Showing posts with label Captain Atom. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Captain Atom. Show all posts
Sunday, August 4, 2024
Captain Atom #3 (May, 1987)
On an analogue for Nightline, Captain Atom appeared for a television interview, where he revealed his "secret origin." In actuality, he retold his Silver Age origin, and retconned his Charlton published stories into a government crafted cover story for public consumption. The major difference was that Captain Atom was supposed to have been acting in secret within the DCU for years, "training" to be a super-hero in his old gold costume. As his powers developed, he switched to a red and blue costume that incorporated his silver skin, and fought covert (fictional) villains like Dr. Spectro, Drako and the Fiery Icer. However, Atom retired for three years after meeting and loving a terminally ill wife, Eve. On her deathbed, she made him swear to go public as Captain Atom.
While the taped interview was being broadcast, military brass ordered Captain Atom to clean up after a nuclear submarine. Adam refused, using the incident as a bargaining tool to force Eiling into finally allowing him to be reunited with his children. His grandstanding called into question Eiling's control over the project in front of Admiral Place, but Eiling stood firm. "If the problem here comes down to your denying the Captain the right to see his children-- you're going to have some serious explaining to do to the Joint Chiefs!"
Goz found out the travel itinerary of Adam's daughter Peggy, and Captain Atom flew to Dulles International Airport to greet her as Captain Cameron Scott. Margaret Eiling no longer went by "Peggy," and wasn't interested in some military man trying to hit on the General's daughter. Adam was left standing alone, sickened by his own daughter having sized him up as dating material, all the while the spitting image of her dead mother.
Feeling naive and stupid, Captain Atom realized his kids were adults only a few years younger than himself. They had been raised by Eiling, and would never accept Adam as their father again. Feeling depressed and out of place, Atom journeyed under the ocean to take care of the submarine situation. However, he ignored Dr. Megala's warning about absorbing the energy slowly and from a safe distance...
"Blast From The Past" was by Cary Bates, Pat Broderick and Bob Smith. This was the true continuation from the first issue, with the best art and character development so far. Captain Atom's straight-faced b.s.ing of Ted Koppel on national television displayed a comfort with reshaping the truth uncommon in DC heroes. His willingness to play hardball with Eiling also spoke to previously unseen gravel in his guts. The reworking of Charlton continuity was equal parts clever and galling, as was the co-opting of recently minted storytelling innovations by Miller and Moore in service to an unapologetic super-hero plot. Exploring the loss of Adam's relationship with his still-living children offered much greater pathos than yet another hero kneeling at the gravestone of a loved one. At 28, Adam is old enough to have been invested in his family, but young enough to be attractive to his daughter and (by implication) return the sentiment while seeing what was essentially the reincarnation of his bride. Yes, it's icky, but it's also ambitious, a hallmark of this period that helped set Captain Atom apart from all the cosmic-powered Peter Parkers before and since.
While the taped interview was being broadcast, military brass ordered Captain Atom to clean up after a nuclear submarine. Adam refused, using the incident as a bargaining tool to force Eiling into finally allowing him to be reunited with his children. His grandstanding called into question Eiling's control over the project in front of Admiral Place, but Eiling stood firm. "If the problem here comes down to your denying the Captain the right to see his children-- you're going to have some serious explaining to do to the Joint Chiefs!"
Goz found out the travel itinerary of Adam's daughter Peggy, and Captain Atom flew to Dulles International Airport to greet her as Captain Cameron Scott. Margaret Eiling no longer went by "Peggy," and wasn't interested in some military man trying to hit on the General's daughter. Adam was left standing alone, sickened by his own daughter having sized him up as dating material, all the while the spitting image of her dead mother.
Feeling naive and stupid, Captain Atom realized his kids were adults only a few years younger than himself. They had been raised by Eiling, and would never accept Adam as their father again. Feeling depressed and out of place, Atom journeyed under the ocean to take care of the submarine situation. However, he ignored Dr. Megala's warning about absorbing the energy slowly and from a safe distance...
"Blast From The Past" was by Cary Bates, Pat Broderick and Bob Smith. This was the true continuation from the first issue, with the best art and character development so far. Captain Atom's straight-faced b.s.ing of Ted Koppel on national television displayed a comfort with reshaping the truth uncommon in DC heroes. His willingness to play hardball with Eiling also spoke to previously unseen gravel in his guts. The reworking of Charlton continuity was equal parts clever and galling, as was the co-opting of recently minted storytelling innovations by Miller and Moore in service to an unapologetic super-hero plot. Exploring the loss of Adam's relationship with his still-living children offered much greater pathos than yet another hero kneeling at the gravestone of a loved one. At 28, Adam is old enough to have been invested in his family, but young enough to be attractive to his daughter and (by implication) return the sentiment while seeing what was essentially the reincarnation of his bride. Yes, it's icky, but it's also ambitious, a hallmark of this period that helped set Captain Atom apart from all the cosmic-powered Peter Parkers before and since.
Sunday, July 21, 2024
Captain Atom #2 (April, 1987)
After a few weeks of strategic immersion into the history that had passed him by, Nathaniel Adam was given the new cover identity of Cameron Scott, while "Captain Atom" was bandied about in the media. Batman was dismissive of another new super-hero following the G. Gordon Godfrey crusade, while Superman was ever optimistic. Blue Beetle felt a weird kinship with the new guy, while Firestorm saw competition. "From what I've seen and read about him so far, this chrome-plated 'Captain...' is nobody I couldn't burn atomic circles around any day of the week!"
Adam was letting Cameron Scott roll around in his brain as if it were "James Bond." Military intelligence had given him his first mission-- infiltrating a Quebec secessionist terrorist cell. Scott was initially accepted by the group's leader, a beautiful redhead, but ended up stripped nude and left in a death trap. Adam's sweat would trigger a bomb strapped around his waist, as he'd been informed by a video left by Plastique. Dig how the plot was pure Dr. Evil, but the medium was them newfangled VCRs Adam was just learning about.
Adam managed to turn into Captain Atom before triggering the bomb, and even managed to fly fast enough to grab some secret plans Plastique had left behind to get blowed-up. Très commode! In a twist almost as jarring as when it turns out the SWAT team isn't busting into Jame Gumb's house as Jodie Foster approaches the front door, Cameron Scott isn't surprised when Plastique is undercover as a reporter at a press conference with President Ronald Reagan and Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney. He's not even there. Instead, he had run into his best friend, Sergeant Jeff Goslin, after eighteen years. Goz didn't recognize Adam at first (White hair? Sunglasses? Comic books.) but they were soon hugging in reunion. It was cut short when Captain Atom was needed elsewhere.
