Category Archives: Lists of Six!

My 6 Favorite Comic Book Characters

I love comic books. That should be pretty evident by now. And most of my love for comics comes from a love of the characters, and being able to follow their adventures from month to month. Sure, the stories and art can be really good, but for me it’s mainly about seeing my favorite characters in action. When these characters appear in a comic, either a starring role, bit part or single-panel cameo, it’s almost a guaranteed purchase by me. I love these guys.

So who are my favorite characters?


1. Multiple Man


Jamie Madrox, the Multiple Man, is the only fictional character I have ever personally identified with. His voice, his style and, most importantly, his dry sense of humor are like my own, at least how I see them. The character really speaks to me. He’s a nice, average guy, he’s quite funny and his super power is to make duplicates of himself. That’s pretty cool.

So many Multiple Manses

First and foremost, Multiple Man is funny. He’s got a dry, sarcastic wit that I really enjoy. More than the usual ‘team jokester’ one might find in a comic book. He’s more droll than quippy. I like to think that’s my own style of humor: reacting and commenting on the world and people around us rather than being the joke-throwing, attention-grabbing life of the party. And beyond the humor, Madrox is a nice guy. He’s got a good heart and an altruistic, heroic attitude. But he’s not driven by some gnawing sense of responsibility or vengeance like some superheroes. He’s just a nice guy because that’s how people should be.

And one thing I’ve always loved about Multiple Man is his background status in the world of superheroes. He’s a mutant, and therefore is part of the X-Men family of comic books. But he’s never been one of the X-Men. Sure he’s been on some of the side teams, usually X-Factor, and has helped out the X-Men on some adventures, but he’s never actually been a member of the main team. He’s even turned down membership. This is a character who is a prime example of world building. When mutants represent an entire race of people, not all of them are going to fit into the easy categories of X-Man or Evil Mutant. Sometimes there are people like Madrox who are happy to just do their own thing and not pick sides. Not everybody can be a Wolverine knock-off.

Sometimes his duplicates inhabit different aspects of his personality

I’m pretty sure that my first real experience with Multiple Man came in the form of his 1992 Marvel trading card. My brother and I were really big into the Marvel trading cards back in the early 90s. We used to collect baseball and football cards when we were younger, like ‘normal’ children. But once we started discovering superheroes and their trading cards, we were hooked. Multiple Man had several cards from the different years, but the 1992 years were our favorite set of trading cards.  Multiple Man had an awesome costume back then, consisting of a trench coat over a blueish body suit, with a neat set of X-themed head gear. His powers sounded awesome and he looked really cool, and that was win/win for me. From there, I started digging into comic books to try and find out more about him.

Multiple Man first appeared in Giant-Sized Fantastic Four #4 in 1975 as a threat to Marvel’s First Family. I tracked the issue down and bought it long after I became a fan of Multiple Man. I actually did a newspaper story on the comic back during one of my summer internships. I visited all the local comic book shops on a quest to find the issue, so the story was essentially about the comic book culture in the area. Fun story. At any rate, Multiple Man started as a one-off character. He wasn’t a villain so much as just lost and confused. In the end, Professor X of the X-Men came and took Madrox under his wing, leading to several years of just existing in the deep background of X-stories.

All of that changed when Madrox was chosen as one of the stars of the newly revamped X-Factor in the early 90s! The Uncanny X-Men book has been published since the 60s, but since they’re so popular, there have been tons of side books, characters and teams. X-Factor was a comic book that was originally designed to reunite all of the original X-Men (Cyclops, Iceman, etc.), and it ran for about 60+ issues. Then in the early 90s, Marvel decided to revamp X-Factor and turn them into a government-sponsored mutant team. Gone were the original X-Men, and in came a mish-mash of various mutant characters. Multiple Man, and a few others, were plucked from obscurity and thrown onto the team by writer Peter David.

The whole crazy crew!

I’ve always been curious how writers, or maybe their editors, choose which characters to randomly throw together onto a team. It happens more often than you might think.

I wasn’t reading comics at this point, at least not modern comics, so I was basically clueless about all of this X-Factor stuff while it was coming out. However, I was definitely into the trading cards. Then slowly but surely, I began to find issues of X-Factor at comic shops, at garage sales, flea markets – wherever. I began to actually read the adventures of Multiple Man and I loved them! He was funny and a bit silly, had a cool power and a very cool costume. It was the 90s, trench coats were all the rage instead of capes, but Multiple Man was one of the few characters who managed to pull it off as more than just an ‘x-treme’ accessory.

Which brings us to X-Factor #79, one of the most influential comic books of my life.

Life-changer

The story is as basic and as simple as one can get. It’s not a big Event Comic or some grand issue. Multiple Man and his teammate Quicksilver going to Smalltown USA to investigate a mutant who has been arrested for murder. They’re going to see if the charges are based more on bigotry against mutants than actual proof. The mutant, Rachel Argosy (Rhapsody) is a school music teacher with blue skin who can do funky things when music is being played. She’s only ever appeared in this one story. Turns out the guy died when Argosy used her powers on him, but she wasn’t intending to kill him, just the opposite. But it felt so good that he had a heart attack. Multiple Man and Quicksilver had to leave her in prison – though not without a bit of action and a mutual attraction/flirting between Madrox and Argosy.

See? Very basic.

But what makes this issue stand out as so influential to me is that X-Factor #79, I think, was my first real experience with the idea that superheroes could be treated as normal, everyday people. They didn’t have to be muscly, spandex-clad behemoths engaged in epic brawls with super-villains. Madrox doesn’t even wear his costume in this issue, just his trench coat and street clothes. (Quicksilver wears his costume, but that’s a Quicksilver thing). They meet with government officials and talk. They make small talk. There’s some action, sure, but it’s low key and simple. There’s no big fight. This is a story about Jamie Madrox, government officials, investigating a potential bias incident. His powers and his superhero identity are purely secondary.

