Doctor Polaris
Doctor Polaris is an alias used by two supervillains appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics.[1]
Publication history
Created by John Broome and Gil Kane, the first Doctor Polaris, Neal Emerson, made his first appearance in Green Lantern #21 (August 1963).[2]
The second Dr. Polaris, John Nichol, first appeared off-panel in
Fictional character biography
Neal Emerson
Doctor Polaris | |
---|---|
New Earth | |
Team affiliations | Cadre Secret Society of Super Villains Black Lantern Corps Suicide Squad |
Notable aliases | Baxter Timmons Butcher of the Board Room Repulse |
Abilities | (Both):
(Emerson):
(Nichol):
|
Neal Emerson and his brother John were raised by an abusive father (although a later flashback shows him raised by an abusive aunt). This apparently drove Neal Emerson within himself and led to the creation of the personification of his own dark side.
As a medical student, Neal Emerson develops a fanatical interest in
After time Emerson came to believe he had absorbed too much magnetic energy, and unsuccessfully tries to drain off the excess energy. In desperation, Emerson tries to make a public appeal at a charity event to
Doctor Polaris apparently returns to battle Green Lantern and the
Doctor Polaris was later released from imprisonment during one of his "good" periods. He attempted to discover the source of Green Lantern's power by kidnapping his friend,
What Doctor Polaris did not know was that Green Lantern was taken to Oa, home of the Guardians of the Universe, the masters of the Green Lantern Corps. Due to the magnetic effect of Polaris' weapon, they believed Jordan was dead. To complicate matters further, Jordan was taken into the 58th Century where he battled a threat to the Earth in the fictional identity of Pol Manning. Returning to the 20th Century, Green Lantern defeated Polaris. After reviving him, Jordan revealed to Kalmaku the "good" nature of Neal Emerson had lessened the effect of Doctor Polaris' weapon, thereby saving the ring wielder.
A reformed Emerson traveled to the Earth's magnetic North Pole to study it. Emerson was at the point where the lines of magnetic force converge when an earthquake plunged him into a deep crevice. At the bottom of the crevice lay a glowing blue blob. The radiation from the blob altered Emerson's perceptions, allowing him to understand the blob's intentions to dehydrate the entire Earth. Emerson was able to subconsciously influence Hal Jordan into becoming Green Lantern, but was unable to bring the Lantern to the North Pole. In desperation, Emerson created a mental duplicate of his evil alter ego. Doctor Polaris took advantage of the situation and attacked Green Lantern by blocking his power battery with a magnetic barrier. Doctor Polaris flew into Earth's orbit to increase the solar radiation reaching the planet. As he left the Earth's magnetic field, the barrier around the power ring faded, allowing Green Lantern to recover. Green Lantern managed to use micrometeorites to form an iron mask around Polaris' head, blocking off his vision. Back on Earth, Emerson was able to use telepathy to warn Green Lantern of the alien threat. Once Green Lantern disintegrated the blob, the mental image of the evil Doctor Polaris faded away.
Years later, Emerson's dark side returns. Returning to his old costume, Polaris takes the name of Baxter Timmons and moves to Metropolis' Suicide Slum, where he steals advanced technology from warehouses throughout the city. Polaris integrates the new magnetic circuits into his costume, as part of an attempt to gain revenge on Green Lantern. Polaris' plans are stopped through the efforts of the superhero Black Lightning.
Over the years, the Polaris and Emerson personalities fought for dominance, until Polaris was approached by the demon
Polaris later attacks Steel in Washington D.C., seeking a weapon called the Annihilator that Steel had built. During the battle, Steel's grandmother attacks Polaris and is killed. Polaris is driven away after the Parasite attacks him. Afraid of absorbing Polaris's mind and not just his power, Parasite lets him go before killing him. Polaris flees to Keystone City.[6]
Some time after that, Polaris shows up at Poseidonis in an attempt to seize control of the city, prompting a battle against
Under unknown circumstances, the catatonic Polaris ends up being held in
In 2001, Polaris emerges during the Joker's "Last Laugh" crisis attempting to take control of the magnetic south pole itself, forcing a battle against the Justice League where the League only just manage to defeat him thanks to the actions of Plastic Man (the only League member with no metal on him whatsoever). At the end of Last Laugh, the Slab metahuman prison is moved to Antarctica, as Polaris now is the magnetic pole and cannot be moved.
Shortly thereafter, Polaris appears in San Francisco, allied with the villainous
Shortly before the "Infinite Crisis" storyline, Dr. Polaris appears in Metropolis, seeking Superman's help in battling a more powerful and ruthless magnetism manipulator who calls herself Repulse. It eventually transpires that this is a new manifestation of his personality disorder; Polaris is hallucinating Repulse (who looks like the aunt who hated him), and performs her actions himself. Eventually, Superman forces him to accept she is not real.
