Category: Uncategorized

  • Nightwing and the 4 Supergirls

    Nightwing and the 4 Supergirls

    You can probably guess at this point that I’m a pretty big fan of Supergirl, what you might not be aware of is that I’m equally into Nightwing. Nightwing, the Dick Grayson one, first appeared as Nightwing in Tales of the Teen Titans #44 in 1984 and by 2005 he had met and interacted with 4 separate variations of the maid of might. A single Nightwing meeting 4 different Supergirls in a mess of continuity resets and revisions while Nightwing’s history remained relatively unchanged is what I want to discuss here. The 4 Supergirls are; Pre-Crisis Kara Zor-El, Matrix Supergirl, Cir-El, and Post-Crisis Supergirl. The Pre-Crisis interaction and the interaction with Cir-El are rather brief so I’ll only cover them briefly, and I’ll mostly focus on The Batman Chronicles #20 and Supergirl (Vol. 5) #3.

    I’ve had this thought in my mind for a while and its partly because I was positive Nightwing would have been included in the group shot of all the heroes shown in Supergirl (Vol. 2) #20. It even proclaims on the cover that the New Teen Titans are in the book! I was just as surprised as anyone else to find out Nightwing does not show up and it’s because Supergirl #20 released the month before Tales of the Teen Titans #44. I worried briefly that maybe the Pre-Crisis Supergirl never met Nightwing before her untimely demise, but both heroes do show up in Crisis and even stand near one another on the Monitor’s satellite so it’s reasonable that they could’ve had some conversation.

    The Nightwing story in Batman Chronicles #20 is just one of 3 stories from the issue and is titled “The Rage of Angels”. Written by Ian Edginton, penciled by Mshindo Kuumba, inked by Bob Almond, with colors by Noelle Giddings and letters by Ken Lopez. This, of all the comics I’m covering in this post, is the most interaction we have between Supergirl and Nightwing. While just 10 pages, this is a very clear cut Nightwing and Supergirl team-up and doesn’t have the ensemble cast that most the other stories I’m covering have.

    We open in Blüdhaven where Nightwing is staking out a shipment coming in that is transporting illegal substances into his city. His plan was to take it slow until a certain red cape entered the scene. Apparently this shipment also had a stop in Leesburg which is the home to the Linda Danvers/Matrix Supergirl. Supergirl has a much more aggressive approach than Nightwing’s stealth plan, but together they are able to successfully apprehend the Russians that are smuggling in guns, drugs, and refugees.

    The police and FBI show up and the captain of the ship seems like he is planning on pulling his diplomatic immunity when Supergirl, as Nightwing says, “puts the fear of god” into him. The pair finish off with a farewell and agreement that they made a pretty good team together. This story does a good job of fitting nicely in both Nightwing and Supergirl’s worlds at the time of it’s release in early 2000 with Supergirl having the flame wings that were present near the end of her time bonded to the Matrix, and Nightwing being the hero to Blüdhaven while not being very well respected as such. I also wanted to note that Nightwing pretty immediately calls out this Supergirl as “not a Kryptonian. She’s something else” which is possibly just to get Batman readers up to speed if they hadn’t been keeping track of the goings on of the S side of the universe.

    Cir-El barely has a dozen appearances so it’s really impressive that she not only shares an appearance with Nightwing, but also they’re both on the cover to Superman/Batman #5. This is the penultimate issue of the first arc of the Superman/Batman title and features the sidekicks of the titular heroes breaking into the White House after President Lex Luthor reported to the world that he had captured Superman and Batman. Dick Grayson and Cir-El don’t directly interact here but it seems the “S-Team” (Superboy, Supergirl, and Steel) and the “B-Team” (Nightwing, Robin, Batgirl, and Huntress) would’ve had to planned an operation like this beforehand and are in radio communication the whole time.

