| Deathstroke | |
 Deathstroke, as seen in the cover to Villains United #1 (2005). Art by J.G. Jones. Image File history File links Download high resolution version (411x754, 218 KB)Deathstroke, in a detail from the cover to Villains United #1. ...
Villains United is a six-issue comic book limited series, written by Gail Simone with art by Dale Eaglesham and Wade von Grawbadger, published by DC Comics in 2005. ...
J. G. Jones is an American Comic Book artist. ...
| | | | Characteristics | | Alter ego | Slade Wilson | | Affiliations | The Society Titans East H.I.V.E. Checkmate | | Abilities | Superhuman physical attributes, Heightened mental capacity, Regenerative healing factor, Expert martial artist, Skilled armed/unarmed combatant, Master tactician and strategist, Access to hi-tech equipment. | | Deathstroke the Terminator (Slade Wilson), also called simply Deathstroke (and originally simply the Terminator) is a fictional character, a supervillain in the DC Comics Universe. He is a mercenary and assassin who first appeared in The New Teen Titans (1st series) #2 (1980). DC Comics is one of the largest American companies in comic book and related media publishing. ...
In comic books, first appearance refers to first comic book to feature a character. ...
Cover to Crisis on Infinite Earths #1, which was written by Wolfman. ...
New Teen Titans #1. ...
The Secret Society of Super Villains (SSoSV) is a group of comic book villains that exist in the DC Universe. ...
Titans East is the name of several DC Comics teams. ...
The H.I.V.E. (stands for The Hierarchy of International Vengeance and Extermination) is the name of a DC Comics supervillain team. ...
Checkmate is a fictional covert operations agency within the DC Comics universe. ...
A healing factor is a term used to describe the ability of some characters in fiction to recover from bodily injuries or disease at a superhuman rate. ...
Alice, a fictional character from the work of Lewis Carroll. ...
Doctor Doom, one of the most archetypal supervillains and his arch-enemies The Fantastic Four (in background). ...
DC Comics is one of the largest American companies in comic book and related media publishing. ...
Cover to the History of the DC Universe trade paperback. ...
A mercenary, is a person who takes part in an armed conflict and is motivated to take part in the hostilities essentially by the desire for private gain and, in fact, is promised, by or on behalf of a Party to the conflict, material compensation substantially in excess of that...
It has been suggested that Selective assassination be merged into this article or section. ...
The Teen Titans, also known as âThe New Teen Titansâ, âNew Titansâ, or âThe Titansâ, a DC Comics superhero team. ...
1980 (MCMLXXX) was a leap year starting on Tuesday. ...
Fictional character biography Origins Imbued with enhanced physical prowess by secret army experiments attempting to create metahuman soldiers for the U.S. military, Deathstroke the Terminator (called "Terminator" for most of his published existence) became a mercenary soon after the experiment. However, he kept this career secret from his family, even though his wife was an expert military combat instructor, until a criminal named the Jackal kidnapped his younger son, Joseph, as a hostage to force Slade to divulge the name of a client who had hired him as an assassin. Slade refused to do so, claiming that it was against his personal honor code, and attacked and killed the kidnappers at the rendezvous. Unfortunately, Joseph's throat was slashed by one of the criminals before Slade could prevent it, destroying his vocal cords and rendering him mute. After taking Joseph to the hospital, Slade's wife Adeline, enraged at his endangerment of her son, tried to kill Slade by shooting him, but only managed to destroy his right eye. Afterward, his confidence in his physical abilities was such that he made no secret of his impaired vision, marked by his mask which has a black featureless half covering his lost eye. Without his mask, Slade wears an eyepatch. The Jackal is the main character in the fictional book The Day Of The Jackal by Frederick Forsyth, which features a storyline centered on a professional assassination attempt on Charles de Gaulles life in the summer of 1963. ...
// Bold textItalic text The vocal folds, also known popularly as vocal cords, are composed of twin infoldings of mucous membrane stretched horizontally across the larynx. ...
