THE COOLEST SUPER HERO COSTUMES

Many years ago we featured The Worst Superhero
Costumes, and recently showcased The Best Supervillian
costumes, so it was only a matter of time before we finally got
around to give the best hero duds a shake. What makes a great
costume? Is it a one hit wonder design that is only around for
a bit but just taps in to something cool that everyone loves?
Or is it an iconic design that has lasted for many decades
virtually unchanged from the original pages it appeared in? We
have a pretty good mixture of all these things. The Top 15 of
these are a result of voting responses from a poll we featured
for retroCRUSH readers, while the bottom 5 are just some
personal favorites I threw in that were likely too obscure to
register with the polling masses, but needed special
recognition nonetheless.
With some internal debate, I decided to leave
female characters off the list, as they'll get their own Top 20
shortly. So without
further adieu...

#20 THE PHANTOM
The Phantom's purple outfit is one of those
costumes that looks absolutely ridiculous in real life, but in
the comic book medium, it's rather striking. The Phantom first
appeared in comic strip form back in 1936, beating comic book
heroes starting with Superman by a good 2 years. Though there
haven't been too many purple heroes since then, you have to
give The Phantom credit for being the first costumed hero to
wear tights, and have a mask with blank white eyes (which they
took out of
theatrical
version with Billy Zane) that became a staple from heroes
ranging from Batman to Wolverine in the years to follow.

#19 CAPTAIN MARVEL
(ORIGINAL MARVEL COMICS VERSION)
If there was ever a superhero costume that
embodied the retroCRUSH spirit, it's the original '60s version
of Marvel Comics' Captain Marvell (or Mar-Vell, if you must).
Green and white is such a neat color combination for costumes
that I totally dig. I'd have put The Spectre here, too, but
he's more or less just underwear and a cape. Jim Starlin later
redesigned the costume into a neat red
blue and yellow number that was made with cheap Chinese
fabric that ultimately gave the good Captain cancer. Always
stick with your roots.

#18 ULTRAMAN
Despite the 800 different revamps of his outfit
since original '60s TV series, I'll always have a fond place in
my heart for the original silver and red getup that Ultraman
first wore. I always wanted to be Ultraman for Halloween, but
always ended up getting stuck being Casper or Leo Sayer. My
mother was very cruel.

#17 GHOST RIDER
How could you not totally love a guy who rides a
motorcycle with a flaming skull? My good buddy and retroCRUSH
contributor Bradley Mason Hamlin and I were arguing last
evening about whether or not Ghost Rider even wears a costume,
since he really just sort of turns into a monster, but the
outfit he has, natural or not, is probably one of the more
fearsome and striking of them all.
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#16 THE ROCKETEER
Dave Stevens' '80s comic only lasted a handful
of issues which spawned a very underrated movie, but it's a
gorgeous simple and striking design that looks as cool and
fresh as the day it was created. The slick aviator outfit, the
simple but menacing looking jetpack, and the streamlined
art-deco inspired helmet is simply kick ass.

#15 THE PUNISHER
The Punisher's costume is one of those rare
outfits that would actually look cool on someone in real life.
As much as Batman is supposed to strike fear in the hearts of
criminals with his cape and pointy ears, he'd likely strike as
much laughter into them if he actually went around wearing it
in the real world. The single menacing skull on top of an
otherwise black getup (which has gone from all spandex, to
disgruntled high school goth coat look through the decades),
tells you everything you need to know about Frank Castle.
Trouble is coming.

#14 GOLDEN AGE SANDMAN
I'll admit that Sandman perhaps looked a bit
more silly back in the golden age of comics, but when he got a
more grim '90s revamp courtesy of Matt Wagner's "Sandman
Mystery Theater" the more darkly drawn version made him seem a
lot more menacing, creepy, and even kinky. Sure, he's basically
just a dude with a gasmask on, but he's scary as hell. Once I
had entered a short film competition put on by The Sacramento
Film Festival in which all the entrants had to show up and get
the surprise theme to proceed making a 10 minute film within 10
days on. One of the guys that showed up was wearing a gas mask
that looked just like this and talked through a 70s era tape
deck that was strapped to his belt. I thought it was a put on,
but apparently he was some guy with a mysterious disability.
The festival organizer told me the film he submitted was
unusable because it was just 10 minutes of him having sex with
an inflatable doll. I don't know why I brought that up, but I'd
still love to figure out what that guy was all about.

#13 WOLVERINE
When he first appeared in #181 of The Incredible
Hulk (or #180 if you're a nitpicky dork), Wolverine had one of
the
most ridiculous costumes of them all, complete with
whiskers. Now the brown themed combo used above is my personal
favorite, but the yellow/blue/black versions that have appeared
through the years are pretty nice, too. Wolverine also has one
of the coolest masks for a costume ever made, too. Too bad they
never tried to use it in any of the movies.