    Supergirl (Vol. 5) #3 is part of the Post-Crisis Kara Zor-El’s exploration through the DC Universe as she tries to find a place for herself. This issue has her meeting up with and trying out for the Outsiders, currently led by Nightwing, in a story titled “The Girl of Steel Chapter 3: Outsiders”. Jeph Loeb writes, Ian Churchill pencils, and Norm Rapmund inks with letterer Richard Starkings and colorist David Moran. We open the story with Grace, Lightning, and Supergirl fighting in what can be assumed is a training exercise. Supergirl also has some internal monologuing during this time and the reader gets some insight to how Supergirl feels about the other Outsiders, including her confusion about why Grace doesn’t have a hero name and why Thunder’s name really doesn’t make sense.

    This all changes when Nightwing shows up. Here we find out that our girl of steel has a teenage crush on Nightwing (and who can blame her). We get about 4 pages of Supergirl looking dreamily at Nightwing and not hearing a single word he says. Supergirl then kisses Nightwing and then runs off to take on Lex Luthor by herself. The back half of this issue doesn’t feature Nightwing since Supergirl fried the controls to the Pequod (the Outsider’s main mode of transportation).

    I’ll probably wait to cover the rest of the story at some other time, possibly as part of Supergirl Surprise sometime down the line. I do want to mention however that some of the art in this issue is really great especially Supergirl breaking out of the chains and the whole of the Supergirl/Grace fight.

    I didn’t really have a goal in mind with this post other than having an excuse to talk about my 2 favorite super heroes. I’ve been reading through my Nightwing comics recently and I liked the variety of stories here and enjoyed reading some Nightwing stories that are a bit adjacent to his normal series that I didn’t read as part of my Nightwing reading. This was by no means every iteration of Supergirl and Nightwing together but I feel it represents the somewhat irregular timeline that DC has. Dick Grayson from before the first Crisis, around New Teen Titans, up to Flashpoint really had a pretty uninterrupted continuity while Supergirl in that timeframe seemed to have a pretty irregular stability and it seemed they kept trying to reinvent her. Let me know if you have a favorite Supergirl Nightwing team up or if you have any other heroes that team up with Supergirl that you’d like to know more about!

  • Supergirl in the Multiverse: Earth-53

    Earth-53 has made a few brief appearances in the recent DC Comics lore in comics like The Green Lantern #11 and Dark Crisis: The Dark Army #1 where we have met a universe that seems much like our own but slightly different with all of mankind being apes. When this universe first showed up it was referred to as “Earth-53” but is most often referred to as “The 53rd Earth”. More recent mentions of the universe have taken to calling it Earth-52, although I think Earth-52 is much better represented as a continuation of the New 52 as I mentioned last week in my Supergirl in the Multiverse post (found here). As I was reading the DC Finest Science Fiction collection for unrelated research I came across a story initially published in Strange Adventures #45 titled “The Gorilla World” that had humans Albert and Cora Dawson transported to an adjacent world where the inhabitants were all gorillas. It is stated here that Gorillas evolved to be the dominate species as opposed to Humans who remained savages and eventually went extinct. I don’t think this story is followed up on ever and I don’t believe it served as inspiration for the later Earth-53, but it was a cool coincidence that I wanted to mention.

    Earth-53 is home to the Primate Legion which is only shown to include Ape versions of Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman, Atom, and Aquaman, but the idea of instead of humans we have apes can easily be applied to any resident of the DC Universe. Super-Ape is named as Titano the Super-Ape, obviously a reference to the Superman foe (who is currently mini sized and showing up in the current Supergirl comic). Continuing on with this theme, I’m going to call this universe’s Supergirl Tee-Nah the Super-Ape after Tee-Nah the new gorilla staff member at the Daily Planet that first appeared in Superman Unlimited #2. With this universe being fairly unmapped, it’s hard to say exactly how the super-heroes differ from their Earth-0 counterparts but until it is more defined I will just assume Tee-Nah is from a very ape-like Krypton and shares the same origin as Supergirl but if she was instead an ape.