This idea, though I didn’t know it at the time, was revolutionary to me! It’s the same sort of effect as Watchmen or Harry Potter, reading about superheroes (or wizards) as people first and god-like heroes second. It’s why I love Mark Millar’s Ultimates so much. And it was through Jamie Madrox that I first experienced this writing-style, and I’ve been hooked ever since. I think that’s part of the basis for why I love this character so much.

Modern Costume

At any rate, Multiple Man hung around X-Factor for about 20 more issues before he was ‘killed off’ in X-Factor #100. Though considering he has the power to create duplicates of himself, it wasn’t long before they revealed that only a duplicate had died, and that the real Madrox was just off somewhere with amnesia. He hung around X-Factor as a supporting character (a new team had been brought it to replace Madrox’s team), and was there when the book was cancelled with issue #149. After that, Madrox was once again cast into obscurity. For years, he’d show up now and again in a cameo role here and there, and I’d always make sure to snatch up the comics so I could read his rare adventures.

Then in 2005, a gift from Heaven!

Peter David, the guy who brought Madrox to prominence in X-Factor, was going to write a 5-issue Madrox mini-series. Multiple Man would get his own starring role in a comic! He and a few buddies from his X-Factor days, were going to open up a private detective business in New York City. Bliss. I devoured all five issues, and the series was fantastic! Madrox was his usual fun self, only Peter David was expanding on his humor, his personality, he was really giving Multiple Man a sense of character. No longer just a cameo character to be used however needed (usually as a one-man army), Madrox was once again a human being with real feelings, emotions and jokes! And what’s more, Peter David thought up a cool new twist to his duplicating powers: because of all those copies, Madrox could theoretically follow every path in life a person could want, simultaneously. But if he could do everything, why bother doing anything? It gave Madrox an unsure, indifferent-to-life sort of vibe, and it was fun.

That mini-series was so popular with the fans that Marvel commissioned Peter David to turn it into an entire series! Soon Madrox and his detective agency were headling a relaunched X-Factor, with a new team and new stories. And that X-Factor is still going strong today, with over 50 issues published and no sign of slowing down.

It’s a great time to be a Multiple Man fan.


2. Robin


Yep, the Boy Wonder. Even despite the green short-shorts, the pixie boots and Chris O’Donnell, I absolutely love Robin. He’s the most maligned mainstream comic book character in the world, but I’m his biggest fan. One has to take a lot of crap for liking Robin (even liking him more than Batman), but I don’t care. It’s all worth it. Despite some really horrible portrayals on TV and in movies, Robin is actually a fantastic character who brings a lot of depth and intrigue to the world of the Dark Knight.

I just wish other people would realize this.

They complete each other

I have written a lot of posts featuring Robin on this blog so far, and there are a lot more to come. I’m working on an essay/book/manifesto about all the ways that Robin is awesome and misunderstood. But I’ll save most of that for later posts. This is just about why Robin is one of my favorite comic book characters. I’ll talk more about this later (see #5), but I like the mantle of Robin moreso than any individual Robin. No matter who is behind the mask (even if I dislike them), I still like seeing Robin kicking ass in comics. He’s good as a solo hero, a member of the Teen Titans, and, of course, he’s at his very best when he’s serving as Batman’s sidekick. The sum of those two together is far better than each individual part.

But this is where the problem arises, and why I think Robin is the most maligned character in comic books. Most people, especially non-comic fans, would prefer that the dark, brooding, and badass Batman not have a kid running around in red and yellow tights. When most people think of Robin, they think of this:

The worst and best thing to ever happen to Robin

Burt Ward’s portrayal of the character in the 1960s TV show made Robin a household name, but it forever ingrained in people’s minds an image of Robin as a loserish manchild spouting silly catch phrases and always getting held hostage by the villains.  Plus there’s the whole gay thing. And yeah, even in the comics, Robin’s costume at the time was incredibly lame. Pixie boots? Bare legs? Little yellow cape? Come on! And then because it was iconic, the first Robin, Dick Grayson, wore that same exact costume in the comics well into the 80s when he was a college-aged guy. Bare legs and pixie boots for a college kid? Have mercy.

But I’m here to tell you that you have to look past the ridiculous early designs of the character (and the actors) to see Robin’s true value. It’s all about what Robin brings to the table in terms of the larger Batman landscape. Like I said, some people prefer Batman as a solo act. They want their dark knight to beat up the bad guys and hide in the shadows, and that’s fine. Batman works very well as a solo hero. But having Robin to help him out and watch his back makes Batman a much more rounder and interesting character. Robin adds depth and personality to Batman that he wouldn’t have if he was a loner. Batman goes from being a crazy vigilante on a personal crusade to having some responsibility, having someone to care about and be friends with. Not to mention just having someone to talk to in the Batcave.

It’s a mentor/student relationship, and it’s rare in the world of superheroes. Superman and Spider-Man don’t need apprentices. But Batman is only human. He could easily die any night that he goes out. With Robin, he’s training his replacement. And since Robin is apprentice to the Goddamn Batman, that makes him cool by association. Batman doesn’t trust just anybody. But he trusts Robin. To me, these are fascinating stories to work with as a superhero. Plus Robin is typically a cheerful, fun and bright character. Seeing his colorful costume in the usually dark pages of a Batman comic is a delight.

Though the main reason I’m such a fan of Robin, I think, is because I’ve always seen myself as the sidekick/partner type.

