List of DC Comics characters: W
Amanda Waller
Warhawk
Warhawk (Rex Stewart) is a fictional character created for the DC Animated Universe, voiced by Peter Onorati.
In the , Warhawk's attitude shifted from reluctant ally to devoted teammate. They would eventually become close comrades and colleagues.
In the animated series' related comics, Warhawk appeared in Batman Beyond issue #21 ("The Blackest Day - Part 1") when Batman teams up with the JLU in a high-voltage adventure as they battle new villain
Warhawk's next appearance was in
Warhawk also appears in the second-season finale "Epilogue", again as a member of the JLU.
In the third-season episode "Ancient History", John finally informs Shayera that she is to become the mother of his child. This information briefly gives Shayera an ecstatic feeling of hope. But despite still loving Shayera, John decides to stay with Vixen and "refuses to be destiny's puppet", preferring to let things work themselves out. After this, Shayera asks Batman to tell her what he knows about her son.
Other versions of Warhawk
In that wears a red version of Warhawk's costume.
In September 2011, The New 52 rebooted DC's continuity. In the new timeline, the Warhawks are the Thanagarian military force. They are sent to earth to kill Hawkman and invade the planet. In the 2015/2016 Batman Beyond series, Micron reveals to Tim Drake that he fought alongside Warhawk and Barda against
Warlock's Daughter
Warlord
Warp
Waverider
Martha Wayne
Thomas Wayne
Van Wayne
First appearance | Batman #148 (June 1962) |
---|---|
Created by | Bill Finger and Sheldon Moldoff |
Further reading
|
Vanderveer "Van" Wayne is Bruce Wayne's rich and spoiled cousin. While visiting him, Van found the Robin costume in Alfred's laundry which Bruce claimed were his and Dick Grayson's masquerade costumes. He got himself into some trouble when he hired a con artist named Jumpy Regan to impersonate Batman, while he posed as Robin. He did all this with the intention of impressing Dick, but Van was not aware that they were, in fact, the real Dynamic Duo. Van had to be rescued from Regan by Batman and Robin and even helped to apprehend Regan. In the aftermath of the situation, he learned a lesson in humility.[4]
Van Wayne in other media
Van Wayne appears in Powerless, portrayed by Alan Tudyk.[5] This version is the head of Wayne Security, a subsidiary of Wayne Enterprises, in Charm City. A self-proclaimed "rich, over-educated, globetrotting wastrel", the megalomaniacal Van hates his job and seeks to move to Gotham City for a better position at the company.
Winema Wazzo
Winema Wazzo is the mother of Legionnaire Phantom Girl (Tinya Wazzo). She was created by writers Tom and Mary Bierbaum, and first appeared in Secret Origins vol. 2 #42 (July 1989).
In pre-Zero Hour continuity, Winema is a relatively minor character and does not have much of a presence outside of her first appearance. However, in post-Zero Hour, she takes on a more prominent role as she becomes the interim president of the United Planets after Ra's al Ghul murdered president Leland McCauley.
Originally, Winema was married to Bgtzl native Byzjn Wazzo. However, post-Zero Hour, her husband is instead Murl Wazzo, a Carggite, with that continuity's version of Tinya being a hybrid.
