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Doctor Death (character)

DC Comics supervillain


Summary

DC Comics supervillain

FieldValue
imageDoctor-Death.jpg
convertedy
captionDr. Death as depicted in Batman (vol. 2) #25 (January 2014). Art by Greg Capullo.
character_nameDr. Death
real_nameDr. Karl Hellfern
publisherDC Comics
debutDetective Comics #29 (July 1939)
creatorsGardner Fox (writer)
Bob Kane (artist)
speciesMetahuman
homeworld
alliancesScience Squad
partnersRiddler
supports
aliases
powersChemical and biological weapons
catsuper
subcatDC Comics
villainy
sortkeyDoctor Death (comics)

Bob Kane (artist) Doctor Death (Dr. Karl Hellfern) is a supervillain appearing in publications by DC Comics, primarily as an enemy of Batman. Created by Gardner Fox and Bob Kane, he first appeared in Detective Comics #29 (July 1939). He is notable as the first traditional supervillain to be encountered by Batman as well as his first recurring foe.

Publication history

The character first appeared in Detective Comics #29 in 1939. The scriptwriter for Detective Comics #29 and #30 is an issue of dispute, leaving the creator of Doctor Death uncertain. Batman creator Bob Kane is officially credited as scriptwriter of these issues, though later Gardner Fox, the scriptwriter of Detective Comics #31 and #32, claimed authorship.

Fictional character biography

Golden Age

In his first appearance in Detective Comics #29, Doctor Death develops a lethal chemical agent from pollen extract and plans to use the poison to extort money from wealthy Gotham City citizens. He is assisted by a large East Indian manservant Jabah. He decides to eliminate Batman, and threatens to kill someone unless Batman stops him. Batman defeats his two henchmen, but is wounded when Jabah shoots him, though he escapes using a gas pellet. He then gets to Doctor Death's base, meeting him in his lab, and chases him around the building. To evade capture, Doctor Death ignites chemicals in his laboratory, presumably killing Jabah and himself in the resulting explosion.

Doctor Death next appears the following month in Detective Comics #30. With a new accomplice, a Cossack named Mikhail, Doctor Death is this time successful in claiming a victim in his extortion scheme, but discovers from the widow that the poisoned man lost his fortune in the Great Depression. Batman intervenes in the plot, following Mikhail back to Doctor Death's base, and upon apprehending the doctor, discovers that his face had been horribly disfigured from the lab explosion, giving him a brown, skeletal appearance.

Bronze Age revival

After several decades' absence, writer Gerry Conway reintroduced Doctor Death in Batman #345 and Detective Comics #512 (1982). Conway's story is an update of the original 1939 tale. In this version, Doctor Death is depicted as a paraplegic, but his deadly gas gimmick remains the same. He is assisted this time by a manservant named Togo.

Modern Age

Doctor Death was revived once again in Batgirl #42-44 and #50 (2003–2004) by writer Dylan Horrocks.{{cite comic|writer=Dylan Horrocks|penciller=Damion Scott|inker=Robert Campanella|colorist=Jason Wright Jamison|letterer=John Costanza|editor=Dennis O'Neil|title=Batgirl|issue=#42|date=April 2000| publisher=DC Comics|location=New York City}} The modern version of the character is a producer of biological weapons, often selling them on the black market to terrorists and other criminals. He is now depicted as a bald, gnome-like man wearing a lab coat and an oxygen mask.

''The New 52''

In The New 52 continuity reboot, Doctor Death is a disgruntled former Wayne Enterprises scientist who created a serum that causes uncontrolled bone growth and possesses a skeletal appearance due to testing it on himself. He is killed in battle with Batman after being affected by the serum.

Other characters named Doctor Death

  • A different character named Doctor Death appears in Doom Patrol #107 (November 1966).
  • In Sandman Mystery Theatre #21 (December 1994), Wesley Dodds encounters a serial killer named "Doctor Death", a.k.a. Dr. Raymond Kesslor. This Doctor Death euthanizes elderly patients, in a reference to Jack Kevorkian.
  • A rogue doctor styling himself "Doctor Death" is the villain of the Scoop Smith story in Whiz Comics #2. This issue features the first appearance of Captain Marvel, later Shazam.

In other media

Doctor Death appears as a character summon in Scribblenauts Unmasked: A DC Comics Adventure.

References

References

  1. (2008). "The Essential Batman Encyclopedia". Del Rey.
  2. (2006). "The Supervillain Book: The Evil Side of Comics and Hollywood". Visible Ink Press.
  3. Daoust, Christian. (2020-09-28). "Who is Batman's First Villain in the Original Comics?". [[Screen Rant]].
  4. Daniels, Les. (1999). "Batman: The Complete History". [[Chronicle Books]].
  5. (1976). "The Encyclopedia of Comic Book Heroes, Volume 1: Batman". Macmillan Publishing Co.
  6. Rovin, Jeff. (1987). "The Encyclopedia of Supervillains". Facts on File.
  7. (July 1939). "[[Detective Comics]]". [[DC Comics]].
  8. (August 1939). "[[Detective Comics]]". [[DC Comics]].
  9. (November 2003). "[[Batgirl (comic book)". [[DC Comics]].
  10. (October 2006). "[[52 (comics)". [[DC Comics]].
  11. (April 2011). "Batman: Streets of Gotham". [[DC Comics]].
  12. (January 2014). "[[Batman (comic book)". [[DC Comics]].
  13. (February 2014). "[[Batman (comic book)". [[DC Comics]].
  14. (January 2014). "[[Batman (comic book)". [[DC Comics]].
  15. (January 2014). "[[Sandman Mystery Theatre]]". [[DC Comics]].
  16. Eisen, Andrew. (October 4, 2013). "DC Characters and Objects - ''Scribblenauts Unmasked'' Guide".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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