The Teen Titans
Cover to New Teen Titans #2. The first appearance of Deathstroke (in the shadows). Art by George Perez. Slade has a long history as an enemy of the Teen Titans, beginning when his other son, Grant, became an early Titans foe called the Ravager who was physically enhanced to fulfill a contract to kill or capture the Teen Titans. However, those enhancements proved fatal and Slade agreed to complete the contract. As a result, he attacked the Titans continually and finally succeeded in capturing them by introducing Terra (whom he shared an intimate relationship with, despite her being barely sixteen years old) into the team as a spy. At the end of this plot, Slade was defeated and captured with the help of Joseph, who joined the team as Jericho. Slade was put on trial for his crimes, but the trial was deliberately sabotaged by Garfield Logan, aka Beast Boy so that he could kill Slade himself, believing he was responsible for Terra's betrayal of the Titans. However, when the two confronted each other, Gar found himself unable to kill Slade. Feeling some empathy for Gar's grief, Slade explained his past with Terra, and Gar realized he was not to blame for the choices Terra had made. The two men parted on peaceful terms afterward. Image File history File links Download high resolution version (393x604, 616 KB)Cover to New Teen Titans #2, by George Perez. ...
Image File history File links Download high resolution version (393x604, 616 KB)Cover to New Teen Titans #2, by George Perez. ...
Cover to New Teen Titans #2, the original Ravagers first (and only) appearance. ...
Terra is a fictional character in the DC Universe. ...
Jericho (Joseph William Wilson) is a fictional character, a superhero who was a member of the Teen Titans in the acclaimed 1980s period of New Teen Titans by Marv Wolfman and George Perez, published by DC Comics. ...
Beast Boy (real name Garfield Mark Gar Logan) is a fictional character in the DC Comics universe, a shapeshifting superhero who is a former member of the Doom Patrol and member of the Teen Titans. ...
Months later, Slade encountered the Titans again while they were investigating a mysterious plague linked to a group of biologically engineered beastmen, one of whom was a target of an assassination by Slade himself. When Troia and Raven were both stricken by the plague, he aided them in destroying the beastmen and finding a cure for the contagion. Shortly after this, he came to the Titan's assistance again during the Titans Hunt storyline when most of their members were abducted by the Wildebeest Society, and proved instrumental in tracking them down, only to discover their leader was none other than Jericho himself. It was revealed that Jericho had been possessed by the corrupted souls of Azarath, who were using him to capture the Titans and use them as physical hosts in order to survive. During the transfer process, Jericho's true self resurfaced briefly, begging his father to kill him. To spare his son any more pain and save the remaining Titans, Slade was forced to drive a sword through Jericho's heart, seemingly killing him. This act still haunts him to this day, though Jericho later turned out to have survived death by transferring his mind into his father's body seconds before his death. Donna Troy is a fictional character, a superheroine in the DC Universe. ...
Raven is a fictional superhero in the DC Comics Universe, specifically the Teen Titans comics. ...
Wildebeest is a name used by many characters in DC Comics New Titans series. ...
Azarath is a fictional dimension featured in the Teen Titans comic book series and animated series. ...
Afterward, Slade continued his life as a mercenary, but also acted as an occasional hero, aiding the Titans or acting on his own to help others, most notably during the Total Chaos storyline when the Team Titans arrived in the 20th Century to assassinate Donna Troy before she could give birth to her son, who in their timeline had grown up into the tyrannical despot, Lord Chaos. His relationship with Gar Logan had also changed around this time to the point where they became friends as well. Slade also met Pat Trayce, a tough former-cop who would become the new costumed Vigilante. Pat Trayce and Slade quickly became lovers, and began a tumultuous on again/off again relationship. For the animated television series based on this comic book, see Teen Titans (TV series). ...
Two comic-book characters share the name Lord Chaos: image=[[1]] Lord Chaos, in the fictional universe of Marvel Comics, is a fundamental entity of cosmic proportions that embodies disarray and confusion. ...
Vigilante is the name used by several fictional characters appearing in DC Comics. ...
