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Wikipedia

Green Arrow

Green Arrow is a superhero who appears in American comic books published by DC Comics. Created by Mort Weisinger and designed by George Papp, he first appeared in More Fun Comics #73 in November 1941. His real name is Oliver Jonas Queen, a wealthy businessman, owner of Queen Industries, and a well-known celebrity in Star City. He uses this position to hide the fact that he is the Green Arrow.[1] Partly inspired by Robin Hood, Green Arrow is an archer who uses his skills to fight crime in his home cities of Star City and Seattle, as well as alongside his fellow superheroes as a member of the Justice League. The world's greatest archer, as well as a competent swordsman and martial artist, Green Arrow deploys a range of trick arrows (in contemporary times, they are referred as "specialty arrows"[2]) with various special functions, such as glue, explosive-tipped, grappling hook, flash grenade, tear gas and even kryptonite arrows for use in a range of special situations.

Green Arrow
Textless variant cover of Green Arrow: 80 Years of the Emerald Archer collection (March 2021).
Art by Jim Lee.
Publication information
PublisherDC Comics
First appearanceMore Fun Comics #73 (November 1941)
Created byMort Weisinger
George Papp
In-story information
Alter egoOliver Jonas "Ollie" Queen
SpeciesHuman
Place of originStar City
Team affiliationsJustice League
Justice League United
Queen Industries
Outsiders
Seven Soldiers of Victory
Justice League Elite
Justice League Task Force
PartnershipsDinah Laurel Lance
Speedy (various)
Connor Hawke
Emiko Queen
Green Lantern (Hal Jordan)
Barry Allen
Abilities
  • Peak human physical and mental conditioning
  • Highly skilled martial artist and hand-to-hand combatant
  • Master archer and marksman
  • Expert acrobat
  • Utilizing high-tech equipment, armor, compound bow, and various types of specialty arrows

Green Arrow enjoyed moderate success in his early years, becoming the cover feature of More Fun, as well as having occasional appearances in other comics. Throughout his first twenty-five years, however, the character never enjoyed greater popularity. In the late 1960s, writer Denny O'Neil, inspired by the character's dramatic visual redesign by Neal Adams, chose to have him lose his fortune, giving him the then-unique role of a streetwise crusader for the working class and the disadvantaged. In 1970, he was paired with a more law and order-oriented hero, Green Lantern, in a ground-breaking, socially conscious comic book series.[3] Since then, he has been popular among comic book fans and most writers have taken an urban, gritty approach to the character. Oliver Queen was killed off in the 1990s and replaced by a new character, Oliver's son Connor Hawke. Connor, however, proved a less popular character, and the original Oliver Queen character was resurrected in the 2001 "Quiver" storyline, by writer Kevin Smith. In the 2000s, the character has been featured in bigger storylines focusing on Green Arrow and Black Canary, such as the DC event The Green Arrow/Black Canary Wedding and the high-profile Justice League: Cry for Justice storyline, prior to the character's relaunch alongside most of DC's properties in 2011.

Green Arrow was not initially a well-known character outside of comic book fandom: he had appeared in a single episode of the animated series Super Friends in 1973. In the 2000s, the character appeared in a number of DC television properties, including the animated series Justice League Unlimited, Young Justice, The Batman and Batman: The Brave and the Bold, and several DC Universe Animated Original Movies. In live action, he appeared in the series Smallville, played by actor Justin Hartley, and became a core cast member. In 2012, the live action series Arrow debuted on The CW, in which the title character was portrayed by Stephen Amell, and launching several spin-off series, becoming the starting point for a shared television franchise called the Arrowverse.

Publication history

Beginnings, 1941–1968

 
A panel of More Fun Comics #73 (November 1941), featuring Green Arrow and Speedy's debut and their original costumes. Art by George Papp.

Green Arrow and Speedy first appeared in More Fun Comics #73 (cover-dated November 1941), which was illustrated by artist George Papp. When Mort Weisinger was creating the character, aside from the obvious allusions to Robin Hood, he took inspiration from a movie serial, The Green Archer, based on the novel by Edgar Wallace. He retooled the concept into a superhero archer with obvious Batman influences.[4] These include Green Arrow's sidekick Speedy, his use of an Arrowcar and Arrow-Plane for transportation, his use of an Arrow-Cave as his headquarters, his alter ego as a wealthy playboy, the use of an Arrow-Signal to summon him, as well as a clown-like arch foe named Bull's Eye, similar to Batman's arch-foe, the Joker. His and Speedy's first origin stories were told in More Fun Comics #89.

 
Green Arrow, as he originally appeared during the 1940s, on the cover of More Fun Comics #77 (March 1942). Art by Papp.

Green Arrow began as a back-up feature in More Fun Comics, but within four months the Green Arrow and Speedy replaced Doctor Fate and the Spectre as the cover feature. In Superhero Comics of the Golden Age, Mike Benton writes that "their front cover star status was probably due to Speedy's appeal -- teenage sidekicks were the current rage."[5] They were also given a spot as one of five back-up features to be promoted in one of the earliest team-up books, Leading Comics, starting with issue #1 (Winter 1941). They appeared in More Fun until issue #107 (January 1946), and then moved to Adventure Comics from #103 (April 1946) to #269 (February 1960).[5] Green Arrow and Speedy also appeared in various issues of World's Finest Comics until issue #140 (March 1964).

He was one of the few DC characters to keep going after the Golden Age of Comic Books. His longevity was due to the influence of creator Mort Weisinger, who kept him as a back-up feature to the headlining Superboy, first in More Fun Comics and then Adventure Comics; since Superman-related titles were all but guaranteed success during this period, Green Arrow endured the 1940s and 1950s relatively unchanged, outlasting most of his Golden Age contemporaries. As a result, he avoided being revived and "re-imagined" for the Silver Age, as the Flash, Green Lantern, and others were.

Aside from sharing Adventure Comics with him, issue #258 featured an encounter between a younger Oliver Queen and Superboy. The Green Arrow and Speedy feature during this period included a short run in 1958 written by Dick and Dave Wood and drawn by Jack Kirby. For much of this period, Green Arrow's adventures were written by France Herron, who was the character's primary scripter 1947–1963.[6]

Neal Adams and Dennis O'Neil, 1969–1983

In 1969, artist Neal Adams updated the character's visual appearance by giving him a Van Dyke beard and costume of his own design in The Brave and the Bold #85 (August–September 1969).[7] Writer Dennis O'Neil followed up on Green Arrow's new appearance by completely remaking the character's attitude in Justice League of America #75 (cover-dated November 1969), having Oliver Queen lose his fortune and become an outspoken advocate of the underprivileged and the political left wing. The story also turned teammate Black Canary into a love interest for Queen.[8]

 
Green Lantern (vol. 2) #76 (April 1970). Cover art by Neal Adams.