In other media
Winema Wazzo appears in Legion of Super Heroes, voiced by April Winchell. This version began public service as a teenager, with her first assignment being a failed attempt to re-establish diplomatic ties with the planet Zerox, and is a well-intentioned, though occasionally overbearing mother towards Tinya.[6][7]
Weapons Master
Weasel
Weasel is the name of two
John Monroe
Weasel | |
---|---|
Publication information | |
The Fury of Firestorm #36 (June 1985) | |
Created by | Gerry Conway (writer) Rafael Kayanan (artist) |
In-story information | |
Alter ego | John Monroe |
Team affiliations | Suicide Squad |
Abilities | Great agility Hand-to-hand combat |
John Monroe was a lonely student at Stanford University in the late 1960s. His contemporaries rarely noticed him. If they did, they referred to him in derogatory terms, using words like "Weasel" to describe him. This made him bitter, driving him to become a murderer decades later. The grown John Monroe became a teacher at Vandemeer University in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. A number of his fellow students from Stanford University held prominent positions. To rationalize killing three of them, he considered them threats to getting tenure at Vandemeer. Taking on the costumed identity of Weasel, displaying great agility, expertise at hand-to-hand combat, and a costume with sharp claws, he stalked the campus grounds and brutally murdered Arnold Lintel, Linda Walters, and a night guard named Chuck Gherkin. When Martin Stein (one half of Firestorm) shows up for a job opening as a physics professor, Monroe made two attempts on Martin Stein's life. In the second attempt, he would have killed Martin had he not provoked the transformation of Stein into Firestorm. After a fight, Firestorm unmasked Weasel and sent him to jail.[9]
Weasel was later recruited into the Suicide Squad for their ill-fated mission to rescue Hawk. During the mission, he tried to kill the Thinker by cutting Thinker's throat with his claws. Rick Flag Jr. took the Thinker's helmet to regain control over the mission. When he saw the Weasel, the Thinker's helmet told Flag to kill him. Weasel's death was not mourned.[10]
During the Blackest Night storyline, Weasel's dead body was seen to be among those entombed in the Hall of Justice. When the Black Power Rings flew in, Weasel's body was among the dead bodies that were reanimated by the Black Power Rings and inducted into the Black Lantern Corps.[11]
In September 2011,
Future Weasel
In Batman #666 (July 2007), a special issue set 15 years in the future, a different Weasel is shown as an enemy of Damian Wayne, who has become Batman following the death of Dick Grayson.[13] This future Weasel has canine-like teeth.
Weasel in other media
- An unnamed, animalistic incarnation of the Weasel appears in Corto Maltese, but seemingly drowns while being airdropped onto the island's coast and brought ashore by Savant. In a mid-credits scene, Weasel awakens and flees into the local jungle.
- Weasel will appear in Creature Commandos,[16] voiced by Sean Gunn.[17] This version is a member of the eponymous team.
Weather Witch
The Weather Witch is a character in DC Comics.
The Weather Witch was a former prostitute from
During the Final Crisis storyline, Libra sent her and the rest of the New Rogues after the Rogues when they withdrew from the Secret Society of Super Villains. She was not very skilled with her Weather Wand and the Weather Wizard easily killed her with a lightning bolt.[19]
Weather Witch in other media
- She first appears in the fifth season of The Flash.[citation needed] The estranged daughter of Mark Mardon / Weather Wizard, this version was a meteorologist who was fired after her weather experiments became too dangerous. A part of her van was struck with a fragment of Thinker's Enlightenment satellite, which she converted into a staff that enables her to control the weather like her father and teleport via lightning.
- The Weather Witch makes a minor appearance in the crossover "Crisis on Infinite Earths".[citation needed]
Weather Wizard
Web
Wedna
Wedna (also known as Wedna Kil-Gor) was a native of the planet Krypton and the daughter of the inventor of Kil-Gor. She first appeared in Krypton Chronicles #3 (September 1981).
Wedna married her father's colleague and friend Bur-El and gave a birth to his children Val-El and Tro-El, both who later became a noted explorers. Wedna is an ancestor of Kal-El, also known as Superman, and died several centuries before the destruction of Krypton.[20]
Wedna in other media
Wedna (renamed Wedna-El) appears in a flashback in the Krypton episode "Zods and Monsters", portrayed by Toni O'Rourke. This version is a scientist and member of the House of El who, alongside Van-Zod, experimented on a Sagitari soldier named Dax to turn him into a supersoldier due to its unique genetics believed to be a key to end a civil war between Kandor and Argo. When Dax goes through a painful process in the chamber, Van becomes concerned and tries to stop the project, but Wedna refuses as she believes they were doing a greater good. After 455 trials, Dax becomes Doomsday. When the war was over, Dax's wife Enaj demands them to see a husband, but they refuse as Dax was already transformed. Enaj leaves the laboratory after seeing him transformed to her horror.
Weeper
The Weeper is the name of two comic book supervillains originally published by Fawcett Comics and today owned by DC Comics. The original Weeper was Mortimer Gloom who was an enemy of Bulletman and Bulletgirl. The second Weeper is his son who is also an enemy of Bulletman and Bulletgirl.