There are two kinds of men in the world: alpha males and beta males, and I am most definitely a beta male. I’m a follower, not a leader. I’m never the life of the party, but I’d like to think I’m a good friend who can be fun to have around. That’s why I’ve always identified with Robin. He’s not the star attraction, here’s there to help out and make the star look good. That’s kind of how I’ve always seen myself.  Though there’s a picture somewhere of my brother and I as little kids wearing Batman and Robin pajamas (complete with velcro capes) and he’s Robin and I’m Batman. But that’s just what happens with younger brothers. That just goes to show that a love of superheroes and the whole Batman clan has been a part of my life since childhood. So much so that I simply don’t remember how I first discovered Robin or why I first started liking him more than Batman. I just do.

Poetry in motion

There have been 5 Robins in total, not counting alternate realities or futures. The first was Dick Grayson, who worked with his parents in the flying trapeze in Haley’s Circus. His parents were killed by criminal sabotage, and Bruce Wayne was in the audience to see it. When Bruce’s parents were gunned down by a criminal in an alley, he swore he would never let another boy be orphaned by crime – yet it happened right in front of him! So he took Dick Grayson under his wing to give him a good life. Batman didn’t immediately dress him up and throw him in front of criminals and guns. Dick proved he could be useful, insisted Batman train him and designed his costume himself after his parents’ trapeze outfit.

But eventually Dick grew up, went off to college and the Batman writers stopped using him. So he had a falling out with Batman and became his own superhero, Nightwing. Good for him. Most recently, Dick took on the mantle of Batman when Bruce was believed to be dead. I really liked that. When it comes to cartoons, movies or other media, I am of the opinion that Robin should always be Dick Grayson. Concepts like Nightwing and other Robins just gets too complicated. Keep It Simple, Stupid.

The second Robin was Jason Todd. He was a street urchin who Batman caught trying to steal the wheels on the Batmobile. Since he was lonely without Dick, Batman took in Jason and made him the new Robin. But Jason wasn’t the fun, quippy daredevil that Dick was. Jason was a bit of a little jerk, and eventually he got killed by the Joker. (He eventually came back from the dead. Yay comics!) The third Robin was Tim Drake in the 90s. He was a young man with a sharp mind who had deduced that Batman was Bruce Wayne. When Jason died, Batman snapped a bit and became more ruthless in his war on crime. Tim stepped forward and tried to convince Dick to become Robin again, then everybody realized that Tim would make a good Robin. Once more, Batman reluctantly accepted a partner. Thankfully, they gave Tim a new costume.

Robin went from this…to this!

Tim Drake is the best Robin, and more on him later. One fun thing about Tim was that, for most of his career as Robin, at least one of his parents was alive. So Tim had a family to go home to at the end of the night, instead of being Bruce’s adopted son. Though eventually his dad was murdered and Tim did become Bruce’s son, but I wasn’t a fan of that. Anyway, before he died, Tim’s dad found out that his son was Robin so he demanded that Tim quit, and he did. As a replacement, Bruce chose Stephanie Brown, the amateur vigilante known as Spoiler and Tim’s girlfriend. That was a fun story, with the female Robin, but Bruce fired her after a short while when she didn’t follow his orders.  Plus using her as Robin was all a plot by Batman to get Tim back. And it worked!

Then came the time when Bruce was believed dead and Dick became Batman. At that point, Tim was kind of pushed out of the role of Robin to make way for Damian Wayne, Bruce’s biological son. One of his super-villains, Talia, used Bruce’s DNA to give herself a son. She trained Damian as a ninja and eventually introduced him to Bruce. Damian then switched sides, choosing to stay with his dad instead of going back to Talia. Then when Bruce ‘died’ and Dick stepped up as Batman, he decided to have Damian as Robin instead of Tim because Damian really really needed the guidance. Tim sort of got the shaft. It wasn’t his choice to stop being Robin. Damian started out as annoying little punk, but he’s grown a lot under Dick’s tutelage. I can actually stand him now. But starting in September, Dick is going back to Nightwing and Bruce, as Batman, will have Damian as his Robin. I don’t have high hopes for that.

Dick Grayson, Jason Todd, Tim Drake, Stephanie Brown, Damian Wayne

But even if I don’t like who’s behind the mask, I’ll never stop loving Robin. He’s the Dark Knight’s squire, and Batman is much better with Robin at his side than on his own. Pixie boots and all.


3. The Mimic


Characters don’t get much more obscure than The Mimic, and perhaps that’s part of the reason I love him. Until some big changes last year, the Mimic hadn’t appeared in more than a handful of comics since his debut in the 1960s. He’s a D-list villain from the X-Men corner of comics with the power to mimic the super powers of other heroes. It’s a fun power, but he’s always been such a minor player.

Fun Fact: Mimic was the first new member of the X-Men. Of all the dozens of characters who have been X-Men over the years, Mimic was the first one to join the team after the original five. His membership lasted three issues.

Original costume. He has retained the powers of the first five.

Unlike the first two characters on this list, I don’t really personally identify with the Mimic. He started out as an arrogant hot-head who got his super powers due to an accident in his father’s lab. When he discovered the X-Men, he first tried to fight them. He lost. Shortly thereafter, he came back and joined them instead. For three issues, he was a member of the X-Men and helped them out on some adventures – until Professor X kicked him out for his arrogance. He lost his powers and went away, having learned a lesson about his attitude.

That’s where I first met the Mimic, in his original appearances with the X-Men. My father has an extensive comic book collection, but I never got to read any of the books he has in good condition. I got to read the old beat up issues, which were torn and rarely had their covers in tact. So my love of the Mimic comes from these early issues, some of the first comics I ever read. It’s also why I have a special place in my geeky heart for the original five X-Men. That’s essentially why I love the Mimic. He was one of my earliest comic book reading experiences, with a cool power and he’s made so few appearances over the years that it’s like a game of hide and seek trying to find him in a comic.