In the early 1970s, Green Arrow became a co-feature with Green Lantern (Hal Jordan) in an acclaimed series of stories by O'Neil and Adams that dealt with various social and political issues. The two co-stars served to represent contrasting sociopolitical viewpoints: Green Arrow spoke for radical change while Green Lantern was an establishment liberal figure, wanting to work within existing institutions of government and law.[8] Queen convinces Jordan to see beyond his strict obedience to the Green Lantern Corps, to help those who were neglected or discriminated against. O'Neil explained: "He would be a hot-tempered anarchist to contrast with the cerebral, sedate model citizen who was Green Lantern."[9] The duo embark on a quest in a beat-up pickup truck to "find America", along the way witnessing the problems of corruption, racism, pollution, as well as overpopulation confronting the nation. One story (in issues #78-79) was even widely interpreted as an allegory for the Manson Family cult murders, though O'Neil has emphasized that the story was about the authoritarian left and not Manson.[8]

In Green Lantern (vol. 2) #85–86, it was revealed that Green Arrow's ward, Speedy, was addicted to heroin.[1] Speedy overcame his addiction with the help of the Black Canary. This story prompted a massive public reaction, including a congratulatory letter from the mayor of New York, John Lindsay.[8] However, Green Lantern sales had been in a major decline at the time Green Arrow was brought on as co-star, and the O'Neil/Adams stories failed to revive them.[8] Green Lantern was canceled with issue #89 (April/May 1972), and the climactic story arc of the Green Lantern/Green Arrow series was published as a back-up feature in The Flash #217 through #219. In sharp contrast to the socially-relevant tales which preceded it, this story centered on emotional themes, with Green Arrow struggling to deal with the guilt of having killed a man.[8] Afterwards Green Arrow appeared in solo stories run as backups in Action Comics, starting with #421. Elliot S. Maggin, who had made his comics debut with a Green Arrow story published in Green Lantern (vol. 2) #87, was Green Arrow's writer for the next several years.[8]

In 1976, the Green Lantern/Green Arrow title was re-launched, without the socially conscious themes of the original series, with O'Neil writing and Mike Grell drawing. After the title moved to solo Green Lantern stories, solo Green Arrow stories appeared in World's Finest Comics. In his solo series, Oliver landed a job as a newspaper columnist, which allowed him to articulate his political beliefs in a more public field. In World's Finest #255 (1979), Queen unsuccessfully ran for Mayor of Star City.

In May through August 1983, Green Arrow appeared for the first time in his own comic book, a four issue limited series.[10] This miniseries introduced a running rivalry between Green Arrow and the supervillain Count Vertigo.

In 1985, the Earth-Two Green Arrow died in the Crisis on Infinite Earths, still wearing red boots and gloves. The Golden Age Earth-2 character had been retconned as a time-lost member of the original Seven Soldiers of Victory superhero team, recovered by the Justice League and Justice Society. After the Crisis, the Earth-Two Green Arrow and Speedy were retconned out of existence altogether, given the end of DC's former multiverse.

Longbow Hunters/Mike Grell ongoing

 
Green Arrow: The Longbow Hunters #1, the gritty redefinition of Green Arrow. Cover by Mike Grell.

In 1987, DC Comics launched the character into a new ongoing title as part of their mature audience comic line. Written and illustrated by Mike Grell, the revamp was launched with Green Arrow: The Longbow Hunters mini-series.[11] In this three-issue prestige format limited series, a routine adventure against a group of drug runners led to tragedy as the Black Canary was captured and brutally tortured. In response, Oliver murdered his girlfriend's attackers. The mini-series also introduced the enigmatic female Japanese archer, Shado, whose family had suffered in a World War II internment camp. Shado later raped Oliver[12] and became pregnant by him, producing a son named Robert after his father.[13]

Under Grell, Green Arrow abandoned the use of his trademark gadget arrows and relocated from Star City to Seattle, Washington. As the series was part of DC Comics' mature audience line, it took on a more gritty, violent, as well as urban tone, with Green Arrow often using deadly force against his enemies. Grell wrote the series for the first 80 issues, downplaying the super-hero aspects of the characters: Oliver abandoned his mask and was never actually referred to as "Green Arrow" and Black Canary was never shown using her sonic scream power (sometimes, this was explained as having lost it due to the events of The Longbow Hunters, though this was not consistent with her appearances in other titles published during this period). While crossover specials were conceived to allow other writers (most notably Denny O'Neil, who wrote Batman and the mature audience comic The Question) to use Green Arrow, Grell wrote him as largely isolated from the rest of the DC Universe; when other DC characters like longtime friend Hal Jordan (also known as Green Lantern) appeared, they did so in street clothes and used only their civilian names.[14]

In place of the super-hero community, Grell created his own supporting cast. In addition to Shado, Grell introduced Seattle police Lieutenant Jim Cameron, who was disgusted with Green Arrow's vigilante actions (including killing criminals), renegade CIA agent Greg Osborne, who began to monitor Queen's activities, as well as mercenary Eddie Fyers, initially introduced as Queen's adversary, but later to become a companion of necessity when Green Arrow was forced to leave Seattle after false accusations of aiding terrorists. Grell's run ended with Green Arrow vol. 2 #80, shortly after Dinah dumped Oliver.

During this period, the writer also redefined the character's origin in the four-part 1992 limited series, Green Arrow: The Wonder Year. Grell portrayed Oliver Queen as a thrill-seeker who inherits his family business at a very young age. Changed by his sojourn on the island, Oliver decided to take up crime fighting as a means of rebelling against his responsibilities. During his first adventure in Star City, Oliver meets an old flame, Brianna Stone, a former college radical who warns him if he continued to carry his bow, he would one day have to use it for real. Grell's limited series also established Queen's attraction toward dangerous women.

Post-Grell and character's temporary death

 
Connor Hawke and Oliver Queen as Green Arrows on the cover to Green Arrow Secret Files & Origins #1 (December 2002). Art by Matt Wagner.

