WHY Do Superheroes Wear Capes (And When Did They Stop)?

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  • Опубликовано: 3 апр 2024
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    Capes are thought of as part of the archetype for superheroes. So where did that come from? How accurate is the perception? What purpose does a cape serve? That's what this episode digs into.
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Комментарии • 1,4 тыс.

  • @josephkolar3443
    @josephkolar3443 Месяц назад +1403

    Back in the 70s, Captain America became Nomad and his first costume had a cape because “he always wanted to try it out.” He immediately tripped over it during his first fight and promptly ditched it.

    • @arghsonofcliff
      @arghsonofcliff Месяц назад +84

      Ya he totally missed on the nomad thing. That was the first thing to come to my mind when seeing title.

    • @WayneD.Ashford
      @WayneD.Ashford Месяц назад +6

      @josephkolar3443:Lol...😂

    • @The.Crystal.Clods.
      @The.Crystal.Clods. Месяц назад +12

      Amazing lmao

    • @MrDman21
      @MrDman21 Месяц назад +16

      Spawn has a ridiculously long cape that he doesn't even need.

    • @WayneD.Ashford
      @WayneD.Ashford Месяц назад +15

      @@MrDman21 ...most of the characters in comics have ridiculously-long capes...it'd be SO funny to just line Superman's cape with Kryptonite

  • @jamessatter7418
    @jamessatter7418 Месяц назад +1213

    Dick Grayson is an interesting example of a character who began with a cape as Barman's sidekick Robin, and then drops the cape as Nightwing.

    • @ngominh259
      @ngominh259 Месяц назад +111

      And the suit is beautiful. It feels aerodynamic, futuristic, sleek, and serious. The black bodysuit with a single blue/red bird symbol across the chest gives the character a serious and even inhuman appearance, with the boxer removed to take away the traditional superhero/strongman appearance. The eskrima sticks are the cherry on top. The design is mature, powerful, but still extremely distinct and streamlined. Next to the Batman suit you can immediately tell the power relation between the 2 characters and especially Nightwing's focus on acrobatics.

    • @tchitchouan
      @tchitchouan Месяц назад +171

      i am the nightclub
      i am the vineyard
      I AM BARMAN

    • @marsupius
      @marsupius Месяц назад +76

      Barman is awesome. World's greatest bar tender.

    • @davfree9732
      @davfree9732 Месяц назад +28

      Everyone knows he dropped the cape for cake.

    • @0Aberration
      @0Aberration Месяц назад +48

      Ah, you think the bar is your ally? You merely adopted the bar, I was born in it, molded by it. I didn't drink plain water until I was already a man...

  • @MisterJax
    @MisterJax Месяц назад +107

    They stopped because Edna Mode decided to stop designing costumes with them.

    • @Parallax-3D
      @Parallax-3D 8 дней назад +7

      NO CAPES!!

    • @superj7771
      @superj7771 6 дней назад

      Edna just make it a detachable cape you dumb ****!!! AAAAHHHHHHH!!!!

    • @user-ut7hh3zb2f
      @user-ut7hh3zb2f 2 дня назад +1

      Capes get you sucked into jet engines. Do not want.

    • @superj7771
      @superj7771 2 дня назад +2

      Me: You make amazing hero suits. Why can't you make the capes detachable, Edna.
      Edna: Umm...

  • @MegaJetty1
    @MegaJetty1 Месяц назад +111

    I always looked at capes as being a symbol that THAT particular superhero can fly/glide, like Mario in Super Mario World, he picks up a feather but then it turns into a cape that allows him to fly/glide.

    • @sevenbark
      @sevenbark Месяц назад +11

      I agree - just think about how many kids broke bones after tying a blanket around their neck and jumping off the garage!

    • @MegaJetty1
      @MegaJetty1 Месяц назад +2

      @@sevenbark 😆😆😆

    • @znail4675
      @znail4675 4 дня назад +6

      This is kind of ironic as Superman couldn't fly from the start, but still had a cape.

  • @ObsessedCollector
    @ObsessedCollector Месяц назад +798

    "Not all super heroes wear capes" takes on a WHOLE NEW meaning now.

    • @Jordan-ii4ip
      @Jordan-ii4ip Месяц назад +42

      Yeah, ironically most of them don't.

    • @CB-ke7eq
      @CB-ke7eq Месяц назад +7

      🤯

    • @kuahmelallah
      @kuahmelallah Месяц назад +16

      ​@Jordan-ii4ip exactly why i hated the phrase. Most heroes wouldn't touch capes. You'd see cloaks sooner than capes.

    • @demonwolf8024
      @demonwolf8024 Месяц назад +2

      Not all heroes wear capes, but some villains do.

    • @Nixn_From_Da_Hood
      @Nixn_From_Da_Hood Месяц назад +1

      *No capes*

  • @mttylerdurden9
    @mttylerdurden9 Месяц назад +196

    Edna Mode: NO CAPES!

  • @geoffreyguestion2843
    @geoffreyguestion2843 Месяц назад +124

    Moon Knight's cape forming a crescent and literally enveloping the panel, fusing it with the gutter, has always been one of my favorite visual tropes.

    • @zachariahmerry2396
      @zachariahmerry2396 Месяц назад +8

      The current Moon Knight's run (well, I guess given it changed name and reset the number after issue #30 it's "current and previous") way of utilizing Moon Knight's design is particularly effective. They also evoke the whole "I want you to see me" by making it look like he's almost glowing while wearing his white suit in the night. Utterly fantastic comic.

    • @evilforestspirit
      @evilforestspirit 3 дня назад +1

      i love it when they make his cape massive

  • @giantbonsai8950
    @giantbonsai8950 Месяц назад +161

    Rule of thumb: flying = cape. Not flying = no cape.

    • @TheFreeBass
      @TheFreeBass Месяц назад +18

      Not really, but I'd reverse & rephrase the generalization to fit better: cape = more likely to fly/ no cape = more likely to be afoot. I do agree that it would be a rule of thumb, as I don't recall Mr Sinister ever flying for example, or Dr Strange (more of a levitator than a flier). And there are too many non-caped fliers to bother listing so the rule of thumb barely applies to them.

    • @caldw615
      @caldw615 Месяц назад +24

      Batman and Saitama can't fly.

    • @AmyCherryLMAO
      @AmyCherryLMAO Месяц назад +13

      ​@@caldw615and invincible can

    • @jmurray1110
      @jmurray1110 Месяц назад +18

      Batman glides in a way to mimic flight but yes saitama doesn’t

    • @YUSUKE488
      @YUSUKE488 Месяц назад

      Saitama can with a fart ​@@caldw615

  • @LordOfClarkness
    @LordOfClarkness Месяц назад +490

    I think Supergirl‘s fake science that says capes help you steering while airborne is my favorite explanation.