Family business
Deathstroke finds his wife Addie dying. After Slade thwarted an assassination attempt on the President of the United States, he was subsequently framed for the murder of a U.S. Senator. The man responsible had taken on the identity of the Ravager and was hunting down Slade's friends and loved ones. Eventually with the help of the Titans and Sarge Steel, Slade was able to prove his innocence, and the true culprit was revealed to be Steve Dayton, under the alias of the Crimelord, who had again succumbed to mental instability caused by his Mento helmet. Meanwhile, his relationship with his estranged wife Adeline took a tragic turn as Slade underwent a process to gain regeneration power, allowing him to survive any wound so long as his brain is intact (this power is limited, as Slade can not regenerate his lost eye since that injury happened before he gained his healing factor) . After gaining the power, Slade was forced to give his wife a blood transfusion, resulting in her gaining a similar healing factor which manifested itself as a form of immortality. This drove Adeline insane, shaming Deathstroke into going into a semi-retirement state. Image File history File links Size of this preview: 250 Ã 317 pixelsFull resolution (250 Ã 317 pixel, file size: 28 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg) Addie as the H.I.V.E. Mistress meets her end in Titans #12. ...
Image File history File links Size of this preview: 250 Ã 317 pixelsFull resolution (250 Ã 317 pixel, file size: 28 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg) Addie as the H.I.V.E. Mistress meets her end in Titans #12. ...
Sarge Steel was a detective/spy character published by Charlton Comics during the 1960s. ...
Mento is a fictional superhero from the DC comics universe. ...
In Titans #12, Deathstroke teamed up with the Titans to face his wife Adeline, who in her insane state, had revived The H.I.V.E. and sought to rid the world of all superhumans, blaming them for Jericho's death. During the battle, interrupted by Vandal Savage and a band of villains that he had organized from recent Titan battles, Adeline's throat was slit and begged Slade to kill her, since her version of her healing factor wouldn't heal the wound but allow her to live in spite of it. Deathstroke refused, but Koriand'r, aka Starfire of the Teen Titans shocked her teammates and Deathstroke by using her starbolt blast to disintegrating her completely, per Adeline's wishes. This was a turning point, as Deathstroke renounced all ties with the Titans as a result of this act of mercy on Starfire's part. The H.I.V.E. (stands for The Hierarchy of International Vengeance and Extermination) is the name of a DC Comics supervillain team. ...
Vandal Savage is a fictional character and supervillain in the DC Comics universe. ...
Starfire is the name of three superheroes who have appeared in comic books published by DC Comics. ...
The Teen Titans, also known as âThe New Teen Titansâ, âNew Titansâ, or âThe Titansâ, a DC Comics superhero team. ...
Recently, it was revealed that Jericho managed to transfer his consciousness into Deathstroke in the instant before his death. Taking control of his father, Jericho forced Deathstroke to murder his longtime butler, mentor, and companion Wintergreen. He then launched a series of attacks against the current Teen Titans, most notably shattering Impulse's knee with a shotgun blast, before leaving his father's body. Deathstroke has since manipulated his one remaining child, Rose Wilson, into the mercenary business as the new Ravager, in order to find and kill Jericho. Image File history File links Size of this preview: 289 Ã 258 pixelsFull resolution (289 Ã 258 pixel, file size: 18 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg) Ravager and Deathstroke, from the pages of Nightwing [2005]. [1] This image is a single panel from a comic strip or the interior of a single...
Image File history File links Size of this preview: 289 Ã 258 pixelsFull resolution (289 Ã 258 pixel, file size: 18 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg) Ravager and Deathstroke, from the pages of Nightwing [2005]. [1] This image is a single panel from a comic strip or the interior of a single...
Rose Wilson is a fictional comic book character in the DC Comics universe. ...
W.R. Wintergreen, is a fictional character in DC Comics Teen Titans comics. ...
Bartholemew Bart Allen II is a fictional character in the DC Comics Universe. ...
Rose Wilson is a fictional comic book character in the DC Comics universe. ...
In Identity Crisis, Deathstroke was enlisted as a bodyguard for Doctor Light, who was being chased by the Justice League. In the ensuing battle, Deathstroke nearly beat the team of Elongated Man, the Flash (Wally West), Zatanna, Hawkman, Green Arrow, Black Canary, the Atom, and Green Lantern (Kyle Rayner). He systematically took out every member except for Rayner, whom he had the potential to disable through trying to usurp his ring's energies using his own formidable willpower. But before the outcome of this conflict with Rayner ended, Green Arrow stuck an arrow in Deathstroke's right eye socket, enraging him. Slade went ballistic and began to beat Green Arrow, but was stopped when the majority of the team tackled Deathstroke to the ground. Dr. Light used his powers, and the two escaped. Near the end of Identity Crisis, Deathstroke confronts Green Arrow on a rooftop. Arrow sees his reflection in the windows of a nearby building, but when he turns to confront Slade, Deathstroke is gone. Instead Green Arrow finds Slade's cowl and a note stuck to the wall by the very arrow he stabbed in Slade's eye socket. The note reads, "This is yours - We're not done." This article is about the DC Comics series. ...