Once Grell left the series, DC almost immediately began restoring Green Arrow to the mainstream DC Universe. His ongoing series (mostly written by Kelley Puckett and drawn by artist Jim Aparo) was removed from the "Mature Audience" line (which had evolved into "Vertigo") with #63, prior to Grell's departure and Green Arrow began appearing in various super-hero titles as a guest: most notably Green Lantern (vol. 3) #47, which had Oliver aiding Green Lantern in rescuing his longtime girlfriend Carol Ferris and her family from one of Hal's enemies, as well as the 1994 DC Comics mini-series Zero Hour. In Zero Hour, where Hal Jordan seeks to remake the universe after the trauma of Coast City's destruction drives him to destroy the Green Lantern Corps to gain the power to remake the universe, Queen is forced to shoot his old friend at a pivotal moment. Now tightly integrated in the DC Universe, the character Connor Hawke was introduced and revealed as Oliver Queen's son from a previous relationship.

In Green Arrow (vol. 2) #100–101, Queen infiltrated a group of eco-terrorists known as the Eden Corps and sacrificed his life in order to prevent the group from detonating a bomb that would destroy the city of Metropolis.[1] Superman attempted to intervene, but ultimately did not after Queen rebuked him for suggesting that Queen allow him to sever the arm attached to the bomb.[15] The exchange between Queen and Superman pays tribute to Frank Miller's 1986 work The Dark Knight Returns. Queen later admits in the Quiver storyline (where he is resurrected) that he refused due to both his own issues at this point in his life and the more practical issue that he would be useless as an archer with one arm. Queen's death allowed the writers to shake up the status quo by making Connor Hawke a replacement Green Arrow. The series, now written by Chuck Dixon, would continue with Hawke as the main focus until issue #137, when the series was canceled.

Smith, Hester and Parks/Meltzer 2000–2004

Queen is revived in 2000's, Green Arrow (vol. 3) as part of the "Quiver" story arc, written by Kevin Smith and illustrated by Phil Hester and Ande Parks. It is revealed that Hal's resurrection of Oliver (seen on the last page of Green Arrow (vol. 2) #137, the final issue of the Oliver/Connor ongoing series) was in reality a deliberately flawed one. In Hal's final hours before sacrificing his life to save the Earth during "The Final Night", Hal speaks with Oliver's soul in the afterlife. The two agree to bring back a version of Oliver Queen: one without a soul (so Oliver may properly stay in Heaven) and with no memory of the events of The Longbow Hunters mini-series or of the subsequent events that followed, up until his death, Oliver reasoning that things went wrong for him after the events that drove him to kill for the first time and feeling that the copy of him was restored at the best point in his life.

For some years, this resurrected Oliver lives in Star City as a vigilante hero, completely under the radar of his other superhero friends, but eventually he is discovered and learns the truth of his resurrection, leaving the resurrected Oliver feeling uncertain about his state now that he knows he has no soul. His resurrection is eventually used by the grandfather of Stanley Dover in an attempt to gain power over the monster that Dover accidentally bound to his grandson, Dover intending to take Oliver's body- possible only due to his lack of a soul- and use his access to the JLA's resources to find the monster. At the climax of the story, Oliver's soul returns from heaven, re-inhabits his resurrected earthly form and helps his son Connor Hawke fight a horde of demons, the body of Oliver having made contact with his soul and convincing him to return to save their son. Dover is defeated and actually consumed by the Beast, who then leaves of his own accord. Oliver also finds himself independently wealthy again, as Dover had transferred all his financial assets to Oliver in anticipation of taking over his body. He also picked up a new sidekick, Mia Dearden, who would become the new Speedy, under Oliver's tutelage.[16]

After the resurrection storyline, Smith wrote a second and shorter arc involving a super-powered serial killer, calling himself Onomatopoeia, who sought to claim Connor as his latest victim. Smith then left the title and Brad Meltzer took over as writer.

Meltzer's single storyline for Green Arrow featured Oliver and his former sidekick, Roy Harper, reuniting and going on a cross-country road trip to pick up old possessions of Oliver's, most notably a spare Green Lantern power ring entrusted to him by Hal Jordan many years earlier. The story also revealed that Oliver knew all along that Connor was his son and was even present at his birth, but that Oliver ultimately abandoned Connor and his mother, because of his fear of the responsibilities of fatherhood. Meltzer's storyline would continue into the mini-series Green Lantern: Rebirth, which featured Oliver's attempts to use the ring against Sinestro- presumed dead for several years- before the ring is reclaimed by the reborn Hal Jordan.

Meltzer went on to write the mini-series Identity Crisis, which heavily featured Green Arrow as one of the story's main characters, investigating the murder of Sue Dibny – the wife of the Elongated Man – and revealing that the League had been involved in mind-wiping various villains in the past to conceal their secret identities.

During this time, the character also appeared in a number of other titles, such as the Justice League, when he is temporarily brought into a 'reserve League' created by Batman after the original League is nearly killed by the powerful Gamemnae, and Justice League Elite, where Oliver joins a 'black ops' super-team as the team's tactical consultant. His time in the Elite is notable for showing a brief affair with Dawn, the wife of the team's magical expert, Manitou Raven.

Judd Winick, 2004–2008

Judd Winick took over as Green Arrow's writer and made many changes. Mia Dearden, the new Speedy, was revealed to be HIV positive and attempts were made to expand Green Arrow's Rogues Gallery with Merlyn the archer, Constantine Drakon, as well as Danny Brickwell (the Brick) joining the cast of existing Green Arrow villains such as the illusion-casting Count Vertigo and the enigmatic Onomatopoeia, the latter of whom, himself, was a relatively recent addition. Other DC villains, such as the Riddler, made guest appearances throughout his run.

2006 saw the title (along with other DC comics titles) jump "One Year Later" after the events in Infinite Crisis. Oliver, having once again amassed a large personal fortune, is the newly elected mayor of Star City, continuing his fight for justice both on the streets and within the political system.[17] He also has a new costume, which appears to be a combination of the classic Neal Adams costume and the Mike Grell Longbow Hunters costume. In flashbacks, it is revealed that Oliver survived a near-fatal attack during the events of the Infinite Crisis, as well as used his recuperation time to retrain. He works with several expert instructors including a sensei known as Natas, who also trained Deathstroke, and becomes proficient in several martial arts including the use of swords, which he makes use of on occasion during this time, and proves that he and his family are now formidable combatants when battling Deathstroke and later Batman's rogue protégé Jason Todd. He is eventually forced to resign from his position as mayor after a scandal where he learns that he had been secretly funding the Outsiders, essentially a bounty hunter team at this point in their history, coupled with his uncertain position with the voting public, having never had much more than 50% of the city on his side at a time. Queen is convinced to resign his position in exchange for his successor leaving the various social aid organisations and resources he had established alone, although Ollie was able to beat his opponent by resigning prior to the election and putting someone he trusted in charge of the city.[18] The series concluded with Oliver proposing to Dinah (Black Canary).

