Lasso of Truth
Lasso of Truth | |
---|---|
Publication information | |
Publisher | DC Comics |
First appearance | Sensation Comics #6 (June 1942) |
Created by | William Moulton Marston |
In story information | |
Type | Mystic item/artifact, Weapon |
Element of stories featuring | Wonder Woman |
The Lasso of Truth is a weapon wielded by
The lariat forces anyone it captures into submission; compelling its captives to obey the wielder of the lasso and tell the truth.
Origin and influences
William Moulton Marston created Wonder Woman but he also worked, in the period before, during and after World War I, on understanding and perfecting the systolic blood-pressure test while working on his Ph.D. in psychology at Harvard University. Blood pressure was one of several elements measured in the polygraph tests that were being perfected since as far back as Italian criminologist Cesare Lombroso, in 1895. Marston's wife, psychologist and lawyer Elizabeth Holloway Marston, one of his inspirations for the Wonder Woman character, also played a key role in his lie detector research.
The lie detector however had nothing to do with Marston's creation of the Magic Lasso. Wonder Woman's Magic Lasso or Golden Lasso was the direct result of their research into emotions and was more about submission than truth.[6] Marston created the Magic Lasso as an allegory for feminine charm and the compliant effect it has on people. The idea behind feminine allure was that submission to a pleasant controller (instead of a harsh one) was more pleasant and therefore made it more likely that people would submit.[citation needed]
In a 1997 academic article, psychologist Geoffry Bunn incorrectly reinforces a correlation between the lasso and the systolic blood-pressure test:[original research?]
Anyone caught in the lasso found it impossible to lie. And because Wonder Woman used it to extract confessions and compel obedience, the golden lasso was of course nothing less than a lie detector [...] Like the lie detector upon which it was modelled, Wonder Woman's Golden Lasso produced truth—and by implication justice and freedom too—through coercion.[7]
Publication history
Pre-Crisis
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The lasso was formed from Aphrodite's girdle, which made it indestructible, and its magical properties were granted by the Goddess herself. The powers forced whoever was bound within it to obey the commands of whoever held the other end.[8] This effect could be used on larger groups of people, although this reduced its efficiency. In addition to being unbreakable, the lasso was also infinitely elastic.[9][10]
Diana coated it in special Amazon chemicals that allowed it to transform her civilian clothes into Wonder Woman's garb. Diana demonstrated a remarkable level of skill with the lasso, performing such feats as twirling it to create air currents (upon which she could float) and spinning it to emit certain frequencies that disrupted spells.[10]
Post-Crisis
In the post-Crisis,
Empowered by the fires of
The only times it has ever been shown to break was when truth itself was challenged. For example, in JLA the lasso broke when she refused to believe the confession it wrought from Rama Khan of Jarhanpur.[5] Elsewhere, when the backwards-thinking monster Bizarro was caught in Trinity, he was horrified by the very idea of truth. As the antithesis of reason and logic he was able to break the lasso.[16] The fairy tale villainess, Queen of Fables, who has the power to bring any fictional or non-true character to life, and is herself "fictional", had power over the lasso by bringing fictional characters to life and having her non-true minions break it. It is worth noting that Wonder Woman had in fact hoped to win simply by lassoing her and let its powers of truth destroy the fairy tale villain.[17]
The magic lasso has subsequently been shown to produce a wide array of effects. When battling the entity Decay, Wonder Woman used the lasso's link to
In the mini-comic enclosed with the release of the Kenner Super Powers figure of Wonder Woman, the Amazing Amazon ensnares a mind-controlled Superman with her lasso, preventing him from destroying the Washington Monument. Superman is unable to resist the powers of the lasso as Wonder Woman renders him unconscious. Later, Wonder Woman uses her lasso on Brainiac and commands the villain to release Superman from his mind control.
In later Post-
During her current tenure as writer for Wonder Woman, Gail Simone has further explored the nature of the Lasso of Truth, describing it as "a deadly weapon, that not only binds you, and follows its mistress' commands, the damned thing can see into your soul".[19]
This lasso should not be confused with the lasso of the current Wonder Girl, Cassie Sandsmark. That lasso, given to her by Ares, has the power to shock a target with Zeus' lightning if Cassandra ropes her target and becomes angry with them.[1] Donna Troy also wields a mystical lasso of her own called the Lasso of Persuasion, which has the ability to persuade anyone within its confines to do Donna's bidding if her willpower is greater than theirs.
