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Spectre (comics)

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The Spectre is a fictional cosmic entity and superhero who has appeared in numerous comic books published by DC Comics. The character first appeared in More Fun Comics #52 (February 1940), and was created by Jerry Siegel and Bernard Baily.

Character history

Origins

The Spectre's career began in the late 1930s, when hard-boiled police detective Jim Corrigan was murdered. His spirit refused to pass into the afterlife, however, and, in the guise of a chalk-white man in a green cloak, it sought bloody vengeance against Corrigan's murderers in a grim, supernatural fashion.

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During the mid-1940s, the popularity of superhero comics began to decline, and the Spectre suffered as a result. He was reduced to playing the role of "guardian angel" to a bumbling character called "Percival Popp, the Super Cop." The character had formerly been part of the Justice Society of America featured in All-Star Comics, but he was replaced in 1944.

Silver Age version

When the Silver Age of comic books arrived in the 1960s, the Spectre was re-written and returned to the role of an avenging undead spirit. Under the authorship of Gardner Fox and as drawn by Murphy Anderson, his power was vastly increased, and at times he approached the level of omnipotence. This run of the Spectre is noteworthy for presenting horrific images in a way that cleverly avoided the strictures of the Comics Code. For instance, in one story the Spectre transforms a murderer into a candle and then lights it. According to the Code, it was forbidden to show a person being burned alive, but no such restriction existed for images of candles, even if they were screaming in pain.

Bronze Age version

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In the 1970s, the Spectre was revived in the pages of Adventure Comics. This series, written by Michael Fleischer and drawn by Jim Aparo, was notorious for its gruesome depictions of the Spectre's poetic retributions against criminals; they were melted like wax, turned to wood and run through sawmills, transformed into glass and left teetering over a precarious drop. The series was cancelled with a few chapters written but not yet drawn. These remaining chapters were illustrated by Aparo several years later and collected as the final issue of "Wrath of the Spectre", a 4-issue miniseries which reprinted the original Fleischer/Aparo stories in its first three issues.

The Spectre also made several guest appearances in the DC comic "Ghosts". In these short stories, supernatural debunker Terrence Thirteen would oftentimes become caught in dangerous situations with deadly criminals. Against Thirteen's protests, the Spectre would appear and kill the offenders. Thirteen was convinced that the Spectre was not a ghost, but a man, until in the final appearance, the Spectre took Thirteen to the realm of Judgement, where Thirteen met with the spirit of his dead father.

Among the many changes made to DC Comics' characters during the later half of the 1980s (following the Crisis on Infinite Earths), the Spectre was largely de-powered. First, The Spectre is revealed to be guarding an entrance to Heaven in a Swamp Thing annual story by Alan Moore. Then, in the conclusion to Alan Moore's Swamp Thing series, "American Gothic", the Spectre is defeated by evil incarnate as it advances to destroy Heaven. In The Books of Magic series, written by Neil Gaiman, The Spectre is revealed to be an archangel who metes out punishments for god as the Spirit of Vengeance. Finally, the Spectre, in Last Days of the Justice Society of America, fails to resolve a situation and is punished by God for his failure. Under the authorship of Doug Moench, he became nearly a generic mystical figure, with Corrigan joining an occult detective agency.

Panel from the cover to The Spectre v2 #30. Art by Fred Butler.
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Panel from the cover to The Spectre v2 #30. Art by Fred Butler.

Modern Age version

Eventually, Moench was replaced by former theologian John Ostrander, who chose to re-examine the Spectre in his aspects both as the embodied Avenging Wrath of the Murdered Dead and as a brutal 1930s policeman.

Ostrander placed the Spectre in complex, ambiguous situations — what vengeance should be wrought upon a woman who killed her abusive husband in his sleep, for instance. Other notable dilemmas included the tiny (fictional) nation of Vlatava (faced with endless cycles of civil war and ethnic cleansing and retribution and blood feuds that had endured for centuries, the Spectre responded by judging the whole nation guilty and killing the entire population except two politicians), the pending execution of a wrongfully-convicted man (his death sentence was commuted to life in prison after the Spectre threatened to kill the entire population of the state of New York in retribution), and a 90-year-old woman who had spent her entire life trying to atone for the single murder she had secretly committed in the 1920s (the Spectre found her on her deathbed).

Ostrander also retconned several new concepts into the Spectre's history: he revealed that the Spectre was meant to exist as the embodiment of the Wrath of God, and Jim Corrigan was but the latest human spirit assigned to guide him while he existed on Earth. It was also shown that the Spectre was a fallen angel named Aztar who had participated in Lucifer's rebellion, but then repented, and that serving as the embodiment of God's anger was its penance.

Furthermore, the Spectre was not the first embodiment of God's anger, but was the replacement for the previously-minor DC character Eclipso; Ostrander chose to portray this as a distinction between the Spectre's pursuit of vengeance and Eclipso's pursuit of revenge. In a historical context, Eclipso was responsible for the biblical Flood, while the Spectre was the Angel of Death who slew the firstborn Egyptian children.

Cover to Green Lantern: Rebirth #1. Art by Ethan Van Sciver.
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Cover to Green Lantern: Rebirth #1. Art by Ethan Van Sciver.

The Spectre was also featured as a brief cameo in Neil Gaiman's The Books of Magic, a whirlwind tour of the occult characters of the DC Universe. In the course of the book it is implied that the Spectre is Raguel, the Archangel with whom is entrusted the Lord's Vengeance.