Arthur Light is a DC Comics fictional character and supervillain. ...
The Justice League, sometimes called the Justice League of America or JLA for short, is a fictional DC Universe superhero team. ...
The Elongated Man is a fictional comic book superhero in the DC universe. ...
Wally West is a fictional character, a superhero in the DC Comics Universe, the first Kid Flash and the third Flash. ...
Zatanna Zatara is a fictional wizard and a superheroine in the DC universe. ...
For other meanings of the term, see Hawkman (disambiguation) Hawkman is a fictional DC Comics superhero. ...
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Black Canary is a fictional character, a DC Comics superheroine. ...
The Atom introduced during the Silver Age of comic books in Showcase # 34 (Sep-Oct 1961) is physicist and university professor Ray Palmer (named for real-life science fiction writer Raymond A. Palmer, who was himself quite short). ...
Kyle Rayner is a fictional character, a superhero from the DC Comics universe, known for most of his publication history as Green Lantern, a member of the intergalactic police force known as the Green Lantern Corps. ...
Infinite Crisis Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow. Deathstroke was a founding member of Lex Luthor's Secret Society of Super Villains in the Infinite Crisis storyline. He was seen in Infinite Crisis #1, hiding in a warehouse south of Metropolis waiting to ambush the Freedom Fighters with several other members. The battle didn't last long, and by the end, Deathstroke had impaled Phantom Lady through the chest, calling his action "just business". Lex Luthor is a fictional DC Comics supervillain. ...
The Secret Society of Super Villains (SSoSV) is a group of comic book villains that exist in the DC Universe. ...
Infinite Crisis was a seven-issue limited series of comic books published by DC Comics, beginning in October of 2005. ...
Metropolis as depicted in the Superman Returns video game Metropolis is a fictional city that appears in comic books published by DC Comics, and is the home of Superman. ...
Freedom Fighters is the name of a minor DC Comics comic book superhero team made up of characters acquired from the defunct company, Quality Comics, and the short-lived comic book series of the same name featuring those characters. ...
Phantom Lady #17 (April, 1948), Fox Feature Syndicate. ...
He was the employer of an undercover Dick Grayson, whom he hired to train his daughter Rose. However, after the two had a confrontation with Superman, Deathstroke discovered that Nightwing had been teaching Rose the values of heroism. He could not kill Grayson in front of his daughter because doing so would undo all of Slade's teachings. Nightwing offered a deal: he would stay away from Rose if Slade would keep the metahuman villains out of Blüdhaven. Dick Grayson is a fictional superhero in the DC Comics Universe. ...
Superman is a comic book superhero , originally created by American writer Jerry Siegel and Canadian artist Joe Shuster and published by DC Comics. ...
Metahuman is a term to describe superhumans in the DC Universe. ...
Blüdhaven is a fictional city in the DC Universe. ...
The deal held for 34 hours until Infinite Crisis #4, when Slade, under the orders of Alexander Luthor Junior, the real leader of the Society, went with several villains — who included old Titans Doom Patrol foes and Brotherhood of Evil members Monsieur Mallah and Brain — to drop Chemo, another fellow villain who appeared to be a nearly brainless monster made of pure energy and radioactive chemicals, on Blüdhaven, killing thousands. Slade gave the explanation to the Brotherhood that Nightwing should be made to believe that he can never go home again. This article contains a trivia section. ...
The Brotherhood of Evil is a group of DC Comics supervillains, arch-enemies of the original Doom Patrol and the Teen Titans. ...
Monsieur Mallah is the name of a DC Comics supervillain. ...
The Brain is a DC Comics supervillain. ...
Chemo is a DC Comics supervillain, an enemy of the Metal Men. ...
Grayson took the first of his revenge by bursting in on Deathstroke and Rose's training session, revealing to the latter that the Kryptonite that Deathstroke had implanted in place of her missing eye was radioactive and deadly to humans as well as to Kryptonians (though slower in its effects on humans). Angered, Slade went after Nightwing with a grenade, only to have Rose try to stop him. Amid the smoke of the resulting explosion, Rose fled, telling her father that she hated him. Dick disappeared as well, but not before leaving a note for Slade warning him that he'd be back to make him pay for Blüdhaven. Rose Wilson is a fictional comic book character in the DC Comics universe. ...