Weeper made his animated debut in
Publication history
The original Weeper first appeared in
Biography of Weeper
Mortimer Gloom
Formerly known as the "Crying Clown" or "Weeping Willie," Mortimer Gloom is fired for dishonesty from his work as a circus performer. Sometime afterward, he commits several acts of revenge. He then takes on the name "the Weeper". The Weeper sends letters and visits a number of families telling them tragic news. He tells one family their son has died in the war. In another family, the father is fired from his job after years of dutiful service. In yet another family, he tells the husband his business has burned to the ground. Later, the families discover that the Weeper has lied to them. The Weeper tells these lies so he could either case the families' homes for robbery or they would lead him to where they hid their valuable possessions. The Weeper puts an ad in the paper looking for men who feel life has given them a raw deal. A lot of men reply to the ad. He interviews them all and picks ten of the saddest men. He calls them the Bittermen. The Weeper, along with the Bittermen, sets out to make the lives of other people very unhappy. They start by riding through a parade in a hearse and tossing tear gas into the crowd. This causes a stampede which kills a great many people. The Weeper drives through the street littered with dead bodies, weeping at that horrible tragedy. The Weeper and the Bittermen commit a series of ghastly acts which attracts the attention of Bulletman and Bulletgirl. He succeeds in capturing Bulletgirl. However, Bulletman is able to save her and the Weeper is apparently drowned.[21]
Sometime after being defeated by Bulletman and Bulletgirl, the Weeper returns and looks to gather his Bittermen back together. One of them refuses, saying he makes enough money now to choke a horse and he is very happy. The Weeper replies saying he hates to hear that people are happy. The next day, the man is found dead after having choked on his wad of money. The Weeper then shows his other Bittermen the newspaper account of what has happened. Fearing for their lives, they join his group again. The Weeper is later betrayed by one of them where he told Bulletman and Bulletgirl what happened.
The Weeper is a founding member of the Revenge Syndicate. The Revenge Syndicate is started by the Murder Prophet and joined by the Weeper and the Black Rat. At first, they are at odds with each one wanting to be the chief of the group. The Weeper comes up with the idea that they roll dice to see who would be chief; the person with the highest roll would go first, the person with the second highest would go second, and the person with the third highest would go last. The Murder Prophet wins the first roll. His plan is to rob an art museum by pretending to be a visitor, with the aid of the Black Rat emerging from the sewer with a machine gun. Bulletman and Bulletgirl stop them, but they escape. The Weeper goes second. His plan is for the Murder Prophet to pretend to be a psychic at a carnival after kidnapping the real psychic. The Murder Prophet tells a rich woman to move her money so it will not be stolen. They are going to steal the money while it is being moved. Bulletman and Bulletgirl stop them after realizing their plot. They lift the car the villains are in and throw it into a lake. The Black Rat is thrown in also and saves the Murder Prophet and the Weeper. The three realize that Bulletman has always thwarted their plans and they need to eliminate him if they ever want to succeed. The Black Rat meets several criminals who agree to pay $100,000 if he gets rid of Bulletman. The Black Rat goes third. His plan is to send out a radio broadcast to lure Bulletman to an abandoned shack. They set up a dummy of the Black Rat. Bulletman and Bulletgirl go inside the shack. The Revenge Syndicate goes inside and beats up Bulletman. To their surprise, Bulletman has set up a dummy of his own. Bulletman and Bulletgirl beat them up and a fire is started when the radio is broken.[22]
The Weeper returns a few months later on Thanksgiving Day and is captured by Bulletman, Bulletgirl, and their new ally Bulletdog.[23] Weeper eventually died between 1942 and 1946.