#12 AQUAMAN
Bradley Mason Hamlin wrote in his
retroCRUSH Aquaman tribute a couple years back, "Aquaman’s
costume was very aesthetically pleasing, orange shirt, black
trunks, and aquatic green leggings. His gloves originally
appeared yellow, but someone wisely changed them to green to
match the legs. Sadly, that one change, the yellow gloves for
the green, in my opinion, remained the only wise change that
occurred with this classic character." For a few issues in an
'80s limited series, Aquaman sported a pretty kickass
ocean camouflage costume that
disappeared about as soon as it arrived.

#11 CAPTAIN MARVEL
Captain Marvel got one of the biggest shafts in
comic book history. Debuting just a couple years after Superman
first appeared, he quickly became one of the best selling
characters of all time, especially during war time years where
comic book sold an insane amount of copies to a market of kids
who were buying them because they actually enjoyed reading
them, not just putting them in a plastic bag so that they'd be
kept in mint condition for all eternity. Superman's creators,
DC comics, successfully sued Fawcett publications for trademark
infringement and Cap was taken off the market. In the meantime,
Marvel Comics stepped in and made their own Captain Marvel, and
took over the retired trademark. DC ironically bought the
rights to the original Captain Marvel after that but since
Marvel owned the trademark, had to call his books Shazam,
instead. The difficulty in marketing this character, and his
long hiatus from the public eye made him very hard to sell and
sales of new Captain Marvel books always seem to disappoint.
But about the costume!
What a fantastic and powerful looking outfit.
Like The Phantom, it looks better in a comic than it does in
real life, but it's just such a fun mix of red and yellow with
the prominent thunderbolt on the chest. Hell, you could argue
that DC's Flash ripped off Marvel's look more than he ripped
off Superman.
PROTIP: Captain Marvel creator CC Beck used the
face of Fred MacMurray as a design inspiration.

#10 THE FLAMING CARROT
Bob Burden's wonderfully ridiculous Flaming
Carrot certainly has the wackiest costume of all time. But
despite having a giant carrot mask with a can of Sterno on top,
and green scuba flippers he still manages to come off as one of
most suave and cool motherfuckers to ever grace the pages of a
comic strip. Martini in hand with a gaggle of bikini clad beach
babes, it's clear that despite the occasional odd glance, the
costume doesn't hold him back. His origin story perhaps
provides some insight as to why he chose this awesome getup, as
he read 5,000 comic books in a single sitting (on a dare) and
received permanent brain damage as a result. It's a parable for
our times. Flaming Carrot remains one of the funniest comic
books ever published.
CLICK HERE to check out his official site.

#9 DR. STRANGE
Hands down, the coolest cape in comic book
history! That being said, I also have a soft spot for Steve
Ditko's original capeless design for the character, too
(below).

Both designs were expertly crafted by Ditko, and
befitting of an older gentleman who lived in a world of sorcery
and magic, instead of just flying around and busting through
doors. An all time classic that has changed little in the 40
plus years he's existed.

#8 SPACE GHOST
Alex Toth designed this great character back in
1966 and hit a grand slam during the original design (above).
Elements from Batman and Superman are mixed with a rare white
costume base that superheroes can rarely pull off successfully.
Obviously there's a lot less dirt in space. There's a nice
feature on Toth and his work if you pick up the complete Space
Ghost/Dino-Boy DVD set.

#7 THE SHADOW
I was concerned as to how far into the pulp hero
world I should go back, while still keeping the term,
superhero. Green Hornet, for example, has a fun costume but
nothing so brilliant about it to deserve "all time best"
recognition. The Shadow, however, has one of the most simple
and effective outfits out there, and deserves praise. Brad
pointed out that The Shadow is pretty much just dressed as a
cowboy, but damnit if The Shadow ain't the sexiest spooky
cowboy the world has ever seen. The red scarf over his face is
a simple mask, while his black clothing accented with a red
interior to his cape, make him pretty damn awesome. Check out
the very underrated Shadow movie starring Alec Baldwin to see
how cool the costume can really be.

#6 GREEN LANTERN
Probably no other superhero has gone from bad to
good costumes than Green Lantern. The original Green Lantern,
who first appeared in 1940, clearly had his Garanimals tags
mixed up, with a garish red, yellow, black, and green
combination that clearly demonstrated that the power ring
rendered its owner Alan Scott color blind. In 1959, Gil Kane
gave the character a reboot with the innovative green, white,
and black number that only with slight variation has remained
the same ever since. Green Lantern's costume is a personal
favorite of mine, and works well as a uniform of The Green
Lantern Corp, as well. It's certainly one of the more
aesthetically pleasing costumes ever made.