Atom finally figured out that the location designated on a map he'd seen related to a suicide bomber's planned position. Atom saved the guy, then tortured him for seven seconds with molecular heat to dope out the next target. It was a granny packing a bomb in the Statue of Liberty. The Captain saved the monument, but not the terrorist. Finally, Captain Atom confronted Plastique at the press conference, who must have been part anime heroine by managing to change into a skimpy costume between panels, but not kill the president or P.M. Captain Atom absorbed her energy blasts, then knocked her out with one punch for the cover of Life. Batman reconsidered his earlier criticisms, while Superman and Blue Beetle were validated. Firestorm? "I was the first one to fight Plastique! If I had been on the case-- she never would've gotten near that press conference! You're still a small-time hero, Captain Atom... and someday Firestorm will be the one to prove it! Maybe someday soon."
"A True American Hero?" was by Cary Bates, Pat Broderick and Bob Smith. The art was much better this time, but still not quite up to Broderick's usual standard. He clearly relished drawing Plastique and her cleavage again, but her appearance was a sticking point. The first super-villain the new Captain Atom fought was a minor Firestorm sparring partner whom he beat in seconds. That's not very respectful of the source, and makes Atom seem like a spin-off besides. Captain Atom's real foe at time was his own gullibility, and he's carried over Firestorm's signature underachievement by taking on generic bad guys he clearly outmatches. Also, his primary characterization remains a lame sense of humor, so the appeal of the new character is all in the visuals.
Adam was letting Cameron Scott roll around in his brain as if it were "James Bond." Military intelligence had given him his first mission-- infiltrating a Quebec secessionist terrorist cell. Scott was initially accepted by the group's leader, a beautiful redhead, but ended up stripped nude and left in a death trap. Adam's sweat would trigger a bomb strapped around his waist, as he'd been informed by a video left by Plastique. Dig how the plot was pure Dr. Evil, but the medium was them newfangled VCRs Adam was just learning about.
Adam managed to turn into Captain Atom before triggering the bomb, and even managed to fly fast enough to grab some secret plans Plastique had left behind to get blowed-up. Très commode! In a twist almost as jarring as when it turns out the SWAT team isn't busting into Jame Gumb's house as Jodie Foster approaches the front door, Cameron Scott isn't surprised when Plastique is undercover as a reporter at a press conference with President Ronald Reagan and Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney. He's not even there. Instead, he had run into his best friend, Sergeant Jeff Goslin, after eighteen years. Goz didn't recognize Adam at first (White hair? Sunglasses? Comic books.) but they were soon hugging in reunion. It was cut short when Captain Atom was needed elsewhere.
Atom finally figured out that the location designated on a map he'd seen related to a suicide bomber's planned position. Atom saved the guy, then tortured him for seven seconds with molecular heat to dope out the next target. It was a granny packing a bomb in the Statue of Liberty. The Captain saved the monument, but not the terrorist. Finally, Captain Atom confronted Plastique at the press conference, who must have been part anime heroine by managing to change into a skimpy costume between panels, but not kill the president or P.M. Captain Atom absorbed her energy blasts, then knocked her out with one punch for the cover of Life. Batman reconsidered his earlier criticisms, while Superman and Blue Beetle were validated. Firestorm? "I was the first one to fight Plastique! If I had been on the case-- she never would've gotten near that press conference! You're still a small-time hero, Captain Atom... and someday Firestorm will be the one to prove it! Maybe someday soon."
"A True American Hero?" was by Cary Bates, Pat Broderick and Bob Smith. The art was much better this time, but still not quite up to Broderick's usual standard. He clearly relished drawing Plastique and her cleavage again, but her appearance was a sticking point. The first super-villain the new Captain Atom fought was a minor Firestorm sparring partner whom he beat in seconds. That's not very respectful of the source, and makes Atom seem like a spin-off besides. Captain Atom's real foe at time was his own gullibility, and he's carried over Firestorm's signature underachievement by taking on generic bad guys he clearly outmatches. Also, his primary characterization remains a lame sense of humor, so the appeal of the new character is all in the visuals.
Wednesday, May 1, 2024
Captain Atom #1 (March, 1987)
A brown-haired man sat nearly nude in a silver pod being lowered miles below the Earth's surface. Electrodes strapped all over and cameras trained on him, Adam told bad jokes to calm his anxiety. Dr. Megala was sympathetic, but Colonel Eiling reminded "Nathaniel Adam was found guilty of treason and sentenced to die. If he survives this experiment, the government has agreed to commute his sentence and make him a free man. That prospect does not 'amuse' me..."
Encased in seemingly indestructible metal taken from a downed alien spacecraft, Adam hoped to soon return to his loving wife and young children. If not, he'd made Eiling promise to deliver a letter that the Colonel instead ripped up. A multi-megaton bomb was detonated, leaving no trace of Adam, the extraterrestrial pod, or even any remaining radiation...
Jeff Goslin was Adam's best friend in the military, and passed along what information he could to his wife "Ange." The UFO had crashed in Nevada a year earlier, and the presumed dead "little green men" inside were put on ice. The ship was immune to the most powerful weapons around, and Nate was being used to determine its outside extremes. "Lissen up. This is the same Cap'n Adam who went down with his plane 30 miles inside Cambodia and managed to walk out again a week later. The man's a natural-born survivor..." An amorphous pink humanoid form appeared from nowhere in the desert, and unintentionally brought down a jet fighter with its energy beams at Winslow Air Force Base. Conventional weapons bounced right off it, but the creature eventually laid down on its own. Taken into custody, military scientists observed the creature slowly absorbing outer layers of mass into itself, becoming more human in appearance. It turned into a silver-skinned human male. General Eiling wanted an up close look as the creature opened its eyes. "Eiling... What happened to you. You look so... old!!"
Eiling cleared the room, then hammered at what appeared to be Nathaniel Adam. "I remember your sense of humor, Captain. I still do not share it." Eiling told Adam about his rise in rank, and the deaths of John Wayne, Martin Luther King, Bobby Kennedy, Johnson, Humphrey, Jack Benny, Anwar Sadat, Indira Ghandi and John Lennon. "Your wife is dead too." Adam was sufficiently provoked, so Eiling hit him with nerve gas and claimed he was an inhuman creature that attacked him. No one was to get near the thing without his orders.