    • @devforfun5618
      @devforfun5618 Месяц назад +98

      it is a good explanation, that is bad for superman in particular, he basically fly with telekinesis, so the cape would be uselss, but for storm who manipulates wind it is perfect

    • @LordOfClarkness
      @LordOfClarkness Месяц назад +48

      That telekinesis-thing was a thing for a second, but I don‘t think it‘s considered canon. BUT you‘re definitely right as far as Storm‘s concerned. Haven‘t actually thought of her at all.

    • @AaronAbernethy
      @AaronAbernethy Месяц назад +14

      @@LordOfClarkness If he's not flying via telekinesis, then what IS keeping him in the air?

    • @alysondavy2485
      @alysondavy2485 Месяц назад +25

      ​@@AaronAbernethyHe's just exhaling really hard.

    • @davfree9732
      @davfree9732 Месяц назад +2

      She should try a rocketeer style helmet.

  • @t7plus
    @t7plus Месяц назад +605

    The word 'escape' is derived from the Latin 'excappa' which literally means to get out of your cloak (or cape). If someone is holding you by your cloak, you 'escape' by undoing it.

    • @The.Crystal.Clods.
      @The.Crystal.Clods. Месяц назад +34

      That’s a great piece of info🦸

    • @T.R.R.Jolkien
      @T.R.R.Jolkien Месяц назад +12

      Super cool 😎

    • @57snador
      @57snador Месяц назад +1

      Tal- Liss is the pronunciation.

    • @heroineburgh
      @heroineburgh Месяц назад +6

      @@57snador That's in Ashkenazic Hebrew, or Yiddish. In Sephardic Hebrew (Israeli), it's Talit (Tah-Leet). In Ancient Hebrew, it would have been Talith (Tah-Leeth), like 'Lilith' or 'Judith'. Speaking of which, Chris failed to mention a very interesting Jewish-related cape from Marvel: the Israeli superheroine Sabra!

    • @hancocki
      @hancocki Месяц назад +9

      And the plan would have worked too! If not for those meddling kids and their cape clasps.

  • @185Keith
    @185Keith Месяц назад +169

    Magneto, great cape! I can't imagine the character without it.

    • @ajdynon
      @ajdynon Месяц назад +9

      I was going to comment about Magneto not getting mentioned (yeah, he was originally a villain, but he's switched to being a good guy from time to time).

    • @michaelolivero1626
      @michaelolivero1626 Месяц назад +10

      From what I remember, Magneto's cape is either laced with or made of metal fiber that he can manipulate with his magnetism, making it a functional accessory

    • @Petrico94
      @Petrico94 Месяц назад +6

      Also Jewish, sees himself as a savior and maybe moral figure wanting to draw all other mutants to his cuase, X-Men are a bit toned down from other superheroes but manipulating all metal around him is pretty overpowered. I say it fits.

    • @dacksonflux
      @dacksonflux 29 дней назад

      Yes

  • @Rose-yx6jq
    @Rose-yx6jq Месяц назад +56

    11:56
    As Batman once said "Any good superhero cape should have a quick release collar."
    I'm paraphrasing but my point is there. Many of those deaths could have been prevented with a quick release.

    • @user-lf3kr1nq2d
      @user-lf3kr1nq2d Месяц назад +2

      11:57, was she sucked into the plane's engine? Not sure a quick release would help at that altitude! Unless she has an emergency chute... that could work.

    • @Rose-yx6jq
      @Rose-yx6jq Месяц назад +4

      @@user-lf3kr1nq2d she is flying. The Cape is not what is giving her the ability of flight like super Mario.

    • @RonJohn63
      @RonJohn63 13 дней назад +2

      Engineers (back when engineers wore ties) going onto the shop floor, and policemen are mandated to wear clip-on ties.

  • @mikethetowns
    @mikethetowns Месяц назад +314

    Meta Man, express elevator!
    Dynaguy, snag on takeoff!
    Splashdown, sucked into a vortex!
    NO CAPES!

    • @GuiltlessGear
      @GuiltlessGear Месяц назад +36

      Thunderhead was not the brightest bulb-

    • @axelwulf6220
      @axelwulf6220 Месяц назад +27

      I'm still trying to figure how getting sucked into a vortex was the cape's doing...

    • @mf--
      @mf-- Месяц назад +37

      I suspect Pixar did that so they would not have to animate them with capes

    • @axelwulf6220
      @axelwulf6220 Месяц назад +17

      @@mf--
      Well, capes are a bit of hassle
      Remember the bloopers for Monsters Inc., and the many steps of animation for Sully's fur?

    • @timepilotcluefinder94
      @timepilotcluefinder94 Месяц назад +2

      ​@@axelwulf6220 not if you're Kryptonian, Martian, Atlantean or Amazonian at a ceremony or some ghost of vengeance or some kids with magic or a stranger of some kind.

  • @DarthBoardBVE
    @DarthBoardBVE Месяц назад +140

    The other reason why capes are so associated with superheroes is that contemporary people don't wear them. As a result, for generations, the most common place people would encounter capes was in superhero media. So it's not that the majority of superheroes wear capes (clearly they don't); it's that capes are accepted fashion for superheroes but not (generally) for people in the real world. Combine that with the ubiquity of Superman and Batman, and capes are seen as superhero attire.

    • @metawarp7446
      @metawarp7446 Месяц назад +12

      Well put. It really reminds me of stereotypes for real groups :o
      I guess capes are a "superhero stereotype"

    • @badaboum2
      @badaboum2 Месяц назад +5

      Exactly, because our minds like to work in categories, we tend to pick up on what's most different from what we're used to as a defining trait, even if it's not an overwhelmingly common trait for that category.

    • @DanielAppleton-lr9eq
      @DanielAppleton-lr9eq Месяц назад +2

      @@badaboum2 Royalty & nobility in Europe wore cloaks, which is sort of the same thing.

    • @JONNYSORENSEN_AU
      @JONNYSORENSEN_AU 21 день назад

      The common thread for pretty much anything cape related. ​@@DanielAppleton-lr9eq 😅

  • @orinanime
    @orinanime Месяц назад +197

    I love that you differentiated, and singled out Bob Kane with -
    "Siegel and Schuster created Superman" vs "Bob Kane credited with creating Batman".
    Small, but appreciated distinction.

    • @miked5814
      @miked5814 Месяц назад +14

      It should be Kane and Finger the same way as it's Siegel and Schuster.

    • @orinanime
      @orinanime Месяц назад +23

      @@miked5814 it should just be Finger if there were any justice. But Finger and Kane. Finger contributed more to the character and mythology. His name should come first.