Lex Luthor in front of a displays of kryptonite and holding Green Kryptonite. ...
Kryptonians are a fictional extraterrestrial race who hail from the planet Krypton. ...
At the climactic Battle of Metropolis at the conclusion of Infinite Crisis, Slade was confronted by Batman, Robin and Nightwing. During the struggle he was questioned regarding his motives for aiding the Secret Society. His claims of monetary motivation were deemed unsatisfactory, and he was told to take responsibility before being rendered unconscious.
One Year Later
Cover to Teen Titans #43: Titans East Part 1. Art by Tony Daniel. Slade appears in the Green Arrow series after the one year jump in DC Comics's storylines. Apparently in hiding, he nearly murders a crony of several Star City businessmen who want to hire him for a murder. Before finishing his violent refusal, he asks the name of the target; when informed that it was to be the mayor of Star City, Oliver Queen (whom Deathstroke knows is secretly Green Arrow), he spares the lackey and decides to take the job. However, things don't quite go according to plan, with Green Arrow using the resources of both his identities, then trapping him within a ring of armed National Guardsmen. The fight ends with Deathstroke's arrest and subsequent conviction and incarceration; however, this is revealed as a ploy to gain access to another jailed foe of Green Arrow's who has information on the hero's activities in the "lost year", which include Green Arrow studying under an assassin who once trained Deathstroke himself. Image File history File links Titanseast. ...
Image File history File links Titanseast. ...
Checklist X-Force Annual #2 X-Force #28, 30-36, 38-41, 43 Gambit & the X-ternals #1-2 Shattered Image #1, 4 Spawn #38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48 Spawn: Bloodfeud #1, 2, 3, 4 Tales of the Witchblade: #9 Witchblade #78, 79 F5 #1-4, preview, origin Silke...
One Year Later event logo. ...
Star City is a fictional city that appears in stories published by DC Comics, best known as the traditional home of the superheroes known by, or affiliated with, the shared alias of the Green Arrow. ...
The United States National Guard is a component of the United States Army (the Army National Guard) and the United States Air Force (the Air National Guard). ...
Green Arrow #66 claims that an assassin known as Natas taught Deathstroke "almost everything he knows". Deathstroke is also active behind the scenes in Teen Titans, currently in the process of organizing a counter-team of teen superhumans that will be known as Titans East. The current Titans team includes Ravager, who now wants nothing to do with her father. Deathstroke intends to "reclaim" Ravager and a recently resurrected Jericho from the Titans or, if that fails, to crush them along with the rest of the team. For these reasons, he's specially choosing each member of Titans East. Deathstroke believes Titans East, overall, will successfully counteract every member of the current Teen Titans line-up. As indicated over the course of recent issues, Deathstroke is manipulating every member of his new team in one way or another. He has blackmailed former Titan Risk while at the same time offering him an outlet for his rage, is drugging Cassandra Cain and supplying Inertia with a formula which grants superhuman speed. His team however is slowly falling apart, as Robin managed to free Batgirl of his mind control serum, and Raven has managed to convince Duela Dent to switch sides. Then Slade and his Titans faced off against both the current Titans and a group of old Titans led by Nightwing. Although he is defeated, he still manages to escape with several members of his team. In the end, however, it is revealed to the readers that Slade's real mission to was provide his children with something he could never offer them - a real family, in the form of the Teen Titans, and by attacking the Titans, have Rose and Jericho become more trusted and grow closer to the team. Titans East is the name of several DC Comics teams. ...
Risk is a comic book character appearing in publications from DC Comics. ...
Cassandra Cain, is a fictional character in the DC Universe, and the most recent Batgirl. ...
Inertia Inertia is a comic book character in the DC Comics universe. ...