Eiling next consulted Dr. Megala, who had deteriorated physically from needing leg braces to a fully automated body. Megala believed the alien metal had needed sufficient time to absorb the explosion, with the excess energy it could not immediately absorb used to fuel a "quantum leap" through years of space-time. Eiling feared what Adam represented, and had no intention of allowing Megala further access. Instead, he had Adam stuffed into a rocket meant to launch a new communications satellite, and ordered Megala's death. Babylon, Megala's brawny Black aide, injected the assassin with the potassium chloride intended for the doctor. Both men went into hiding. Captain Adam also escaped death by using his energy powers to explode the rocket within the atmosphere, and learned to fly to safety under his own power. Adam traveled to his family's home, but found it vacated, with Dr. Megala and Babylon anticipating his arrival. Adam agreed to join Megala in hiding, so that his powers could be studied and a means found to restore his full humanity before reuniting with his wife.
Government agents found Megala's hideout, and observed from afar. Tests found that Captain Atom's skin was impervious to injury, and that he could access "quantum potential" to fire unlimited energy at will. His silver skin could absorb and repurpose energy as simple as flames or as complex as lasers. Adam could effect his field of gravity to allow for flight propulsion, and he had incredible strength. Finally, Adam managed to reclaim his human form when desired.
General Eiling followed this progress, and when the time was right, alerted President Reagan. Eiling's forces took over Megala's home, and the General had Adam fly them both to the grave of Angela Eiling (1938-1982.) After mourning for three years, Ange married Wade for eleven years before dying one night of a heart attack in her sleep. "Perhaps our years weren't as idyllic as the years of young love she shared with you... More mature, certainly less passionate, perhaps." Wade had raised Adam's children. "Margaret is 23 next month. Randall is 26." Ronald Reagan was under no obligation to honor any agreement made to Nathanial Adam in 1968, but in 1986 would allow him a measure of freedom if he acted as a deep cover agent and public super-hero... "Point of Origin" was by Cary Bates, Pat Broderick and Bob Smith. For an extra quarter, the book ran forty pages without ads, and obviously took advantage by spanning eighteen years and dumping loads of exposition. For the times, it was somewhat decompressed, since the heroic Captain Atom wasn't really introduced and didn't get to fight a super-villain. Still, it told a fairly complete origin story with lots of subplots generated, a wealth of supporting characters, and an antagonist to truly make the blood boil. The art was somewhat off in its weird proportions and general inconsistency, which may be due to the page count or the collaborative process. That would improve with time, just as did the main character and stories.
Encased in seemingly indestructible metal taken from a downed alien spacecraft, Adam hoped to soon return to his loving wife and young children. If not, he'd made Eiling promise to deliver a letter that the Colonel instead ripped up. A multi-megaton bomb was detonated, leaving no trace of Adam, the extraterrestrial pod, or even any remaining radiation...
Jeff Goslin was Adam's best friend in the military, and passed along what information he could to his wife "Ange." The UFO had crashed in Nevada a year earlier, and the presumed dead "little green men" inside were put on ice. The ship was immune to the most powerful weapons around, and Nate was being used to determine its outside extremes. "Lissen up. This is the same Cap'n Adam who went down with his plane 30 miles inside Cambodia and managed to walk out again a week later. The man's a natural-born survivor..." An amorphous pink humanoid form appeared from nowhere in the desert, and unintentionally brought down a jet fighter with its energy beams at Winslow Air Force Base. Conventional weapons bounced right off it, but the creature eventually laid down on its own. Taken into custody, military scientists observed the creature slowly absorbing outer layers of mass into itself, becoming more human in appearance. It turned into a silver-skinned human male. General Eiling wanted an up close look as the creature opened its eyes. "Eiling... What happened to you. You look so... old!!"
Eiling cleared the room, then hammered at what appeared to be Nathaniel Adam. "I remember your sense of humor, Captain. I still do not share it." Eiling told Adam about his rise in rank, and the deaths of John Wayne, Martin Luther King, Bobby Kennedy, Johnson, Humphrey, Jack Benny, Anwar Sadat, Indira Ghandi and John Lennon. "Your wife is dead too." Adam was sufficiently provoked, so Eiling hit him with nerve gas and claimed he was an inhuman creature that attacked him. No one was to get near the thing without his orders.
Eiling next consulted Dr. Megala, who had deteriorated physically from needing leg braces to a fully automated body. Megala believed the alien metal had needed sufficient time to absorb the explosion, with the excess energy it could not immediately absorb used to fuel a "quantum leap" through years of space-time. Eiling feared what Adam represented, and had no intention of allowing Megala further access. Instead, he had Adam stuffed into a rocket meant to launch a new communications satellite, and ordered Megala's death. Babylon, Megala's brawny Black aide, injected the assassin with the potassium chloride intended for the doctor. Both men went into hiding. Captain Adam also escaped death by using his energy powers to explode the rocket within the atmosphere, and learned to fly to safety under his own power. Adam traveled to his family's home, but found it vacated, with Dr. Megala and Babylon anticipating his arrival. Adam agreed to join Megala in hiding, so that his powers could be studied and a means found to restore his full humanity before reuniting with his wife.
Government agents found Megala's hideout, and observed from afar. Tests found that Captain Atom's skin was impervious to injury, and that he could access "quantum potential" to fire unlimited energy at will. His silver skin could absorb and repurpose energy as simple as flames or as complex as lasers. Adam could effect his field of gravity to allow for flight propulsion, and he had incredible strength. Finally, Adam managed to reclaim his human form when desired.
General Eiling followed this progress, and when the time was right, alerted President Reagan. Eiling's forces took over Megala's home, and the General had Adam fly them both to the grave of Angela Eiling (1938-1982.) After mourning for three years, Ange married Wade for eleven years before dying one night of a heart attack in her sleep. "Perhaps our years weren't as idyllic as the years of young love she shared with you... More mature, certainly less passionate, perhaps." Wade had raised Adam's children. "Margaret is 23 next month. Randall is 26." Ronald Reagan was under no obligation to honor any agreement made to Nathanial Adam in 1968, but in 1986 would allow him a measure of freedom if he acted as a deep cover agent and public super-hero... "Point of Origin" was by Cary Bates, Pat Broderick and Bob Smith. For an extra quarter, the book ran forty pages without ads, and obviously took advantage by spanning eighteen years and dumping loads of exposition. For the times, it was somewhat decompressed, since the heroic Captain Atom wasn't really introduced and didn't get to fight a super-villain. Still, it told a fairly complete origin story with lots of subplots generated, a wealth of supporting characters, and an antagonist to truly make the blood boil. The art was somewhat off in its weird proportions and general inconsistency, which may be due to the page count or the collaborative process. That would improve with time, just as did the main character and stories.