    • @miked5814
      @miked5814 Месяц назад +14

      @@orinanime I won't argue with that but I do give Bob Kane credit for being the guy with his foot in the door and at least coming up with a general idea (sh!tty as the original idea was). I can give him credit for that but honestly it should at least be Bill's name first.

    • @alysondavy2485
      @alysondavy2485 Месяц назад +1

      ​@@orinanimeCredits should be in alphabetical order, that's why Billy comes up first.

    • @orinanime
      @orinanime Месяц назад +8

      @@alysondavy2485 nah. They don't have to be. And they aren't always.
      It's generally whichever order flows better linguistically and/or phonetically.
      Also, percentage of contribution should be the primary consideration.

  • @anotherspaceboy
    @anotherspaceboy Месяц назад +17

    Neo in The Matrix's trench coat certainly evokes a cape, especially when he flies.

  • @RighteousBrother
    @RighteousBrother Месяц назад +381

    It always feels good wearing a cape, I wish they'd come into fashion

    • @Canoby
      @Canoby Месяц назад +60

      NGL one Halloween while I was working at an art school I went to work in a Batsuit; the cape was oddly empowering

    • @ngominh259
      @ngominh259 Месяц назад +41

      I think in fall and winter capes can look extremely cool. If not a full cape then a half-cape like Ezio's in Assassin's Creed, or a hip-length poncho. Capes are cool and functional. I wish superheroes would start using them not just as shields but functional clothing items for storage of items and gadgets, with actual pockets.

    • @epiphoney
      @epiphoney Месяц назад +6

      Just go to karaoke.

    • @alysondavy2485
      @alysondavy2485 Месяц назад +8

      I would say this is such a nerd thing to think but I'm the one watching a comic book channel so who am I to judge.

    • @jpotter2086
      @jpotter2086 Месяц назад +26

      Be the change you want to see .... start wearing a cape! I have a couple full-length coats, I wear them when it's cold, have done so for 30yrs.

  • @Sigmaairav
    @Sigmaairav Месяц назад +257

    Japan's oldest superhero and folk icon is Golden Bat, an invincible hero who has a golden skull for a face and cackles incessantly in the face of evil while thwarting it

    • @metawarp7446
      @metawarp7446 Месяц назад +53

      You forgot to mention he has a red cape (and a swashbuckler outfit).
      I wonder what influenced the creators to adopt that appearance? I'd guess it was Western books depicting adventures of... well swashbucklers and knights/princes.
      (maybe also silent films?)
      Japan was greatly interested in European culture, so it seems fitting.
      Also... before Superman Japan's paper theaters had "Prince of Gamma": an orphaned alien prince from another planet who protects Tokyo and even the Earth from a variety of perils.
      He wears a costume consisting of a tight blue bodysuit with a chest insignia, yellow cape and a headdress shaped like a bird. He could fly, was invulnerable, and had super-strength. He even had a secret identity, disguised as a poor street urchin. (source: Fandom)

    • @jonathanathor117
      @jonathanathor117 Месяц назад +4

      Haven't heard of golden bat in a long time.

    • @projekttaku1
      @projekttaku1 Месяц назад +5

      @@metawarp7446 Which fandom did you find that on? I'm curious to learn more. I always knew about Gladiator's heavy influence on Superman but never about Prince of Gamma.

    • @heroineburgh
      @heroineburgh Месяц назад +12

      @@metawarp7446 I think when Chris mentioned things like royalty and Zorro, he forgot to go back a bit farther and delve into the era of both romantic and swashbuckling novels like Three Musketeers, Ivanhoe, Robin Hood, Dracula, and others, down to Sherlock Holmes and Phantom of the Opera. Plenty of capes all over the place!

    • @timepilotcluefinder94
      @timepilotcluefinder94 Месяц назад +1

      ​​@@heroineburgh Robin Hood...doesn't that guy Speedily inspire some Arrow? 😂

  • @pian-0g445
    @pian-0g445 Месяц назад +14

    Capes are interesting because in comic form (and other 2D visual novels etc.), they help portray motion and a feeling of energy in a drawing.
    So, despite capes not being any more common in anime/manga than in comics, what you do see often is lots of long pieces of clothing that replicate this feeling.
    One recent example, Deku in the latest arcs of My Hero Academia has a yellow scarf from one of his mentor, and almost acts like a cape in the way and illustrates his momentum and movement.

  • @DBG750
    @DBG750 Месяц назад +51

    Many iconic character silhouettes outside of traditional superheroes include draped materials. Some examples include Clint Eastwood's "Man with no name" in his poncho, Piccolo's weighted cape, and Neo's trench coat.

    • @KairuHakubi
      @KairuHakubi Месяц назад +8

      connecting a cape to two big pointy shoulder pads is one of Toriyama's great contributions to the art world. He will be missed.

    • @nicolea3857
      @nicolea3857 День назад

      And think how many iterations of the Doctor in Doctor Who have said draped costume components: 3rd Doctor's literal cape (opera cape, I think it's called), 4th Doctor's scarf and long coat, and the 6th, 10th/14th, 12th, and 13th Doctors' coats.

  • @MDHaughton
    @MDHaughton Месяц назад +82

    Before watching the video, my take is that drapery add a lot of dynamics to art. Take a stationary pose of a character looking over the edge of a rooftop without a cape. Now add a cape blowing in the wind. Instant life breathed onto the page.

    • @KairuHakubi
      @KairuHakubi Месяц назад +6

      Also, and this is something you won't hear people bring up often, classically-trained comic artists? They are really very few-trick ponies. They know how to draw nude muscular figures and flowing cloth, that's _it._ That's why superheroes never have anything but shrink-wrapped costumes, even if they're meant to have something underneath like Spider-Man's belt and web shooters. They ground out the skills to draw muscles and THAT IS IT. It's also why comic characters who are meant to look sort of mutatey are usually much more human-looking than they should be (Beast's first two forms, Sauron, etc) or poorly and inconsistently drawn (Beast's later form/s). You notice most classic artists draw Kurt Wagner in totally normal stances most of the time, ignoring his unusual feet, and they have a real bad habit of forgetting to draw tails, the list just goes on.

    • @ninjaeagleart
      @ninjaeagleart 23 дня назад

      Oh that makes a lot of sense lmao. I guess that’s why my favorite OCs to draw have long coats/skirts/capes

  • @joshua2814
    @joshua2814 Месяц назад +99

    The circus connection makes sense to me.

    • @metawarp7446
      @metawarp7446 Месяц назад +11

      I wonder if stories about heroic princes and knights were common, and did they wear capes in them? That would absolutely make people associate capes with heroes too
      Japanese super heroes Golden Bat and Prince of Gamma predate Superman and also wear capes :o

    • @Marveryn
      @Marveryn Месяц назад +11

      there actually one more reason for cape he did not mention is that fact auto were not yet in everyone home so a lot of people had to walk to work or ride a bus. so on that means a lot of time outdoors where it can rain. to keep dried people use cape and trenchcoat over their normal wear which was typically suits. That also why people use to wear hats daily. As people started to be able to afford cars there was less need to carry a cape or a trench coat around. which is around the time people started to see supe without caps becoming more of the norm. So one reason for the cap is fashion.