Powers and abilities Deathstroke possesses various superhuman powers. He also possesses the strength of ten men, heightened speed, agility, stamina and reflexes. He has the capacity to use up to 90% percent of his brain making him a combat skills and tactical genius (written at a time when it was conjectured that humans only used 10% of their capacity), making him adept at turning opponents' own abilities against them, stemming from his years in the military and combat with various heroes. He is also a highly formidable opponent in physical combat. Deathstroke also possesses a regenerative factor in his blood that enables him to heal from physical injury much faster than a normal person. This has also made him effectively immortal, enabling him to recover from what would otherwise be fatal injuries, though recovering from what would be a fatal injury renders him insane and animalistic for a short period.
Equipment Deathstroke is skilled in the use of many weapons ranging from guns, rifles and swords, which are usually among his current weapons of choice. His signature weapon is a power staff that fires lethal and non-lethal energy blasts from both ends. The staff can also be used to strike using energy at each end. His bodyarmor is composed of a mesh-woven, kevlar, chainlink mail, capable of stopping small arms fire.
Trivia - Deathstroke received his own series, Deathstroke the Terminator, in 1991; It was retitled to Deathstroke the Hunted for issues #0 and #41-45 and then simply "Deathstroke" from 46 through 60. The series was cancelled with issue 60 shortly after the conclusion of Zero Hour. In total Deathstroke ran for 65 issues (#1-60, plus 4 annuals and a special #0 issue).
- Even though the character of Deathstroke the Terminator pre-dates the first Arnold Schwarzenegger "Terminator" film by four years, the Slade Wilson character is now simply called "Deathstroke", even by characters who had called him "Terminator" for years.
- Marvel Comics' character Deadpool is similar to Deathstroke. Deadpool commonly uses the name "Wade Wilson", similar to "Slade Wilson". In Superman/Batman Annual #1 written by former Deadpool author Joe Kelly, Deathstroke from another reality appears and has similar characteristics related to Deadpool (such as Deadpool's "merc with a mouth" wisecracks, a black spot on his mask over his eye somewhat resembling Deadpool's, and some measure of a healing factor). This character tries to introduce his name multiple times but is always interrupted. The most he was able to get out was "Dea-". It could be implied that this character was the DCU counterpart of Deadpool. Marvel seemingly acknowledged this in the Cable/Deadpool series, where Deadpool sometimes answers a letters column. Deadpool claimed that he didn't want to be in a Marvel/DC crossover, because people might mistake him for a certain DC character.
- A similarity between Deathstroke and the Marvel Comics mercenary Taskmaster was noted in Wizard Magazine #177: "Both Tasky and Slade are amoral profiteers, and thanks to mutual designer George Pérez, even their original costumes are similar." They share an orange/blue colour scheme and many design elements (such as buckaneer boots, flared gloves, and a near-identical collection of weapon belts). The largest differences were their masks, Taskmaster's cloak, and the white in Taskmaster's costume. Both characters were designed by George Pérez in 1980, within a few months of each other.
1991 (MCMXCI) was a common year starting on Tuesday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
Zero Hour: Crisis in Time was a 1994 comic book miniseries and crossover storyline that ran in DC Comics. ...
The Terminator (also known as Terminator in some early trailers and posters) is a 1984 science fiction/action film featuring former bodybuilder Arnold Schwarzenegger in what would become his best-known role, and also starred Linda Hamilton and Michael Biehn. ...
Marvel Comics (Stan Lee is behind many of the superheros) is an American comic book line published by Marvel Publishing, Inc. ...
For other uses of Wade Wilson, see Wade Wilson Deadpool is a fictional comic book character sometimes depicted as a villain or anti-hero, who appears in books published by Marvel Comics, usually in the X-Men family of titles. ...
Cover to #8 of Kelly and Chris Bachalos creator owned Steampunk series (2001) Joseph Joe Kelly is an American comic book writer who has written such titles as Uncanny X-Men, Action Comics, and JLA. As part of the comics creator group Man of Action, Kelly is one of...
Marvel Comics (Stan Lee is behind many of the superheros) is an American comic book line published by Marvel Publishing, Inc. ...
Taskmaster is a fictional character, a supervillain in the Marvel Universe. ...
Wizard is a magazine about comic books, published monthly in the United States by Wizard Entertainment. ...
New Teen Titans #1. ...
