Sunday, April 13, 2014

Wonder Girl - DC Comics

There have been three Wonder Girls in DC.
Diana herself, Donna Troy and Cassie Sandsmark.


Wonder Girl - DC Comics
I like the Wonder Girls.
Of course Donna Troy was MY Wonder Girl growing up.
But thanks to "Young Justice: Invasion", I got to know Cassie.


Wonder Girl - DC Comics

But even though scenes like this are really cool with Wonder Woman and her two sidekicks, the New 52 ruined all that.
I liked Donna and Cassie being Diana's Nightwing and Robin.
Thanks a lot DC.

Tigra - Marvel Comics


Tigra.

She's furry, she's hot and she's funny.
Along with She-Hulk, she's one of the few Marvel females that have managed to keep something of a sense of humor about them despite all they go through.
She's been in no less than four different Avengers groups, plus the Lady Liberators and the New Warriors.
And EVERY fight she is in is a catfight.....

The Tigra is the defender of the "Cat People", not people that like cats but people that are actually descendants of a race of cats created by sorcery during the Dark Ages. They have lived in the shadows ans always had a Tigra to protect them. Sort of combine that horrible Halle Berry "Catwoman" movie and the movie "The Cat People" and you are close.

Anyway HYDRA (Hail HYDRA!) goes after the Cat People for some weapon tech they have, Greer as the Cat is mortally injured trying to help them and to save her life the Cat People use science, magic and psychic powers to turn her into The Tigra.

Tigra looks like a humanoid tiger. She has sharp retractable claws and enlarged canine teeth that can puncture steel and your standard superhero skill-set, superhuman strength, speed, senses and agility. Because of her transformation, she is said to have limited mystical abilities, but these have never been explored extensively. She also has some degree of resistance to psychic attacks.

And she is the patron saint of Furry/Comic fans everywhere.

So far Tigra has only appeared in one Marvel cartoon, the absolutely horrible "The Avengers: United They Stand" (1999) where she was voiced by Lenore Zann (Rogue).

Tigra-Ms Marvel-Marvel Comics 
   Tigra and Ms. Marvel have a real catfight


Saturday, April 12, 2014

Lyra - Marvel Comics

She's the daughter of Hulk and Thundra.
What else do you need?
It's like what if Superman and Wonder Woman had a baby.
And Wonder Woman was a man-hating Femizon from the future and Superman was a green rage-filled hate machine.
Just don't make Lyra calm.
You wouldn't like her when she's calm.

Lyra - Marvel Comics

You see, in her quest to create the perfect female warrior, Thundra got some Hulk DNA (which wouldn’t be hard the way he goes around smashing things) and took it to the scientists in her future. They impregnated her and in nine months or so....BOOM! A little baby girl with the genetic make up of the Hulk and Thundra. Yes this is sort of the Marvel equivalent of what would happen if Superman and Wonder Woman had a kid. Although she was nicknamed, "She-Hulk" in the comics, I decided to include her here what with Thundra actually being her mother.
One thing I thought that was cool about Lyra was her power. Yes she had Hulk level strength, but the madder Lyra got...the weaker she got. The exact opposite of her father.
So to maintain her strength, she had to enter into a Zen-like trance that enabled her to stay calm and very strong. Of course since this was a really cool quirk and didn’t go along with the berserk/killing rage so popular in comics, Marvel got rid of it.
Hey...who wants a powerful character that remains powerful by keeping their head about them and NOT giving into rage? What kind of role model is that?
Idiots.
Lyra was created by Jeff Parker and Mitch Breitweiser, and first appeared in Hulk: Raging Thunder #1 in 2008.

Lyra - Marvel Comics

Friday, April 11, 2014

Supergirl - DC Comics

The Maid of Might, the Girl of Steel, Supergirl. Kara Zor-El was the cousin of Superman and was sent to Earth by her father and mother Zor-El and Alura to be raised by her cousin. But her capsule malfunctioned and where Kal-El made it here as an infant, Kara aged to her teenage years. Supergirl was created by Otto Binder and Al Plastino, debuted in 1959 and immediately made a HUGE splash. The fans loved her.

Of course the The New 52 has changed Kara quite a bit and she is no longer the happy go lucky teen she was. Thanks DC. You have a wonderful way of taking all the fun out of characters. You do realize when EVERYONE is as grim and dark as Batman, he won't be special anymore right?

