Blue Devil (DC Comics)

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Blue Devil
Fury of Firestorm #24 (June 1984)
Created byDan Mishkin (character)
Gary Cohn (character and visual)
Paris Cullins (belt design)
In-story information
Full nameDaniel Patrick Cassidy
Team affiliationsShadowpact
Justice League America
Sentinels of Magic
Justice League Dark
Justice League
Abilities
  • Superhuman strength, durability, agility, and senses
  • Enhanced vision and hearing
  • Master martial artist and hand-to-hand combatant
  • Expert acrobat
  • Nigh-invulnerability
  • Healing factor
  • Utilizes the Trident of Lucifer
  • Can find demons on Earth and banish them to Hell
Blue Devil
Blue Devil #1 (June 1984), cover art by Paris Cullins.
Publication information
PublisherDC Comics
Schedulemonthly
FormatOngoing series
Genre
Publication dateJune 1984 – Dec. 1986
No. of issues31 issues & 1 annual
Main character(s)Daniel Cassidy

Blue Devil (Daniel Cassidy) is a

American comic books published by DC Comics. He first appeared in a special insert published in Fury of Firestorm #24 (June 1984).[1] That story led directly into Blue Devil #1, also cover dated June 1984.[2] He was created by Dan Mishkin, Gary Cohn, and Paris Cullins. The Blue Devil comic book ran for 31 issues and one annual. Blue Devil later appeared as a regular character in Shadowpact
which ran for 25 issues.

Dan Cassidy was working as a

Neron
. Regretting the deal, Blue Devil decided to fight occult evil, often alongside the other members of Shadowpact.

Cassidy's original trident was a mechanical device that he designed himself, but, after being turned into an actual demon, he acquired the magical "Trident of Lucifer" to help combat demons.

Blue Devil has appeared in the animated series Justice League Unlimited and Young Justice as well as the live-action DC Universe series Swamp Thing, in which he was portrayed by Ian Ziering.

Concept and creation

the Thing, the tragedy of the guy stuck in a shape he didn't want; and a light-hearted, bouncy approach and a character who was going to move like Spider-Man. ... And we wanted something like the Green Goblin. How about Blue Devil? We called him that because Dan's wife is from North Carolina and he was a Blue Devils fan. Then we started creating Blue Devil and thinking, "Ditko is going to love this!" We created this great proposal, and it was everything that we knew was going to set Ditko's light on high beam. We took it in to Manak and he gave it to Ditko. Ditko looked at it and said, "I'll do it if I have to, but this is really not my kind of stuff at all".[4]

However, Manak liked the proposal and suggested that they show it to artist Paris Cullins. Cullins was immediately enthusiastic, and Blue Devil was given his own series.[4]

Blue Devil's costume and general visual appearance were chiefly designed by Cohn; Cullins came up with the belt design.[4]

Publication history

Co-writer Gary Cohn recounted that "the first six issues [of Blue Devil], I was living in

writing a plot and giving it to an artist. It was a very organic collaboration".[4] Following issue #6, Cullins left the series, and both Mishkin and Cohn felt that none of the succeeding artists were able to capture the combination of thrills and comedy that they wanted the series to have.[4]

The first Blue Devil series was intentionally written as a humorous and light-hearted comic book story, but this light-hearted style was discarded with later appearances of the character.[citation needed]

Fictional character biography

Daniel Patrick Cassidy is a special effects wizard and stuntman hired to create and play the title character in the movie Blue Devil. To that end Cassidy creates a full-body costume with a hidden powered exoskeleton and built-in special-effects devices. When two of his co-stars accidentally free a demon named Nebiros, Cassidy uses his costume to drive the demon back, but not before being blasted with mystical energy. After the fight, Cassidy finds that the blast has permanently grafted the Blue Devil costume to his body.[5]

Cassidy quickly finds himself embroiled in repeated adventures and conflicts with

Kid Devil. Eventually, he moves into "The House of Weirdness" with Cain the Caretaker as his superintendent.[7]

Blue Demon and later alliances

Seeking more fame and thrills,

Neron, who is known for offering Faustian bargains to heroes and villains alike. Neron offers Cassidy fame as an actor, requiring an act of destruction as payment. Neron sends Cassidy to destroy an unmanned electrical substation in the desert. Believing it to be a relatively harmless act, having checked that nobody was working that night and a relay station would kick in to carry the load, Blue Devil complies and inadvertently causes the death of Marla Bloom, the aunt of Cassidy's best friend Eddie, as the resulting power outage in other electrical towers causes a crash that kills Marla. The story of his personal loss is enough to attract several movie offers.[8]

Opposing Neron, Cassidy is able to partly foil the demon's short-term plans, but he dies in the process. Cassidy's death is short-lived, as he is restored to life as a real devil, no longer a man in an organic suit. Ironically, Cassidy had been a devout

Catholic
, but now is unable to set foot on consecrated ground without harmfully bursting into flame.

