X-Plam
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− | + | [[Image:Xplam.jpg|left]] | |
− | + | '''X-Plam''' | |
+ | A kindly, warm-hearted man from the mid-twenty-fourth century A.D. who journeys to the twentieth century via “time machine†and persuades [[Lois Lane]] to marry him, firstly by showing her a future edition of the ''[[Daily Planet]]'', an historical document in X-Plam’s own era—in which their marriage is announced, and secondly by suggesting that she might be happier married to him than waiting interminably for [[Superman]]. Lois Lane marries X-Plam and flies off into the future with him, out of a desire to spite Superman and to prove to herself that she can be happy without him, but when X-Plam sees how truly wretched she is in a life without Superman, he willingly sacrifices his life to return her to her own era by fatally overexposing himself to the “radioactive fuel that powers [his] time machine†(S No. 136/1, Apr 1960: “The Man Who Married Lois Lane!â€). (TGSB) | ||
+ | ==External links== | ||
+ | *[http://goodcomics.comicbookresources.com/2010/05/20/comic-book-legends-revealed-261/ Comic Book Legends Revealed #261] | ||
[[Category:Entries]] | [[Category:Entries]] | ||
[[Category:People]] | [[Category:People]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Lois Lane]] | ||
[[Category:Silver Age (1956-1970)]] | [[Category:Silver Age (1956-1970)]] |
Latest revision as of 18:06, 21 May 2010
X-Plam
A kindly, warm-hearted man from the mid-twenty-fourth century A.D. who journeys to the twentieth century via “time machine†and persuades Lois Lane to marry him, firstly by showing her a future edition of the Daily Planet, an historical document in X-Plam’s own era—in which their marriage is announced, and secondly by suggesting that she might be happier married to him than waiting interminably for Superman. Lois Lane marries X-Plam and flies off into the future with him, out of a desire to spite Superman and to prove to herself that she can be happy without him, but when X-Plam sees how truly wretched she is in a life without Superman, he willingly sacrifices his life to return her to her own era by fatally overexposing himself to the “radioactive fuel that powers [his] time machine†(S No. 136/1, Apr 1960: “The Man Who Married Lois Lane!â€). (TGSB)