In other media Lois & Clark In the fourth season of "Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman", an assassin by the name of Deathstroke appeared in "Bob and Carol and Lois and Clark." The only commonality is the fact that he is an international assassin known as Deathstroke. In "Lois and Clark," Deathstroke is a former scientist. An accident in the lab exposed him to magnetic particles, permanently altering his body and granting him magnetic powers. His assistant, who afterwards becomes his wife, helps by creating a special suit to contain his powers and keep metal from being drawn to him while out in public. The suit even has a symbol of its own: resembling the force lines of a magnetic field, forming a stylized figure eight. After this, he becomes an assassin, murdering his targets with his powers, first by drawing the target to him, then by magnetizing the iron in their blood cells, causing a figure-eight mark on the chest as the person dies of a heart attack. Lois and Clark: The New Adventures of Superman was a live-action television series based on the Superman comic books. ...
The couple take the name Bob and Carol when the arrive to Metropolis, making friends with Clark Kent and Lois Lane as they discover that Lois is going to be interviewing an eccentric reclusive billionaire. The couple plan to assassinate the billionaire before he goes public, taking his identity and thus his fortune. The plan is foiled when Superman interferes, destroying Deathstroke's containment suit, which causes him to be magnetically drawn to a steel pillar until the police arrive. Very much like Superman, this Deathstroke kept a secret identity by wearing a pair of glasses. For other uses, see Clark Kent (disambiguation). ...
Lois Joanne Lane-Kent is a fictional character who appears in DC Comicsâ Superman stories. ...
Superman is a comic book superhero , originally created by American writer Jerry Siegel and Canadian artist Joe Shuster and published by DC Comics. ...
Teen Titans The Animated Series
Top-left: Slade with the mark of Skath. Top-right: Slade disguised as the Old One from Forces of Nature. Bottom: Slade's "normal" appearance. Deathstroke also appears in the Teen Titans animated series, where he is referred to only by his first name, Slade, and voiced by actor Ron Perlman. The name "Deathstroke" did not make it through the censors due to hesitance to use the word "death" in a children's animated series. Like his comic book counterpart, he has only one eye and an orange and black color scheme to his clothes. Image File history File links Slade from the Teen Titans Animated Series This work is presumed to be copyrighted, but its source has not been determined. ...
Trigon (also known as Trigon the Terrible) is a fictional villain who appears in Teen Titans comics published by DC Comics. ...
Forces of Nature is the third episode in season one of the animated TV series Teen Titans. ...
Teen Titans is an American animated television series created by Sam Register and Glen Murakami and produced by Warner Bros. ...
Ronald Francis Perlman (born April 13, 1950, in Washington Heights, New York), billed as Ron Perlman, is an American television, film and voice over actor. ...
Slade is the Titans' main adversary. He is shown to be ambitious, calculating, and emotionless. His main goal is to "destroy" the Titans and conquer the city, and quite possibly the world, for unknown reasons — although it is possible that he is simply a criminal with ambitions of power and has no ulterior motives. He has at least one extremely advanced secret hideout, and a seemingly limitless supply of technologically advanced robot minions. In addition, he has incredible physical strength. His fighting skills surpass Robin's, and he seems to have some knowledge of ceremonial magic (as seen in Forces of Nature). This article does not cite any references or sources. ...
A minion is a lowly human following a master. ...
This article or section does not cite any references or sources. ...
The Sorceress by John William Waterhouse Magic and sorcery are the influencing of events, objects, people and physical phenomena by mystical, paranormal or supernatural means. ...
In many episodes in Season One and Season Two, he tries to recruit others to his side. He initially hires Jinx, Gizmo, and Mammoth from the H.I.V.E. Academy, but the Titans succeed in beating the three graduates. Slade then disguises himself as Old One from The Forces of Nature and tries to trick Thunder and Lightning, two teenage storm elementals, into destroying Jump City, but that too failed when Beast Boy helped the brothers to see the error of their ways. Robin appears to capture Slade in "Masks", only to discover that it is a robotic duplicate. In the "Apprentice" story arc, Slade forced Robin to join him, with the threat that if he did not, Slade would use nanobots he planted in the Titans to destroy them from the inside out. Robin eventually overcame Slade with his friends' help. Slade had tried to be Robin's mentor, a father-figure, but Robin shunned him saying he already had a father. This is one of the very few references to Batman in the series, as he looks up to the sky and bats fly by. Jinx is a fictional character, a supervillain appearing in the DC Comics universe. ...
Gizmo, from Outsiders #13, (August 2004). ...
Mammoth, from Outsiders #13, August 2004. ...
