Lex Luthor: Man of Steel

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Is a five issue mini-series written by Brian Azzarello and drawn by Lee Bermejo, with the titular Lex Luthor as lead character. The covers are also drawn by Bermejo. It is a story in which readers get a glimpse into the mind of Superman's longtime foe. It reveals why Luthor chooses to be the proverbial thorn in the Man of Steel's side, to save humanity from an untrustworthy alien being that Luthor views to be a threat to humanity.

Cover to Lex Luthor: Man of Steel #1
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Cover to Lex Luthor: Man of Steel #1

At the onset of the series, the story seems to be narrarated from Luthor's own point of view, one depicting himself as some one much different than the ruthless, corrupt killer that readers are accustomed to. He displays a charitable nature by giving a loyal employee an invitation to Luthor's own "Science Spire", a new Metropolis attraction still under construction. By contrast, many of the 'heroes' Luthor encounters during his story (Superman, Batman) are depicted as duplicitous and unworthy of trust. Luthor watches footage of Superman engaging criminals with heat vision and wonders to himself why the public invests so much trust in an alien simply because he "looks" human.

While holding a meeting, it is brought to Luthor's attention that the union workers building the Science Spire want a higher wage. Luthor tosses his business plan and decides to unveil the attraction as non-profit, which undercuts the union's demands. Upon leaving the boardroom full of stunned executives, Luthor's assistant tells him that was unwise and that the shady union rep will do something to retaliate, but Luthor ignores her. He arrives at his lab where he observes a woman with short black hair floating inside a vat.

At the opening for the Science Spire, Lex announces the arrival of a new superhero by introducing "Hope", the woman from earlier. Hope displays abilities of super-strength and flight, essentially replacing Superman and becoming a corporate-sponsored hero. Over a short period, Hope takes on duties normally reserved for Superman and gains a following. While Luthor pursues an intimate relationship with his new heroine, his Chechyan operative, Mr. Orr, approaches Winslow Schott (aka Toyman) with a job. Hope and Lex are in bed together when a news bulleting breaks that Schott is wanted for a bombing at the Metropolis Daycare Center. Lex urges Hope to bring the criminal to justice.

Inside his warehouse, Toyman is being protected by life-size toy solider robots and is confronted by Superman, who is immediately met with a hail of bullets. Hope appears during the barrage, but rather than assist Superman, she bursts in, grabs Schott, and soars into the sky with him. In a separate location, someone's hand clicks a mouse button, and Hope suddenly releases Schott, sending him falling to his imminent doom. At the last moment, Superman flies up and catches Toyman. Hope wonders why she involuntarily let Toyman go just as Superman confronts her for attempted murder. Hope sends electricity bolts through her fingers at Superman's way. The attacks leaves Superman dazed long enough for Hope to escape. She heads for at the Science Spire (perhaps suspecting Lex is to blame) as Superman intercepts her. Superman sears her body with heat vision, revealing sizzling circuitry (Superman must have seen through her flesh with his x-ray vision). The realization that she is robotic is a shock even to Hope. She sheds a tear before grimacing and attacking Superman with full force. A Metropolis news chopper records every move as the two superpowers battle in flight. Far away, Lex Luthor watches the event unfold on a screen - it is he who is controlling Hope's every move. Luthor's screen reads 'DETONATE' and he clicks his mouse. Hope's body explodes, taking Luthor's gift to Metropolis, the finished Science Spire, with her.

Luthor fully expects Superman to glare at him from his window and turns his back to it. Luthor claims to feel his eyes, but declares even Superman can't see his soul. Superman watches silently from outside the building, with Lex daring him to believe that not one person in Metropolis wanted to see Schott hit the ground once Hope dropped him. Luthor sneers, calling Superman an "arrogant alien bastard" to provoke him. With still no response, Lex becomes infuriated with Superman’s silent judgment and demands he say something (reacting much like the Luthor in Superman: The Animated Series). Superman simply says, "You're wrong...I CAN see your soul." Taken aback, Lex pounds the window in defiance, then staggers back, trying to regain composure. He rejects this statement, saying that if Superman could, he would see a man who sacrificed everything for "A world without a Superman." He starts to say that if just one person out there saw Luthor's staged broadcast and "realizes what you are" then it was worth it, but before he can finish his sentence, his bravado collapses in Superman's presence. Luthor turns away from the window, asking him to "Please, just fly away." Superman obeys, soaring off with a sad expression.

Now alone at his desk, Luthor's closing thought is, "I am a man. I hope."


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Superman
Creators: Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster
Characters: Superman (Clark Kent) • Lois Lane • Jimmy Olsen • Perry White • Jor-El • Ma Kent • Pa Kent • Lana Lang • Steel • Supergirl • Superboy (Kon-El) • Krypto
Villains: Lex Luthor • Bizarro • Brainiac • Cyborg Superman • Darkseid • Doomsday • Eradicator • General Zod • Metallo • Mongul • Mr. Mxyzptlk • Parasite • Toyman • Ultra-Humanite • Intergang • Phantom Zone villains
Locations:

Daily Planet • Fortress of Solitude • Krypton • Metropolis • Smallville

Storylines: Relationship of Clark Kent and Lois Lane • Alternate versions of Superman • Publications • Superman in popular culture
Miscellanea: Kryptonite • Powers • Symbol