Anyway, Kara as a Kryptonian has the full powers of Superman. But Kara may be even more powerful than her cousin. Superman has spent a lifetime holding back and trying not to hurt people or damage things with his powers. Kara has not had that benefit/holding back. When she cuts loose...she really cuts loose.

If you forget the 1984 film, Supergirl has fared pretty well in the media outside comics. She was good in Superman: The Animated Series and Justice League Unlimited, both times voiced by Nicholle Tom. She also did quite well in Smallville, with Laura Vandervoort playing a live action version of Supergirl. And if you wanna see a really fun Supergirl, check out the Super Best Friends Forever shorts DC made which should have been turned into a series.

Supergirl also appeared in the animated DC films, Superman/Batman: Apocalypse and Superman: Unbound and now she is getting her own CBS TV show.

Supergirl - DC Comics

Thursday, April 10, 2014

Starfire - DC Comics

Created by Marv Wolfman and George Pérez in 1980, Princess Koriand'r also known as Starfire was one of the most popular Teen Titans.
Though her personality has gone through a lot of changes between series and other media, she has retained her popularity.

Starfire - DC Comics

Starfire is an alien Princess from the planet Tamaran. And the poor lady has had a hard time getting a persona straight.

In the original Titans, Starfire was this incredibly sexy but very innocent girl. She was the girl that was built like a playmate, but had no idea she was anything special.

When the Teen Titans cartoon appeared, they kept the innocence but got rid of the body. Starfire was caring, loving and kind. All the things she was in the comic, but without the 40-24-36 body.

Then in the New 52, they claimed they turned her into a sexually liberated woman, but we all pretty much know that was just a cover story for turning her into more of a sex object. Of course most of the comic book community called them on it. I mean c'mon guys, when 14 year old teenage boys can see what you are doing....you went too far. Knock it off.

As far as powers go, Starfire's alien physiology gives her quite a few powers. She can absorb ultraviolet radiation and turn it to energy, she can fly, she can fire starbolts, unleash a "Nova Blast" similar to the Human Torch, and she has superhuman durability and strength. Starfire is also an excellent hand to hand fighter, able to beat Donna Troy (Wonder Girl) in combat.
Starfire - DC Comics

Wednesday, April 9, 2014

Spider-Girl - Marvel Comics

Part of the MC2 Universe, Spider-Girl was May "Mayday" Parker, the daughter of Peter (Spider-Man) Parker and Mary Jane Watson.
I really liked this character and the feel of the series.
It reminded me a lot of DC's "Batman Beyond".

Spider-Girl - Marvel Comics

I'm really surprised that more people do not know about May "Mayday" Parker aka The Spectacular Spider-Girl. Yes, Spider-Girl. Set in the MC2 Universe, May is the daughter of Peter (Spider-Man) Parker and Mary Jane Watson. MC2 (Marvel Comics 2) was a series of stories set in a possible alternative timeline of the Marvel Universe. There we got to see what would happen to the heroes in a few years from now, without messing up the current continuity. It was Marvel's way of logically progressing the stories without affecting their trademark heroes. What I liked about the series was that it had a "Silver Age" feel to it in a lot of ways.

May was created by Tom DeFalco and Ron Frenz and first appeared not in MC2, but in an issue of "What If" in 1998. I liked this Universe it was set in because it wasn’t your typical apocalyptic future stories. Everything didn’t go to hell in a hand-basket in a few years. And you got to see the sons, daughters, nieces and nephews of our current heroes.
May inherited most of her fathers powers. She was only half as strong but twice as fast. May's wallcrawling was due to a bio-magnetic field her body generated. Her "Spider-Sense" was vastly more acute than her father's and she also had the ability to sense the weak points, similar to the Inhuman's Karnak. She also wore mechanical web-shooters that could fire a line, impact webbing and metal darts.

And she got the best of both worlds. She inherited her mothers looks and her dads brains.

Tuesday, April 8, 2014

Silk Spectre - DC Comics

Silk Spectre (or I guess Silk Spectres?) from the Watchmen.
Two of the hottest superheroines to grace the big screen so far.
Yeah I know that their backgrounds were fraught with tragedy....
But Carla Gugino and Malin Akerman were just so hot!

Silk Spectre - DC Comics

Talk about a female superhero with a messed up past, Watchmen's Silk Spectre had it rough. Though in all fairness, she was supposed to. Alan Moore gave her a lot of heavy baggage because that's what the comic book industry had done to superheroines in the first place. He was just holding up a mirror.

