The story was an influence on Alan Moore when creating
Watchmen. Moore has said: "We wanted to take Superduperman 180 degrees – dramatic, instead of comedic", but it also influenced the art: "I think that we probably settled upon the kind of Wally Wood 'Superduperman' style. You know, super-heroics, lots of details, heavy blacks, of a distinctive style". When asked about the influence of
Superfolks on his work like the earlier
Marvelman, Moore said: "I'd still say that Harvey Kurtzman's
Superduperman probably had the preliminary influence". He went into more detail in
Kimota! the Miracleman Companion: The story would also influence
John Shelton Lawrence. As a child he dressed as a superhero and got himself into trouble but "[h]is understanding of superpowers matured, however, when he read ''Mad Magazine's''' "Superduperman" in the early 1950s. That teenage skepticism grew into a philosophical teaching career, resulting in his current position as a professor of philosophy, emeritus, at
Morningside College in Iowa. With Robert Jewert, he developed his suspicion that America's righteous stance in the world often projects the story of the selfless crusader who can cleanly use superpowers to rescue the innocent". These ideas would be expanded in their books
The American Monomyth (1977),
The Myth of the American Superhero (2002), and
Captain America and the Crusade Against Evil: The Dilemma of Zealous Nationalism (2003). In 1956,
Ernie Kovacs did a
Superclod sketch parody that had some similarities to Kurtzman's version; Kovacs was also a contributor to
Mad Magazine. That same year, Warner Bros. released their own parody,
Stupor Duck, which was another in a series of cartoons depicting Daffy Duck doing a parody of another character. The story has "Cluck Trent" squaring off against supervillain "Aardvark Ratnik," although neither Cluck Trent nor
Stupor Duck are aware that Ratnik is merely a character in a TV show.
Don Glut made, and starred in, a
Superduperman fan film in 1963. ==See also==