Stretchy superheroes are my favorites, especially Cole’s (and Kyle Baker’s) Plastic Man.
My assumption was that the stretched body part didn’t get any heavier than it was originally. Why would it?
Stretchy superheroes are my favorites, especially Cole’s (and Kyle Baker’s) Plastic Man.
My assumption was that the stretched body part didn’t get any heavier than it was originally. Why would it?
Interesting – I hadn’t encountered Flexo before, although, from the examples you give, Flexo doesn’t seem to stretch to the extremes of Plastic Man or his successors.
Maybe, at some point, he can’t support cantilevered arms. Maybe to grab something a hundred feet away, he has to snake his arm along the floor. It seems to me that in most instances of extreme stretching, you either have limbs supported on both ends (holding onto a lamppost on one end and a speeding vehicle on the other, say), or you’ve got a dynamic situation that doesn’t need to be statically stable (like brachiating off of skyscrapers).
Along the extended arm, he drops millimeter-thin vertical struts made of his own elastified flesh as supports. You can’t see them almost all the time.
Well, hell. I wasn’t thinking about LIFTING something a hundred feet away, except maybe a villain. A thin, small villain.
Is this something along the lines of Doc Ock anchoring himself with two of his steel arms in Spider-Man II?
We should remember that comic books show us second hand accounts of the actual events. Comic book artists are likely to show us an arm extending ridiculous distances without support while in reality Reed Richards has to snake his arm out like that until he can grab something. It just looks better that way in a still frame. This is probably done by comic book artists in the comic book universe as well as ours.
You guys are close but not quite spot on about Plastic Man. Sure, he started out as a regular stretchy hero but he’s a lot more than that. Plastic Man doesn’t always stretch nor make shapes…he becomes things.
It’s one thing to stretch. That’s fine. But in at least one occasion he became a jet engine. Not the shape of one, but an actual jet engine capable of producing thrust. He can become a car and be driven. It’s scary when you think about it.
I noted that above – when he shaped himself into a car or a blimp, he functioned as a car or blimp.
Still bothers me that he didn’t twist his hands off when he rolled along, since his hands were the “wheels”.
He also got blowed apart under the ocean and spent years putting his pieces back together. He’s a little bit more than just a stretchy guy.
I’m not sure how he could become a jet engine though. What’s the fuel source? How does the propulsion work? Maybe I should remember that it’s just a comic and I should really just relax.
Wiki has some interesting info onPlastic Man. His powers are remarkable even in the comic book universe. He can change density and create additional muscle to increase his strength.
Throw in immortality and invulnerability, and not really being physiologically human anymore either:
In the original FF origin story Reed immobilized The Thing by wrapping his stretchy arms around him. Maybe it just slowed Ben down long enough for him to calm down, though.
That’s exactly the thing, Cal. When he becomes a car he BECOMES a car. There’s no way for his hands to twist off as he doesn’t really have hands at that point, he has wheels and axles and a drive train and such.
He doesn’t have to keep his body intact. As noted above, he was once blown to smithereens but eventually was able to put his body back together again. There is no explanation for how such a car is fueled, but I suppose ordinary gasoline would work if he formed himself into an engine, which seems to be feasible with his powers.
No mention of Plastic man? Why not? I see others have…
https://proxy.duckduckgo.com/iu/?u=http%3A%2F%2Fmajorspoilers.com%2Fwp-content%2Fuploads%2F2018%2F10%2FPlastic-Man-5-Cover.jpg&f=1&nofb=1
There are numerous mentions of Plastic Man in this thread, starting with the opening sentence of the first post.
Because you don’t bother to learn the facts about a situation before you start spouting off your opinions about the situation.
Bye, Marion, time for you to ride off into the sunset.
When Plas turned into a blimp in the Kyle Baker story, he required the Incendiary Monk to fill him up with hot air. He didn’t provide his own lifting gas.
I suppose when he becomes a car he needs to fuel up before he can drive anywhere.
OTOH, when he changed into a fan to blow smoke out of a room, he didn’t plug himself in first.