor this partnership? For starters, there’s… Sergio Aragonés with “A MAD Look at Comic Book Stores” Jim Zub & Ramon Perez teaming for “Guy vs. Spy” A brand-new DC Fold-In by Charles Soule & Ryan Browne The rest of the 64 pages are hush-hush, but the roster of talent involved is…..whew. Just look at this list: Kyle Starks, Dave Johnson, […]
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I grew up reading MAD, so seeing them go hard on DC again feels right. People forget how important parody is to comics history. That court case with Superduperman is not just trivia, it shaped what creators can do today. I like that this project is not just Batman jokes nonstop. The list of creators tells me this will be many styles, many voices, not one tone. Sergio Aragones doing comic book stores alone already sells it for me. Also, having Chip Zdarsky joke about Batman burnout feels honest, not marketing talk. The price is fair for 64 pages, especially today. I do not care about rumors of selling or Netflix stuff, I care if the book is funny and smart. MAD works best when it punches everyone, including friends. DC letting this happen shows confidence. I will buy it day one because projects like this do not happen often anymore, and I want publishers to see that people still want humor comics.
 
Big creator lists sometimes feel like hype more than substance. Still, MAD has a track record, and parody is their core skill. The history part about DC suing them made me laugh because it shows how messy comics used to be. Now they are basically neighbors doing a party together. That contrast is funny by itself. I hope this is not just inside jokes for hardcore fans. MAD used to be readable even if you did not know everything. I want jokes that work even if someone only knows Batman from movies. The fold-in returning is a good sign because that is classic MAD thinking. April 1 release date fits the tone, even if it is obvious. I am not blown away yet, but I am curious enough to check it out and judge it on the jokes, not the names.
 
What I like here is that this feels unapologetic. MAD is not pretending to be modern or edgy, it is just doing what it always did. Parody, exaggeration, and disrespect in a friendly way. DC characters need that sometimes because they are treated too seriously. Superman especially benefits from humor. The creator list is huge, but it also feels like a celebration, not a flex. It reads like everyone wanted in, which tells me people still respect MAD. I also appreciate that this is in comic shops, not just online content. Physical humor comics matter to me. The price is reasonable compared to other specials. I do not care about corporate synergy talk, that stuff comes and goes. What stays is whether people laugh. If even half of these stories land, it will be worth it. I miss magazines that are not afraid to be dumb and smart at the same time.
 
I am mainly here for Sergio Aragones. That man can say more with no words than most writers do with full scripts. A piece about comic book stores sounds perfect because those places deserve love and teasing. The rest of the lineup is almost too much to process. I had to reread it to even recognize all the names. That said, I hope the book is not overloaded. MAD works best when each piece has space to breathe. I also like the idea that DC is letting people poke fun at them without trying to control it. That was not always the case. The joke about being insulted if you were not invited is funny and very MAD-like. I will buy this more out of curiosity than hype. I want to see how modern creators handle MAD humor, not just superhero jokes.
 

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