The first Silk Spectre was Sally Jupiter (Sally Juspeczyk). She was a founding member of the superhero group the Minutemen in 1939. Sally possessed no superpowers but was a pin-up girl of Betty Grable status. I guess the villains were a kinder lot back then. The villains may have been but the heroes were not. Sally was raped by Edward Blake, the "superhero" known as The Comedian. The result of that rape was Laurie Juspeczyk.

Carla Gugino plays Silk Spectre in the Watchmen film.

The second Silk Spectre was Laurie Juspeczyk. Like her mother, Laurie possessed no superpowers, but had been trained to a high level as a hand to hand combatant. She was the girlfriend of first Dr. Manhattan and then later Nite Owl. I much prefer the "ending" of Nite Owl and Silk Spectre's tale in the Watchmen book as opposed to the movie. Alan Moore gave us an unusually (for him) happy ending.

In the movie, Malin Akerman played Silk Spectre 2.

Silk Spectre - DC Comics

Monday, April 7, 2014

Sif - Marvel Comics

Marvel Comic's version of Sif.
Usually just a back up player in Thor's adventures in the comics, in Norse Mythology, Sif was a goddess, Thor's wife and the mother of his children.
Well at least she did manage to get into both Thor films and show up on Marvel's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. (played by Jaimie Alexander).


Unfortunately, the Lady Sif has usually been used as a background character in Thor. She was created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby in 1964 and....well that's not exactly true. Stan and Jack based their Sif on the goddess Sif from Norse mythology. Where Marvel's Sif is pretty much just an Asgardian warrior with a sword, the Norse Sif was actually a goddess and the wife of Thor. She also had golden hair which Loki cut off and Thor made him replace a golden headpiece.

The hair-cutting thing was worked into Marvel's story, but in the comics, her hair is replaced by black enchanted hair made by dwarves. Yeah....I know.

Also in the comics, Sif is the sister of Heimdall (aka Heimdallr in the myths).

Sif has your standard Asgardian powers, super strength (she can lift around 30 tons), durability and she's basically immortal. She's six foot two and weighs 425 pounds. 425 pounds? Yes, like all Asgardians, Sif's body tissue is about three times as dense as a humans. Sif also has the power of teleportation through time and space

She also carries a sword that has been enchanted by Odin that allows her to cut open passageways between dimensions.

Of course Sif was portrayed on the big screen by Jaimie Alexander in both Thor and Thor: The Dark World. And she also showed up as Sif on an episode of Marvel's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.

Saturday, April 5, 2014

Scarlet Witch - Marvel Comics

One of my all time favorite Marvel superheroines, the Scarlet Witch.
She didn't look like this in Avengers: Age of Ultron, but I got used to the "new" look.

Scarlet Witch - Marvel Comics

I've always had a soft spot in my heart for Wanda Maximoff aka the Scarlet Witch.
One, she had a "stand and point" power.
Two, her brother Quicksilver was a world class jerk.
Three, her daddy Magneto was one of the biggest, baddest super villains in the world. Normally not so bad, but when you are trying to be a hero, it can be a drawback.
But Marvel rectified all that years later and had Wanda, originally a pretty weak character, almost destroy the world.
Things change right?

Scarlet Witch was created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby and first appeared not in the Avengers, but in X-Men #4 back in 1964.
You see, Wanda and her brother Quicksilver are both mutants and were part of her father's Brotherhood of Evil Mutants.
Interestingly, Wanda's outfit was green on the cover of X-Men #4.

Anyway, after a brief run she and Pietro (Quicksilver) went to the Avengers because the Avengers had a habit of allowing ex-criminals to join...and because Iron Man asked them to.
At that time the Avengers were Cap and three ex-supervillains, Hawkeye, Scarlet Witch and Quicksilver.
So the Avengers had the first supervillain work release program ever.

Wanda became a mainstay in the Avengers.
She married the android Avenger the Vision, was trained in the mystic arts by both Agatha Harkness and Doctor Strange, and was the leader of the Avengers West Coast team.

As far as powers go, generally her abilities are the power to alter probability (Hex Spheres) and work magic.
Her probability alteration has gone up to God-like points now and then as when she resurrected Wonder Man or when she wiped 90% of the mutants off the Earth by saying, "No More Mutants."
Besides all that, she's a pretty good hand to hand fighter, being trained by both Captain America and Hawkeye (who has had a crush on her since the 60s).