It always helps to introduce yourself

After his brief membership with the X-Men, Mimic dropped off the grid for a few years. He popped up a few times in a few random issues. He even died when he copied the gamma radiation powers of the Incredible Hulk…only to come back to life when his corpse copied the healing powers of Wolverine. I wouldn’t know, I’ve never read those issues and only learned about them after the fact.

I re-discovered Mimic in the mid-90s, once my brother and I had started reading more and more comics on our own. I remember it like it was yesterday, in a Media Play store in some mall in Syracuse.  I was reading some comics at the rack when my dad walked up and saw the Mimic on the cover of X-Force #46. He pointed him out and I, in a fit of nostalgia for those original X-Men issues, bought the comic. It was pretty fun, revealing that Mimic had been in meditation in Siberia because his powers were out of control. He fought off X-Force, and then went on to become a bit player in the big Event Comic of the summer the Onslaught Saga.

Over the next few years, Mimic kept popping up in various issues for various reasons. He was no longer an arrogant prick. He’d become quite humble, but always managed to find himself teaming up with bad guys. He was a nice guy who kept getting stuck in bad situations. He joined a version of the Brotherhood of Mutants for awhile. I can still remember searching comic book shop back issues for all the various Mimic appearances. It really was like a game there were so few.

Then in 2010, they brought him back yet again and for a new role in the Dark X-Men.

Updated and clean-shaven

The story was Dark Reign, a company-wide Event in which one of the big bad guys in the Marvel Universe had tricked everyone into letting him be in power. He got a bunch of his super villain buddies to pose as the Avengers, making them the Dark Avengers. Then when this baddie went up against the X-Men, he formed his own team to pose as the X-Men. Mimic got plucked from obscurity to be on the Dark X-Men, and it was a blast. Mimic had been tricked just like everyone else, so he believed the baddie was a legitimate hero, and he believed he was doing good as a member of the X-Men. But once again he’d been tricked into joining a villain team.

Along with the X-Men storyline, the Dark X-Men later got their own 5-issue mini-series. Both stories explored Mimic’s character a bit more, and diagnosed him as bi-polar. So he was finally getting some much needed characterization. I really enjoyed reading him in modern adventures, with an actual starring role, even if it was brief. After the end of Dark X-Men, the big baddie was eventually figured out and defeated. The usual good guys were put back in charge and Mimic has once again disappeared into obscurity.

My fingers are definitely crossed that he’ll be back again before too long.

But until then, I have a special memento of the Mimic to enjoy. My girlfriend Alyssa managed to find a copy of his very first appearance, X-Men #19 from the 60s, and she gave it to me for Christmas! I have it bagged and framed on my wall. Am I a lucky geek or what?


4. Phil Urich, the Green Goblin/Hobgoblin


Phil is my Peter Parker. Which was probably the entire point behind his creation in the 90s, when I was just getting into comics. He was the young white guy superhero, created to appeal to the 90s youth culture just like teen-age Peter Parker, Spider-Man, was in the 60s. And it worked on me! Phil was a total slacker with a good heart. He loved video games, made pop culture references and got into superheroics mostly just for the fun of it. He was also broke, something of a loser and wasn’t very good with the ladies.

What’s not to love?

Badass and heroic!

Most people know from the movies that the Green Goblin is Norman Osborne, and is Spider-Man’s greatest foe. Well in comics back in the 90s, Norman and his son Harry had been dead for years. There was no Green Goblin anymore. So writer Tom Defalco came up with the idea that this slacker kid, Phil, would stumble upon one of Norman’s hidden hideouts where he kept a lot of his Goblin Gear. Phil found the costume, the weaponry and even one of those Goblin Gliders, like Norman had in the first movie. A combination of Goblin Serum and Electronics woven into his mask gave Phil super powers and a hypersonic laughter attack. He helped save his uncle from some hoodlums in the first issue, and then went on fighting various super villains and having adventures over the next 12 issues. It was simple stuff, written for the time, but I was hooked. And the art was amazing!

They say that every comic book is somebody’s first, and Phil Urich’s Green Goblin series was the first series I ever collected on my own. I used my own money to buy the single issues back when they were sold in supermarkets. That was back before I even knew that comics came out on Wednesdays. I just sort of lucked into finding all the issues as they came out, and then scoured the back-issue bins to get the rest. And then it wasn’t until I’d graduated college before I was able to find a copy of the final issue, #13, online. I waited years between reading #12 and #13, and it was a blast to jump back in to read Phil’s final issue. The fun was still there.

At the end of the series, Phil’s Goblin Gear was damaged beyond repair and he had to retire. His series was cancelled and he was hurled into the ether of the Marvel  Universe. He popped up now and then as a bit player in some Spider-Man comics, but that was for the most part. He had a big role in Spider-Girl, but that series took place in the future, where Phil was an adult. I wasn’t that interested.

Phil finally returned for good in a story in Runaways in the mid-00s. He was still powerless, and was trying to lead a support group for other mid-90s youthful superheroes who, like him, had found themselves cast on the wayside. It was a fun little cameo, and I loved it. The support group went on to star in their own mini-series called The Loners, and I loved that as well. But it was there that Phil began to take a turn for the worst. By the end of The Loners, he was revealed to be the villain because the Goblin Serum had turned him as crazy as it had done Norman Osborne. He fled the group is disgrace, only to return earlier this year in Amazing Spider-Man.

Badass and villainous!