âAlumniâ redirects here. ...
Thunder and Lightning are a duo of superpowered brothers of DC Comics that had encounters with the Teen Titans. ...
Beast Boy (real name Garfield Mark Gar Logan) is a fictional character in the DC Comics universe, a shapeshifting superhero who is a former member of the Doom Patrol and member of the Teen Titans. ...
This article or section does not cite any references or sources. ...
Nanorobotics is the technology of creating machines or robots at or close to the scale of a nanometre (10-9 metres). ...
In Season Two, Slade recruited the superpowered girl Terra, who in the animated series is portrayed as a merely misguided enemy than a wholely irredeemable villain. In "Betrayal", Terra betrayed the Titans to Slade. In "Aftershock" Parts One and Two, Terra seemingly destroyed the Titans at the command of Slade, who took over the city with her help. The Titans returned, however, and with Beast Boy's help, Terra overcame the link her new suit had to Slade, and she sent him to his doom in a lava pit. Terra is a fictional character in the DC Universe. ...
As a result, Slade was absent for most of the third season, with the exception of "Haunted". In this episode, he is a figment of Robin's imagination, due to a reagent released from his mask into Robin's body, which made him see, hear, and feel Slade. Robin was nearly killed, but Robin saved his own life by turning on the lights, thus banishing the Slade hallucination, which only worked in the dark. Oddly enough, it was revealed that this gas had been triggered from the outside, and the season was finished without answering the question of who set it off. Slade returned in full for Season Four, as the servant of Raven's demonic father Trigon. Slade now had fire powers, the ability to fly, invulnerability, and a red mark on his forehead, called the Mark of Scath. He delivered Trigon's message to Raven, that she would cause the end of the world on her birthday. In the episode "The End Part 2", it is explained that Slade's defeat at Terra's hands had indeed killed him, and that Trigon had promised to give him back his flesh in exchange for his services. However, Trigon went back on the deal, and Slade decided to join forces with the Teen Titans. While Cyborg, Starfire, and Beast Boy tried to distract Trigon, Robin and Slade went to find Raven in the underworld. Upon returning to the surface with Raven, Slade led the final assault on Trigon, having recovered his flesh and stolen the demonic weapon of one of Trigon's minions. Raven finally defeated her father and restored the world to normal, but Slade escaped the Titans shortly thereafter, with a solemn promise from Robin that nothing has changed, and will make that clear if he ever sees him again. Raven is a fictional superhero in the DC Comics Universe, specifically the Teen Titans comics. ...
Trigon (also known as Trigon the Terrible) is a fictional villain who appears in Teen Titans comics published by DC Comics. ...
Cyborg (Victor Stone) is a fictional DC Comics superhero best known as a member of the Teen Titans. ...
Starfire is the name of three superheroes who have appeared in comic books published by DC Comics. ...
Beast Boy (real name Garfield Mark Gar Logan) is a fictional character in the DC Comics universe, a shapeshifting superhero who is a former member of the Doom Patrol and member of the Teen Titans. ...
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Species See text. ...
Slade makes a cameo in "Hide and Seek" when Raven is telling the story to Melvin, Timmy, and Teether. Slade makes a final appearance in the last episode of the series, "Things Change" when Beast Boy was searching for answers on why a newly revived Terra seemed to have lost all memory of her past or superpowers. Slade confronts Beast Boy, denying anything to do with Terra's sudden regeneration, saying that if Terra didn't remember her past, it was because she didn't want to remember; that he should leave her alone, in peace. Infuriated by his speech, Beast Boy attacks Slade, only to find that it was just another of his many robot-duplicates. Beast Boy (real name Garfield Mark Gar Logan) is a fictional character in the DC Comics universe, a shapeshifting superhero who is a former member of the Doom Patrol and member of the Teen Titans. ...
Terra is a fictional character in the DC Universe. ...
Judas Contract Slade will appear in the upcoming straight-to-DVD Teen Titans adaptation, Teen Titans: The Judas Contract, an adaptation of the Terra storyline from the comics. However due to the targeted PG-13 rating and the subject matter, he will be called Deathstroke in the film. This is unrelated to the more youth-oriented anime-like Teen Titans. The MPAA film rating system is a system used in the United States and instituted by the Motion Picture Association of America to rate a movie based on its content. ...
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