Rogue - Marvel Comics

My favorite incarnation of the Marvel's mutant southern belle was in X-Men: The Animated Series in the 1990s.
Lenore Zann pretty much ruined any other version that would come later.
She raised the bar way too high.

Rogue - Marvel Comics

Again...here I go dissing the comic book version of a character and going for the animated one. I'm sorry, but there has been no comic book or live action version of Rogue that topped the X-Men's southern belle that appeared in the 1990's X-Men: The Animated Series.

Has there "Sugah"?
Nope, voiced by Lenore Zann this Rogue was awesome. She was smart, sassy, sexy and could punch a hole through a brick wall with ease. This Rogue wasn’t whiny or mopey at all. She could flirt with the boys and then go toe to toe with them at a moments notice.
They gave her cute lines, like "Come on, pretty boy... make a girl feel welcome." between breaths when she was giving Cyclops CPR once and they also gave her feelings.

Rogue - Marvel Comics

To say this cartoon was ahead of it's time is an understatement. And the way they did Rogue was part of that.
This Rogue was the one that had Carol Danvers' (Ms. Marvel) super-strength and flight, plus her own absorption powers.
Besides the comics, Rogue also appeared in X-Men: Evolution and Wolverine and the X-Men. The Wolverine and the X-Men version wasn’t bad, but it was no 1990s Rogue.
Anna Paquin in the X-Men trilogy....? No....just no.

Rogue, book, character, comic, comic book






Comic Book, Rogue, Marvel Characters, Marvel, Marvel Comics, X-Men, Cartoons

Justice League: War - DC Universe Animated Original Movies

Yes I finally got around to watching "Justice League: War".
And yes I know it took me long enough.
I liked it.

Justice League: War - DC Universe Animated Original Movies

It wasn't "Under The Red Hood" or "Justice League: Flashpoint Paradox" by any means.
But I hope the Justice League live action movie is at least similar to this.

Justice League War, comic books, comics, dc, dc comics

Read More Here:
Justice League: War Review
http://www.bubblews.com/news/2872049-justice-league-war-review

Friday, April 4, 2014

Raven - DC Comics

One superheroine that I think has fared much better on TV and in video games than in the comics...Raven.
Voice actress Tara Strong breathed all kinds of life into this character.
A lot more than the books ever did.

Raven - DC Comics

Heck, I even liked her better in Injustice: Gods Among Us than in the comics.

Raven-Injustice: Gods Among Us

DC Comic's Raven was a good character. I think they dropped the ball around...well really not long after she was created. But they really messed her up in the New 52 with a version that is pretty much unrecognizable. The saving grace of Raven is in DC's animation.

I really liked her in the Teen Titans animated series, where she was voiced by Tara Strong. Tara reprises the role many times. She was Raven in the original Teen Titans, New Teen Titans, Teen Titans Go!, in the animated film Teen Titans: Trouble in Tokyo and in the video game Injustice: Gods Among Us. Tara is to Raven what Kevin Conroy is to Batman.

Her mom was a human and her father was/is one of the most powerful demons in know creation, Trigon. So Raven has a huge laundry list of powers she can pull out at anytime. Sometimes I wonder if the writers don’t just give her new powers as is convenient. It sure seems like that sometimes.
My favorite basic skill set is: empathy, teleportation and her black Raven Soul-Self (that can fight, create a force field and do long range recon for her). But it seems like now she is WAY overpowered.

Thursday, April 3, 2014

Psylocke - Marvel Comics

Psylocke can go mind to mind with the best telepaths in the Marvel Universe and still go round after round with the likes of Wolverine and Sabretooth.
Plus she is one of the hottest superheroes ever created.

Psylocke - Marvel Comics

You talk about a character with a messed up past. Here is Elizabeth "Betsy" Braddock. Betsy is the sister of UK based superhero Captain Britain and was created back in 1976 by Chris Claremont and Herb Trimpe. CB was a character that appeared in Captain Britain Weekly, a book put out by Marvel UK.

Anyway, Betsy was a precog, then a telepath, then she got telepathy AND telekinesis (with no explanation...her powers just changed), she was blinded and then got bionic eyes, then she body melded with Kwannon who was a Japanese female ninja mutant and gave us the Psylocke we all know and love today. Yeah...like most female comic book characters, she has been through a lot.