Unknown
At some point between 1942 and 1946, the Weeper dies and is replaced by his son, the second Weeper. In 1946, Bulletgirl and her friend Mary Marvel fight the second Weeper and Dr. Riddle. The second Weeper says, "My father, the true Weeper, is dead -- Sob! But I am carrying on with his name!" They first try to hang Bulletgirl in her civilian identity of Susan Kent after surprising her and pulling her up with a noose and the Weeper tries to stab her also, but Mary Marvel stops them, as she was with Susan when the villains attacked. The villains escape while Mary frees Susan from the noose and she changes to Bulletgirl; however, a riddle left behind allows the two to track the villains to an abandoned asylum on the outskirts of town. The Weeper saw Bulletgirl outside, but Riddle said that was part of his plan. First the Weeper went into another room with a straitjacket while Riddle waited for Bulletgirl. Bulletgirl knocked Riddle over, not noticing the Weeper moving towards her. The Weeper placed the straitjacket on her from behind just after she decided to look for him. Then with Riddle's help, she was tied to a chair and gagged. The two villains then tell Bulletgirl they know that Mary is here also. Mary was lured in when she decided to look for Bulletgirl and stopped from speaking with a hose. While binding and gagging her, the Weeper talked about how he wept for Mary. The two villains carried the two heroines into a cell which they made airtight and left. Bulletgirl was able to remove Mary's gag with her helmet, allowing her to transform into Mary Marvel, free Bulletgirl, and break open a cell wall. The two superheroines found a riddle in the asylum and deciphered it, showing the duo were planning to rob a plane carrying gold bullion, and one of them would wait on the ground as the gold would be dropped. Mary Marvel flies after the plane after Riddle has knocked out the two pilots. Dr. Riddle is able to escape from the plane by parachute as Mary saves the plane, and knock out Bulletgirl by landing on her just as she has met Weeper II, but Mary Marvel then captures him and Bulletgirl gets the Weeper. They are then jailed.[24]
The second Weeper teams up with
Weeper In other media
Television
- The Mortimer Gloom incarnation of the Weeper appears in the Batman: The Brave and the Bold episode "Joker: The Vile and the Villainous!", voiced by Tim Conway. This version wields a cane capable of producing miniature rain clouds that make people give in to misery as well as handkerchiefs that can grow and entrap his opponents. Additionally, he is the first supervillain to use a signature motif in his crimes, previously fought Bulletman, and served as inspiration for the Joker becoming a supervillain.[26]
- An original, unnamed incarnation of the Weeper appears in Marlize DeVoe.
Film
The Mortimer Gloom incarnation of the Weeper appears in Scooby-Doo! & Batman: The Brave and the Bold.
Weird
Paul Westfield
Whip
White Canary
During the
Later, the White Canary takes the Black Canary to
Alternate versions of White Canary
- The White Canary appears in the Ame-Comi Girls comic book series. This version is a superheroine instead of a supervillain and possesses the sonic scream known as the "Canary Cry". Like her previous appearances though, she is still of Asian descent and retains her anonymity.
- A different version of the White Canary appears in The New 52's Black Canary title. Debuting in issue #4 as an unnamed character in a white costume, she saves Ditto from Amanda Waller and returns her to Dinah in secret. She later reappears stealing a vial of blood from Dinah. Later, the still-unnamed woman helps the Black Canary defeat a monster and save her band and then appears to Dinah's house, revealing her identity. She is revealed as Dinah's maternal aunt, Rena, who wants to protect her niece from a threat related to her missing mother's past. At the end of the series' run, Rena is revealed as a fake, with the villainous shapeshifter Izak Orato masquerading as the Black Canary's "aunt" to trick her. Unlike previous incarnations, the character is depicted as Caucasian and blonde.
White Canary in other media
- In the Arrowverse, Sara Lance adopts the alias of the White Canary after being brought back from the dead with a Lazarus Pit and joined the Legends.
- This version of the character appears in the mobile edition of Injustice 2, as an alternate skin for the Black Canary.