Thursday, September 15, 2016
2011 Pixel People - Justice League International - PDF Cross Stitch Pattern from weelittlestitches
Click To Enlarge

$5.00 USD
Originally designed for our JLI lovin' friend, we couldn't wait to share the pattern with you. Featuring Booster Gold, Blue Beetle, Guy Gardner, Martian Manhunter, Fire, Ice, and Captain Atom, this is a quick stitch for the comic book fan in your life!
Fabric: 14 count
Grid Size: 98W x 70H
Design Area: 6.43" x 2.71" (90 x 38 stitches)
This listing is for a PDF file of the pattern, not the finished product. (That's in another section of the shop!) You will need Adobe reader to open the files, which you can get free from get.adobe.com/reader.
This cross-stitch pattern comes with a full colour chart with floss legends in DMC, JP Coats, and Anchor, although of course all colours can be replaced as per the stitcher's preference. If you would prefer a black and white chart, please specify in 'note to seller.'
This pattern is simple and suitable for beginners. We've included our best stitching tips for both beginners and more experienced stitchers and if you're completely new to the craft there's a good how-to video courtesy of Yarn Tree at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mr_LfGr1v0E
The digital file will be delivered via email within 24 hours of payment. The pattern will be sent to the email on file with Etsy, however if you would like it to be sent to a different email, please specify in the 'note to seller' box during checkout. Due to the nature of digital files, no refunds can be given after the email is sent to the buyer. There is a small window of opportunity before the PDF is emailed where a refund may be issued if desired.
© 2011 Christopher Gable
Patterns are for personal use only. Please do not distribute any copies of the pattern. Finished pieces may be given as gifts, but not sold for profit. Thank you!
$5.00 USD
Monday, October 5, 2015
Power of Captain Atom Podcast #5
The 2nd Man in Space
- The second ever adventure of Captain Atom by Joe Gill and Steve Ditko.
- From Charlton Comics' June 1960 cover-dated Space Adventures #34!
- Text version here.
- Email.
- Tweet.
- Comment on Power of the Atom blog.
- Comment on Rolled Spine Podcasts blog.
Dr Spectro on WHO'S WHO UPDATE 87 PODCAST! http://t.co/ghXodrTDmf @FKAjason & @CommanderBlanx love #CaptainAtom! pic.twitter.com/FPe97hvdVy
— Firestorm Fan (@FirestormFan) August 3, 2015
@FirestormFan @FKAjason @CommanderBlanx The Charlton version of the costume wasn't much better... pic.twitter.com/k9C0JVVEOX
— Anthony Durso (@TheToyroom) August 3, 2015
Monday, June 22, 2015
Power of Captain Atom Podcast #3
Introducing Captain Atom
- The debut of the Atomic Age Action Hero!
- Creators Joe Gill and Steve Ditko!
- From Charlton Comics' March 1960 cover-dated Space Adventures #33!
- Text version here!
Sunday, May 4, 2014
Captain Atom in Super-Team Family: The Lost Issues
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Work demands and my waning interest in covering DC Comics characters has put a damper on this blog, plus there's now a new avenue focused exclusively on our good Captain called Splitting Atoms functioning with much greater quality and quantity than I can currently muster. At the same time fanfic collage artist Ross has stepped up his usage of Captain Atom at Super-Team Family... The Lost Issues, so I figured I could and should do one group entry for the hero. It was fairly easy to pick which of the three to use as a spotlight image here, because I'm frustrated by two of them. I've never liked the Human Torch, so that was a non-starter for me, while the Doctor Solar pairing featured counterintuitive references. Featured Captain artist Dan Jurgens had a run on Solar when it was published by Acclaim, and Bob Layton has drawn both Solar and Captain Atom professionally, but the images used combined the very dissimilar Jurgens and Barry Windsor-Smith (plus Valiant's Solar was named Phil Seleski.) The Thing piece worked much better at creating the illusion of merged worlds, plus it's just plain cool.
...More Lost Team-Up Issues...
Work demands and my waning interest in covering DC Comics characters has put a damper on this blog, plus there's now a new avenue focused exclusively on our good Captain called Splitting Atoms functioning with much greater quality and quantity than I can currently muster. At the same time fanfic collage artist Ross has stepped up his usage of Captain Atom at Super-Team Family... The Lost Issues, so I figured I could and should do one group entry for the hero. It was fairly easy to pick which of the three to use as a spotlight image here, because I'm frustrated by two of them. I've never liked the Human Torch, so that was a non-starter for me, while the Doctor Solar pairing featured counterintuitive references. Featured Captain artist Dan Jurgens had a run on Solar when it was published by Acclaim, and Bob Layton has drawn both Solar and Captain Atom professionally, but the images used combined the very dissimilar Jurgens and Barry Windsor-Smith (plus Valiant's Solar was named Phil Seleski.) The Thing piece worked much better at creating the illusion of merged worlds, plus it's just plain cool.
- Captain Atom &...
- Human Torch
- Solar: Man of the Atom
- The Thing
...More Lost Team-Up Issues...
- John Henry Irons: Steel @ DC Bloodlines
- Vibe and the Family Steel @ Justice League Detroit
- Wonder Woman and Captain America #219 @ Diana Prince
- Captain America vs. the JLA @ The Idol-Head of Diabolu
Sunday, December 15, 2013
2013 “21. Captain Atom” by ColourOnly85
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This round is villain themed, but there are so many heroes represented by this blog and so few bad guys relevant here to turn up so far in "The 215 Project 200 DC Characters," I figured I'd sneak this one in under "Monarch."
I Want to be Evil
This round is villain themed, but there are so many heroes represented by this blog and so few bad guys relevant here to turn up so far in "The 215 Project 200 DC Characters," I figured I'd sneak this one in under "Monarch."
I Want to be Evil
- Amanda Waller @ DC Bloodlines
- Ares @ Diana Prince
- Black Manta @ JLDetroit
- Despero @ The Idol-Head
Friday, September 6, 2013
Dragon*Con 2013 The Atom/Captain Atom Cosplay Gallery by Pat Loika
Tuesday, August 13, 2013
Justice League of America #1-2 (April-May, 2013)
A.R.G.U.S.' Amanda Waller feared that the Justice League might turn from a lawful peacekeeping collective into superhuman fascists, and set about creating a government sponsored countermeasure. Through whatever means necessary, the heroes of the Justice League of America would loyally serve the interests of the U.S., and each member would be selected as an opposing force against a matching hero in the ungoverned League. Her first recruit was Hawkman, and she explained to field leader Colonel Steve Trevor "His clashes with the authorities have been escalating. That's good for us. Hawkman will accept our invitation under the pretense that the U.S. absolves his current record and grants him diplomatic immunity to continue carrying on his hunt however he likes." The cover story was "Katar Hol is a police officer from the planet Thanagar hunting alien fugitives and the humans working for them on Earth... There's one other thing. He prefers using maces and swords to ray guns and laser rifles. We have no idea why." All Waller was concerned about was that she had someone to check Aquaman.