In 2007, Andy Diggle and Jock's Green Arrow: Year One[19] presented the newest official version of his origin. Using concepts from previous iterations, Oliver Queen is a rich, thrill-seeking activist who is attacked, thrown overboard and washes up on an island where he learns of a smuggling operation. Upon witnessing the inhabitants' slave-like living conditions, he begins to take down the smugglers' operation. He eventually returns to civilization changed by his experiences. In the final part of the story, Oliver claims that a mutiny or the actions of a group of heroin dealers could be used as a cover story for what transpired, referencing the original Green Arrow origin story, as well as Mike Grell's version.

Green Arrow/Black Canary

After the end of the ongoing series, DC Comics published a four-part bi-monthly Black Canary miniseries in which Green Arrow teamed up with Black Canary to help get Sin into school and establish a new life. This series concluded with the Black Canary accepting his proposal. This resulted in DC Comics publishing three interconnected specials revolving around the Green Arrow/Black Canary wedding that tied into that month's "Countdown" stories. These were The Black Canary Wedding Planner, JLA Wedding Special, as well as The Green Arrow/Black Canary Wedding Special. The wedding special worked as a lead-in for a new Green Arrow/Black Canary series. At the conclusion of the wedding special, the Black Canary is forced to kill Green Arrow after he appears to go mad and attacks her.

The new ongoing series picked up on this, quickly revealing that Green Arrow was alive (the dead Green Arrow being an impostor) and being held hostage by "Athena". The Black Canary, Connor and Mia launch a rescue mission to save Green Arrow. As the team is united and on their way to safety, Connor is struck by a bullet meant for Oliver and is left in a vegetative state. While Connor rests, Oliver and Dinah go out and are officially married, since they had never actually been married in the Wedding Special, but they come home to find Connor has been kidnapped.

This storyline led directly into the second arc that followed the rescue of Connor from a mysterious foe. Connor is eventually found, now having recovered thanks to manipulation by Doctor Sivana. With issue #15, Andrew Kreisberg took over as the series writer.

Blackest Night

Oliver is transformed into a Black Lantern Corps member and attacks his former allies, notably his son, wife and sidekick. During the battle, Connor says he never really forgave his father,[20] while Oliver's internal monologue reveals his thoughts, which express concerns for his "family" and disgust at his actions. The team manage to disable Oliver by freezing him with liquid nitrogen.

Cry for Justice & Rise and Fall

In the Cry for Justice miniseries, JLA foe Prometheus destroys Star City, as part of a grand scheme to "hurt" the Justice League community of heroes. During the episode, the identity of the Green Arrow was nearly revealed by an old friend, Moreno. After tricking the Justice League into releasing him, Green Arrow tracks Prometheus to his hidden lair and kills him with a single arrow right between the eyes.[21]

This murder, committed in secret, is what Oliver considers justice for the bombings (which also cost the life of Lian Harper, Roy Harper's (Red Arrow) daughter, who was killed in the bombing of Star City) and this immediately leads into the Rise and Fall storyline, in which Oliver obsessively hunts other super-villains allied with Prometheus during the recent events,[22] including Prometheus's former allies who were involved in the bombing. When his JLA comrades learn of this plot, they confront Green Arrow and he realizes he has crossed a line and turns himself in: Black Canary returns her wedding ring and declares their marriage over. The Green Arrow/Black Canary series ends during this story arc, as well as in the pages of Justice League: Rise and Fall Special; Oliver is tried, but found not guilty as most of the jury sympathise with his motives. He is exiled from Star City's remains as a result, choosing to live in the mysterious forest which has grown at its centre.[23]

Brightest Day

Following the events of Blackest Night, Deadman was brought to the ruins of Star City by his white ring. Powered by the entity of life on Earth, the ring created a vast green forest, that instantly grew in the presence of the white light, in much of what remained of Star City.[24]

Unbeknownst to the populace of Star City, Green Arrow returns and lives within the new forest, trying his best to protect a city still reeling from the death and destruction of Prometheus's attacks. With the law breaking down and numerous public figures being murdered, a new owner of Queen Industries, the result of a hostile takeover, arrives to enforce peace and rebuild the city.[25] This self-proclaimed 'Queen' has a connection to Green Arrow's father and claims to be upholding the Queen family legacy where Oliver failed.[26]

The New 52

 
The New 52 Green Arrow on the cover of Green Arrow (vol. 5) #17 (February 2013). Art by Andrea Sorrentino.

In 2011, DC chose to relaunch its titles with new #1 issues and a refreshed continuity and called this initiative The New 52. Green Arrow was one of 52 titles included in this.[27] In the post-Flashpoint continuity, Oliver Queen is Green Arrow and he balances his own breaking of laws with his efforts to bring outlaws to justice across the globe. In the new continuity, Queen runs Q-Core, a communications technology company that is part of Queen Industries, through which he funds and armors himself as Green Arrow. He makes scarce allusion to his former partnership with Roy Harper, but Roy's memories in Red Hood and the Outlaws establish that the pair fell out badly, leading Oliver to expel him from Q-Core, as well as prompting Roy's own downward spiral.[28] He is based once again in Seattle and supported in his vigilante activities by a small team of close friends who are tech geniuses. In addition, his romantic history with the Black Canary, his friendship with Green Lantern (Hal Jordan), and his being a father (to both Connor Hawke and Shado's son Robert Queen II) did not take place as the result of the reboot.

The New 52 series was originally written by J.T. Krul, who was later replaced by Keith Giffen and Dan Jurgens, who were in turn replaced by Ann Nocenti. None of these writers' runs were well received by critics or fans. Beginning with issue 17, the series received a new creative team in writer Jeff Lemire and artist Andrea Sorrentino, who brought more positive reception to the book. Lemire's story introduces new mysteries concerning Oliver's original time on the island where he was shipwrecked, as well as a central mythology concerning the ancient Arrow Clan and several other weapon-themed analogues to the Arrow, known as the Outsiders. New antagonists include Komodo, who Oliver learns was his father's archer apprentice and apparent murderer. It has also seen the New 52 debut of several characters, such as Count Vertigo, Shado, the Clock King, Richard Dragon, as well as John Diggle, a character originally created for the TV series Arrow.