White Dragon
White Dragon is the name of four different characters appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics.[citation needed]
White Dragon I
The first White Dragon is a gang leader who is an enemy of
Wu Cheng
Wu Cheng is a combat pilot who works as a member of the Blackhawk Squadron under the alias of White Dragon.[33]
William Heller
William Heller is a Neo-Nazi and white supremacist who formed the Aryan Empire. While posing as a vigilante, William handed any Asian, Black, and/or Latino criminals to the police while sending the white criminals to the Aryan Empire headquarters. White Dragon's actions attracted the attention of the Suicide Squad. Deadshot infiltrated the Aryan Empire as a man named William Hell. Using Chronos' time machine, the Suicide Squad rigged the shooting contest between William Heller and Deadshot so that Deadshot would win while also tarnishing Heller.[34]
Heller later wore a suit of armor and took on the alias of White Dragon where he joined the Fourth Reich in their goal to wipe out the original members of the Justice Society of America. He was defeated by Hawkman.[35]
White Dragon later sided with General in his plan to overthrow Amanda Waller and kill the rest of the Suicide Squad. He was killed by Plastique.[36]
Daniel Ducannon
Daniel Ducannon is a white supremacist who used the White Dragon name when posing as a vigilante after getting his pyrokinesis from the Meta-Bomb incident. While targeting people of color, White Dragon ran afoul of Hawkman and Hawkwoman. They defeated White Dragon with help from Carter Hall and Shiera Sanders Hall.[37]
During the "
During the "
White Dragon later appeared as a member of the Fourth Reich where he now rides an actual white dragon.[35] White Dragon and his fellow Nazi villains attacked the Justice Society of America's headquarters and was defeated by them.[40]
White Dragon in other media
An original version of the White Dragon with elements of the William Heller and Daniel Ducannon incarnations appears in the DC Extended Universe television series Peacemaker. This version is August "Auggie" Smith (portrayed by Robert Patrick), a white supremacist, former vigilante, and the father of Christopher Smith / Peacemaker who is disappointed that Chris works for the United States government and blames him for the accidental death of Auggie's eldest son Keith during a fight instigated by Auggie when Keith and Chris were children. Despite this, Auggie maintains a secret armory for Chris in his home. After Chris kills an alien "Butterfly" parasite disguised as a human and holds a couple hostage while working with Project Butterfly, his teammate John Economos frames Auggie for the crimes, leading the police to arrest him and send him to prison, where he is hailed as the "White Dragon" by most of the white prisoners. When Auggie threatens to expose Project Butterfly, Chris' friend Adrian Chase mounts an unsuccessful assassination attempt before Auggie provides proof of his innocence to the police and he is eventually released. Gathering his followers and donning a suit of power armor, which allows him to fly and shoot energy projectiles, Auggie tracks down Chris and prepares to kill him, having had enough of his son's antics. While Chase disables his weapons, Economos shoots and kills most of his followers. Realizing his father is a lost cause, Chris executes Auggie, but is later haunted by hallucinations of him.
White Rabbit
White Rabbit is the name of three different characters appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics.
Angora Lapin
Angora Lapin is a mysterious arms dealer that operates in Metropolis that operated as White Rabbit. She and her henchmen C&H, Dutch, and Mucus stole high-tech weaponry made by John Henry Irons called "Toastmasters" so that they can sell them to the gangs of Metropolis. When John Henry Irons first became "Man of Steel", his first job was to get the Toastmasters off the streets and defeat White Rabbit.[41]
White Rabbit II
The second White Rabbit is an unnamed swordsman and mercenary who is a member of the Pentacle which antagonizes the Shadowpact.[42]
Jaina Hudson
In 2011, "The New 52" rebooted the DC universe. Jaina Hudson was the child of a Bollywood actress and a diplomat named Tom Hudson. After spending time in private schools, Jaina attended a fundraiser where she met Bruce Wayne. When first seen as White Rabbit, she was among the Arkham Asylum inmates that escaped where she teased Batman and the Gotham City Police Department. When Batman caught up to White Rabbit near the scene of dead clowns, Joker draped a cloth over her. Batman fought Joker until it was discovered that Joker was actually Clayface in disguise. When Clayface fell on Batman, White Rabbit tried to inject a steroid into Batman only to be thwarted by Flash.[43]
During the "Forever Evil" storyline, White Rabbit is among the villains that join the Crime Syndicate of America's incarnation of the Secret Society of Super Villains.[44] She was present at Arkham Asylum when Bane arrived.[45] When Bane caused a breakout at Arkham Asylum, White Rabbit went to Bar 8 and participated in many battles throughout Gotham City.[46]
In 2016, DC Comics implemented another relaunch of its books called "
White Witch
Perry White
Wild Dog
Wildebeest
Wildfire
Wildstar
Rose Wilson
Windfall
Creators:
Windfall was a young metahuman who gained her powers after her mother let her company perform prenatal DNA experiments on her and her sister Becky, causing Becky to eventually kill their mother in revenge later in life.
