Coincidence or Swipe?
Moderators: Daniel Jackson, greg
Coincidence or Swipe?


I just happened to have the Secret Wars run and my new comics on my night stand and noticed that Sinestero posed on the cover of Green Lantern #52 looks a lot like Captain America posed on Secret Wars #7.
Granted, one could say that the characters are in a generic hero pose that is drawn to fill the page—just a coincidence. Yet, the poses are extremely similar, too similar to be a coincidence—a reversed swipe.
What do you guys think?
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I think it's impossible to tell, but creative coincidences happen all the time. I once had an artist change a scene I wrote because he refused to draw what I wrote, saying I stole the scene from one of the Home Alone movies.
As strange as it sounds, I've still never seen any of the Home Alone movies...
I've run into several other coincidental situations as well.
As strange as it sounds, I've still never seen any of the Home Alone movies...
I've run into several other coincidental situations as well.
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Go back and look at ancient statues. I'd guess that kind of posturing has meant the same kind of thing for hundreds or thousands of years.sanman wrote:I totally forgot about those images—thanks for posting.X-O HoboJoe wrote:It's an iconic image that implies power, a weapon and the willingness to use it. Ever the faces are tilted back a bit to imply the character's larger and stronger than the viewer.
I wonder what the original source was.
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Original source would be tough thing to figure out as I'd think this qualifies as one of the root-images our brains view as an emotional gesture: Not nearly as obvious as someone choking, a smile or tears but more along the lines of a sultry "come-hither" look. It's been around as long as we have and it's one of those looks artists use to get an emotive response.ian_house wrote:Go back and look at ancient statues. I'd guess that kind of posturing has meant the same kind of thing for hundreds or thousands of years.sanman wrote:I totally forgot about those images—thanks for posting.X-O HoboJoe wrote:It's an iconic image that implies power, a weapon and the willingness to use it. Ever the faces are tilted back a bit to imply the character's larger and stronger than the viewer.
I wonder what the original source was.

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Sounds like the makings of an interesting research paper—shared iconic imagery and meaning.X-O HoboJoe wrote:Original source would be tough thing to figure out as I'd think this qualifies as one of the root-images our brains view as an emotional gesture: Not nearly as obvious as someone choking, a smile or tears but more along the lines of a sultry "come-hither" look. It's been around as long as we have and it's one of those looks artists use to get an emotive response.ian_house wrote:Go back and look at ancient statues. I'd guess that kind of posturing has meant the same kind of thing for hundreds or thousands of years.sanman wrote:I totally forgot about those images—thanks for posting.X-O HoboJoe wrote:It's an iconic image that implies power, a weapon and the willingness to use it. Ever the faces are tilted back a bit to imply the character's larger and stronger than the viewer.
I wonder what the original source was.