Putting theory into practice, Hawkman ran down a human criminal accused of trafficking women and children. The Winged Wonder kept calling the perpetrator "Byth Rok," since that's the name Hawkman intended to use in the official arrest record to explain brutalizing the creep with his morningstar...
Meanwhile, the mysterious leader of a Secret Society of Super-Villains continued his recruiting efforts, which almost included a spy dubbed "Dark Hunter," who in the end barely escaped the Society's clutches into the custody of A.R.G.U.S. Oliver Queen had taken on the role at the request of Colonel Steve Trevor, but his injuries prevented Queen from telling what he knew. Trevor and Amanda Waller discussed the situation outside of Queen's surgical suite, with the Wall in a rush to pit her new League of America against the Society as a test of their mettle.
The savage Hawkman arrived at the new headquarters of the League in Washington D.C., ahead of a press conference where President Obama would officially announce the team. The young hero Vibe asked if he was okay.
"Why?"
"You're covered in blood."
"It's not my blood."
After a long beat, Vibe scooted his chair further away from Hawkman. Col. Trevor arrived and told Hawkman that he would need to get cleaned up. Sometime after meeting the press, the team climbed aboard a jet bound for the Kielder Forest in Northumberland, England, where Green Arrow had been found. "If the Secret Society is hiding in these woods, why don't we knock down some trees, make some noise and get their attention?" Trevor thought that unwise, since the League knew virtually nothing about what they were up against. Then Katana vanished, Catwoman disappeared, and something unseen flew past the group. A golden lasso caught Trevor around the neck like a noose. "Steve," said a figure who appeared to be Wonder Woman, "You shouldn't have come here." She was flanked by approximations of Superman and Batman...
"World's Most Dangerous, Chapters One-Two" was by Geoff Johns & David Finch. There was a Captain Atom reference in the second issue, when Vibe saw a chair in the meeting room with a "C" on it and thought he might be joining. Turned out the chair was meant for Catwoman, though. If they really wanted to take on the true Justice League, they'd have gone with Captain Atom.
- The Green Team: Teen Trillionaires #1 @ DC Bloodlines
- Col. Steve Trevor in Justice League of America #2 @ Diana Prince is the New Wonder Woman
- Martian Manhunter in Justice League of America #3 @ The Idol-Head of Diabolu
- Vibe #3 @ Justice League Detroit
Tuesday, July 2, 2013
2010 “Captain Atom's Family: Armagedon” animation-style fan fiction by N:TAS
Click To Enlarge

N:TAS DCU: Captain Atom's Family: Armagedon 10-20-10
Here's the final offering in the fan fiction series of "NightwingTAS" revolving around an imaginary animated series version of the Nathaniel Adam super-family as featured on the Super Buddies message board...
N:TAS DCU: Captain Atom's Family: Armagedon 10-20-10
Here's the final offering in the fan fiction series of "NightwingTAS" revolving around an imaginary animated series version of the Nathaniel Adam super-family as featured on the Super Buddies message board...
"Nikola Hanssen of Earth-50 is the Void host and when Captain Atom visted her world, she had to reclaim her full power from Captain Atom. While doing so she sent him back to New-Earth, and destroyed, then recreated Earth-50. Nikola is the only person on Earth-50 who recalls the previous Universe, something she did not expect, nor did she expect Captain Atom to still possess a small part of the Void within him. During the aftermath of the Infinite Crisis Captain Atom carried a wounded woman to the paramedics and was taken by who he saw. One of the paramedics was Nikola Hanssen of New-Earth. Not fully recalling who she was but feeling a pull towards her, Captain Atom couldn't get her off of his mind, and during the Blackest night the two ran into each other again, this time while around a group of Star Sapphires who sensed in them a strong sense of love. Being urged together the two kissed igniting a dorment spark in Nikola who took the portion of the Void from Captain Atom, as well as a portion of his power, covering her in a Dilustel skin shell. her body resembling an amalgam of the Void suit and the coating that Captain Atom had during his stay on Earth-50. Like Bombshell Nikola can retract her Dilustel skin, what no one expected was what happened next, Captain Atom for the first time was able to transform back into a human form, and both he and Nikola recalled their romance from Earth-50. Now together again and in possession of this power Nikola decides to join Captain Atom as Armagedon."Also today: Z'Onn Z'Orr: Santurian @ The Idol-Head of Diabolu
Tuesday, June 25, 2013
2010 “Captain Atom's Family: Bombshell” animation-style fan fiction by N:TAS
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N:TAS DCU: Captain Atom's Family: Bombshell 10-18-10
Here's the penultimate edition of the imaginary animated series concept cavalcade of "NightwingTAS," as the Nathaniel Adam brood is expanded by Geoff Johns & Tony Daniel via the Super Buddies message board...
N:TAS DCU: Captain Atom's Family: Bombshell 10-18-10
Here's the penultimate edition of the imaginary animated series concept cavalcade of "NightwingTAS," as the Nathaniel Adam brood is expanded by Geoff Johns & Tony Daniel via the Super Buddies message board...
"Amy Allen was a member of a rogue Black Ops Military Group and was threatened to be arrested, until she begged her father, the head of Project: Quantum to be recruited for the project. The Project bonded the same Alien metal Dilustel to her skin that compromises the body of Captain Atom. Unlike Captain Atom Bombshell can retract and engage her Dilustel skin shell at will, which she discovered when Protect: Quantum tried to have her murdered for joining the Teen Titans. Bombshell and the Teen Titans discovered from Amy's dad that it was not Project: Quantum that put the hit out on her, but a rogue group within it, and what none of them know is that the leader of the group is Bombshell's mother. Bombshell is not the by the book soldier that Captain Atom is, she is more of a shoot now and sort later frontline soldier which often causes conflict with everyone."
Friday, June 14, 2013
2010 “Captain Atom's Family: Captain Atom” animation-style fan fiction by N:TAS
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N:TAS DCU: Captain Atom's Family: Captain Atom 10-16-10
After a lengthy hiatus, we revisit the imaginary animated series concept cavalcade of "NightwingTAS," this time focused on expanding the Nathaniel Adam's family...Super Buddies message board...
N:TAS DCU: Captain Atom's Family: Captain Atom 10-16-10
After a lengthy hiatus, we revisit the imaginary animated series concept cavalcade of "NightwingTAS," this time focused on expanding the Nathaniel Adam's family...Super Buddies message board...
