Current Topic:
The Vile Vial
Due Date:
May 31, 2001
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Here's the challenge:
Read "The Vile
Vial: Release" to get the full idea here.
All superheroes and supervillains have been gathered together
at Belle Reve, where they were infected by a virus. The supervillains
begin acting like superheroes, while the heroes are now acting like villains.
Superman informs the world as to what's happened and provides lists of
which heroes should now be guarded against and which villains should be
considered "okay" for the time being.
A temporary Justice League forms, led by the Scarecrow,
with the objective of tracking down and containing the former heroes.
They are also charged with stopping the release of the vials by the other
agents of Ra's. To make matters worse, the virus is mutating amongst the
bodies of the aliens trapped in the Watchtower, and unforeseen results
could occur.
The challenge is to tell the stories of the new encounters
between the characters. I realize it's kind of confusing to understand
how this virus works, since it's just a deus ex machina explanation for
turning the heroes into villains and vice versa. Don't get TOO radical
in its application to a character. For instance, the Scarecrow now becomes
a man who uses fear toxins to fight for the common good
he DOESN'T become
a hater of fear toxins.
Understand? Some characters will be more confusing. As a
plant-woman who defends plants, I'm not really sure what Poison Ivy's
ideals would be after the infection.
As for the heroes, they should be uniformly interested in
themselves over society (instead of using their powers to help society).
For some, this means robbing banks; for others, its using their powers
over others. Don't have them commit murder and rape, though, although
you can have them threaten such evils.
Most heroes (whatever their personal motivations) are engaged day-to-day
in concern for the safety and well-being of others, going so far that
they would risk their lives for others. Thus, the reversal involves the
valuing of the safety and happiness of the self and a neglect of others.
Most villains are concerned for themselves over anything else. They want
power and wealth and they don't care what happens to others. The reversal
similarly reverses these concerns.
Of course, there are some interesting individual effects of this virus.
- Two-Face is mostly the same, except that his scarred side is now
his good side. Thus, Two-Face is more good than evil. (It's wrong
to think he's evenly split; if that were true, he wouldn't be a criminal.)
- Ventriloquist's dominant personality (Scarface) is now good, whereas
his nebishy wimp side is evil.
- Trickster is unaffected(!) as he was never too strongly one or the
other.
- Wonder Woman is strongly evil, since she was so good before. She
now hates men for what they did to her people and hates women for
not being like her fellow Amazons. But she's also not all that concerned
about society; she cares more for her own happiness.
- Black Manta is horrified at his past as a child killer and tries
to make up for it by being as strong a defender of the oceans as Aquaman
was.
- Joker is still insane, but he seems to be working for the good.
I can't go over all of the possibilities, but there is a wild card: namely,
everyone is affected differently by mental aberrations. Therefore, when
dealing with the element of "What does this person care for?", don't go
overboard. They will still like food and money and watching TV, and some
people might rebel against the things they used to fight for and others
might not. Whatever you want to do is okay. And if a different writer
comes up with some other interpretation, we'll simply say that the effects
of the virus are fluctuating.
Infected and quarantined:
Aliens (Superman, J'onn, G'nort
but Guy Gardner is switched)
Future men (Captain Comet, Hector Hammond)
Unaffected:
Robots (Red Tornado, Metal Men)
Spectral characters (Spectre, Deadman, Gentleman Ghost)
Specifics:
- Prose form please. Comic script style won't be rejected, but many
people don't like reading them.
- Do your own editing and spell-check, please.
- Send your story in HTML if possible. (Fanzing does have a
tutorial on HTML which many have found easy to use.) Otherwise,
either Word format or Rich Text Format (.rtf) is fine.
- As always, It Must Not Suck.
- E-mail it to [email protected]
by May 31.
- The winner will receive a $10 gift certificate for Amazon.com OR
a Fanzing t-shirt.