    • @SEB1991SEB
      @SEB1991SEB Месяц назад +1

      Especially since Superman’s main power at the time was probably his superhuman strength, just like the circus strongmen.

    • @ChrisMattern-oh6wx
      @ChrisMattern-oh6wx 4 дня назад +1

      @@SEB1991SEB And his whole costume was in fact based off of circus strongman attire: the skintight bodysuit, the bright colors, the trunks. It's only today after 95 years of superheroes following after Superman that this outfit evokes superheroes instead of its origins.

  • @Walter_Lou_Iggy
    @Walter_Lou_Iggy Месяц назад +18

    Capes were used while fighting during the middle ages and renaissance. They didn't get tangled, the secret is they have to be quite short detachable at a moment's notice. They could even be wrapped around one's arm to form a different level of protection

    • @jacobstaten2366
      @jacobstaten2366 25 дней назад

      They were often a lot shorter, covered the shoulders (making them easier to manipulate than Superman's beach towel), and had weights that made them easier to be swept out of the way.

    • @SIPEROTH
      @SIPEROTH 4 дня назад

      @@jacobstaten2366 Superman is the kind of hero that can wear a cape with no real issue because his so powerful that a cape can't really be a liability. He can't get tangle and get shot like the hero descripted in the video etc.
      Also Superman is the epitome of a human like God so seeing that big red cape flowing as he flies or lands down is to maximise his presence as an all powerful being.
      People just seeing from afar that big red cape know they are saved etc.

  • @kylecarter1599
    @kylecarter1599 Месяц назад +24

    What im getting from this video is that the new response to "not all heroes wear capes" should be "correct, most don't"

  • @PS-it1dm
    @PS-it1dm Месяц назад +141

    I remember when Dollar Bill died because of his cape got stuck during robbery. No capes after that incident.

    • @mattiasbrunzell8957
      @mattiasbrunzell8957 Месяц назад +12

      You talk as if this is something that happened in real life.

    • @unofficialspider-man465
      @unofficialspider-man465 Месяц назад +32

      Look at this Dollar Bill denier

    • @thehawk8332
      @thehawk8332 Месяц назад +9

      ​@@mattiasbrunzell8957It did happen

    • @scibus2593
      @scibus2593 Месяц назад +12

      It's funny because in actual real life, soviet soldiers in WWII and many police constables around the world in the 1800s wore capes and were just like, fine. I guess the more you wear one the more aware of it you'd be- ignoring the fact that people still wear coats and jackets which can and do catch on things anyway.

    • @KameronJ7
      @KameronJ7 Месяц назад +1

      ​@@scibus2593A short, easily removed cape isn't nearly the liability that a long, flowing piece of fabric wrapped around your neck is. At worst it's as bad as when your unbuttoned jacket catches on a door handle.

  • @joshpinchuk7061
    @joshpinchuk7061 Месяц назад +77

    Did the Scarlet witch and vision get married because they both had an affinity for capes?

  • @Dogman2605
    @Dogman2605 Месяц назад +3

    To quote Miss Edna Mode from The Incredibles “NO CAPES!”

  • @choczynski
    @choczynski Месяц назад +6

    If you limit the pool to only new superheroes that are: prominent enough to have their own stand-alone series, not affiliated with existing heroes, not homages to existing heroes, and/or not deconstruction of existing heroes, then you're left with a vanishingly small pool of characters.

  • @goblinjones
    @goblinjones Месяц назад +21

    Capes being denoted to just an impractical hazard is pretty reductive, if you ask me. Alan Moore is a great writer but starting that trend of questioning the realism of specifically stylized things like capes feels like giving ammunition to those who are missing the point. There's a healthy amount of "rule of cool" in capes or trench coats, and once we start nitpicking little things like that we move beyond reading comics and start just complaining about things that don't matter.

    • @jacobstaten2366
      @jacobstaten2366 25 дней назад +3

      He is extremely reductive in most of his views and especially in interviews. Flying would be boring because we have planes? We only like bright colors? Tell that to manga fans. A country with no guns has no danger? Tell that to England and Rawanda....

  • @jacemachine
    @jacemachine Месяц назад +43

    Spawns cape was a deliberate riff on Dr. Strange's cape -- according to MacFarlane.

    • @knightmarepilot4832
      @knightmarepilot4832 Месяц назад +4

      Interesting, although they are too different as characters.

    • @KAW101
      @KAW101 17 дней назад

      @@knightmarepilot4832 Spawn is a riff of damn-near every character. Batman, Spider-Man, Venom, etc.

  • @nehukybis
    @nehukybis Месяц назад +8

    There's a more obvious and direct origin. Scaramouche, from the Rafael Sabatini novel. He's a direct influence on Zorro and Batman. He disguised his identity by wearing the costume of the commedia dell'arte character. The traditional Scaramouche character wore a cape.
    Also, a lot of military uniforms retained capes after they were no longer in vogue in the civilian world. They were a practical accessory, but they also conveyed a dashing appearance that was good for morale and recruitment. A lot of the early superheroes tried to capture that WW1 martial vibe. The Italian Carabinieri *still* wear them.

  • @TheBeowulf
    @TheBeowulf Месяц назад +18

    I actually enjoy capes and wish more artists would use them, especially since capes in the real world eventually ended up coming in a dizzying array of styles, fashions, and functions. You can even find rennaisance sword dueling manuals that teach you how to dual wield your rapier in one hand and your cape in the other!

    • @nightmarefanatic1819
      @nightmarefanatic1819 Месяц назад +1

      There's a superhero anime called Tiger and Bunny, and one of the heroes named Fire Emblem has this beautiful Phoenix based coatume with a gorgeous cape that appears to be some kind of LED screen fabric that has animated flames. I wish more artists would come up with designs like that.

  • @belgiumcomics2537
    @belgiumcomics2537 Месяц назад +82

    Interesting topic.
    My favorite part of a superhero costume is not the cape.
    Its the chest emblem.

    • @alysondavy2485
      @alysondavy2485 Месяц назад +24

      Power Girl's is my favorite

    • @MegaManXPoweredUp
      @MegaManXPoweredUp Месяц назад +5

      My favorite superhero doesn't have a chest emblem, but an alternate version of him does.

    • @belgiumcomics2537
      @belgiumcomics2537 Месяц назад

      @@MegaManXPoweredUp Interesting.