Blue Devil joins the Justice League again, until his second death at the hands of

Firestorm to deal the killing blow; back on Earth, the other heroes of the Sentinels of Magic
save the world.

Blue Devil then joins the Sentinels of Magic and becomes Faust's partner, but it is an uneasy partnership. In an apparent act of kindness, Faust restores Blue Devil's freedom by restoring to him his last missing bone. Blue Devil sacrifices his life fighting Hermes Trismegistus, but as a true devil he returns to life again. He is tasked to roam the Earth with Lucifer's Trident sending escaped demons back to Hell.

One Year Later

Ragman, Enchantress, and Detective Chimp to fight against The Spectre in Day of Vengeance. With his enhanced demonic strength, he is the heavy hitter of the Shadowpact, the assemblage of magical heroes devoted to fight for every "lost cause". This grouping is even able to wound the powerful Eclipso. Feeling necessary for the first time in a long time, he devotes himself to the team. One of their goals is to help look over the wild magic of the "Tenth Age", a direct result of the events of Day of Vengeance.[2]

He spends the "missing year" trapped in Riverrock, Wyoming along with the rest of Shadowpact. It is a small city hidden by a blood shield by an assembly of evil magical beings called the Pentacle. There he meets, or rather meets again, Jack of Fire, a red, muscular demon. The entity is hiding a disfigured, bony face under a black bandanna, claiming to have been turned into a demon by the actions of Daniel. He further explains that the very same moment the demonic

Neron
granted fame and powers to Cassidy as Blue Devil, the dead parents and siblings of Patrick were dragged from Heaven to Hell.

From then on, Blue Devil's life starts going downhill: even if in his personal timeline only a few days passed, the Enchantress was forced to steal a year of life out of every Shadowpact member (and surviving Riverrock townsperson) to shatter the bloody barrier. As such, the entire world had long thought Shadowpact lost, even building a memorial statue. Having been considered dead for a year, Blue Devil struggles to rebuild his life.

Blue Devil is forced to confront Kid Devil, now granted metahuman powers by Neron himself. When questioned about his involvement in Marla's death, Blue Devil is forced to admit that his actions were what caused her death. Due to the terms of his deal with Neron, that he would become Neron's eternal servant on his 20th birthday should he lose his trust in Blue Devil, Kid Devil realizes that he is now damned, having lost all trust in Blue Devil following his confession. Kid Devil, enraged, yells at Blue Devil to stay away from him and runs off, leaving a guilt-ridden Blue Devil behind.

To add further misery to his condition, Blue Devil is demoted to the rank of a Rhyming Demon. His new position results in the heroic Earth-based angel Zauriel being sent to confront him.[10] His demotion is explained as the paradoxical condition of his being both a hero and a demon: being famous and loved by everyone, he makes Hell a glamorous place, spurring weak minds to attain his glamour by selling their souls to Hell. Zauriel, on behalf of his good faith, takes Blue Devil's place in the Shadowpact, giving him enough time to get out of his infernal deal.

Blue Devil puts his case in the hands of an eager lawyer, more than happy to be able to confront Hell itself in a hall of justice. Blue Devil undertakes the task of completing 13 labors, as Hercules before him, on behalf of the Catholic Church as a show of good will.

Returning to Hell for the final hearing, he discovers that Jack of Fire was the one selling his sibling's soul first, with Blue Devil merely following unwillingly. His lawyer repeatedly proves that Jack is the only one who can return Cassidy's soul, and the souls of his family, back, since he was the one who sold them in the first place. Blue Devil uses his new lower status as a Rhyming Demon to force Jack to do so, but in the process he loses both Lucifer's Trident and his demon form, reverting into a mortal.[11]

Jack of Fire is now allied with a seemingly all-powerful Sun God, but plots to betray him in retaliation for his harsh treatment and to lead an army of demons on Earth. Cassidy feels forced to don a new suit of armor, very similar to the one he wore during his Hollywood years, but even more powerful. He sets off to fight his brother, who refuses. Instead, after a brief confrontation, acknowledging that the Sun God will eventually kill him for his betrayal, he commits suicide in front of Cassidy, naming him inheritor of all his powers and demonic status - but without forfeiting his soul. Cassidy rejoins the Shadowpact to defeat the Sun God, and Zauriel ends his temporary membership with the group.

During the

Etrigan
, who is causing damage to Satanus' forces; Satanus takes heed of this and teleports him to do battle with Etrigan. Upon losing, Etrigan steals the remains of his humanity.

Later, due to the effects of the magical drug Satanus has released all over Hell, he is transformed into a human, but soulless.

Jason Blood, offers him his soul back, warning him the drug only worked on pureblood demons such as the type he had been transformed into when Etrigan stole his soul, meaning accepting it back meant returning to his demon shape forever. He is later traumatized by Sargon's sacrifice to let almost all heroes intervening in the War of Hell escape to Nanda Parbat
and is later the only one convinced of reuniting the Shadowpact by Detective Chimp.

