The Flash’s Lost Daughter Faces DC’s Perfect Doctor Doom Homage

The Flash’s Lost Daughter Faces DC’s Perfect Doctor Doom Homage

Fresh from the pages of Stargirl: The Lost Children, Judy Garrick, the lost daughter of the original Flash, brings a bit of classic comedy charm to the modern era in both her style and her villainy. Doctor Elemental, Jay and Judy’s former “forgotten” foe, is a clear call to ’60s icon and primary Marvel villain Doctor Doom, whose presence alternates between elements. Classic and modern elements in new mini-series. Jay Garrick: The Flash #1 by Jeremy Adams, Diego Olortegui, Luis Guerrero and Steve Wands follows Judy Garrick (the Boom) as she struggles to fit into an unfamiliar present, having only recently returned from her transformation. disappeared from existence in 1963. Trying to go on patrol to clear her head, Judy is quickly interrupted by her father, the original Flash Jay Garrick, and chastised for not knowing the dangers of the present, causing Judy to scoff at “people [who] could] be more dangerous than the Elemental Doctor? – a villain Jay doesn’t remember. A flashback shows Judy about to apprehend the villain, seen as a cloaked figure in an iron mask, before vanishing from reality. With Judy gone, it is implied that Doctor Elemental used the opportunity to go underground, his exploits going unnoticed into the present.

Marvel and DC Love Mad Doctors from the 1960s

Doctor Doom

Doctor Elemental is an obvious homage to Marvel’s Doctor Doom: both are men cloaked in metal gloves and menacing masks who can’t seem to bear being exposed. Even their introductions have some similarities, each entering with the goal of gaining the heroes’ powers before strangling them to death. In Doctor Doom’s first appearance in Fantastic Four 5 by Stan Lee, Jack Kirby, Joe Sinnott, Stan Goldberg and Artie Simek in 1962, he takes Sue Storm hostage to blackmail the Fantastic Four into doing what he wants. . Doom then tries to suffocate them. For his part, Doctor Elemental takes Jay’s wife Joan hostage and then attempts to drown her in an elemental infusion. This homage to Silver Age cruelty seems intentional, as Judy Garrick’s story pits the past against the present. Judy brings much-needed optimism to DC’s sometimes dark world: Jay even cited Dark Crisis as an example of the type of villain Judy may not be ready to face. By introducing Doctor Elemental to readers as a brilliant, playful character like Doctor Doom in his first appearance, it both established his credibility as a genuine threat to the Flash family, just invited readers to speculate about how this character has changed over time. This sets up a conflict between a hero who represents half a century of innocence and a villain who is expected to only get worse over time.

The Flash Family Will Have to Face DC’s Doctor Doom

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The Flash family has always been some of DC’s most upbeat and positive heroes   especially Jay Garrick and so this lighter tone with Judy and her enemies seems both appropriate and a welcome throwback to Silver Age shenanigans (albeit with a hint of modern obscurity arrive). If the Flash’s daughter intends to bring a bit of ’60s glamor into the present, there’s no better foe for her than DC’s own version of Doctor Doom.

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