    • @davidmarrero9608
      @davidmarrero9608 Месяц назад +3

      The Chest emblems usually severed a purpose of a sort of target for villains and crooks to figure on. Superman chest logo is yellow and red and Batman's using yellow with black makes people want to shoot at it as well it's typically reinforced so bullets can't break it.
      Same for Punisher which is why he haves a bright white skull on his chest it attracts criminals to fire there. I like the explanation in the PS4 Spider-Man game that you read through Doc Ock's notes on why he made the logo white on Peters suit that it's a science to it being people's brain's have a slower reaction time looking at bright colors that stand out which draws people's eyes there first which also makes criminals hard to force on a specific area of the suit of the hero hence why they wouldn't hurt the hero so quickly.
      Which makes sense since brighter colors that compliment each other is what draws people which is why typically heroes where bright contrast colors and villains typically have muted dark colors like green and purple or chaotic colors like joker being 5 colors mixed being purple, green, orange, white, and red

    • @MegaManXPoweredUp
      @MegaManXPoweredUp Месяц назад +1

      @@davidmarrero9608 PS4 Spider-Man's chest emblem is also armored, as Otto said that the segments of the suit that are red have greater protection, and the white parts are the most heavily armored.

  • @Assimandeli
    @Assimandeli Месяц назад +92

    About time we bring capes back to style

    • @skarloey1214
      @skarloey1214 Месяц назад +8

      Agreed

    • @maatcrook6910
      @maatcrook6910 Месяц назад +5

      I want more capes I’m my wardrobe!

    • @jacobstaten2366
      @jacobstaten2366 25 дней назад

      In comics or real life? They're like hoods; neat looking, but not super practical.

    • @skarloey1214
      @skarloey1214 25 дней назад +1

      @@jacobstaten2366 It's not about practicality; it's about style.

    • @jacobstaten2366
      @jacobstaten2366 25 дней назад

      @@skarloey1214 same with hoods. You could easily wear a hat with ear flaps and pull your collar up for the same effect without losing peripheral vision or having to fiddle with it constantly, but it doesn't look as cool.

  • @francofernandes2006
    @francofernandes2006 Месяц назад +55

    This reminds me a bit of something interesting about the Pyramids. You see, Sudan actually has more historical pyramids than Egypt. They were built extensively by the Ancient Nubians, it was as important to their culture as it was to Egypt. Mexico and Central America also have really important Pyramids, some of the biggest in the world. But Egypt has Giza, the most famous set of Pyramids out there, made iconic by the Egyptian craze of the European 19th and early 20th centuries. Therefore, Egypt became synonymous with the idea of Pyramids. The same thing happens with superheroes and capes: Most superheroes don't wear them, but a lot of the most famous ones do (Superman, Batman, Captain Marvel, their respective derivatives, Thor, etc), so the idea of capes became synonymous with superheroes.

  • @mr.pavone9719
    @mr.pavone9719 Месяц назад +128

    I have a large "necker" that I wear when hiking. It's a 36" square of cloth that functions as part of my scouting uniform and it's great for many uses. I can:
    Clean myself off
    Sit on it to stay clean
    Use it as a sling/bandage
    Make a bag
    Make a hood or skullcap
    And many other uses.
    The kids like to turn them into capes as well and I have to admit it's fun to wear and useful if it cools down quickly, it starts to rain or the sun is really strong. Wearing it as a cape can help a lot in those situations.

    • @funkoxen
      @funkoxen Месяц назад +1

      I use a bandana for the same purpose. It has the added advantage of a fashion function too. I would use a necker but I hated scouts to the point of wanting to go school shooter about it.
      I'd be more likley to wear a cape.

  • @Woodclaw
    @Woodclaw Месяц назад +18

    In a way, a cape is very useful tool because it provides both a way to better convey movement (as Siegel and Shuster noted), but also a portable backdrop for a character.

  • @ramboti6402
    @ramboti6402 Месяц назад +3

    One thing Superman used his cape quite often is shielding people with it. As it is from Kryptonian material it is as strong as he is, so when flying fast it prevents the friction, or shields from an explosion etc.

  • @dennisanderson3895
    @dennisanderson3895 Месяц назад +4

    The circus origin is so spot on. You look at the early Superman and he clearly looks to be a caped circus strongman with belted boxers rather than "hugging" spandex briefs on the outside. ( :-D ) Marvel's original Ghost Rider, the cowboy vigilant schoolteacher, utilized a cloak coated on the outside with the same phosphorous as the rest his pure white attire but the inside of that cloak was velvet black so when he flipped the cape in wrapping it about, it would seem - in open darkness with NO artificial light - there was merely his glowing spectral head floating. So, points for that detail. But mostly, capes simply are a hassle.

  • @rockinrobin9093
    @rockinrobin9093 Месяц назад +21

    Damn I never stopped to realise your fact about Spawn being the last modern popular superhero who wears a cape.

    • @ComicTropes
      @ComicTropes  Месяц назад +5

      There are a few but most are just spin-off characters, not completely new ones.

    • @Marveryn
      @Marveryn Месяц назад +1

      @@ComicTropes yeah i was just thinking of all the superman ripoff that shown up in modern time after spawn that worn cape but they are not original character just rehashing what someone else think superman should be if... fill in the blank.

    • @heroineburgh
      @heroineburgh Месяц назад

      Maybe not as popular, but there are other examples. I'll pick two off the top of my head. Retro Girl (Calista Secor) from Powers had one, and that was not only in comics but in a TV show for 2 seasons. Starlight in The Boys has a cape, and she's pretty damn popular. Not sure if you could argue that either of them is simply a Supergirl spinoff.

    • @andrewli6606
      @andrewli6606 2 дня назад

      Think Hit-Girl is about the only moderately popular superhero after Spawn with a cape.

  • @Kitsaplorax
    @Kitsaplorax Месяц назад +29

    The Phantom of the Opera movie comes to mind as well. Dramatic shadows in European cinema are likely one point of reference, if only an unconscious one. What about the Golden Bat?

    • @frofrozzty
      @frofrozzty Месяц назад +2

      The Golden Bat has to be one of my favorite pieces of comic history. Dying for a modern adaptation as the character is public domain.

    • @Kitsaplorax
      @Kitsaplorax Месяц назад

      @@frofrozzty Why hasn't someone approached the team behind the "Masks" Universe? I really want to see a Green Lama/Golden Bat/Fury series.

    • @frofrozzty
      @frofrozzty Месяц назад

      @@Kitsaplorax are you... are you talking about that pajama show for little kids? Definitely would prefer just a direct shonen adaptation lol

    • @GribbleGob
      @GribbleGob Месяц назад

      @@Kitsaplorax did you just admit to watching a show meant for little kids?