When Oliver meets Shado, he learns she had a daughter from Oliver's father (Robert Queen) named Emiko, whom Komodo has raised as his own daughter. When Oliver returns to the island as part of his investigation into the Outsiders, and in search of a relic known as 'the green arrow', he discovers that his father had survived to the present, and disguised as one of Oliver's torturers on the island, he manipulated Oliver's time there, culminating in Oliver's transformation into the warrior he is today and the hero known as Green Arrow. Disgusted at this revelation, and taking the arrow relic with him, Oliver leaves Shado and his father behind, stranded on the island, before returning to America to take down the Outsiders. Shado and Robert followed Oliver to Prague, and Emiko turned against Komodo after learning the truth of her parentage. Robert was killed by Komodo in an attempt to save his daughter, and Komodo was later killed himself by Emiko.

From 2013, DC also chose to include Green Arrow as a headlining character in its Justice League of America (vol. 3) series, which runs alongside Justice League (vol. 2) and Justice League Dark. In this book, Queen is part of a crack state-sponsored team assembled by Amanda Waller and Steve Trevor of A.R.G.U.S. to bring in good PR for the US government and serve as a defense against the independent Justice League headed by Superman and Batman should they ever go rogue. Following the cancellation of JLA at the conclusion of the Forever Evil storyline, Green Arrow appears in its replacement series, Justice League United, also written by Lemire.

Lemire and Sorrentino left Green Arrow after issue #34, to be replaced by writers Andrew Kreisberg and Ben Sokolowski, and artist Daniel Sampere. Kreisberg was the executive producer of Arrow, and Sokolowski served as a writer for the show. Kreisberg and Sokolowski's first issue featured The New 52 debuts of Felicity Smoak and Mia Dearden. Kreisberg's run saw him face off against the influential magnate John King, who is Mia's father, and his hired gun, Merlyn. At a moment of desperation given King's infinite resources and litany of loyal subjects, Felicity and Diggle recruit some of Green Arrow's allies and old enemies to help in the fight: Batman, Arsenal, Emiko, Katana, Onyx, Cupid and even Lex Luthor, at that time a Justice League member.

Following DC's Convergence storyline in April–May 2015, the title again received a new creative team in writer Ben Percy and artist Patrick Zircher, whose run was more influenced by the horror genre. Elements from Arrow were removed, and characters created by Lemire, such as Emiko and Henry Fyff, were restored to major roles. Percy's first arc depicts Green Arrow confronting a racist serial killer using drone-like security technology in Seattle to systematically target criminals and potential criminals based on computer profiling and police data.

DC Rebirth

 
Textless variant cover of Green Arrow (vol. 6) #1 (August 2016). Art by Neal Adams.

In 2016, DC relaunched its entire line of titles once again with the DC Rebirth event, this time intending to restore elements from the DC Universe prior to Flashpoint, while also maintaining the continuity of the New 52.[29] Ben Percy remained the principal writer for the series, with a rotating art team consisting of Otto Schmidt, Juan Ferreyra and Stephen Byrne. During this run, Green Arrow is seemingly betrayed by Emiko as Percy reintroduces Shado, echoing elements from the Grell run, as well as John Diggle. In addition to restoring Green Arrow's trademark Van Dyke beard, the series revisited a romance between Green Arrow and Black Canary for the first time since 2011. Percy also reestablished Green Arrow as a politically conscious figure, with the writer describing him as a "social justice warrior".[30] After it was revealed that Emiko was still on Oliver's side, she eventually adopted the codename of Red Arrow.[31]

This volume finished in March 2019, with issue #50 serving as an extra sized final issue.[32]

Dawn of DC

In November 2022, it was announced that Joshua Williamson would write a new Green Arrow series following Oliver's disappearance at the end of Dark Crisis on Infinite Earths, with Sean Izaakse illustrating and launching in April 2023.[33] On April 25, the day of the first issue's release, it was announced that the initial six-issue miniseries would become a twelve-issue maxiseries.[34]

Supporting characters

As with other DC superheroes, Green Arrow has an extensive supporting cast of characters, sometimes called Team Arrow, along with a unique rogues gallery of villains. His supporting cast has changed wildly over the course of the series, but has tended to include his sidekick Speedy (Roy Harper and Mia Dearden) and his fellow superhero and main romantic interest, Black Canary. His son Connor Hawke has also been a part of the Arrow vigilante family, along with Black Canary's adopted daughter Sin. For a brief time, Green Arrow was also "assisted" by the aspiring superhero Miss Arrowette, with whom he had a brief affair. The New 52 reboot of Green Arrow has also introduced a number of new supporting characters for Oliver, including ex-Queen Industries technology experts Naomi Singh and Henry Fyff, and his archer half-sister Emiko Queen who later takes up the code-name Red Arrow.[35] The characters of Felicity Smoak and John Diggle from the Arrow TV series were also adapted into the comic books in 2015 (though Felicity was later removed from the continuity). The archer Shado, though not part of Oliver's unit of heroes, has also been a recurring character in Oliver's life. Additionally, Green Arrow has been regularly paired with his fellow superhero Green Lantern (Hal Jordan) in comics, as the two co-starred in the series Green Lantern/Green Arrow together for many years.

As a Justice League member, Green Arrow will also appear in crossovers with stories featuring other DC flagship characters from time to time. Of his Justice League colleagues, classic stories depict Ollie as having an ongoing feud with Hawkman owing to their differing outlooks on life, and more recently, he has been depicted as a good friend of his Justice League United colleague Animal Man. Green Arrow has also been a member of the Outsiders, both in its incarnation as a covert superhero team led by Batman and in its New 52 form as a secret society based around various weapon clans, including an Arrow Clan which Oliver is the rightful head of. In the Golden Age of Comic Books, Green Arrow and Speedy were also affiliated with the superhero group the Seven Soldiers of Victory.

Recurring Green Arrow villains of course include his archenemies Merlyn, a master archer, and Count Vertigo, a foreign dignitary with the power to disrupt his enemy's balance and perception. Other recurring villains have included China White, Clock King, Cupid, Brick, and Constantine Drakon. Since the 2000s, the longstanding DC supervillain Deathstroke has often been depicted as having a particular grudge against Green Arrow.

Other versions

Amalgam Comics

Two versions of Green Arrow exist in the Amalgam universe:

Earth-Two

For many years, DC Comics wrote stories in what it called a Multiverse, or a series of infinite parallel Earths. This allowed DC writers to freely retcon and retell stories, as well as explain continuity mistakes. The Green Arrow of the 1940s, like all Golden Age characters at that time, resided on Earth-Two and was a member of the Seven Soldiers of Victory and All-Star Squadron along with his sidekick Speedy. Despite having a different origin than the modern Green Arrow, the Golden Age character's development largely parallels the modern one's.