Under the pen of Dan Slott, Phil was still a slacker working for his uncle at the Daily Bugle. This time, Phil took over the identity of the Hobgoblin, and became a villainous mob enforcer! But rather than get beat up and thrown in jail right off the bat, Slott is building up Phil as a longer-lasting villain. He defeated Spider-Man and got away, and is still working at the Daily Bugle without anyone being the wiser. In fact, he’s started taking pictures and video of himself as the Hobgoblin to sell to the Daily Bugle.

Sound familiar?

We’ll see where Phil’s career as the Hobgoblin goes from here. I’m excited to have him so prominently in comics again, but am saddened in a geeky way that he has to be a crazy villain. That never ends well.


5. Tim Drake


This one is a bit of a cheat, because Tim Drake was the third Robin. And like I said, I like the mantle of Robin more than any of the specific people behind the mask. However, Tim Drake is such an awesome Robin that he’s one of my favorite characters anyway.

In the shadow of the Batman

I’ve already written – at length – about why I like Robin, so we’ll skip that part here. Out of all of the Robins, Tim is the best at the job, and that’s a large part in why he’s one of my favorite characters. When reading comics about Batman and Robin, I want Tim Drake as my Robin. So goody for me that the makers of Batman: Arkham City are going to have Tim Drake as their Robin! I can’t wait for that game.

Readers were sick of Jason Todd by the late 80s. He was something of a brat. There was a contest held where readers could call a 900-number and vote to either have Todd killed in a story or have him survive. The readers voted to kill him. But the writers at DC knew that Batman needed a Robin, so they set about creating one for the 90s. Tim Drake was in his low teens (not a young kid), and he was friendly, a bit nerdy, was great with computers and had a lot of heart. Sounds like me! They designed a new, more modern costume for Robin (goodbye pixie boots!) and they started him off with some of his own books. Tim Drake was the first Robin to get his own series, starting with mini-series before leading to his own ongoing title.

My dad bought me the second mini-series in collected for, and that was one of my first direct experiences with Tim Drake. The story was about Tim’s first time protecting Gotham City solo while Batman is out of the country, and he just so happens to have to face off against the Joker. So right off the bat Tim has to prove that he has the chops to figure out the Joker’s scheme and put it to an end, all the while trying to convince both himself and everyone around him that he’s got what it takes to do this job. There are a few great scenes between Robin and Commissioner Gordon where Tim has to defend his abilities.

“They didn’t pick my name out of a hat for this,” Robin tells Gordon. I loved that scene!

So the dorky, friendly Tim Drake really struck a chord with me. Not only that, but he worked great as Batman’s partner! He wasn’t a brat, like Jason Todd, and he wasn’t butting heads with Batman like Dick Grayson. Tim served his duties as Robin wonderfully, providing the support and backup that Batman needs. He was the perfect sidekick to Batman, and that’s why I loved him. But as I said earlier, Tim got ousted from his role as Robin to make way for Damian Wayne. So what did Tim do?

He became Red Robin.

From Robin to Red Robin

The Red Robin codename originally comes from a story set in an alternate future that really has nothing to do with the normal DC universe. Then through some very complicated stories and a visit to an even different alternate reality, a version of the costume found its way back to the normal DCU and into the hands of Tim Drake. When Bruce Wayne was believed to be dead, and Dick Grayson and Damian Wayne took over as Batman and Robin, Tim was the only person in the world who believed that Bruce was still alive (and Tim was right). So since he was no longer Robin, Tim just put on the new costume and the name Red Robin. And eventually he proved his theory right and Bruce came back, but Tim was stuck as Red Robin.

I’m not a big fan of the change. Tim should have stayed Robin. Granted he’d probably achieved everything there was to achieve as Robin, and it was time for him to grow and change as a character, but as I’ve said, I liked him as Robin. Fortunately, the writers at DC found a loophole. He didn’t simply design his own new identity, like Dick did as Nightwing. Tim simply became a more adult version of Robin, keeping the name ‘Robin’ in his new identity. Then when Bruce came back as Batman, Tim has worked with him again as Red Robin. There have been a lot of fun scenes where Bruce and Tim continue their partnership from before Bruce died. It’s been fun.

But come the changes in September, Bruce is going to take Damian as his Robin. Tim will stay as Red Robin, and he’ll be transferred full-time to the Teen Titans. He will still technically be part of the Bat-verse, but his main focus will be the Titans. I suppose we’ll see how that works out.


6. The Spot


The highest-ranking, full-on super-villain on my list is possibly the dorkiest, silliest super-villain in comics. He was once on a team called the Legion of Losers (though they called themselves the Spider-Man Revenge Squad). But you can keep your Dr. Dooms, your Jokers and your Magnetos – I love the Spot. He’s just plain neat.

Take that, Spider-Man!

Check out that costume and that power! The Spot’s body is all white, with little block spots covering him. Those spots are portals. He can throw them around a room or hang them in midair. Go in one and you come out the other. He’s like a living, breathing game of Portal! And honestly, that’s where my love of the Spot comes from. He’s just neat. I suppose I like that he’s a huge dork, and something of a science nerd, but he doesn’t have much character beyond that. The Spot has made fewer appearance than the Mimic, though just like the Mimic, he recently got a modern update. They’ve made him more badass, something of a silent killer who uses his powers as an assassin. That’s pretty cool.

I had a hard time picking No. 6 on this list. I knew the top five, and their order, but I couldn’t decide on No. 6 for the longest time. The Spot was chosen on the criteria that should he appear in a comic, I try to make sure I buy it. He had a fun episode of the 90s Spider-Man cartoon show. And I even tracked down one of his earliest comic book appearance and bought that issue. He’s just a character I enjoy, moreso than other characters. Thanks to Alyssa for suggesting him as No. 6.