    As with all my Supergirl in the Multiverse posts, this is my own artwork. Tee-Nah the Super-Ape is diving down towards the viewer. Tee-Nah is a blonde ape wearing a Supergirl costume. There are a few buildings shown behind her and a building that looks like a version of Lex-Corp has a shattered window that it seems the Super-Ape is jumping out of. The top right corner features a motif of Super-Ape’s symbol with a 53 on top of it.

  • Supergirl Surprise #9: Supergirl (Vol. 4) #9

    Supergirl Surprise #9: Supergirl (Vol. 4) #9

    As I have been doing this Supergirl Surprise series I’ve generally found the single issues hold up pretty well on their own. This issue however I was totally lost reading through it. Tempus Fugit, cover dated as May ‘97, has credits that read “David, Frank, Smith, Prentice, D’Angelo & Digital Chameleon with Pittarese” It looks like the order is writer, penciler, inker, colorist, letterer, and finally editor with both D’Angelo and Digital Chameleon on colors. Looking into it, it seems the reason I was so lost reading through this is because this is part 2 of 2 of the Tempus Fugit story.

    The story opens with a brief interlude showing the young Wally (who I’m pretty sure ends up being God) asking his grandparents to go out and see a friend – remember this for later – before cutting to what I assume is where the previous issue left off. A double scythe wielding foe named Tempus is obliterating the Danvers’ home while Buzz is sitting looking like an absolute d-bag. We get a reminder here that this is the Matrix Supergirl when she blasts Tempus with a “psi-blast”. Realizing her parents are banged up but otherwise okay, she tells Fred that she’s going to go after Tempus and try to alert Supergirl to the crisis at hand.

    From here we get another interlude with Cutter at the Leesburg Tribune, before we see Buzz and Tempus having an argument. In the midst of their argument, they see Wally and an attempted fireball soon gets knocked away by Wally’s baseball bat like it was nothing. Supergirl catches up to Tempus at the hospital and this is the main action sequence of the comic. Around this point some dialogue between Buzz and Tempus reveal that their plan is to push Supergirl over the edge into murdering Tempus. Before this can happen however, Buzz stops her and asks if she wants to continue on the Linda Danvers life or change to be more like Supergirl. This moment of clarity snaps our hero out of it and Buzz gets whisked away. The story then ends with Linda waking up the morning before and it seems Wally has turned back time so that the Danvers’ house wasn’t destroyed, Dick Malverne wasn’t brainwashed to being Tempus (yeah I forgot that too!), and everything is just back to normal.

    Peter David is an exceptional writer and this Supergirl series is often regarded as the best for our maid of might and this issue continues this trend. Me being lost as I read through this second part of a 2 part story doesn’t diminish the quality but it was an interesting thing to experience with this series, although I didn’t much care for the Groundhog’s Day starting over ending we got but maybe that’s just me. I’m interested to see how other comics approach the single issue vs larger storyline approach especially miniseries like Cosmic Adventures in the 8th Grade or Superman/Supergirl Maelstrom. The final panel at the end of the issue features a newspaper that while cut off can still read “Gary F Thanks R For Suppor” and it seems like this is meant as a send off since it’s Frank’s last issue doing art on the book. I don’t always like Gary Frank’s art and sometimes it falls a bit into the uncanny valley for me, but I do think there are some pretty exceptional panels in this book and the full page spreads are particularly successful. Linda does spend the first 10 pages of this issue half naked which is a weird outfit to wear to dinner with her parents but you do you.