After recovering from this breakdown, Polaris is recruited by Lex Luthor's Secret Society of Super Villains in "Villains United". Dr. Polaris is one of the villains waiting to ambush the Freedom Fighters in a warehouse south of Metropolis in the beginning of Infinite Crisis. When Phantom Lady is impaled by Deathstroke, the Human Bomb becomes enraged. After Dr. Polaris taunts the Human Bomb, he is blown into pieces by the Human Bomb's explosive rage.[3][10]
During the "Blackest Night" storyline, Emerson has been identified as one of the deceased entombed below the Hall of Justice.
Neal Emerson appears in the "DC Rebirth". He first appears as part of Max Lord's supervillain team trying to kill Amanda Waller.[11] He is revealed to have been part of Waller's original Suicide Squad.[12]
John Nichol
A new Doctor Polaris is mentioned, having fought League members
During the "Final Crisis" storyline, the new Doctor Polaris can be seen among the recruits of Libra's new Secret Society.[15]
It is revealed that businessman and
This Doctor Polaris was also among the villains in the ambush of the JSA led by Tapeworm.[17]
During the "Blackest Night" storyline, Nichol is reported to have been killed by the Black Lantern version of Emerson during a conversation between Calculator and Lex Luthor. The kill is said to be verified by Cheetah and Calculator noting that Nichol was the only real source of information he had on the new Blue Beetle.[18]
Powers and abilities
Both versions of Doctor Polaris possess the power to generate and channel electromagnetism naturally or artificially. They can lift/move heavy metallic objects, control ferrous particles in the atmosphere, alter Earth's electromagnetic field, levitate/fly at subsonic speeds, and project forms of energy related to magnetism. They are able to manipulate the metals deep in the Earth to create earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, or other disasters. They can also sense metals around them, determine on the distance.[19]
The Neal Emerson version of Doctor Polaris is strong enough to bring the Justice League Watchtower down on Earth or overwhelm constructs created by Green Lantern Power Rings via metals. He was shown to have lost his powers from extreme heat exposure. As Emerson, he has extensive knowledge of
The John Nichol version of Doctor Polaris had all his predecessor's powers and more, such as the ability to create localized magnetic storms in people's brains, thus killing them instantly.
In other media
- The Neal Emerson incarnation of Doctor Polaris appears in Justice League Unlimited, voiced by an uncredited Michael Rosenbaum. This version is a member of Gorilla Grodd's Secret Society who received augmented powers from Lex Luthor, who also included fail-safes to override the latter's powers and prevent him from betraying the former.
- An unidentified Doctor Polaris appears in Batman: The Brave and the Bold, voiced by Lex Lang. Additionally, an unnamed, heroic, alternate universe counterpart makes a non-speaking appearance in the episode "Deep Cover for Batman!".
- An unidentified Doctor Polaris appears in the "Thunder and Lightning" segments of DC Nation Shorts.
References
- ISBN 978-1-4654-5357-0.
- ISBN 978-1605490458.
- ^ OCLC 213309017
- ISBN 0-8160-1356-X.
- ISBN 978-1-4654-8578-6.
- ^ Steel vol. 2 #29. DC Comics.
- ^ Green Lantern vol. 3 #96
- ^ Green Arrow vol. 2 #130
- ^ The Flash vol. 2 #135
- ^ Johns, Geoff (w), Jimenez, Phil (p), Lanning, Andy (i). "Infinite Crisis" Infinite Crisis, vol. 1, no. 1 (December 2005). New York, NY: DC Comics.
- ^ Williamson, Joshua (w), Fabok, Jason (p), Fabok, Jason (i). "Justice League vs. Suicide Squad" Justice League vs. Suicide Squad, vol. 1, no. 1 (February 2017). New York, NY: DC Comics.
- ^ Williams, Rob, Spurrier, Simon (w), Rossmo, Riley (p), Rossmo, Riley (i). "The First and Last Mission of Suicide Zero" Suicide Squad, vol. 5, no. 9 (March 2017). New York, NY: DC Comics.
- Justice League of Americavol. 2 #11. DC Comics.
- ^ Justice League of America vol. 2 #17. DC Comics.
- ^ Justice League of America vol. 2 #21. DC Comics.
- ^ Blue Beetle vol. 7 #32 (December 2008). DC Comics.
- ^ Willingham, Bill, Sturges, Lilah (w), Merino, Jesús (p), Merino, Jesús (i). "Bad Seed, Part One: Fresh Meat" Justice Society of America, vol. 3, no. 29 (September 2009). New York, NY: DC Comics.
- ^ Blackest Night #4, DC Comics.
- ^ Who's Who: The Definitive Directory of the DC Universe Vol 1 #6 (August 1985)
- ^ Green Lantern Vol 2 #21 (June 1963)
- ^ Sturges, Lilah (w), Coelho, Andre (p), Coelho, Andre (i). "Boundaries (Part IV) – Backstory" Blue Beetle, vol. 7, no. 32 (December 2008). New York, NY: DC Comics.