Honorable mentions: Stilt-Man, The Shocker, Mach V, Scorpion, the Slingers, Strong Guy, Iceman, Blob, Toad, Avalanche, Green Lantern Corps, Blue Lantern Corps, Batman, Spider-Man, Scarlet Spider, Beta Ray Bill, Silver Surfer.

6 Things I Want in a Green Lantern Sequel

First of all, there’s no guarantee that the Green Lantern movie that opened this weekend is even going to have a sequel. Word has it that it’s only going to make something in the $50 million range for the weekend, and is going to tank next weekend when it goes up against Pixar’s Cars 2. Still, I think it’s pretty clear that the filmmakers were really hoping for a sequel, and that they planned on making Sinestro the villain, possibly with the entire Sinestro Corps behind him. That’s obviously a really popular storyline (and the one that got me into Green Lantern comics), but the mythos is full different characters and concepts that fans would love to see on the big screen.

So if the Sinestro Corps is a given, here are 6 other things I would want to see in the sequel.

6. More of the Corps!

Like the Star Wars Cantina - but Green!

If you read my review of the movie, then you’ll know that my No. 1 complaint was that the Green Lantern Corps was given such a minor role. Had the filmmakers embraced the Corps throughout the film instead of focusing on just Hal whining about getting a Power Ring, the movie would have been a huge success. That’s right, I said it. The concept of an entire intergalactic police force of Green Lanterns is unique among all superheroes, both DC and Marvel! It’s so good that Marvel stole the idea and made the Nova Corps.

A sequel shouldn’t abandon Earth and Carol Ferris completely (see #2), but the majority of the film should be about Hal in space interacting with the Corps. As you can see from the picture above, there’s an actual Green Lantern cafeteria on Oa. This would be the perfect place for a scene like the famous cantina scene from Star Wars. Put some actors in super makeup to be different aliens, or just go ahead and CGI a bunch of them. Anything to show that Hal is part of a huge team who break each others chops, chitchat about the space weather and complain about the grub.

5. Mention the rest of the DC Universe – but only through Tomar Re and Krypton

You failed them all, fish-face!

Ask yourself this very geeky question: If the Green Lantern Corps are supposed to protect the universe, why didn’t they save Krypton – Superman’s home planet – from exploding? The answer is: they tried. Or at least Tomar Re did. Krypton is in Space Sector 2813, which Tomar Re mentioned in the movie as his sector. It’s right next door to Earth’s sector, 2814. And in the comics, Tomar Re was going to try and use some space minerals to siphon off some of the explosiveness that was going to destroy Krypton. He got blinded and delayed by a solar flare along the way and didn’t make it in time. Win some, lose some.

I have no idea whether or not a Justice League movie will ever get made, or if DC/Warner Bros. will do what Marvel is doing and unite all their solo hero movies into one flick. The Ryan Reynolds Green Lantern may not be the Green Lantern that appears in the Justice League movie. But minor cameos and references in the sequel would be fun. However, rather than having Superman fly by to say ‘hi’, they should be creative about it and tell the story of Tomar Re and Krypton. They could do it while eating in the cafeteria.

4. Hal should never again doubt himself

Don't let it go, fool!

They say that the second film in a trilogy has to be the darkest chapter. It worked in Empire Strikes Back. I have nothing wrong with this idea. The way they’ve done it in superhero movies is that the hero loses his powers, friends and/or faith in himself. It happened to both Peter Parker and Tony Stark. However, it should not happen to Hal Jordan. There was enough whining and wussing out in the first movie, Hal should stay confident in himself and his abilities throughout the sequel.

That’s not to say he shouldn’t lose his Power Ring. I could forsee a moment when Sinestro and his forces attack Oa and destroy the Central Power Battery. It reminds me of Matrix Revolutions when Morpheus watches the Nebuchadnezzar blow up. Hal and the Corps could lose their powers, then have to band together as ordinary people to get them back. Or maybe they’ll be stuck with what little charge remains on their rings. Either way, losing his powers should not involve losing his confidence and courage.

3. Mention the Emotional Light Spectrum

Collect them all!

But only mention them. There are 9 different colored Lanterns in the comic. Green is willpower. Yellow is fear. Pink is love. Purple is compassion. Blue is hope. Orange is greed. Red is rage. Black is death. White is life. That’s all well and good, but having too many of these Lanterns in the movie would make it too crowded and possibly confusing. They introduced will and fear in the first one, so they should introduce the others in the sequel. Let Hal and the audience know that all of these colors exist, but don’t show anyone actually using the Lanterns or the Power Rings (with one exception). Save all of that for the third movie.

2. Carol becomes Star Sapphire

Maybe with a costume change

This is that one exception.

Sinestro as the villain with his yellow, fear-based ring is a given in the sequel. They teased it during the credits. And I would say that Sinestro and his Sinestro Corps would be villain enough. However, as a subplot, Carol Ferris should be given the pink, love-based ring of the Star Sapphire. She’s probably Hal’s second most popular villain, so much so that they teased it during the opening dogfight scene. Her call sign was ‘Sapphire’ and she had the star-symbol on her flight helmet.

This would give Carol something to do in the sequel besides just being the girlfriend stuck on Earth. If a sequel focuses on the Green Lantern Corps vs. the Sinestro Corps, Carol could be a wild card. Which side will she take? Will she be evil, like in the comics, or will her love for Hal win out and she lends a hand? Perhaps one and then the other If we go with my idea of the GLC losing their powers, the Star Sapphire might be crucial in helping get those powers back. Carol and the Star Sapphire would make a great B-story.

1. Mogo!

The coolest Green Lantern of them all!

