I feel like Red Son is one of the darkest incarnations of Superman actually and the biggest critique of anti-democratic communism (which many Soviet influenced communists embraced, claiming Western democracy was inherently capitalist). The version of Superman established in the book is one that creates his "paradise" via absolute control and suppression of dissent for the greater good.BridgeConsoleMasher wrote: ↑Tue Jul 04, 2023 3:11 pmTo this regard I've become somewhat intrigued with the DC rendition of the old War played out by the likes of Superman Red Son, in which the events of the Cold War are rather consistently played out with Lex Luthor as the US president and Superman as the liberal ideal that Soviets have historically espoused since around the time Superman became a thing in the US. If anything Red Son seems like a return to form for the original incarnation of Superman as a historical parallel to early Leninism.
Superman has never been corrupted by Darkseid and only once by the Joker but is successfully done so by Stalin with the ideals of "you can't make an omelette without breaking some eggs." The world established is an ATOMIC HEART (another interesting critique done by ex-communists that APPEARS to be a paradise) utopia with Kryptonian super science but if you don't agree with Superman's world, you end up lobotomized.
Red Son does a great job of also critiquing the USA though as Lex Luthor remains the horrific monster that he always is but manages to be the only person who allows individual freedom versus collectivist ideals. He also creates his own science paradise through authoritarianism. Except, as the richest most powerful man in America, of course he constantly wins every election.
Democracy is almost incidental in the world.