    A couple cool ads this week for the second wave of Amalgam. The first page near the front is in black and white and advertises Lobo the Duck, Thorion of the New Asgods, and The Dark Claw Adventures and the ad page in the back (full color now) showcases Bat-Thing, Spider-Boy Team-Up, and JLX Unleashed. I’m not sure exactly why the front ad is in black and white, perhaps it was part of the marketing or maybe it was a printing error. The colorless ad is on the inside front cover and the ad on the inside back cover is also in black and white so I’m leaning towards either printing error or it was intentional as possibly a cost cutting measure. Looking at some other books in my collection from around this time, it seems like DC books from cover date April and May 1997 have colorless inside covers but it seems isolated to those two months based on the Supergirl and Nightwing books I have (I don’t have any other books from those cover dates). Otherwise I didn’t notice anything notable while reading through this but I really enjoyed this different experience with Supergirl Surprise and I hope to have more surprising adventures through my collection.

  • Supergirl in the Multiverse: Earth-52

    Earth-52, from what I can gather, has about one panel of existence. That statement however comes with a pretty big asterisk. Near the end of issue 12 of Doomsday Clock, Doctor Manhattan says something along the lines of “Earth-52 is out there” and while saying this images of Superman, Batman, and Wonder Woman can be seen. These depictions of the Trinity bear striking resemblance to their New 52 counterparts. From this we can imply that Earth-52 shares some similarities with the New 52 continuity or perhaps Earth-52 is a universe where the New 52 continued on without Rebirth happening. I choose to believe the latter. I do want to note that sometimes Earth-52 is called “the 53rd Earth” (since the local 52 universes are 0-51, that would make 52 the 53rd Earth). The “53rd Earth” usually shows a gorilla version of the Justice League but Earth-52 makes more sense to me being a New 52 expansion, and the gorilla stuff seems like a great choice for Earth-53 (see more on that next week!).

    Supergirl in the New 52 era has a bit of a different origin to what we normally see of Supergirl. Instead of landing near Metropolis or even in the United States at all, Kara’s rocket shows up in Siberia. Kara then spends a lot of her early life on Earth not speaking any human languages, not believing Superman is her baby cousin, and generally being very mad. After meeting Siobhan Smythe, who can instantly learn any language, Kara now has someone to communicate with and a later encounter with H’el lets her speak English. Kara eventually comes around to trusting Superman as well and an encounter with the Red Lanterns helps her with her anger issues a bit. Supergirl’s life as shown in the New 52 era ends with her powerless and with Jeremiah and Eliza Danvers from the DEO working to help figure out a solution to getting er powers back.

    As with all my Supergirl in the Multiverse posts, this is my own artwork. New 52 era Supergirl is floating in the air with a large metal object held aloft in her hands. There are blue skies and clouds all around an her cape is billowing around her. The top right corner has a motif of Supergirl’s S symbol with a 52 on top of it.

  • Supergirl in the Multiverse Season 1 recap

    Supergirl in the Multiverse Season 1 recap

    If you’re reading this blog I assume you are at least a bit familiar with my Supergirl in the Multiverse series which has been a weekly feature here (if you’re not familiar check it out here). Today I’m going to go through the series up to this point. What I have begun calling “Season 1” of Supergirl in the Multiverse is actually the entirety of my initial goal for the series. I set out at the beginning of this year to find and catalogue the Supergirl of each of the 52 universes of DC’s “Local Multiverse” or Earths 0 through 51. As I got further through the series I became more and more excited about it and more and more invested in learning about DC’s multiverse. This excitement, as well as the overwhelmingly positive response, has led me to expand the series indefinitely and I’m very excited to see how the series will progress and what new universes I’ll find outside the “New 52” universes. This post will talk about the origins of this series, look at some statistics in regards to the series, some of my favorite stories I read doing research for the series, talk about the response I got from the series, and briefly look at where the series is going.