Mogo is, hands down, the coolest, most exciting Green Lantern of them all. Mogo is a sentient planet. He can think, speak, fly through space and change the shape of his continents. And he was recruited into the Green Lantern Corps! We saw all those different and weird-looking aliens in the group scene in the movie, so we know that the corps is diverse. But no member is more diverse and wild than Mogo. He will blow the minds of all those non-comic fans who go to see the Green Lantern movies and have no idea what they’re in for.

Out of everything on this list, Mogo is the one that absolutely has to happen in the sequel. The movie could start on Mogo, maybe show Hal hanging out in a lush, tropical environment. Then when he flies away from the planet, they reveal the big Green Lantern symbol and hear Mogo ‘talk’. Perhaps he could even show up to lend a hand in the finale. What better cavalry to call on than an entire planet with super powers? Mogo is an absolute must for the Green Lantern sequel!

If there is a sequel…

Honorable mention: Guy Gardner! I don’t want to see any of the other human Green Lanterns in the movies. But if they insist on expanding the cast like that in order to appease the fans, Guy Gardner should be the one and only extra Lantern they use.

The Crazy One!

In the comics, there are four human Green Lanterns. Hal Jordan was the first, and he’s eventually joined by Jon Stewart, Kyle Rayner and Guy Gardner. Each one has their own personality and origin as to how they got the ring, as well as how they use it. Each one also has their own group of fans, diehards who would love to see them on the big screen. I, however, do not want to see any of them on the big screen. I’m a HUGE proponent of the K.I.S.S. method of superhero movies: Keep It Simple Stupid.

The first Green Lantern movie messed this up. They dumped info and background and characters and concepts all over the audience. Bad idea. The filmmakers will be tempted to throw in at least one of these other human Lanterns because they are such a big deal in the comic book, and it will make some fans happy. But all it will do is take focus away from Hal Jordan and the rest of the alien members of the Corps. So I don’t think they should do it.

But if they insist, I vote for Guy Gardner.

Guy is a huge jackass. He’s insulting, insubordinate and cockier than Hal Jordan – but he’s got more heart than any of the others. Guy may be an asshole, but he’s also a serious white knight who will go to any length and make any sacrifice in the name of the good guys. You could trust Guy Gardner with your life, you’d just have to put up with his attitude (and sexual harassment, if you’re a woman).

On the screen, he’d push all of Hal Jordan’s buttons. He’d take to the ring far faster than Hal did, and prove to be a natural in a way that embarrasses Hal. He’d flirt with Carol, buddy it up with Kilowog and prove to be a real badass. Plus he’d be funny. Hal was funny in a charming way, Guy could be funny in a laugh-out-loud sort of way. And in the end, his head strong behavior and cockiness would be his undoing as he tried to take on the Sinestro Corps single-handedly. So Guy would need to turn to Hal and the rest of the Corps for help.

And with Hal and Guy as the two human Lanterns, never ever bring in Jon Stewart or Kyle Rayner! Two many Lanterns just dilutes their importance, and there’s nothing film-worthy about Jon or Kyle.

Young and Black, that is all

6 Picks from the Upcoming DC Comics Rejiggering

This September, DC Comics is going to do a company wide reboot/revamp/rejiggering in terms of their characters and continuity. They will end all of their current comics and start again with #1 issues for 52 different series. Some characters will stay the same, like Batman, while some will be given new origins and histories, like Hawkman.

I am completely in favor of this change.

I have never been a faithful follower of the DC universe. Make Mine Marvel. I am absolutely gung ho for really only one DC character (Robin), but I have no great connection to any of the others or their histories. So starting again with stream-lined or slate-cleaned continuities and characters isn’t a big deal to me. Sometimes I hate change when it comes to comic book revamps, but this time I don’t.  A big reason for that (besides Robin/Tim Drake staying mostly the same) is that this gives me a chance to pick up some books I never would in current continuity. I’ve dropped plenty of DC comics over the years, and I’d be more than happy to start reading them again with these new revamps.

So here as the 6 titles I am most looking forward to in the revamp. Later I will write about 6 titles I don’t care about.

My Picks:

Teen Titans #1

1. Teen Titans: This title will be the home of my favorite DC character, Tim Drake. When the reboot was first announced, I was hoping that Tim might be put back as Robin under Bruce as Batman. That is the ideal team for me. Give me that in a book and I will be a fan for life. Instead, they’ll be keeping Damian as Robin. As much as I love Robin, I’m just never going to be completely sold on Damian in that role. Fortunately, when Tim stopped being Robin, he became Red Robin. The name sounds like a mouthful, but at the very least he kept the word ‘Robin’ in there. Tim isn’t Dick, he doesn’t want or need to come out of Bruce’s shadow and become his own unique superhero. Tim should always be Bruce’s partner. That’s why he became Robin, that’s one of the things I like about Tim. It’s more important for him to be Robin than it is for him to be Tim Drake.

And as for people who read my previous entry, a few more interviews with the writers have pretty much confirmed that Tim’s history as Robin will remain intact.

I’m also looking forward to the new interactions with the rebooted Kid Flash, Wonder Girl and Superboy. Should be fun. Plus I so far like Red Robin’s new costume. I’m glad he ditched the Kingdom Come costume, even if this one is still based off it. The idea that he got that costume from when Jason Todd went jaunting through alternate realities, only for Todd to throw it in the trash and some other chump character to use it for awhile, was too stupid and convoluted.

Justice League #1

2. Justice League: I started reading Justice League after the One Year Later event, when Red Arrow was the newest member. I wanted to get on board with the Justice League title and be privy to all the big adventures of the main superheroes in DC. It should be the perfect book for anybody to pick up and read. It should be just straight superhero awesomeness. But somewhere along the line in that previous reboot, Justice League became the place for event tie-ins and stories that were essentially ads for other events or other series. It no longer told its own Justice League stories.

