Turtle (comics)
The Turtle | |
---|---|
Publication information | |
All Flash #21 (Winter 1945) | |
Created by | Gardner Fox Martin Naydel |
In-story information | |
Alter ego | Unknown Jai West |
Team affiliations | (Unknown) Secret Society of Super Villains Legion of Doom Legion of Zoom |
The Turtle is the name of two
.Two versions of the Turtle made their live action debut on The Flash, portrayed by Aaron Douglas and Vanessa Walsh.
Publication history
The first Turtle appears in
The second Turtle (the Turtle Man) appears in Showcase #4 and was created by Robert Kanigher and Carmine Infantino.
Fictional character biography
Turtle (Golden Age)
The original Turtle is a 1940s villain who uses tricks of slowness in battle with the Golden Age Flash (Jay Garrick). His main weapon is slow, deliberate planning. After a few clashes with the Flash, the Turtle fades from the public scene.[2]
Years later, the Turtle Man carries on his legacy. After the debut of the third Flash (
Turtle Man (Silver Age)
The Turtle Man (sometimes simply calling himself "the Turtle") is the first gimmicked Rogue fought by the second Flash (
Later, the Turtle Man reappears again, seemingly cured from his severe injuries and having developed the ability to 'steal' speed, slowing down others around him to a crawl no matter how fast they were moving.
During the Infinite Crisis, the Turtle Man is part of the Secret Society of Super Villains led by Alexander Luthor Jr. (posing as Lex Luthor), using his speed-stealing abilities to negate the power of speedsters and thus make it harder for the heroes to track the Society.[4]
Still Force entity
In Scott Snyder's Justice League series, the Turtle is revised as believing in an opposing energy to the Speed Force, known as the "Still Force". Each time he accessed this power, it aged him. Now a hatchling (described as "the fourth generation of his line"), he is finally attuned to the Still Force, and grants Gorilla Grodd (now a member of Lex Luthor's Legion of Doom) total control of it to combat the Flash.[5] His origin was elaborated on with growing up in an abusive household, but this didn't stop his intellect from shining. The boy graduated from school far earlier then any of his classmates and quickly became a leading scientist. One day he met a woman and fell in love. The boy married this woman and had two children: a boy and a girl. The scientist spent most of his time with his family, slowing down his scientific advancements and allowing his peers to surpass him.[6]
Growing jealous of his peers, the scientist began experimenting with a mysterious energy force that he believed kept the universe moving forward. In his jealousy, the scientist rushed the experiments, hoping to prove his genius again. His experiment quickly meandered out of control and the scientist was caught in an explosion. The explosion accelerated the scientist's age, giving him the body of a feeble old man. Furthermore his movement was slowed and he stopped aging physically or mentally. His family helped him through the recovery process and soon enough he could once again move like his old self, however he still kept the appearance of an old man.
He experimented with this energy force for decades, discovering he could negate any form of motion, including the progression of life. Eventually he became disillusioned with human life as he knew that he would outlive everyone he loved, this led him to kill his family with his powers as he saw them as a needless distraction from his work. Eventually he began going by the name "Turtle", most likely because of the motion negating powers he now possessed.
Jai West
In the pages of Flash Forward, Jai West is a manifestation of Wally West's fear of not being able to see his family again that was born in the Dark Multiverse. He is the twin brother of Irey West and was emigrated to Earth 0 by Wally.[7]
In the Watchmen sequel Doomsday Clock, Doctor Manhattan's vision of a possible future says that Jai will become a superhero called the Turtle.[8]
Powers and abilities
The Turtle Man wears a device that enables him to project a force field which can stop bullets. His shell is also body armor which can expand to cover his head and also has some jets in it. The Turtle Man also has a ray device that he uses to make people move slower, as well as a laser gun that causes the optic nerves of a person to see everything moving faster than they are.
Other characters named the Turtle
There have been other villains who called themselves the Turtle:
- The Turtle is a gangster who fought Robotman.[9]
- The Turtle is a criminal who faced off against the Speedy. He is a channel pirate who operates out of a glass structure and uses a submarine and his gang to commit crimes.[10]
In other media
Television
- The Turtle makes a cameo appearance in the Justice League Unlimited episode "Flash and Substance".
- Two original incarnations of the Turtle appear in The Flash:
- The first Turtle appears in the episode "Potential Energy", portrayed by Zoom's orders.
- A female incarnation of the Turtle appears in the episode "Death of the Speed Force", portrayed by Vanessa Walsh. This version is Frida Novikov, a Russian metahuman criminal with chronokinetic abilities, which manifests as "time bubbles". While attempting to seek revenge on everyone who ruined a previous crime spree she went on, she is confronted by Kid Flash. Together, the speedsters distract her long enough to negate her powers with the Velocity-X formula so West can arrest her.
- The first Turtle appears in the episode "Potential Energy", portrayed by
Film
An original incarnation of the Turtle called Victor Vesp was planned to appear in David S. Goyer's cancelled Flash film.[12]
References
- ISBN 0-8160-1356-X.
- ^ All-Flash #21
- ^ a b Showcase #4
- ^ The Flash (vol. 2) #219. DC Comics.
- ^ Justice League (vol. 2) #4 (July 2018) DC Comics.
- ^ The Flash (vol. 5) #73
- ^ Flash Forward #1-6. DC Comics.
- ^ Doomsday Clock #12. DC Comics.
- ^ Star-Spangled Comics #17. DC Comics.
- ^ Adventure Comics #122. DC Comics.
- ^ Abrams, Natalie (January 11, 2016). "The Flash casts Battlestar Galactica alum Aaron Douglas as The Turtle". Entertainment Weekly.
- ^ "Before Green Lantern, Before Deadpool, Ryan Reynolds as -- the Flash?". 17 May 2023.
External links
- Turtle on DC Database
- Turtle Man on DC Database
- Turtle and Turtle Man at Comic Vine
- Hyperborea entry for the Turtle