Captain Atom sacrificed himself when he absorbed Major Force's energies when Superman and Batman were wanted by the then President Luthor. Captain Atom's atomic reaction had an unforeseen outcome, instead of a time jump, he had a reality slide, ending up on another Earth, where he met and fell in love with Nikola Hanssen who is the new Void Host. Captain Atom's appearance was altered due to him possessing a piece of the Void in him, and when Nikola removed it Captain Atom slid back to the Post Infinite-Crisis New Earth, ready to resume his role of hero while still missing the love he had shared with Nikola.Also today: Z'Onn Z'Orr: Roh' Kar @ The Idol-Head of Diabolu
Sunday, September 30, 2012
2008 Captain Atom commission by Marcio Takara
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Marcio Takara
Marcio Takara
- Patrolwoman Diane Meade @ The Idol-Head of Diabolu
- Wonder Woman @ Diana Prince
- The Huntress @ DC Bloodlines
- Zatanna @ Justice League Detroit
Thursday, August 2, 2012
2005 DC Direct Superman/Batman Series 1: Public Enemies: Captain Atom Action Figure
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SUPERMAN/BATMAN SERIES 1: PUBLIC ENEMIES: CAPTAIN ATOM ACTION FIGUREIf I ever catch this for a good price, I'll buy it. He's a bit bulky for my taste, but it captures a lot of the spirit of the character's Post-Crisis high point.
Based on the art of Ed McGuinness! The atomically powered Captain Atom reluctantly confronts the World's Finest team on the order of his evil Commander-in-Chief. This figure features multiple points of articulation and includes a Superman/Batman logo base. Packaged in a 4-color deluxe blister.
Advance-solicited; on sale August 17 o Action Figure o 6.75" H o PI
Tuesday, May 29, 2012
Tuesday, February 14, 2012
Unhappy Valentine's Day: Captain Atom & Plastique
It's another bloody Valentine's Day, so POTA has teamed with Firestorm Fan to present two sides of a bad romance, the relationship of our own Captain Nathanial Adam and one Bette Sans Souci, also known as "Plastique."
Plastique got her start as a Firestorm villain, which is pretty much the worst thing that can happen to a bad guy. Virtually none of them have ever been any damned good, and most are second or third generation, after earlier incarnations got killed off by co-creator Gerry Conway and/or drafted into a Suicide Squad that earned the name. If they don't fall into the category of "endeadened" or "Mort of the Month," they're probably just an evil duplicate of Firestorm, because a hero who resembles a Bic lighter wearing a pirate shirt is a perfect template for replication.
Not quite what I was expecting under that raincoat, but surprisingly close, all things considered.
Plastique falls into the lame category, in a Mulberry purple unitard with baby blue highlights and a built-in popped collar. I don't know how her stingray chest emblem relates to plastique explosives, but it probably served to remind her to unzip her collar as low as possible to put her breast asset forward. She only ever wore a mask on her debut cover, The Fury of Firestorm, The Nuclear Man #7, presumably out of shame over its contents. You see, Plastique was a Québécois separtist, meaning she employed terrorism to try to make Canada let go of that one province of theirs where everybody speaks French. It's sort of like Louisiana wanting to secede from the United States. So she's like a raging Cajun demanding the stop of the world's exploitation of her homeland's natural gas and boudain reserves, or in this case, she holds hostages at New York's 4th largest newspaper to keep them from "raping" the forests of Quebec. 1982 seems so very far away suddenly, am I right?
Plastique's costume was covered with metallic silver discs that looked like land mines from Mongo. I thought the whole point of plastique explosives is that it's a soft, malleable material that could maybe run through piping in a costume, or heck, I suppose you could shove it up your butt if it meant not wearing a suit covered in She-Hulk's diaphragm? Anyway, Plastique was only a plot complication, with the main conflict being how the alter egos could transform into the super-hero while trapped in a public place. As soon as Firestorm manifests, he uses his powers to strip Plastique naked and steal her bombs when they fell off. Yes, really.
Dude, never say the word "fat" once a chick is naked, even if she does expect you to use Juggernaut™ brand condoms.
Sometime into the second year of the series, Gerry Conway realized that he'd burned through all his leftover Spider-Man villain concepts, and instead of coming up with some for a Nuclear Man, just brought back new versions of the same crumby goons. Plastique was still in prison, so a terrorist friend named (I kid you not) Le Flambeau started blowing up stuff while demanding her release. Instead, some other guy brought an experimental serum into a federal prison to inject Plastique, giving her generic energy blast powers. Again, plastique is usually connected to a timer or trigger, so giving her powers like Marvel's Boom-Boom/Boomer/Meltdown would have been perfectly reasonable. As we've established, there is nothing reasonable about Plastique, like for instance that to the best of my knowledge the mysterious "doctor" who came up with the serum didn't show up again, nor did anybody else seem to use the serum, and Plastique wouldn't even show up in Firestorm again for the remaining six years of its run.
Profalaqtic
Instead, Plastique turned up a couple of years later in the second issue on Captain Atom. For those who don't know, the original Captain Atom debuted eighteen years before Firestorm, and inspired Doctor Manhattan. Once DC got ahold of him though, Atom became pretty much Firestorm if Ronnie Raymond had been drafted into Vietnam. Not only is that a long story, but it took an entire extra-sized first issue to tell it, so Plastique ended up being his first Post-Crisis villain. The new creators, including the Firestorm artist that designed Plastique, were still figuring out what to do with a somewhat less dumb second Firestorm running around the DCU. What they initially came up with was to make Nathaniel Adam a spy for the U.S. government trying to infiltrate Plastique's terrorist operation in Toronto, Ontario. I guess that's only a province away from Quebec, so I suppose it's like a Pennsylvania Dutch terrorist hitting Manhattan.
*ahem*
It was here that things got weirder, since Plastique didn't trust Adam, possibly because he was a prematurely graying American WASP with a phony background as "Cameron Scott" provided by the military. Still, that doesn't explain stripping Adam naked, tying rope around his neck and extremities, suspending him from a warehouse ceiling, and leaving a time-activated video message telling Adam his own nervous sweat would detonate the bomb wrapped around his waist. I can only assume this was a test run for her abortive retaliatory plans to sexually humiliate Firestorm. There is so much wrong with that scenario, not the least of which being that she wasn't even sure Adam wasn't an honest-to-gosh fellow terrorist, and that she left the TV hanging upright so that it appeared upside-down to Adam. That's just plum inconsiderate.