    • @Kitsaplorax
      @Kitsaplorax Месяц назад

      @@frofrozzty The Golden Bat was the precursor to anime. The late, great Sonny Chiba starred as the Golden Bat in the 1960's movie. There was an earlier film that's lost.

  • @DWNicolo
    @DWNicolo Месяц назад +37

    Doctor Occult wore a cape in one of his stories. Created Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster and came before Superman.

    • @AirLancer
      @AirLancer Месяц назад +18

      Damn, Doctor Occult created the creators of Superman?

    • @GuiltlessGear
      @GuiltlessGear Месяц назад +1

      @@AirLancer That fellow must be one serious customer!

    • @LordOfClarkness
      @LordOfClarkness Месяц назад +2

      Technically he wasn‘t dr occult back then. He was called mr mystic or something like that. But you‘re right!

    • @DWNicolo
      @DWNicolo Месяц назад +1

      @@LordOfClarknessnot at the time that Dr. Occult story was published. He was known as Dr.Occult.

  • @jonathangwilliams6825
    @jonathangwilliams6825 Месяц назад +2

    I like the explanation given in My Hero Academia: it's so they can use it as a blanket if somebody needs comforting / keeping warm.

  • @AkuTenshiiZero
    @AkuTenshiiZero Месяц назад +18

    I actually find it interesting how All Might is shown wearing a cape in his younger years, but by the time of the main events of My Hero Academia he has long since abandoned it, making him a sort of bridge between the old-fashioned and modern superhero designs. Though also interesting to note that his mentors Nana Shimura and Gran Torino both wear capes, and it's likely he modeled his initial costume after their example. MHA has such an interesting variety of costumes and character designs pulling inspiration from so many sources, it really is a fantastic tribute to the history of superheroes both eastern and western.

    • @KairuHakubi
      @KairuHakubi Месяц назад +3

      I wonder if Deku's costume having a (quite silly looking) mask that he never uses (and with secret identities not being a thing in this setting) is kind of a riff on how the modern movie-dominated hero landscape has masks and helmets coming off at every opportunity, and secret identities largely tossed out.

  • @vedrengrabelox3231
    @vedrengrabelox3231 Месяц назад +7

    People that are critical over a cape's problems/disadvantages in worlds where radiation gives powers, magic is real, gods are real, and teenagers sometimes mutate......are weird.
    I don't think it would be hard to design a cape that would detach if a certain amount of pull was exerted on it.

  • @alexanderf8451
    @alexanderf8451 Месяц назад +21

    Excellent Bob Kane shade, throughout, and also a really interesting history!

    • @orinanime
      @orinanime Месяц назад +1

      Right? I love that

  • @kildaver
    @kildaver Месяц назад +7

    "No capes!"--Edna Mode.

    • @CieJe.Alexander
      @CieJe.Alexander 26 дней назад

      The cardinal rules on the TV series Smallville was "No Flights. No Tights."
      They were trying to tell the story of young pre-Superman Clark Kent/Kal-El. It was meant to be before he discovered his ability to fly. And before he "introduced" himself to the public. 🦸‍♂️
      If and when he was seen by anyone while doing something superhuman he was referred to as the "Blur" (short for the red and blue blur which was all that was visible as he leapt and/or sped by in his usual red jacket, jeans, and his favorite blue tees)

  • @EricTheMage
    @EricTheMage Месяц назад +8

    I like to think of superhero capes in the same way that old magazines or commercials for things like fans or air conditioners had those ribbons attached to them. It shows movement and speed in a static image.
    Because, yeah, every hero that has a cape either flies or is known to make giant leaps from tall places.
    But best cape is definitely Spawn's overly 90's "so long it never fits in one panel no matter how small he's drawn" cape.

  • @KingClovis
    @KingClovis Месяц назад +25

    The cape is iconic. No, most super heroes don't wear capes. But the BEST and COOLEST ones do. Also villains.

  • @joshpinchuk7061
    @joshpinchuk7061 Месяц назад +19

    How do you even find a story where daredevil says "this stupid cape".

    • @ComicTropes
      @ComicTropes  Месяц назад +31

      This is my gift. This is my curse.

  • @willadeefriesland5107
    @willadeefriesland5107 Месяц назад +2

    A couple more historical points. When travelers, who wore capes, entered an area that usually didn't have visitors, they fostered the archetype of the mysterious stranger, an unknown quality. Superman had the introductory blurb, "...strange visitor from another planet...". While Batman’s cape, evocative of bat wings that were often used in paintings of demons and devils, was meant to strike fear in the hearts of evi doers. Rather like the Shadow.
    Also, thank you for the Edna reference, hearing it was Incredible...🙂

  • @TalesoftheBoojum
    @TalesoftheBoojum Месяц назад +7

    I think you nailed it at the end with cultural osmosis. It's like the Dracula effect (also a cape wearer). If you say "vampire" to someone, they picture Bela Lugosi's Dracula and all the associated tropes--the accent, the cape, the eyes, turning into a bat, and so on. If you say "superhero" to someone, it also invokes a very specific set of tropes.

    • @user-lf3kr1nq2d
      @user-lf3kr1nq2d Месяц назад +1

      "turning into a bat" reminded me of Bugs Bunny! Remember the results of "abracapocus" and "hocuscadabra"? 😄

  • @keelanbarron928
    @keelanbarron928 Месяц назад +13

    Just before I start the video, I'm betting that Edna mode is going to be referenced in this.
    Edit: called it at 11:52.

  • @SIXminWHISTLE
    @SIXminWHISTLE Месяц назад +7

    I'm surprised we don't see bit more of capes being included on super strong characters where "grabbing hazard" isn't a concern, for the same reason Invincible wears those googles because they look cool getting smashed. Get a few more dynamic shots or torn up suits in fights, but maybe it gets old fast. Having the outfits and characters get visually damaged as fights go on seems a bit more common now than 20 years ago.

    • @Kitsaplorax
      @Kitsaplorax Месяц назад +1

      The immortal DC Superhero with the wrist mounted killing organism that gives him new powers each time he dies has a functional cloak. Really cool. So did Ragman, I think.

  • @Pegwarmers
    @Pegwarmers Месяц назад +4

    Great episode as always! My friend did a paper in college about how Superman's cape was unusual because it didn't go over his shoulders like typical capes before that.

  • @NaiveSteve
    @NaiveSteve Месяц назад +5

    Fantastic video. I like when contemporary writers create fun additions to the in universe reason characters wear capes. One that comes to mind is in 'Batman Arkham Origins: Blackgate' deadshot fires his rifle at batman while he is walking shrouded in his cape and it hits his cape but not batman. Dead shot comments that he admires batmans idea to wear a cape to disguise where his body truly is.
    It's fun and adds another layer of utility to the cape besides the typical gliding and shielding eyes from explosions

  • @Shootingstarcomics
    @Shootingstarcomics Месяц назад +16

    My mom had a cape from her nursing school days she let me wear a lot when I was a kid.