The Spectre has also played a pivotal role in the Crisis on Infinite Earths and Zero Hour storylines; in both cases, in the final struggle against the main villain- the Anti-Monitor and Parallax respectively- the Spectre was the only hero capable of standing against the villains directly, allowing the other heroes time to put a plan into action that would destroy the villains once and for all.

Hal Jordan

Eventually, Corrigan's soul found peace. He relinquished the Spectre, and went on to the afterlife. The role of the Spectre was later assumed by Hal Jordan, the spirit of the former Green Lantern. In a series written by J. M. DeMatteis, Hal Jordan was able to bend the Spectre's mission from one of vengeance into one of redemption. After this series was cancelled, Jordan was forced to return, temporarily, to the Spectre's mission of vengeance. After the Spectre was able to purge the Parallax from Jordan, he departed in order to move onto the next recipient of the Spirit. Jordan admits that the knowledge he gained from being the Spectre's host has faded, but if he has any greater knowledge of the Universe, he has not revealed it to anyone else.
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Day of Vengeance

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As covered in one of the lead-ins to Countdown to Infinite Crisis, Day of Vengeance, Jean Loring was transformed into the new Eclipso. She seduced the Spectre, who was unstable due to the loss of his host, into removing all magic in the DC Universe. Eclipso explained to the Spectre that all things that follow the rules of the physical universe follow God's law. Anything that breaks the rules, breaks God's law and is therefore evil. Subsequently, as magic breaks the rules of the physical universe, it is an originating source of tremendous evil (this line of logic made sense to the unstable Spectre).

Therefore, the Spectre went on a rampage, destroying magical constructs, institutions that taught magic and magical dimensions. In one such dimension, his acts included the mass murder of over 700 battle hardened magicians. His actions caused havoc to some of the more powerful magic-based characters: Phantom Stranger, whom he turned into a mouse, Black Adam, who fought the Spectre when the spirit invaded his kingdom of Khandaq and caused plagues of destruction, Dr. Fate, who was imprisoned in a dimension inside his helmet, Raven who can no longer properly control her powers, and the wizard Shazam, who, despite the intervention of Shazam's champion Captain Marvel, was killed by the Spectre. The Spectre also destroyed the magic-fueled kingdom of Atlantis, the home of Aquaman, during his rampage.

In the Day Of Vengeance: Infinite Crisis Special, the Spectre finally went too far and killed Nabu, the last and most powerful of the Lords of Order (the Spectre had killed the others, with the exception of Amethyst, whom he battled on Gemworld; apparently she was powerful or clever enough to escape his wrath) and the Presence's attention was finally drawn to him. The Spectre was once again forced into a human host, finally stopping his mad rampage. Nabu revealed before dying, that originally, he and the other Lords had worked towards forming the perfect host for the Spectre, but those plans were cut short.

Crispus Allen as the Spectre, from Tales of the Unexpected #1. Art by Eric Battle.
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Crispus Allen as the Spectre, from Tales of the Unexpected #1. Art by Eric Battle.

Crispus Allen

In Gotham Central #38 Crispus Allen was killed by, ironically, a cop named Jim Corrigan (whose connection, if any, to the original Jim Corrigan was never established). While his body was in the morgue, the Spectre began to enter Crispus Allen as he begged God not to put him in his new host. The Spectre was forced into Allen's body making him the new host for the Spirit of Vengeance.

Alexander Luthor also revealed that he was indirectly responsible for the Spectre's actions in Day of Vengeance. The Psycho-Pirate, under Luthor's orders, gave Eclipso's diamond to Jean Loring, making her manipulate the Spectre so that magic could be undone and used as fuel for Luthor's Multiverse tower.

As the Crisis reached a climax in the North, each magic user on earth, both good and evil, assembled in Stonehenge where they attempted to bring in the new age of Magic by summoning the Spectre. They managed to call forth Crispus Allen who had only recently re-awakened from his death. Allen transformed into the Spectre, who then killed Star Sapphire for her sins before vanishing, leaving a confused and frightened group of magic users in his wake.

After the Infinite Crisis series ends there will be two additional "Crisis Aftermath" limited series. One is a three-issue miniseries called Spectre: Dead Again. The series is written by Will Pfeiffer and illustrated by Cliff Chiang.

In the first issue of the Spectre miniseries, Crispus Allen is confronted by the Spirit of Vengeance. The latter has come to realize that he needs to be humanized by a host in order to know what his mission really means. Allen refuses his request, wanting no further involvement in the Spectre's vigilante work.

The Spirit, then, leaves Allen for a year (presumably about the same as the year depicted in 52). During that time, Allen sees that he cannot help or communicate with his family, still shattered because Jim Corrigan will not be called to account for Allen's murder. Also, while the former detective can solve crimes—and even learns Batman's secret identity—he cannot bring the culprits to justice. This includes Corrigan, his own killer.

After a year of being unseen and powerless, Allen receives another visit from the Spirit of Vengeance. This time he takes the offer, and becomes the Spectre's human host. Their first mission together is to bring ghoulishly appropriate justice to a pedophile. While troubled, Allen is satisfied by the knowledge that, "He (Vengeance) needs me more than I need him."

Awards

The character won the 1961 Alley Award as the Hero/Heroine Most Worthy of Revival and the 1964 Alley Award for Strip Most Desired for Revival.

Trivia

See also

External links

 


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