What could have been a victory for reverse sexism was of course ruined by Adam becoming Captain Atom and Nathaniel's nipples having been drawn harder than Burmese Bells by Pat Broderick. Let's just say I'm not confident as to where the moisture activating the bomb came from. It's also worth noting that not only was Captain Atom's cold decking the girl afterward memorialized as a magazine cover, but that his fully extended arm somehow managed to fly between Plastique's splayed legs as she was sent flying through the air in high heels with a pained but unblemished expression. "Everything Frederick Wertham said was exactly right," said magazine publisher Larry Flynt.
In case all of the above wasn't kinky enough, Plastique showed up less than a year later on a cover where she takes the place of the Virgin Mary in Michelangelo's PietĂ while holding the quasi-nude Captain Atom, taking over the role of Jesus Christ. This was the place from which their "romance" sprang. Good... Lord! How could the contents of this story possibly match the deviant heresy of that image? Well for starters, as mentioned, Captain Atom basically looked like a Chippendale's dancer wearing only gloves and boots, and he gets stabbed from behind by some big Samurai guy's sword, causing him to shoot loads of globulous streaming "energy" across his belly. Plastique starts carrying Atom around over her shoulder like a sack of potatoes, occasionally using him as a human shield. Then the Captain develops this David Cronenberg body horror pink pustule covered growth that has to be burned off with modern science. This causes him to revert to regular nakedness, which Plastique appreciates as they spend every waking hour together for weeks while traveling through Cambodia, reminding me of the first Emmanuelle movie (though what doesn't?)
This was not the doggy style he was aiming for.
A year or so later, Captain Atom and Plastique met up for another jungle adventure/heavy petting session, this time involving Nate in forced servitude while wearing an explosive dog collar. That apparently wasn't pervy enough, so additional make-out partner Nightshade was brought in. As always seems to be the case outside of the sunny San Fernando Valley, the girls weren't that into it, violence ensued, and Nate was left with cobalt blue balls.
However, he'd by this point joined Justice League Europe, and begun romancing their liaison Catherine Colbert. As a French brunette, the Captain must have decided to cherry-pick attributes from the ladies who'd left him behind. Speaking of such, four years since jumping through time, Nathaniel Adam still hadn't consummated any of these relationships, instead choosing to enter the realm of death to find the long dead mother of his children, Angela Adam. This will come up later.
A) Why's the Cap'n wearin' Mammy Two Shoes' best skirt?
B) Proxy Jesus Trades Y-Chromosome For Energy Blasts?
C) Swipe of a previous cover homage to a sculpture = Creative bankruptcy?
Okay, Catherine was only wanting to have sex with Captain Atom, and when she realized she'd be stuck with him mooning over her afterword, she asked to just be friends. Nightshade was really a non-starter relationship. Angela was dead. Meanwhile, Plastique was going nuts, her powers were out of control, she was facing life in prison, and being defended by no less than queen nutbar Jean Loring. It's kind of funny that after the Atom divorced Jean following his making her career by secretly helping on all her cases, another Atom shows up to overtly do the same. The Captain came up with some half-baked scheme to get out of testifying against Plastique by marrying her. Nate finally got laid, Bette found the jail cell proposal "compelling," and the long meandering creative team needed a big blow out for their final fiftieth issue together. I haven't seen motives so pure for entering into an engagement since Michael and Lisa Marie united Jackson to Presley. You could tell that this love was true by the way Sans Souci took a steaming dump on the America (and Canadian!) justice system then disappeared for the final seven guest-creator-filled issues of the series.
What came next was the most ugly, twisted and stupefying turn yet-- the 1990s. First off, Captain Atom was supposed to become evil and kill every other hero in Armageddon 2001, but that idea was scrapped, leaving the character in limbo. He then came back as a republican hardliner, and got back into the government super-hero game. This allowed Nate to dump Plastique without actually facing her, but after deciding a tryst with Maxima was too desperate and suicidal even for him, called Bette up again. Unsurprisingly, there aren't a lot of prospects for a former terrorist with C-list super-villain status who attempted to assassinate the president, was released on a dubious pardon, is still wanted in Canada, and is technically an illegal alien. All it took was one phone call after months out of contact for Bette to be all "Oui qui, mon dieu! I adore mi amore! Voulez-vous coucher avec moi, ce soir?"
You had me wrapped around your finger. But did you have to-- did you have to let it linger?
They were almost immediately re-engaged, right around the time Captain Atom was confronted with an evil alternate version of himself who challenged the legitimacy of his identity but was not engaged to a French-Canadian. Score! Of course, continuing a grand tradition of heroes shutting their significant others out of the Justice League, Plastique was stuck in guest star mode throughout the life of Captain Atom's awful spin-off team, Extreme Justice. She did however get a headband, metal shoulder pads, and a thong because 1995 demanded it. At least Nate had finally told her that his spy alias of "Cameron Scott" wasn't his real name, although it would probably be the name she'd be taking, continuing a foundation of trust and honesty that grounded their relationship in J-E-L-L-O.
You know you're in a bad relationship when you can't find anyone to throw your fiance a bachelorette party besides Maxima, and that she invites Carol Ferris, who has a demonic Predator baby in the club's bathroom. Maybe that's why the wedding that was a week away was turned into a "longer engagement," a phrase that pretty much insures it all ending in irreconcilable differences. Nate actually said the words "I just want to feel like I know who I am first." Gah-- no wonder he's the bottom. To mark this inauspicious occasion, Plastique pretty much disappeared for the final issues of Extreme Justice before it too was cancelled. Some chicks can't take a hint. It takes a special kind of coyote crazy to gnaw two series off to escape matrimony.
The new policeman costume, the Danish Schoolboy one underneath, or the leather one-piece with tassled pasties and a metal ring in the open crotch?
Despite nearly a decade of perfectly good stringing along, Captain Atom & Plastique were finally married in a fashion befitting their status in the DC Universe... off-panel, and acknowledged as an afterthought. It was like that time Nightwing and Starfire's priest exploded before they'd exchanged their vows, but somebody forgot to pass that along to writers on other books, so they were "married" for a few guest appearances before totally breaking up. For no good reason, it stuck in a book called The L.A.W. with a straight face. Further, this was a book by two over the hill Charlton creators who didn't even like Captain Atom, sidelined him for most of his obligatory role in the mini-series, dressed him like the old Allen Adams Captain from 1960, and yet referred to him as "Christopher." Despite the series being poorly received on account of it sucking rocks, it somehow made its way into continuity, and set the standard for even worse Captain Atom scripts to fail to reach through to the present day.*
Despite this indefensible marriage act, or more likely because of it, everyone forgot about Plastique some more and set about unbinding the union at the first opportunity some writer decided "Eh, I guess we can use Captain Atom for this, if that's the best I can get." Just to add insult to injury, in the mini-series that confirmed the divorce, all Captain Atom wanted to talk about was how much better his weeks long relationship with Angela "The Engineer" Spica was to his entire marriage (and his relations with every other super-heroine besides.) Hell, I had to reread the thing to make sure Nate didn't dismiss his departed soulmate and inspirer of longterm chastity, coincidentally also named Angela.