    • @Lonewolf-ei5yv
      @Lonewolf-ei5yv 25 дней назад +1

      My late aunt was a nurse and she had a cape! What's the purpose of them specifically? To be able to rush faster to patients? To cover up if you are blood stained?

    • @Shootingstarcomics
      @Shootingstarcomics 25 дней назад

      @@Lonewolf-ei5yv As far as I know it was just to keep warm, I guess it was part of the approved uniform. I don’t remember my mother wearing it as a nurse in the 70s, I think they lightened up by then. She had one of those funny hats too but she hardly ever wore it.

  • @davideminciaroni3700
    @davideminciaroni3700 Месяц назад +9

    bring back the opening gags!!! they were so funny

  • @andrewm.7389
    @andrewm.7389 Месяц назад +2

    Good episode. Don't forget monastic cloaks with cowls.

  • @mrwoka
    @mrwoka Месяц назад +3

    I think that the pervasive ideas of heroes wearing capes boil down to something very simple: Is easier to remember a someone who has something versus someone who doesn't. A dude with green hair, a girl with steampunk goggles or a dog wearing a jacket are much easier to remember than the guy with regular hair, a girl with no glasses or a regular dog.
    Capes are iconic, graphic, gestural, large, are canvases for massive splashes of color and/or symbols while being an unorthodox outfit option, making them a great pairing with a super-being.
    Loved the vid!

  • @octosalias5785
    @octosalias5785 Месяц назад +19

    Fun topic! I like the excuse Batman has, that he is misdirecting and intimidating his enemies. Which is why I really like capes on villains like Magneto, whose entire psychology is that he WANTS humanity to see him as the threat he is

    • @devforfun5618
      @devforfun5618 Месяц назад +7

      Batman has multiple reasons to wear capes, as he mentioned here, as a cover when he is hiding and as a glider, in the games it is even a weapon used to stun enemies like a matador, which i think is what zorro was referencing

  • @gabrielmomene7620
    @gabrielmomene7620 Месяц назад +4

    I mean as comics progress there are functions to the capes Batmans cape helps him glide, In the Supergirl TV series in the pilot episode when they were making Kara suit Wynn ditched the cape. But when kara was chasing thugs who are in a car chase she couldn't handle the hard turns and crashed into a ditch meaning some form of aerodynamics was involved into the capes.

  • @dhirajksharma_
    @dhirajksharma_ Месяц назад +2

    3:17 this reminds me of Superman Smashes the Klan book, where we see a circus performer, a strongman in fact, tell Clark that a colorful costume is what helped him attract people, who were previously scared of his incredible strength.

  • @TommyLaoGanMa
    @TommyLaoGanMa 22 дня назад +1

    Thank you for referring to Bob Kane as "credited as creating Batman" and not actually as his creator. Your old video on him is still one of my favorite videos about comics on RUclips.

  • @kerricaine
    @kerricaine Месяц назад +4

    "you wouldn't create an action character with a cape nowadays"
    The mandalorian.
    And more comedy/satire, but helldivers has a huge thing capes lol

  • @JanetStarChild
    @JanetStarChild Месяц назад +3

    5:33 ...I just have to note how adorable this scene is; a little girl sitting down in a magazine shop, reading a comic book with a doggy on her lap. These moments in time are a treasure.

  • @jacobclark6002
    @jacobclark6002 Месяц назад +2

    Because Superman was inspired by wrestlers who wore a cape, who did it so people in the back could still easily follow what was going on, the practical benefit in early comics being able to easily convey movement.

  • @andrewtaylor940
    @andrewtaylor940 Месяц назад +1

    I think it was Chuck Dixon who gave a really good explanation for why the Batman Family of characters tend towards capes. The Capes are a heavy Kevlar/Nomex mix. Being similar to a Firefighters jacket. They offer good protection from fire and some from bullets.

  • @WrestlingWithGaming
    @WrestlingWithGaming Месяц назад +3

    This was absolutely fascinating. Who knew a video about capes could be so good.

  • @leorblumenthal5239
    @leorblumenthal5239 Месяц назад +8

    What about the villains who wear capes, like Doctor Doom or Magneto?

    • @metawarp7446
      @metawarp7446 Месяц назад

      Besides heroism, capes also symbolize power, maybe that's why? They do look powerful.
      They both also think they are heroes

  • @ralph3333
    @ralph3333 Месяц назад +1

    16:30 That book "Blankets" made me think of Diaper Man.

  • @seaofcolour7431
    @seaofcolour7431 Месяц назад +1

    The surcoat, also known as a super tunica, was a cloak worn by knights over their armor when riding into battle. Medieval knights were protected by their steel armor (hence "man of steel") and the "caped crusaders" was a popular nick name for Batman and Robin.

  • @Arcadia_warlic
    @Arcadia_warlic Месяц назад +5

    Manga designs like Saitama show that capes have lasting aesthetic even beyond their era. I am in favour of more caped heroes. Great video and analysis.

  • @JamesBrophy
    @JamesBrophy Месяц назад +3

    Another fun video, hope your doing OK given the last weeks events.

  • @elaguajdo
    @elaguajdo 24 дня назад +1

    For an artist, capes have two practical uses, one mainly covered here: To convey movement, and another is an artist's trick: So you don't have to draw as much background. A nice, flowing (most of the time comically, no pun intended, large) cape takes little time to draw. A city block however? So ... capes. ;)

  • @widdrshinswonders
    @widdrshinswonders Месяц назад +1

    I *love* this one. It really feels like your early content in the best way. Just really digging into a solid comic trope and it's influences.

  • @AL-jg4pr
    @AL-jg4pr Месяц назад +7

    Huh so early that idk what to say, except keep up the good work Chris!

  • @kermitthepog7063
    @kermitthepog7063 Месяц назад +8

    You wouldn't have a new action star wearing a cape, but Neo wore a very cape-like trenchcoat in the Matrix! That was 1999 so not long ago, only... oh god. I'm old.

  • @richatdastkey3555
    @richatdastkey3555 21 день назад

    Thank you so much for dropping this! I've heard some answers to this in the past but a full look back on the topic is pretty rare

  • @Yellowjack17
    @Yellowjack17 Месяц назад +1

    Having a cape is a liability for most, using one is a flex, showing that you are more capable than most

  • @richardhart9204
    @richardhart9204 Месяц назад +16

    Superheroes stopped wearing capes after the Dollar Bill incident.

  • @fusionspace175
    @fusionspace175 Месяц назад +7

    Does anyone remember that superhero show The Cape? He was a circus performer with a weighted and armored cape he fought with like a whip almost. You might have seen Abed on Community reference it. It was a cool idea, well done, and never had a chance. Finished as a webcomic.