Psylocke has been a member of a lot of groups, most notably the X-men. But she has also been in The Hand, the Hellfire Club, Excalibur and X-Force just mention a few.

Powers? Who knows? Marvel has altered the character so much that you can't keep track of what she does. I hate it when you have version 1,2,3 or 4 of a character.

The one we are (or at least I am) most familiar with though is the one with ninja skills, telepathy and the awesome "psychic knife," that could take down just about anybody that she scored a direct hit on.

So at that time (around 1989) Psylocke could go head to head with the best telepaths in the Marvel Universe and still go hand to hand with people like Wolverine. She was a pretty well rounded character.

Psylocke - Marvel Comics-X-Men

Wednesday, April 2, 2014

Power Girl - DC Comics

Power Girl got her back story cleaned up by DC in the New 52.
She got a new costume, but some things are hard to change.

Power Girl - DC Comics
She's the Supergirl of Earth 2 that wound up over here on our Earth, the cousin of Superman (well that Superman) and Supergirl with an attitude, Kara Zor-L aka Karen Starr aka Power Girl. She is also a lot of fanboy's dream girl.
Power Girl has had a fairly convoluted past (who hasn’t) but of course all that was wiped clean by the New 52 in DC. Now she and Huntress have formed their own counterpoint to Superman/Batman as World's Finest. And now before she adopted the name Power Girl, she was her world's Supergirl.
And they got rid of that costume she had. Okay...there is a lot of nostalgia connected to the costume but it really was..well...distracting. Maybe it was supposed to be. But she has worn the revealing costume from time to time even now in the New 52. By the way, the original Power Girl costume is a favorite of female cosplayers everywhere.
She has all the powers and abilities of Superman plus (and I think this is a BIG plus), since she is from Earth Two, Kryptonite has no effect on her. And this Power Girl is also a pretty darn good scientist and an excellent business woman (she runs Starrware Industries...or she ran it...who knows).

Power Girl-Huntress-comic books-comics-dc

Tuesday, April 1, 2014

Oracle - DC Comics

DC Comics took a beloved comic book character, Barbara Gordon aka Batgirl, crippled her, then had her rise from the ashes as Oracle.
She became not only a hero in the comics, but a hero to disabled comic book fans.
And even though they changed her back in the New 52, they didn't erase that story.

Oracle in the Birds of Prey by Ed Benes
    Oracle in the Birds of Prey by Ed Benes

Oracle is a real phoenix from the ashes story. Oracle was Barbara Gordon who was Batgirl. In 1967 Batgirl was introduced and she had been a part of the Batman Family since then. In 1988, in Batman: The Killing Joke, Barbara was shot and paralyzed by the Joker, in a twisted attempt to make her father Commissioner Gordon go to the darkside. He wanted to prove to Batman that under the right circumstances, it could happen to anyone. While it was indeed a powerful plot device, a LOT of fans were upset that the permanent crippling of a character that had been around for over twenty years was used as a plot device. Even Alan Moore was apprehensive before doing it and regretted doing it after, even though the DC powers that be were evidently enthusiastic about it, giving him the okay to do it.
Were it an isolated incident it would have had more power. But it was one of a long list of major female comic book characters being "killed, mutilated, and depowered", as writer Gail Simone put it. I swear I think 90% of comic book writers are misogynistic.

But one writer who was not were comic book writers Kim Yale and her husband John Ostrander. They transformed the wheelchair bound Barbara Gordon into "Oracle". They had her fight back from the depths of depression and hone her and use her intellect, her photographic memory and her computers and electronics to become a high level hacker and gatherer of information. Oracle could get info on basically anything and transmit it to the hero in need.
And they didn't let it go there. They had Richard Dragon, considered an equal with Batman, Bronze Tiger and Lady Shiva in martial arts training, train Barbara in Eskrima, and she was also known to use firearms and the trusty batarang when needed.
Not only was she a huge info-broker in the comics, but she also pretty much the leader of Birds of Prey.

And she became a hero to readers with disabilities as well.
Then came the New 52. Barbara was "cured" and returned to her status as Batgirl. Again, DC got a lot of fan outrage over this, but at least they didn't just erase her time as Oracle. That still stands even in the New 52.

Oracle - DC Comics
Dina Meyer as Oracle on the Birds of Prey TV show

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