During DC's landmark event Crisis on Infinite Earths, Green Arrow assists Changeling of Earth-One and Mento of Earth-One in fighting Shaggy Man II of Earth-One. While noticing that Shaggy Man is not a living being, he defeated it with an explosive arrow.[38] Green Arrow was among those who were killed by the Anti-Monitor's Shadow Demons which he tried to fight in Chicago as Peacemaker of Earth-Four was unable to get to him in time. This was because Green Arrow of Earth-Two was not as fast as he used to be. The Anti-Monitor's defeat destroyed all the planets of the Multiverse and rebooted the DC universe with a single Earth.[39]

Modern DC alternate universes

DC's weekly series 52 established a new 52-Earth Multiverse. The ongoing series Countdown showcased several of these. On Earth-3, an evil equivalent of Green Arrow is a member of the supervillain co-op called the Crime Society of America. Another evil equivalent exists in the Antimatter Universe called Deadeye. On Earth-15, Roy Harper has replaced Oliver as Green Arrow.[40] In the gender-reversed world of Earth-11, Oliver is now Olivia Queen, and that world's version of the Black Canary closely resembles him in appearance.[41] The Kingdom Come (Earth-22) and Dark Knight Returns (Earth-31) stories and their variations of Oliver were later amalgamated into the 52-Earth Multiverse.

In the alternate timeline of the Flashpoint event, Oliver Queen is the head of Green Arrow Industries, a major military contracting company, as well as leads an ex-military band of Green Arrows. Even though Oliver is an inventive genius, he steals advanced gadgets from super-villains for military use. one day, Oliver discovers his Green Arrows were killed by a female raider at his base at Starfish Island and killing his best friend/head of security Roy Harper. Taking his weapons and gadgets to hunt down the woman in battle, Oliver shockingly learns that she is a daughter of his and Vixen, Oliver's former lover, as well as the reason she attacked him was because Green Arrow Industries built factories which specializing in testing super-villain weapons in American towns that inadvertently became targets for the super-villains looking to gain their weapons back. Shocked by her revelation, Oliver had only been stalling before his daughter is killed by his reserve teams he earlier called.[42]

 
Green Arrow with one arm in The Dark Knight Returns. Art by Frank Miller.

Earth-31/ The Dark Knight Returns

The character appears in Frank Miller's Batman: The Dark Knight Returns and the sequel Batman: The Dark Knight Strikes Again listed as Earth-31. Despite missing an arm (implied to be because of Superman),[43] Oliver still proves to be an effective archer (he grasps the nocks of his arrows in his teeth). Oliver was later requested by Batman to help the Dark Knight fight against Superman. Oliver accepts, and implants Batman's synthetic kryptonite into the tip of one of his arrows causing Batman to emerge as the winner. After Batman fakes his death in order for him to go underground, Oliver, sporting a mechanical arm as a prosthesis for his left arm, joins Batman in his war against a corrupted American government run by Alexander Luthor. In The Dark Knight Returns, Queen is portrayed as an anarchist, while in The Dark Knight Strikes Again, he is explicitly described as a "billionaire turned Communist."[44]

Other DC Elseworlds stories

In JLA: The Nail and its sequel, Oliver is a featured as a disabled ex-hero, having lost an arm, an eye, and the use of his legs in a fight with Amazo, which also resulted in the death of Hawkman. Bitter and furious, he now spreads fear on Perry White's talk show about the JLA being aliens and claims that they are planning to conquer the world; his former teammates speculate that this is his method of coping.[45] In the sequel, Oliver's brain is transplanted into Amazo's body – the Flash having removed Amazo's computerized brain in an earlier fight – restoring his sanity, allowing him to defeat the creature threatening the universe at the cost of his own life, after mending fences with his former teammates.

In Batman: Holy Terror, Oliver Queen is mentioned as having been executed, found guilty of supporting underground Jewish "pornographers".[46] He has a cameo as Bruce Wayne's society friend in Dean Motter's Batman: Nine Lives.[47] Oliver Queen also appears in Mike Mignola's Batman: The Doom That Came to Gotham, where he is portrayed as a guilt-ridden latter-day Templar equipped with magic arrows dipped in the blood of Saint Sebastian. He is killed in issue #2 by Poison Ivy.[48] Oliver appears in Superman: Red Son, where Oliver Queen is a reporter for the Daily Planet working underneath Perry White and eventually Lois Lane.[49]

An older, balding Green Arrow appears in Mark Waid and Alex Ross' futuristic Kingdom Come, in which Oliver has joined forces with Batman to oppose Superman's army/Justice League. He married his longtime love Dinah Lance and they have a daughter, Olivia Queen aka Black Canary II.[50]

Green Arrow appears in League of Justice, a The Lord of the Rings–inspired fantasy where the character is renamed "Longbow Greenarrow": a mysterious wizard resembling Gandalf. JLA: Age of Wonder shows Green Arrow as a defender of the poor and an enemy of oppression.[51]

Injustice series

In the Injustice universe, where the Joker kills Lois Lane and her unborn child, driving Superman to autocratic madness, Green Arrow joins Batman's Insurgency against Superman's Regime, recognizing the corrupt Man of Steel's harsher approach to ending crime. In Injustice: Gods Among Us, he is married to Black Canary and also unintentionally becomes close to Harley Quinn, who he saves from a near-death encounter with Superman. Near the end of Year One (the comic's first volume) he is beaten to death by Superman in his Fortress of Solitude after the former mistakenly believes that the Insurgency has come to harm his adopted parents kept there (though in reality it was a botched attempt to gain a super pill meant to give humans great power). With his final action, Oliver is able to use an arrow to deliver the super pill to the Insurgency so that the mission was not in vain. Year Two reveals Canary to be pregnant with Oliver's child, leaving her determined to take down Superman for his murder.

  • When Superman nearly kills Black Canary trying to avenge Green Arrow, Doctor Fate heals and takes Dinah to an alternate universe where a different version of Oliver Queen remains alive but his own Black Canary, along with most of his allies, are deceased. Doctor Fate leaves the two to raise the baby—named Conner—together, giving each other a chance at happiness. Five years later, in the prequel comic of the game's sequel Injustice 2, alternate Oliver and Dinah receive news from Doctor Fate of Superman's defeat at the hands of his Prime-Earth counterpart. While Dinah is brought home by Doctor Fate to help Batman restore Earth, the alternate Oliver joins in to honor his late-counterpart. The alternate Oliver discovers that, unlike himself, his deceased counterpart maintained his wealth and resources, and while the public is unaware that its Oliver Queen is dead, alternate Green Arrow is able to access them for the heroes' needs. He learns his counterpart's marriage to Dinah, prompting her to ask the alternate Green Arrow his hand-in-marriage, which he accepts. He and Batman also do not get along, waiting for an opportunity to duel after Oliver reveals that, based on what he learned from Dinah, he has more training than his counterpart.