Similarly, the character Bizarra also has a magic lasso, the difference being that her lasso forces one to tell lies.[20]
Despite Wonder Woman's lasso being mystical in origin, in
In the
In other media
In film
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Wonder Woman (2009 film)
The Lasso of Truth appears in the animated Wonder Woman film from 2009.
DC Animated Movie Universe
The Lasso of Truth appears in the
DC Extended Universe
The lasso appears in the film
It subsequently appears in the Wonder Woman, in which it is also called Lasso of Hestia. In the film, it is used for its truth-inducing abilities, but tactically, Diana uses it as a whip, and as a grappling tool, and as a shield from projectiles near the end of her battle with Ares.
In Justice League, the Lasso primarily appears in the use for truth, beginning with an interrogation of a terrorist as well as when Aquaman comes into contact with it, causing him to confess his doubts about the team's impending mission against Steppenwolf, as well as his attraction to Diana herself (a scene omitted from the director's cut). She subsequently uses on the resurrected Superman to remind him who he is.
The lasso is used the aforementioned ways when it appears in the sequel Wonder Woman 1984, as well as in Wonder Woman's experiments in self-powered flight.
It makes its return in The Flash during the opening act, being used to pull a dangling Batman back up and causing him to admit about the use of his persona and along with Flash admitting he never had sex.
Teen Titans Go! To the Movies
In the 2018 animated film Teen Titans Go! To the Movies, the Teen Titans travel back to when Wonder Woman was a child on Themyscira, where they find her practising with the Lasso of Truth. In order to prevent her from becoming a superhero, they snatch it from her and use it as a skipping rope instead, although they later travel back and return it to her after realising how much the world needs superheroes.
Superman: Red Son
Diana of Themyscira uses the Lasso of Truth in the 2020 animated film Superman: Red Son. This version of the Lasso of Truth is directly connected to her life force, and she uses it as the main source of her powers and longevity.
Space Jam: A New Legacy
The Lasso of Truth appears in the 2021 film Space Jam: A New Legacy, in which Lola Bunny uses it to rescue Bugs Bunny and LeBron James from falling into a pool of molten lava after they interrupted her test to become an Amazon warrior.
In television
Wonder Woman (TV series)
The lasso features in the 1970s live-action Wonder Woman series. In season one the lasso had the power to compel those bound to tell the truth. Beginning with the second season, it also had the power to cause selective amnesia. The lasso appeared to be able to expand and contract, as in the comic books; instead of being a cord of several links at her waist, it is indefinitely longer and sturdier when used to lasso people or being thrown. In season two, with the updated costume, the lasso is even shorter and more like fabric, and only about twenty feet long, unless used to lasso a person or object. It was significantly longer and heavier when in use.
Super Friends/Super Powers Team
In the
On The Super Powers Team: Galactic Guardians, in the episode "The Fear", Wonder Woman suggests using the lasso to get a confession out of one of Scarecrow's victims, though Professor Jonathan Crane (out of costume) warns her against it for fear of trauma.
DC Animated Universe
In the Justice League animated series, the lasso is only used as an exceptionally long, flexible, and unbreakable rope. In Justice League Unlimited however, Wonder Woman's lasso was officially portrayed as being able to compel the truth. This ability was finally unleashed in the episode "The Balance" by Wonder Woman's mother Queen Hippolyta who revealed that Diana had stolen the uniform before being told of its full capabilities. Upon touching the star on the tiara, various parts of the Wonder Woman costume began to temporarily glow such as the tiara, bracelets, belt and lasso. It was after this that Diana discovered that the lasso could compel truth. Diana only used the truth powers of the lasso once, on the demon Abnegazar to learn the location of Felix Faust, an event that occurred in the same episode.
Justice League Action
Wonder Woman wields the Lasso of Truth in the animated series Justice League Action.
DC Super Hero Girls
Wonder Woman also wields the Lasso of Truth in the animated series DC Super Hero Girls.
In video games
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Justice League Heroes
The Lasso features as part of Wonder Woman's arsenal in Justice League Heroes, most notably when Wonder Woman interrogates Darkseid to learn how they can defeat him after the main plot of the game is revealed to have been Darkseid manipulating Brainiac to ensure his own resurrection.