And all the major players left. Superman and Wonder Woman were busy with their own story lines and couldn’t participate, or some crap. Either way, it stopped being interesting and so I dropped it fast.

So now we’ve got this relaunched Justice League, and it stars all the big DC characters! Batman! Superman! Green Lantern! Flash! Cyborg…!? Of course they need to have some new team members to keep things spicy. And Cyborg is as good an addition to the Justice League as anybody. Plus DC has mentioned that the team will pick up other members as weeks go by. Hopefully they will be interesting characters. I don’t have any particular interest in any of these heroes (except maybe Batman and sort of Green Lantern), it’s them as a team that I’m interested in. I want some big, badass DC superhero adventures! Plus it’s written by Geoff Johns, more on him later.

Aquaman #1

3. Aquaman: I have never in my life read a single Aquaman comic book, or even a comic starring Aquaman. But darn it if I don’t love the character and his classic underdog status. Everybody hates on Aquman, it’s practically a cliche to laugh at Aquaman. That has endeared the character to me. He’s not as bad as people make him out to be. He’s telepathic, has a cool costume and is king of the seas. A lot could be done with this concept. This is the #1 book that I would have never picked up in a million years except for the fact that it’s part of this big reboot. I’m curious and interested to see where it goes without all the garbagey years of Aquaman continuity hanging over its head.

Plus the writer is Geoff Johns. I am a huge Geoff Johns fan. The man has done no wrong on the Green Lantern mythos as far as I’m concerned. I’ve never read his Flash stuff, and I think bringing back Barry Allen was dumb, but Johns has all the good will in the world as far as I’m concerned. Seeing him tackle Aquaman with a totally clean slate to play with is very enticing to me.

Unless it’s not going to be a clean slate. Johns may throw in all manner of Flashpoint or Brightest Day crapola. Then I’ll be dropping the book ASAP.

Red Hood #1

4. Red Hood and the Outlaws: Jason Todd is another one of those characters that people just hate, and for good reason. Nobody liked him back in the 80s, in fact they voted to kill him off. And since he came back in the most ridiculous way imaginable, he’s been nothing but a dead weight dangling around the neck of the Batman Family. Here was a guy trained by Batman, a former Robin, who turned into a Punisher of sorts. How is that not cool? How could DC drop the ball on him? He could have been a badass ronin super villain, the Punisher but with the flash and pizzazz of a former Robin.

He could have been somebody! Instead he was hobbled two and fro. They tried to force him into a square hole in Countdown and then just let Grant Morrison and whoever else jumble him up afterwards. He is the living embodiment of Batman’s greatest failure! He could, in theory, take Batman in a fight! He could take anybody in a fight! He’s the perfect dark foil to Batman, Nightwing and most of the Bat family.

But he’s been wasted. Hopefully that will change with this new series. Red Hood would be a great anti-hero. And teaming him up with Arsenal and Starfire is a pretty cool idea. I have no clue what Starfire is doing with them, but it’s still cool. They’ll be these rebellious young adults doing superheroics there way. I’m excited by that idea. And thankfully they ditched that stupid red cylinder helmet that Jason wore in that Grant Morrison arc of Batman & Robin. That costume was just STUPID! The red helmet and biker look is much cooler.

Suicide Squad #1

5. Suicide Squad: I am a huge fan of Gail Simone’s Secret Six. Ever since it’s marvelous debut as Villains United way back during Infinite Crisis, her team of Catman, Scandal, Deadshot, Ragdoll, et al has been brilliant. Never before have I seen a team book better capture what it’s like to be a part of a family. Their cohesion and camaraderie has been second to none. Everybody on the Interwebs loves Secret Six.

So of course it’s getting cancelled.

In its place we’re getting Suicide Squad, a revamp of a title from the 80s and 90s that was popular at the time. Secret Six was always the spiritual successor to Suicide Squad anyway. So even though Gail is no longer writing it, we already know its starring Secret Six characters Deadshot and King Shark. Plus Harley Quinn all tarted up in a new outfit. I like Harley. And I prefer her without the Joker around. She’s much more interesting as her own character than as his sycophantic love slave. She can’t rise above her status if she’s at the Joker’s side. Unless every single time she breaks free of him, which they can’t do. So letting her spread her wings is cool.

And maybe Catman will appear in the series somewhere.

New Guardians

6. New Guardians: I absolutely love everything there is to do about the New Guardians and the multi-colored Lantern Corps. Everything. I love the Blue Lanterns, the Red Lanterns, the awesomeness of Sinestro, the mystery of the Indigo Tribe and everything there is about Larfleeze. It’s a fantastic concept and DC has done a fantastic job with the characters and the concept since their introduction. So even though we didn’t get a cover about this series, and we don’t know who exactly will be in it, I’ve very excited to see.

It also stars Kyle Rayner, arguably my favorite Green Lantern. I don’t care for any of the Earth Green Lanterns. They’ve just never leaped out to me as interesting. But out of them, I’d pick Kyle as my favorite. So it’s cool that he’s going to be the GL in this series. I hope we see more Larfleeze and Sinestro and Saint Walker. While I don’t know how well they’ll be in a team dynamic, I bet they’ll be able to bounce off each other nicely.

The writer, Tony Bedard, had some success on Exiles back in the day, and I was a huge fan of Exiles. So I’m definitely excited to see what happens.

Honorable mentions: Batman, Batman & Robin, Nightwing, Catwoman, Batwoman, Wonder Woman, Green Lantern, Red Lanterns, Green Lantern Corps., and maybe Action Comics with Grant Morrison.

Here is a full list of all the 52 titles that will be released.