Superman: American Alien

In the 2016 comic book Superman: American Alien by Max Landis, which features an alternate retelling of Clark's journey to becoming Superman, Oliver Queen encounters Clark Kent two times in his life. First is when Clark was nineteen and Oliver mistakes him for Bruce Wayne, whom he had thrown a birthday party for despite being aware that Wayne would never show up. Clark, after some hesitation, decides to enjoy himself and befriends Oliver, though he briefly becomes annoyed and shocked at how much money Oliver and his friends waste. Years later, after getting off Starfish Island, Oliver has matured more and encounters Clark again, who has begun his new career at the Daily Planet. At first believing him to be Bruce, Clark quickly comes clean. Oliver forgives him before introducing him to Lex Luthor, partly to annoy the latter.[52]

Earth 2

In the pages of Earth 2: World's End, Oliver Queen is an ally of Batman and operates as Red Arrow. When Batman was killed during the Apokoliptian invasion, Red Arrow continued to guard the Codex that contained the DNA of every animal, plant, and organism in an underwater fortress built by Bruce Wayne. When Batman and Huntress arrive at the underwater fortress, they meet Oliver Queen who assists in fighting the second Apokoliptian invasion. He and the Codex are among those evacuated from Earth when it was destroyed.[53]

Collected editions

The trade paperback edition of The Archer's Quest (#16–21) was released as Volume 4 in the series after Straight Shooter (#26–31) was released as Volume 3. The hardcover editions of Quiver, The Sounds of Violence, as well as The Archer's Quest were never numbered. The hardcover edition of Green Arrow/Black Canary: The Wedding Album was reprinted minus the last two pages of issue #5.

Title Material collected ISBN
Beginnings and team-up with Green Lantern
Green Arrow: The Golden Age Omnibus More Fun Comics #73–107; Adventure Comics #103–117; World's Finest Comics #7–28 SC: 978-1401277208
The Green Arrow by Jack Kirby Adventure Comics #250–256, World's Finest Comics #96–99
Showcase Presents: Green Arrow Adventure Comics #250–266, #268–269; Brave and the Bold #50, #71, #85; Justice League of America #4, World's Finest Comics #95–140 SC: 978-1-4012-0785-4
Green Lantern/Green Arrow Vol. 1 Green Lantern Vol. 2 #76–82 (per indicia, it actually #76-#81, #83). The 1992 edition is titled "Hard-Traveling Heroes". Strangely #82 wasn't reprinted in this collection but #83 was. Issue #82's cover is shown in the cover gallery. DC didn't correct this release at all. SC: 1992 1-56389-038-0

SC: 2004 1-4012-0224-1

Green Lantern/Green Arrow Vol. 2 Green Lantern Vol. 2 #84–87, #89; The Flash #217–219, #226 (only in the 2004 collections onwards) The 1993 edition is sub-titled "More Hard-Traveling Heroes". SC: 1993 1-56389-086-0