Mortal Kombat vs. DC Universe
In Mortal Kombat vs. DC Universe, Wonder Woman wields the Lasso of Truth. She also uses it to perform her two finishing moves.
DC Universe Online
The Lasso of Truth appears in the game DC Universe Online.
Injustice: Gods Among Us
The Lasso was used in the Injustice: Gods Among Us video game.
Infinite Crisis
Wonder Woman wields the Lasso of Truth in combat in the multiplayer online battle arena game Infinite Crisis.
Fortnite
In Fortnite, the playable Wonder Woman skin has the Lasso of Truth attached to her waist.
Justice League: Cosmic Chaos
Wonder Woman wields the Lasso of Truth in Justice League: Cosmic Chaos.
MultiVersus
In MultiVersus, Wonder Woman wields the Lasso of Truth, and she also uses it to pull her opponents closer to her.
Footnotes
- ^ OCLC 213309017.
- ^ The Legend of Wonder Woman: the comic a legendary hero deserves - Vox.com
- ^ Michael L. Fleisher, Janet E. Lincoln, The Encyclopedia of Comic Book Heroes: Wonder Woman, Collier Books, 1976, p. 210.
- ^ Wonder Woman's Movie Powers & Abilities Explained - ComicBook.com
- ^ a b Joe Kelly (w), Doug Mahnke (p), Tom Nguyen (i), David Baron (col), Ken Lopez (let). "Golden Perfect, Part 1 of 3" JLA, no. 62 (March 2002). DC Comics.
- ISBN 9780309084369. Retrieved 2010-09-17.
- S2CID 143152325.
- ^ Sensation Comics (vol. 6)
- ^ The Flash (vol. 2) #219
- ^ a b Content in this section was copied from Lasso of Truth at the DC Wiki, which is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 (Unported) (CC-BY-SA 3.0) license.
- ISBN 978-0345501073.
- .
- . Marston is credited under his pseudonym Charles Marston.
- ). "Wish Upon a Star!" Wonder Woman, no. 214 (October–November 1974). DC Comics.Wonder Woman #214
- ^ Wonder Woman #1
- ^ Batman/Superman/Wonder Woman: Trinity
- ^ JLA #47-48
- ^ Greg Rucka (w), Nicola Scott (p), Prentis Rollins; Jonathan Glapion; Walden Wong; Drew Geraci (i), Nei Ruffino (col), Travis Lanham (let). "Part One: The Living" Blackest Night: Wonder Woman, no. 1 (February 2010). DC Comics.
- ^ "Gail Simone: The Rise of the Olympian, the Fall of Wonder Woman". Newsarama.com. Retrieved 2010-09-17.
- ^ Geoff Johns; Richard Donner (w), Eric Powell (p), Eric Powell (i), Dave Stewart (col), Rob Leigh; Nick Napolitan (let). "Escape from Bizarro World Chapter 3" Action Comics, no. 857 (October 2007). DC Comics.
- ^ Batman (vol. 2) #35
References
- Brown, Matthew J. / "Love Slaves and Wonder Women":/ "Radical Feminism and Social Reform in the Psychology of William Moulton Marston", (Uncopyrighted scholarly report) (2016): pp 1–39.
- Bunn, Geoffrey C. "The Lie Detector, Wonder Woman and Liberty:The Life and Works of William Moulton Marston", History of the Human Sciences, 10 (1997): pp 91–119.
- Jett, Brett. "Who Is Wonder Woman?", (Manuscript) (2009): pp 1–101.
- Jett, Brett. "Who Is WW?: Magic Lasso", (Article) (2015).
- Lamb, Marguerite. "Who Was Wonder Woman? Long-ago LAW alumna Elizabeth Marston was the muse who gave us a superheroine". Boston University Alumni Magazine, Fall 2001.
- Lepore, Jill. The Secret History of Wonder Woman, New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2014, ISBN 9780385354042
- Moore, Mark Harrison. The Polygraph and Lie Detection. Committee to Review the Scientific Evidence on the Polygraph (National Research Council (U.S.)), 2003.
- Richard, Olive. "Our Women Are Our Future" (Article), Family Circle, 14 August 1942.
- Valcour, Francinne. OCLC 229447837Manipulating the Messenger: Wonder Woman as an American Female Icon (Dissertation) (2006): 1–372.