#5 CAPTAIN AMERICA
Captain America's costume is cool because it's
all about America, baby! The only thing that could only make it
cooler would be to have an eagle crying in the center of the
shield next to the World Trade Center Wreckage. Freedom isn't
free! God Bless America! Love it or Leave it! If you don't
speak the language, get out of our country! Bros before Hos!
That which make ya may also break ya! A stitch in time saves
nine. FREEEEEEEEEEEEDOM!

#4 IRON MAN
The photo from the upcoming Iron Man film above
is already giving comic book geeks raging nerdgasms all over
the world. After seeing countless superhero costumes fucked up
in movie adaptations (Bat-Nipples, anyone?), it's great to see
those Hollywood jackholes actually sit down and get things
right for a change! Iron Man has had quite a few cool suits of
armor through the years, and from the secret footage I've
already seen, it looks like they get them ALL right.

This is probably my favorite incarnation of all
the Iron Man costumes. It was right when he ditched the
Frankenstein looking outfits he'd been relying on and got the
more form fitting and slightly devilish number you see above.
It also should be noted that the legendary Steve Ditko designed
this, which is funny since he's generally more famous for the
freaky metaphysical art from Dr. Strange or wacky Spider-Man
villains he co-created with Stan Lee.

#3 SUPERMAN
How can you leave off Superman? This is one of
the few overrides I did with the reader poll, because the
retroCRUSH fans voted his costume at #11, and I say "What the
fuck?" to that! C'mon folks, Superman is the costume that
started all superhero costumes. And aside from a slight
insignia change, it's remained more or less unchanged since he
first appeared 70 years ago. Though his mom made him the
costume out of his baby blanket, so the smell of Kryptonian
spit-up has been awfully hard to wash out.

#2 SPIDER-MAN
While comic books had been a decades old
institution in 1962, Steve Ditko was able to dream up one of
the more original and beautiful designs for any superhero. A
gorgeous design that has survived the decades. It's so nice to
look at that even after a well received and badass black and
white costume variant in the 80s (which later split and went to
Venom) the good old red and blue looked just as good as ever
when it came back. It's amazing how well this costume works,
considering it has the most un-spider colors you could possibly
imagine. I used to love drawing Spider-Man on notebook paper in
school. There's something so wonderfully meditative about
drawing all of that intricate webbing, like walking through a
labyrinth. The webbing was so intricate, as a matter of fact,
that they omitted a lot of it on the costume in the 1962
cartoon to reduce animation expense. I also like the costume
because it really looks like something a teenage geeky boy
would make in his room.

True embarrassing confession time. When I was a
high school junior at Arroyo High School in San Lorenzo, they
had a career dress up day. You were supposed to come to school
dressed in your ideal career. I decided to come to school
dressed as Spider-Man. Of course, this wasn't a store bought
costume, but one I made myself. It was horrible, and I can't
believe nobody beat me up. The sketch I drew above pretty much
tells you the story about how horrible it looked. In order to
achieve the "white eye" effect, I used an innovative approach
of sliding index cards under the mask, allowing about 1/32" of
space in the inside corner of each eye to see out of. How on
earth did I even survive high school, anyway?

#1 BATMAN
Among retroCRUSH readers polled, Batman was the
runaway favorite by a long shot. Though Batman was conceived by
Bob Kane in 1939, we have his writing partner Bill Finger to
thank for not making him look like a complete dork. Kane's
original design reportedly had a Lone Ranger style mask, giant
black wings, bare hands, and a mostly red set of tights. The
story goes that Finger suggested the cape, glove, and mask
changes, and got rid of the red (which is funny, considering
Finger was responsible for the very ugly original Green Lantern
costume). Batman's costume is so badass, because it was
actually designed to strike fear into the hearts of criminals.
In the original and some later incarnations of the outfit, you
could really imagine a thief shitting his pants after seeing
Batman pop down in an alleyway. Batman's costume is also so
great because it give so much leeway for artists to interpret
in different ways that best suit their style. Berni Wrightson
and the late Marshall Rogers are probably my favorite Batman
artists, but as you can see from the gallery below, his costume
has always been a great way for artists to show us what they've
got.
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 |
 |
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| Bob Kane |
Jerry
Robinson |
Dick Sprang |
Carmine
Infantino |
 |
 |
 |
 |
| Neal Adams |
Marshall
Rogers |
Berni
Wrightson |
Jim Aparo |
 |
 |
 |
 |
| Frank
Miller |
Brian
Bolland |
Bill
Siekiewicz |
Mike Zeck |
 |
 |
 |
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| Kelly Jones |
Jim Lee |
Bruce Timm |
Alex Ross |
Something tells me in 100 years, Batman's
costume will still be the coolest of all time.
-Robert Berry
rberry@retrocrush.com