    Supergirl in the Multiverse was a project that I wanted to explore for quite some time now and I even have a very early attempt at the series that I started back in 2023 but didn’t get very far into it. The project was conceptualized as a multi-tiered project. I wanted more practice at drawing backgrounds (which is why all the drawings feature some sort of background), I wanted to have a structured drawing project with clear deadlines (52 universes, 52 weeks in a year, almost seems too good to be true), and I wanted an excuse to read a lot of comics that I otherwise wouldn’t have read. The Multiverse I worked off of for this project was the “New 52” multiverse which was clearly defined (aside from 7 universes) in the Multiversity Guidebook from 2015 which got me thoroughly fascinated with the Multiverse of DC comics, although the Justice League episode “Legends” and some Amalgam comics I took from my dad definitely got me interested in alternate earths as well. As you can see from my initial attempt at this idea, backgrounds weren’t a focus from the beginning and it was more just an attempt at categorizing. I also used Stargirl for the Earth-2 representative instead of Power Girl, a mindset I still support to some extent and I do plan on exploring this more in the future of Supergirl in the Multiverse. You can see here that I also made the Bombshell connection very early on and she’s definitely the first of the “Supergirls” that breaks the mold of the “Supergirl” not being a Kryptonian.

    With that lets get into some statistics with the Kryptonian vs Non-Kryptonian ratio. Based on the 52 Supergirls I have put together for this series, only 30 of them are Kryponian and even in that group I’m counting Bizarrogirl and Ms. Super-Martian which could be argued aren’t strictly Kryptonian. Just over 40% of the Supergirls are super in some other way. A lot of them are still aliens, being Kree or Krylan, or Zirandian, but there are about a dozen who are earth born that either had miraculous powers thrust upon them, or who are super in their own human way. A lot of the non-Kryptonian Supergirls in this series are fairly reasonable associations like Captain Marvel who is often seen as the Marvel equivalent of Supergirl, or Tesla Strong from the universe representing America’s Best Comics. However, some universes didn’t have a clearly defined representative to portray Supergirl so I had to get a bit more creative. Karel Sorensen from Earth-37 isn’t alien, but she gets super powers in a similar way to Captain Atom or Doctor Manhattan which are both Superman analogues so it felt close enough, but there are also Universes 20 and 40 and 47 which don’t really have any sort of Superman representation so I had to instead find a character in the universe that either represented Superman’s ideals or took the place as that universe’s foremost hero and work backwards from there.

    Let’s now segue into the universes that do and don’t have a Superman. For this category I am including Ultraman, Captain Atom, Supreme, Ultiman, and some other very obviously Superman analogues but my count may be skewed from your personal count. For this I’ll mostly be referencing the Multiversity Guidebook images but there might be some disparities for universes that have introduced a Superman since 2015 like Gotham by Gaslight (Earth-19). From my count it’s about 40 universes that have a “Superman” or obvious Superman type character with universes 7, 8, 17, 20, 33, 37, 39, 40, 41, 46, 48, and 51 not having a clear representative, although arguments could be made for 7, 8, and 33 depending on how you count it. Like I said your count may vary. Similarly, most universes also have a Batman although from my count he only got to 37 which was surprising to me because I thought for sure he would outclass Superman but I am happily surprised.

    Supergirl is often depicted as blonde, and I would often have “Blonde” as one of my criteria for “Supergirl Representative” when there wasn’t a clear Supergirl. In my series I had 32 blondes, although 3 of my characters had white hair which could count. The others have a wide range of hair colors, 6 with brown hair, 5 with black hair, 3 redheads, and 2 with no hair and I don’t really know how to count Carrot Cutie but probably under blonde or no hair if I had to choose.

    The last statistic I want to cover is the canonical to non-canonical ratio which is something I was constantly keeping track of. When doing my research for this series I would prioritize using in universe characters that weren’t quite in the Supergirl mold over creating OCs whenever possible, that’s why we get characters like Marene Herald from Earth-17, Colleen Franklin from 39, and Pyra from 51. However some universes just didn’t have a good option either from lack of development in the universe (Earth-46 was especially light) or just not having a lot of room for a Supergirl to exist in canon based on how the Superman of that universe came about (see Earth-30) so for those I tried to just take the vibes of the universe and apply them to a Supergirl to the best of my ability. Anyways, the final ratio was 33 to 19 or a 63% of canon Supergirls which feels pretty good to me and I feel like I approached each universe to the best of my ability although Earths 20 and 40 were particularly tricky.