    • @ethansloan
      @ethansloan Месяц назад

      I always meant to watch that. Abed made it sound cool, and it's not like it would be a big time commitment.

    • @fusionspace175
      @fusionspace175 Месяц назад

      @@ethansloan I really liked it, and I watched a lot of those off brands. No Ordinary Family was great, got 2 seasons, but the Cape was lost in the shuffle. It was kind of a golden age pulp style idea done in the modern day, that was the tone.

    • @GuiltlessGear
      @GuiltlessGear Месяц назад +2

      I remember that. Keith David played the mentor.

    • @0Aberration
      @0Aberration Месяц назад

      Thank you, I was going to be really sad if nobody brought up The Cape... #sixseasonsandamovie

  • @BronzeAgeNerd
    @BronzeAgeNerd Месяц назад

    Loved this video, CT! Such an interesting deep dive into something I think a lot of readers take for granted from comics history. Really enjoyed this one!

  • @jbbarnes1067
    @jbbarnes1067 Месяц назад +1

    Another great video again, Chris!

  • @marieroberts5664
    @marieroberts5664 Месяц назад +10

    Well, somebody has to say it...
    "NO CAPES !!!!"

    • @stevesherman1743
      @stevesherman1743 23 дня назад +1

      “But you’ll look fabulous anyway, Dahhhling !”

  • @user-ee1bm4zq3w
    @user-ee1bm4zq3w 28 дней назад

    Great video as always Chris

  • @joehellno9097
    @joehellno9097 Месяц назад +2

    I fully agree that the circus costume influenced Superman, and all superheroes, cape or not, by way of the trunks outside the pants or leggings. But you're leaving out the tremendous influence of Raymond's Flash Gordon, which featured both the capes and the trunks. In Flash G it seems the basis is all royal military style costume; tunics, capes epaulets, and pants tucked into ornate boots. Raymond likely added the outside trunks to the European military Napoleonic or especially 'Prisoner of Zenda" uniforms to add some imagined otherworldliness to the otherwise historically based earthly costuming. Notice how Flash Gordonian everyone on Krypton is dressed, and tell me that wasn't based on Raymond's Flash costume design.

  • @icarust
    @icarust 13 дней назад +1

    "Capes have no practical purpose and are going to get caught on something and get the hero killed" INCORRECT :) Capes could be incredibly useful. They can be used for so many things. An emergency shock blanket for a victim. To cover a scene of violence so a child doesn't have to see it. To cover glass to let someone climb through a broken window. To wrap up and easily carry objects. Extra layer of warmth in case of cold, but easy enough to let sit open if its warm. If it's waterproof it can be used like a tarp, to make an emergency shelter or to keep people off the wet ground and prevent hypothermia. Literally so many uses! I'm sure there are others I'm not thinking of.
    As for the "it will get caught on something and trap you" part of the argument; I raise you... Breakaway clasps!! Those connectors used on cat collars that are designed to unclasp if enough pressure is applied. Their purpose is to ensure that, if a cat ever gets their collar caught on something, they aren't trapped! Just latch your hero cape with one of those, then when it gets caught or if someone grabs it, you can quickly yank against it, and then BAM you're free!
    Could be a purposeful and strategic move as well, if the hero is more of a trickster type. They let the enemy grab them by the cloak, escape, and then while the enemy is distracted thinking they have the hero in their hand, and subsequently confused by the empty cloak, the hero sneak attacks them from the shadows, or drops on their head from above. :)
    To be fair I am a tad biased because I absolutely LOVE flowy layers in fashion and art, but I stand by the idea that capes and cloaks can be and are useful. :) I am prepared to die on this hill. (Fashionably, in my epic cape. :D)
    (Thank you for coming to my ted talk wow I did not realize I had that much of an opinion on this-)

  • @Lxx00Jxx00
    @Lxx00Jxx00 18 дней назад

    omg i was just watching your old videos the new intro is amazing!

  • @Anhedonis
    @Anhedonis Месяц назад +1

    The Gatchaman Wing-Capes were my favorite. Stylish, functional, and necessary.

  • @MatisseRehel
    @MatisseRehel 9 дней назад

    Very interesting video, thank you for such useful information

  • @ComicPower
    @ComicPower Месяц назад

    Another interesting and well researched report. Awesome.

  • @Barl3000
    @Barl3000 Месяц назад +2

    I totally agree with your conclusion. If you asked someone that was complete unfamiliar with superheroes to name one or more, it would Superman Batman and maybe Spider-Man. Those three characters have transended their origins and have become just a general part of pop culture. Superman in particular has become THE archetype of a superhero and thus the concept of superheroes being associated with capes.
    I even see "capeshit" being the derogatory term of choice for people disliking the current pop culture facination with superheroes.

  • @mareeeeeeeeeeeeeeee
    @mareeeeeeeeeeeeeeee Месяц назад

    This channel is one of my favorites for an afterwork decompress

  • @theunwantedcritic
    @theunwantedcritic Месяц назад +2

    When I was a little boy in the early 1970s right around the disco era for about six months, it was really fashionable for men to wear suits with matching capes. They also have big hats with giant feathers in them

    • @garyasselstine9186
      @garyasselstine9186 Месяц назад

      Reminded of an early scene from WKRP in Cincinnati. Venus Flytrap enters wearing the exact outfit you described

  • @maxordman4100
    @maxordman4100 10 дней назад +1

    Great video and backstory! Well done! Your character research is truly solid! I generally do like the capes myself but I’m glad that not everybody in the superhero domain wears them because ther are so many great diverse characters Out there and the capes aren’t a perfect fit for every costume!

  • @aikisteven0616
    @aikisteven0616 Месяц назад +1

    I've got a pretty nice thief's cloak that works mostly as a cape (plus hooded cowl)... I need to start wearing that to the grocery store and stuff. they could call me 'Mundane Man', or 'Old Guy'!

  • @nahuoxus405
    @nahuoxus405 13 дней назад

    Great video as always!!!!!!!

  • @DementedDistraction
    @DementedDistraction Месяц назад +1

    It's probably just the artist in me speaking, but I always figured it was so they could project a strong silhouette; that way even when the hero wasn't exactly doing anything action-packed, they could still look dynamic - after all, how many countless shots are there of a superhero just standing there with their cape blowing in the wind?

  • @macsnafu
    @macsnafu Месяц назад +1

    I like a good flowing cape. Capes are cool on heroes who fly. I especially love the Golden Age Green Lantern's costume design, including his cape with the high collar around his head. It's impractical as heck, but it looks great!
    I'm also reminded that when E-Man first appeared, his costume included a cape, but he quickly got rid of it when he tripped on it!