Despite everything, I'm kind of sorry these two crazy kids didn't work things out. Writers have tended to treat Captain Atom like some salute-happy soldier boy despite his couter-culture maverick leanings, which would be trickier if he was still shacked up with a Canuck commie. Plastique has gone back to being a villainess high on T&A and less even her thin motivations of old. At least when she struggled with heroism and domesticity, she showed some depth. Also, both these people are severely damaged, and found a peace and affection through asanawa and pelvic explosions of various types. Today, they're just two lonely veterans of foreign affairs, each far less than the sum of the whole.
*I have never read an issue of the DCNĂœ series by J.T. Krul and Freddie Williams, but I have been made aware through solicitations that it is written by J.T. Krul and drawn by Freddie Williams, and is set in the DCNĂœ. A=A.
Tuesday, January 3, 2012
Martian Manhunter #1 (May, 1988)
Ravaged by a sentient virus contracted during a recent Justice League International mission, the Martian Manhunter sought help from Batman. However, J'Onn J'Onzz was pursued by a demonic vision, and fled to avoid imperiling his friend. Batman had briefly seen the pursuer, and rounded up the JLI for an intervention. Despite the Dark Knight's conviction that the creature was real, Booster Gold noted "The Manhunter's a telepath, right? Isn't it conceivable that his mind could project his own hallucinations outward-- so convincingly that Batman believed it was real?" Captain Atom continued, "Tell me something, Bats-- how do we go about finding a guy who can change shape, turn invisible-- and telepathically black out our minds, to boot?"
"If you're going to whine, Captain Atom-- you can just stay here!" Atom objected to the characterization, but joined Mr. Miracle, Blue Beetle, Red Rocket and the rest in trying to find the Manhunter from Mars...
"Fever Dream" was by J.M. DeMatteis and Mark Badger.
Tuesday, December 27, 2011
Captain Atom: Armageddon #9 (August, 2006)
"Listen, Atom. You're a nice guy. Tough, honest, pure of heart. But I'm afraid there's no other solution to this little problem of ours. You have to die. Sorry. No hard feelings."
With that last bit of arrogance and monumental hubris, Jack Hawksmoor turned on the meat grinder. Apollo tried to kill Captain Atom, and instead started the reaction that would end everything. Apollo tried to absorb Atom's rising energy output, and talked just a little bit more crap before being flash fried into a skeleton. Hostile idiot Midnighter reacted as one would expect to the death of his lover, and was swiftly roasted. Hawksmoor had the Doctor rouse
Mr. Majestic, who understandably wanted to kill Hawksmoor. Jenny Quantum returned from Reality 440 to chastise Hawksmoor for his poor leadership and deal with Captain Atom. The preteens's eyes and teeth flew out of her head as she died.
Nikola Hanssen finally (and conveniently) transcended her humanity to become Void, and removed the splinter of her being from Captain Atom to make herself whole again. Captain Atom returned to his familiar silver and red appearance, and was sent back to the DC Universe. However, it was now Void who was set to explode.
"This world... it's gone wrong. Too wrong to continue. And we're to blame. We tried to save it, but we destroyed it instead. We reshaped it into our own twisted image. It's not a sane place to live anymore. Not if you're a normal person, just struggling to get through the day... It's all going to start again. Like it has a million times before.
After the World Storm, the Wildstorm Universe started over again with a page drawn by Jim Lee. He'd draw about twenty-two more story pages for the first and only issue of a "relaunched" Wildcats title, and Gene Ha would manage two issues of a new Authority "series," before this bold new beginning would start unraveling. Seeing as this entire series seemed to drift from fight scene to contradictory story point before petering out halfway through and phoning in a final few issues, the reboot didn't fall far from the initiating event mini-series.
Captain Atom fell back to his Earth, which looked really trashed and post-apocalyptic. As it turned it, it was just a craphole where the closing moments of Infinite Crisis was taking place. That's a set of editorially mandated plot points strung together into a "story" for another time...
"The End" couldn't come soon enough for Will Pfeifer, Giuseppe Camuncoli, Sandra Hope, Jim Lee and Scott Williams.
DCnĂœ Year's Wildstormin' Eve
- Demon Knights #2 (December, 2011) @ The Idol-Head of Diabolu
- Justice League #1 (October, 2011) @ Justice League Detroit
- DC/WS DreamWar #6 (November, 2008) @ DC Bloodlines
Tuesday, December 20, 2011
Captain Atom: Armageddon #8 (July, 2006)
"As strange as my line of work may seem, it's a lot like any other job in one way... you tend to end up dating people you meet at the workplace. At least that's what I did. Bette Sans Souci. Called herself 'Plastique.' She was a villain when we met, but she reformed. Happens more often than you'd think... at least on my Earth. We fell in love. Eventually, we got married. In the end, it didn't work out. American military man, Canadian separatist terrorist? Should have seen the split coming. Still hurts, though."
Lacking ties to Earth, Captain Atom volunteered for the suicide mission that blew him into the Wildstorm universe he was now fated to destroy, even as he had found a new love. Ah well, didn't matter, as Apollo and Midnighter had arrived to kill his ass. Apollo took Captain Atom to the sun to die, but Atom once again jacked with someone's atoms and caused Apollo to have a meltdown. Midnighter broke Grifter's arm, then kicked Nikola Hanssen in the ovaries, until a door opened and the roasted Apollo landed on the queen bitch.
Mr. Majestic showed back up at The Authority's ship again to once more argue against killing Captain Atom with Jack Hawksmoor yet another time, only to be belittled and brushed off by the smug prick.
Midnighter recovered enough to nail Grifter in the back with three shuriken, so Grifter talked some more instead of shooting his gun, and got his damn fool head blown off by Apollo's heat vision. Apollo and Midnighter then rushed Captain Atom and forced him through a wormhole door.
"Lessons In Nuclear Physics" was another irrelevant title that took longer to read than the story by Will Pfeifer, Giuseppe Camuncoli and Sandra Hope.
New 52's Day featuring Wildstorm
- Aquaman #3 (January, 2012) @ Justice League Detroit
- The Huntress #2 (January, 2011) @ Diana Prince is the New Wonder Woman
- Stormwatch #3 (January, 2012) @ The Idol-Head of Diabolu
- DC/Wildstorm DreamWar #1-5 (2008) @ DC Bloodlines
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