    As I mentioned at the top, a big part of doing this series was exploring a lot of comics I otherwise wouldn’t have read. While some of the stories I read were kind of busts, there were a bunch that were really exciting and wonderful comics that I never would’ve read without this project. I started off the year pretty strong reading through the entirety of the Earth One graphic novels, I got an excuse to start reading through my Kelly Thompson Captain Marvel comics. Getting introduced to the Atomic Knights for Earth-17 was a great joy to me and presented some really exciting science fiction tales. Earths 27 and 28 were both newer universes and were presented as Jurassic League and DC Mech respectively which had seemed interesting to me for a while and I’m glad I cot to read them. I also had a wonderful time reading through all of the original appearances of Prez along with the newer Prez, and reading through Jack Kirby’s Kamandi series was spectacular. My favorite stuff however is the comics I read from universes outside of DC comics. Stuff like Tom Strong (Earth-25), Supreme (Earth-35), Savage Dragon (Earth-41), Megaton (Earth-36) and my personal favorite Astro City (Earth-34). I’ve been a DC Girlie almost exclusively for a long time so getting a chance to read stuff outside the norm was really interesting.

    After finishing Earth-51, I took to asking a handful of people who have been following the series what their top 5 Supergirls were and the results were surprising. I expected a lot of the same answers over and over again with maybe slight variation, but everyone I asked gave me drastically different results, no single Supergirl getting more than 2 votes between the 8 people I asked. Another surprising result from when I asked was that a couple people not only responded with their favorite artwork, but also that the backstories of the characters influenced their choices. I will reveal the handful of Supergirls from my survey that got 2 votes, but I wanted to give my personal top 5 as well. 5. Earth-31 Captain Steel-Skin, 4. Earth-49 Injustice Supergirl, 3. Earth-17 Marene Herald, 2. Earth-26 Carrot Cutie, and my favorite and most successful in my opinion at 1. Earth-45 Super-Reign. From my survey it seems like Earths 1, 6, 8, 12, 17, 18, 31, 37, 45, and 49 were slightly more popular than the rest. That being said, my survey resulted in 30 separate entries making peoples top pick which is over half the lineup and it brings me a lot of joy that my art is so well liked and enjoyed by so many people. I would love to hear more people’s favorite entries and see what really resonates with you so I can try to appeal to more people as the series advances.

    Speaking of, now that Supergirl in the Multiverse has traveled through all of the local multiverse, where do we go now? Well, as Doctor Manhatten said at the end of Doomsday Clock, “Earth 52 is out there. I look beyond now…” In short, I am only just getting started and am thoroughly exited for more to come as I look to a more infinite multiverse. A couple adjustments I am putting in now that I’m not beholden to the Multiversity Guidebook, I will jump around a little between numbers and wont go strictly in numerical order. This is for a few reasons, mostly because there aren’t clearly defined universes for all numerical values, Earth-57 for instance, as of right now it doesn’t exist (although if I’m mistaken feel free to correct me and I’ll add it to my list). I also want to do some theme months this next year, and if it goes good I might continue doing similar theme months in future seasons, February, to honor Black History Month will have a series of black Supergirls, June will similarly have queer Supergirls for Pride Month. March is set aside for the Amalgam universe, this is put in March because I have 5 separate Amalgam Supergirls (2 canon, 3 OCs) I want to draw and March had 5 Mondays. May will also be set aside for DC Super Hero Girls to count down to the upcoming DC Super Hero Girls: High School Reunion graphic novel coming out in early June. If you are interested in seeing the full list, it is shown in the images above. With that, I end this recap and hope you stick around for Season 2 starting on Monday with Earth-52.