Wendy Jones was originally a member of the supervillain group called the Masters of Disaster alongside her sister. She even fought the Outsiders on more than one occasion. During an attack against the Outsiders, she rescued one of their members. The team leader, Windfall's sister New Wave, was against Windfall helping Halo. This event caused Windfall to quit the team and join the Outsiders for a while. She later left adventuring with the Outsiders behind and continued with college.
During school, Wendy was invited to a fraternity party and date-raped by members of the fraternity after they spiked her drink with rohypnol. After taking turns with Wendy, the fraternity members took pictures and posted them on the Internet, while the local district attorney, the father of one of the fraternity members who ruined her, refused to make a case for Wendy due to her past as a supervillainess. As a result of the scandal, the college Wendy attended expelled her to avoid scrutiny, causing Wendy to return to the college and kill the fraternity members who ruined her by removing the air from their fraternity house and suffocating all the residents to death. Wendy was later incarcerated in Belle Reve for her murders before eventually being recruited by Amanda Waller for the Suicide Squad.
During a mission to the Middle East, the General betrayed the team and led a mutiny against them as well. After trying to make an air wall to protect the group from the attacks from
Windfall in other media
- Windfall and the Masters of Disaster appear in the DC Nation Shorts: Thunder and Lightning episode "Lightning Under the Weather".
- Wendy Jones appears in Young Justice: Outsiders, voiced by Zehra Fazal. This version is one of the meta-teen trafficking victims residing at the Meta-Human Youth Center in Taos, New Mexico.
Wing
Wing is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics.
Wing began as a uniformed chauffeur of the Crimson Avenger's alter ego Lee Travis. A Chinese immigrant who moved to America to escape Japanese persecution in the days leading up to World War II, Wing helps to instill a social conscience in his employer. When the death of a fellow reporter motivates Travis to become the Crimson Avenger, Wing assists him in his fight against crime. Curiously, despite Wing's initial lack of a costume, no one ever makes a connection between Travis' chauffeur and the Crimson Avenger.
A few months after the Crimson Avenger abandons his cloak and
In Justice League of America #102, it is revealed that Wing sacrificed his life to defeat the cosmic being known as the Nebula Man, a creature who scatters the other Soldiers through time. While most of the JLA and JSA travelled through time to find the members, the Golden Age Green Lantern, Mister Terrific and the Golden Age Robin went on a quest to discover the identity of the Unknown Soldier of Victory, whose tomb lay in the mountains of Tibet, where the Seven Soldiers had fallen after defeating the Nebula Man.[49]
In the pages of "
Woozy Winks
Wintergreen
Wink
Wink is a young metahuman terrorist in the DC Universe, who was a member of the Suicide Squad and The Revolutionaries with the power of teleportation. She is dating The Aerie. Created by Tom Taylor and Bruno Redondo, she first appeared in Suicide Squad Volume 6 #1 (February 2020).
Wizard
Wolf Spider
Wolf Spider is the name of a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics.
Evan Blake is a rich playboy and old friend of Kate Kane that operates as the art thief Wolf Spider. Wolf Spider ran afoul of Batwoman when he tried stole paintings by a Depression-era artist named Eisenstadt where one of his works was actually a map to the location of the money that Eisenstadt stole from a crooked businessman named Grantham. He was actually hired by Grantham's grandson Nathan Grantham.[56] When the map was obtained, Nathan was wounded when a statue fell on him causing Batwoman to allow Wolf Spider to get away with the money and not knowing of his identity. Despite his mission being a success, Wolf Spider disposed of the money in Slaughter Swamp as he considered it "blood money".[57]
Wolf Spider in other media
Wolf Spider appears in the
Gregory Wolfe
This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (February 2023) |
Gregory Wolfe is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics.
Gregory Wolfe is the
Gregory Wolfe in other media
Gregory Wolfe appears in The Flash, portrayed by Anthony Harrison in season one and Richard Brooks in season four. This version is corrupt, lacks metahuman abilities, and has connections with Amunet Black.
Wonder Boy
Wonder Girl
Donna Troy
Cassie Sandsmark
Wonder Twins
Wonder Woman
Wotan
Wrath
References
- ^ Batman Beyond (vol. 5) #8
- ^ Batman Beyond (vol. 5) #9
- ^ Batman Beyond (vol. 5) #11
- ^ Batman #148. DC Comics.
