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I still laugh when I think of the sceen from the first Superman movie when Clark Kent is looking for a place to change into his costume and rescue Lois and he glances at the (then) modern phone booths that were just a hooded phone for minimum privacy.
The nature of superhero suits — how the heroes manage to hide them under their clothes, where they store their masks and other accessories, how the non-super ones keep from sweating in them, etc. — is one of the great examples of the need for the willing suspension of disbelief when enjoying the adventures of our favorites.
Top award for really pushing the envelope on this matter goes to the 1960s Batman series, where Adam West and Burt Ward would slide down the Bat-poles and automatically be changed from their everyday clothes into their Batman and Robin costumes.
wjones over 3 years ago
Telephone booths before telephones were invented.
GROG Premium Member over 3 years ago
I loved those old midnigh skulker strips.
Troglodyte over 3 years ago
How about a fig leaf?
Chithing over 3 years ago
The Poohawk would laugh him right off the comics page. (I have my official Poohawk skulking license)
cocavan11 over 3 years ago
Ah! The Prehistoric Flasher.
sandpiper over 3 years ago
But watch out for the Lone Haranguer. He’s left Id for yonder hills.
Purple People Eater over 3 years ago
So, this is the origin of the Midnight Skulker?
gsawyer101 over 3 years ago
I thought Clark folded the suit into his cape so he could change back after business
Zebrastripes over 3 years ago
Lmao!
patlaborvi over 3 years ago
I still laugh when I think of the sceen from the first Superman movie when Clark Kent is looking for a place to change into his costume and rescue Lois and he glances at the (then) modern phone booths that were just a hooded phone for minimum privacy.
spaceagesoul over 3 years ago
What about the booths with Ralph Hinkley’s clothes. Though he usually shucked them off behind a bush or in the back seat of Bill Maxwell’s car.
blakerl over 3 years ago
Telephone booth? What is a Telephone booth?
David Rickard Premium Member over 3 years ago
Is the Midnight Skulker an ancestor of the Midnight Bomber What Bombs at Midnight?
paullp Premium Member over 3 years ago
The nature of superhero suits — how the heroes manage to hide them under their clothes, where they store their masks and other accessories, how the non-super ones keep from sweating in them, etc. — is one of the great examples of the need for the willing suspension of disbelief when enjoying the adventures of our favorites.
Top award for really pushing the envelope on this matter goes to the 1960s Batman series, where Adam West and Burt Ward would slide down the Bat-poles and automatically be changed from their everyday clothes into their Batman and Robin costumes.