He appears with

Deadman remove the black ring from his body. Blue Devil is then tasked by the Stranger to protect the body, being told that it is of "singular importance".[13]

The New 52

In The New 52 rebooted DC's continuity, Blue Devil is reintroduced when he breaks up a drug deal and runs into Black Lightning, who is also there to bust the deal. They both state that they are trying to take down crime lord Tobias Whale, but Black Lightning does not believe Blue Devil. A fight ensues, but Blue Devil quickly gets the better of Black Lightning and tries to make him listen, when he is interrupted by the LAPD, who are ready to open fire. Black Lightning takes that opportunity to run off and Blue Devil manages to escape as well.[14]

During the Forever Evil storyline, Blue Devil is among the magic users that were captured by Felix Faust and Nick Necro to use them as part of a weapon that would defeat the creature that destroyed the Crime Syndicate's Earth.[15]

Powers and abilities

Even before he became Blue Devil, Dan Cassidy was a highly trained martial artist and acrobat. His costume included kevlar body armor, visual and auditory amplifiers, radio gear, mini-gills allowing underwater breathing, and servo-motors which increased his strength at least twentyfold. After being grafted to Cassidy's body the costume became organic and gained the ability to self-repair at an extremely fast rate. Cassidy's abilities seem to have been changed little by his transformation into an actual demon.

In his current incarnation, Blue Devil still possesses some degree of superhuman strength, capable of going toe-to-toe with beings like Eclipso, and knocking out a power-drunk Enchantress in one punch. He is also remarkably resistant to physical damage, evidenced when Eclipso threw him a distance of approximately 500 feet upwards, he did not even require time to recover before getting up and heading back into the fight.

Originally, Blue Devil wielded a trident of his own design which included, among other things, rocket engines capable of carrying two people at high speeds. He now carries the Trident of Lucifer, which allows him to find demons on Earth and banish them to Hell. During a battle with Eclipso and the Spectre the trident was thrown into the ocean; it was recovered shortly after by Aquaman who returned it to Cassidy, and much later given to Jack of Fire.

Briefly resuming his human body with a more powerful exosuit, Cassidy is given back his trident and demonic powers by Jack of Fire, but as a "demon with a soul".

Dan's apartment in Metropolis connects to California via a closet that opens into Cain's House of Mystery. By crossing through the house, he can travel from the East Coast to the West Coast in moments.

Other versions

Kingdom Come

In Kingdom Come, there is a background character named Blue Devil II, an indigo demon who was visually based on the demon Chernabog from the Disney film Fantasia.

Tangent Comics

In the 1997 Tangent Comics one-shot Sea Devils Blue Devil lends his name to the brand of beer served at The Black Pirate pub in New Atlantis. There is also a patron of the pub seen wearing a Blue Devil T-shirt.

Future's End

In other media

Television

Blue Devil as he appears in Justice League Unlimited.

Film

Miscellaneous

  • Blue Devil appears in Teen Titans Go! #23.
  • Blue Devil appears in issue #25 of the Justice League Unlimited tie-in comic book series.

Merchandise

Blue Devil received a figure in the DC Universe Classics line.

References

  1. . [A] sixteen-page preview story marked the debut of fledgling stuntman-turned-hero Blue Devil. An attempt to put the fun back into comics, writers Gary Cohn and Dan Mishkin and penciller Paris Cullins had Blue Devil face the machinations of Flash villain the Trickster in this lead-in to his own ongoing series.
  2. ^
  3. .
  4. ^ a b c d e Johnson, Dan (April 2007). "The Blue Devil You Don't Know". Back Issue! (21). TwoMorrows Publishing: 28–32.
  5. ^ Blue Devil #1 (June 1984). DC Comics.
  6. ^ Markstein, Don. "Blue Devil". Don Markstein's Toonopedia. Retrieved April 2, 2020.
  7. ^ Blue Devil #20 (January 1986). DC Comics.
  8. ^ Underworld Unleashed (1995). DC Comics
  9. ^ Starman (vol. 2) #38 (January 1998). DC Comics.
  10. ^ Shadowpact #13 (March 2007). DC Comics.
  11. ^ Shadowpact #23 (May 2008). DC Comics.
  12. ^ Blackest Night #2 (October 2009). DC Comics.
  13. ^ Phantom Stranger (vol. 2) #42 (March 2010). DC Comics.
  14. ^ DC Universe Presents #13. DC Comics.
  15. ^ Constantine #11. DC Comics.
  16. ^ Kit, Borys (December 11, 2018). "'Swamp Thing': Ian Ziering Joins the Cast as DC Hero Blue Devil". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved December 11, 2018.
  17. ^ Harvey, James (January 6, 2024). "Check out a selection of images provided by Warner Bros. Discovery Home Entertainment from the upcoming "Justice League: Crisis on Infinite Earths, Part One." The animated movie arrives Jan. 9, 2024 on digital and Jan. 23 on physical". Twitter. Retrieved January 7, 2024.

External links