- ^ Watters, Bill (2017-01-13). "NBC's 'Powerless' Trailer Featuring Bruce Wayne's Cousin". Bleeding Cool.com. Retrieved 2017-01-14.
- ^ Matt Wayne (writer); Lauren Montgomery (director) (November 11, 2006). "Champions". Legion of Super Heroes. Season 1, Episode 5. Kids WB.
- ^ Marty Isenberg (writer); Ben Jones (director) (February 24, 2007). "Child's Play". Legion of Super Heroes. Season 1, Episode 10. Kids WB.
- ISBN 0-8160-1356-X.
- ^ The Fury of Firestorm #38. DC Comics.
- ^ Doom Patrol and Suicide Squad Special #1. DC Comics.
- ^ Blackest Night #3. DC Comics.
- ^ Forever Evil: A.R.G.U.S. #5. DC Comics.
- ^ Batman #666. DC Comics.
- ^ "Nathan Fillion's Role in James Gunn's THE SUICIDE SQUAD May Have Been Revealed". GeekTyrant. Retrieved 2019-10-11.
- ^ Vary, Adam B (August 22, 2020). "'The Suicide Squad' First Look, Full Cast Revealed by Director James Gunn at DC FanDome". Variety.
- ^ Kit, Borys (January 31, 2023). "DC Slate Unveiled: New Batman, Supergirl Movies, a Green Lantern TV Show, and More from James Gunn, Peter Safran". The Hollywood Reporter. Archived from the original on January 31, 2023. Retrieved January 31, 2023.
- ^ Massoto, Erick (January 31, 2023). "'Creature Commandos': Meet the Cast of the New DC Animated Series". Collider. Retrieved February 1, 2023.
- ^ Gotham Underground #3. DC Comics
- ^ Final Crisis: Rogues Revenge #2. Marvel Comics
- ^ Kryptonian Chronicles #3 (September 1981)
- ^ Master Comics #23. Fawcett Comics.
- ^ Bulletman #7 (September 16, 1942). Fawcett Comics.
- ^ Bulletman #10 (December 16, 1942). Fawcett Comics.
- ^ Mary Marvel #8 (December 1946). Fawcett Comics.
- ^ Justice League of America #136 (October 1976). DC Comics.
- ^ "Joker: The Vile and the Villainous". Batman: The Brave and the Bold. Season 3. Episode 1. April 15, 2011. Cartoon Network.
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- ^ Birds of Prey (vol. 2) #1 (July 2010), DC Comics
- ^ Birds of Prey (vol. 2) #2 (August 2010)
- ^ Birds of Prey (vol. 2) #3 (September 2010), DC Comics
- ^ Birds of Prey (vol. 2) #6 (December 2010), DC Comics
- ^ Flash Comics #23. DC Comics.
- ^ Blackhawk #108. DC Comics.
- ^ Suicide Squad #4. DC Comics.
- ^ a b Justice Society of America (vol. 3) #4. DC Comics.
- ^ Suicide Squad (vol. 3) #7-8. DC Comics.
- ^ Hawkworld (vol. 2) #27. DC Comics.
- ^ Underworld Unleashed #1. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Joker: Last Laugh #4. DC Comics.
- ^ Justice Society (vol. 3) #37. DC Comics.
- ^ Adventures of Superman #500. DC Comics.
- ^ Shadowpact #1. DC Comics.
- ^ Batman: The Dark Knight (vol. 2) #1. DC Comics.
- ^ Forever Evil #1. DC Comics.
- ^ Forever Evil: Arkham War #1. DC Comics.
- ^ Batman: The Dark Knight (vol. 2) #23.3 - Clayface. DC Comics.
- ^ Suicide Squad (vol. 5) #26. DC Comics.
- ^ World's Finest Comics #4 (Winter, 1942). DC Comics.
- ^ Justice League of America #102. DC Comics.
- ^ Stargirl Spring Break Special #1. DC Comics.
- ^ Stargirl: The Lost Children #2. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Stargirl: The Lost Children #3. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Stargirl: The Lost Children #4. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Stargirl: The Lost Children #5. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Stargirl: The Lost Children #6. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Batman (vol. 2) #26-30. DC Comics.
- ^ Batman (vol. 2) #31. DC Comics.
- ^ The Flash: Iron Heights. DC Comics.