SC: 2004 978-1-4012-0230-9

The Green Lantern/Green Arrow Collection Green Lantern Vol. 2 #76–87, #89, The Flash #217–219 (did not include #226) This release was a slipcased hardcover. HC: 978-1-5638-9639-2
Green Arrow/Black Canary: For Better or for Worse Justice League of America #75, backups from Action Comics #428 & 434, Joker #4, Green Lantern Vol. 2 #94–95, backup from Detective Comics #549–550, & excerpts from Green Arrow: Longbow Hunters #1, Green Arrow vol. 2 #75 & 101, & Green Arrow Vol. 3 #4–5, 12, & 21 SC: 978-1-4012-1446-3
Green Arrow Vol. 1: Hunters Moon Green Arrow Vol. 2 #1–6 SC: 978-1-4012-4326-5
Green Arrow Vol. 2: Here There Be Dragons Green Arrow Vol. 2 #7–12 SC: 978-1-4012-5133-8
Green Arrow Vol. 3: The Trial of Oliver Queen Green Arrow Vol. 2 #13–20 SC: 978-1-4012-5523-7
Green Arrow Vol. 4: Blood of the Dragon Green Arrow Vol. 2 #21–28 SC: 978-1-4012-5822-1
Green Arrow Vol. 5: Black Arrow Green Arrow Vol. 2 #29–38 SC: 978-1-4012-6079-8
Green Arrow Vol. 6: Last Action Hero Green Arrow Vol. 2 #39–50 SC: 978-1401264574
Green Arrow Vol. 7: Homecoming Green Arrow Vol. 2 #51–62 SC: 978-1401265748
Green Arrow Vol. 8: The Hunt for the Red Dragon Green Arrow Vol. 2 #63–72 SC: 978-1401269036
Green Arrow Vol. 9: Old Tricks Green Arrow Vol. 2 #73–80, Green Arrow: The Wonder Year #1–4 SC: 978-1401275310
Green Arrow: Connor Hawke Where Angels Fear to Tread Green Arrow Vol. 2 #0, #91-101 SC: 978-1779509192
Green Lantern: Emerald Allies featuring Green Arrow Green Arrow Vol. 2 #104, #110–111, #125–126; Green Lantern Vol. 3 #76–77, #92 SC: 978-1-5638-9603-3
Green Lantern: Emerald Knights featuring Green Arrow Green Arrow Vol. 2 #136, Green Lantern Vol. 3 #99–106 SC: 978-1-563-89475-6
Green Arrow Return
Green Arrow: Quiver Green Arrow Vol. 3 #1–10 HC: 978-1-5638-9802-0
SC: 978-1-5638-9965-2
Green Arrow: The Sounds of Violence Green Arrow Vol. 3 #11–15 HC: 978-1-5638-9976-8
SC: 978-1-4012-0045-9
Green Arrow by Kevin Smith Deluxe Edition Green Arrow Vol. 3 #1–15 HC: 978-1-4012-4596-2
Green Arrow: The Archer's Quest Green Arrow Vol. 3 #16–21 HC: 978-1-4012-0010-7
SC: 978-1-4012-0044-2
Green Arrow: Straight Shooter Green Arrow Vol. 3 #26–31 SC: 978-1-4012-0200-2
Green Arrow: City Walls Green Arrow Vol. 3 #32, #34–39 SC: 978-1-4012-0464-8
Green Arrow: Moving Targets Green Arrow Vol. 3 #40–50 SC: 978-1-4012-0930-8
Green Arrow: Heading Into the Light Green Arrow Vol. 3 #52, #54–59 SC: 978-1-4012-1094-6
Green Arrow: Crawling From the Wreckage Green Arrow Vol. 3 #60–65 SC: 978-1-4012-1232-2
Green Arrow: Road to Jericho Green Arrow Vol. 3 #66–75 SC: 978-1-4012-1508-8
Green Arrow/Black Canary
Green Arrow/Black Canary: Road to the Altar Birds of Prey #109, Black Canary #1–4: Black Canary Wedding Planner SC: 978-1-4012-1863-8
Green Arrow/Black Canary: The Wedding Album Green Arrow/Black Canary #1–5: Green Arrow/Black Canary Wedding Special HC: 978-1-4012-1841-6
SC: 978-1-4012-2219-2
Green Arrow/Black Canary: Family Business Green Arrow/Black Canary #6–10 SC: 978-1-4012-2016-7
Green Arrow/Black Canary: A League of Their Own Green Arrow/Black Canary #11–14, Green Arrow Secret Files #1 SC: 978-1-4012-2250-5
Green Arrow/Black Canary: Enemies List Green Arrow/Black Canary #15–20 SC: 978-1-4012-2498-1
Green Arrow/Black Canary: Big Game Green Arrow/Black Canary #21–26 SC: 978-1-4012-2709-8
Green Arrow/Black Canary: Five Stages Green Arrow/Black Canary #27–29, Green Arrow #30 SC: 978-1-4012-2898-9
Brightest Day
Green Arrow: Into the Woods Green Arrow Vol. 4 #1–7 HC: 1-4012-3073-3
Green Arrow: Salvation Green Arrow Vol. 4 #8–15 HC: 1-4012-3394-5
The New 52
Green Arrow Vol. 1: The Midas Touch Green Arrow Vol. 5 #1–6 SC: 978-1-4012-3486-7
Green Arrow Vol. 2: Triple Threat Green Arrow Vol. 5 #7–13 SC: 978-1-4012-3842-1
Green Arrow Vol. 3: Harrow Green Arrow Vol. 5 #0, 14–16, The Savage Hawkman #14, Justice League Vol. 2 #8 SC: 978-1-4012-4405-7
Green Arrow Vol. 4: The Kill Machine Green Arrow Vol. 5 #17–24, 23.1: Count Vertigo SC: 978-1-4012-4690-7
Green Arrow Vol. 5: The Outsiders War Green Arrow Vol. 5 #25–31 SC: 978-1-4012-5044-7
Green Arrow Vol. 6: Broken Green Arrow Vol. 5 #32–34, Green Arrow: Futures End #1, Secret Origins Vol. 3 #4 SC: 978-1-4012-5474-2
Green Arrow Vol. 7: Kingdom Green Arrow Vol. 5 #35–40 SC: 978-1-4012-5762-0
Green Arrow Vol. 8: The Nightbirds Green Arrow Vol. 5 #41–47, Green Arrow Annual #2, Convergence: Speed Force #2 SC: 978-1-4012-6255-6
Green Arrow Vol. 9: Outbreak Green Arrow Vol. 5 #48–52, Green Arrow Annual #1 SC: 978-1-4012-7002-5
Rebirth
Green Arrow Vol. 1: The Death and Life Of Oliver Queen Green Arrow Vol. 6 #1–5, Green Arrow: Rebirth #1 SC: 978-1-4012-6781-0
Green Arrow Vol. 2: Island of Scars Green Arrow Vol. 6 #6–11 SC: 978-1-4012-7040-7
Green Arrow Vol. 3: Emerald Outlaw Green Arrow Vol. 6 #12–17 SC: 978-1-4012-7133-6
Green Arrow Vol. 4: Rise of Star City Green Arrow Vol. 6 #18–25 SC: 978-1-4012-7454-2
Green Arrow Vol. 5: Hard Traveling Hero Green Arrow Vol. 6 #26–31 SC: 978-1-4012-7853-3
Green Arrow Vol. 6: Trial of Two Cities Green Arrow Vol. 6 #32–38 SC: 978-1-4012-8171-7
Green Arrow Vol. 7: Citizen's Arrest Green Arrow Vol. 6 #43–47, Green Arrow Annual #1 SC: 978-1-4012-8523-4
Green Arrow Vol. 8: The End of the Road Green Arrow Vol. 6 #39–42, #48–50 SC: 978-1-4012-9899-9
Miscellaneous
Green Arrow: Year One Green Arrow: Year One #1–6 HC: 978-1-4012-1687-0
SC: 978-1-4012-1743-3
Green Arrow: The Longbow Hunters Green Arrow: The Longbow Hunters #1–3 SC: 978-0-9302-8938-6
Justice League: Rise and Fall Justice League: Rise and Fall Special #1, Green Arrow #31–32, Rise of Arsenal #1–4, Justice League Vol. 2 #43 HC: 1-4012-3013-X
Aquaman/Green Arrow: Deep Target Aquaman/Green Arrow: Deep Target #1-7 SC: 978-1-7795-1689-3

In other media

Smallville

 
Justin Hartley as Green Arrow in the television series Smallville.

Justin Hartley portrayed Oliver Queen/Green Arrow in Smallville, and is first introduced in the season six episode "Sneeze". DC Comics writer Mark Waid had particular praise for Hartley's performance, stating "I think Justin Hartley nails Green Arrow perfectly, I mean, there's that brashness, that, cockiness - but not to the point where you want to smack him - but right up to the edge."[54]

Geoff Johns, former President and CCO of DC Entertainment, and who wrote for Hartley in the episode “Absolute Justice” concurred, saying "I love Justin as Green Arrow. I didn't realize how good he was until I saw him on screen. Like, I knew he was good; but every line he delivered was perfect. He can make any line sound good. So I was pleasantly surprised by how much he stole the scenes."[55]

The character starts off as a recurring character who is already an established vigilante in his home of Star City, and is originally paired with Lois Lane in a romantic storyline. After a rough start, he becomes a trusted ally and friend of Clark Kent. Green Arrow retains his many unique arrows and demonstrates expert archery skill, along with skilled use of a crossbow with many trick arrows. In the episode "Justice", Oliver teams up with Clark to put an end to Lex Luthor's experimentation with supervillains by teaming up with other superheroes Clark has met on his journeys, forming a prototypical Justice League. Oliver is seen again in season seven for the episode "Siren", in which he continues his fight against LuthorCorp and meets another superhero, Black Canary, whom he recruits for his Justice League. In a flashback sequence in the season seven episode "Veritas", a young version of Oliver Queen can be seen being played by Luke Gair.

From season eight through season ten, Hartley is a series regular, and is woven into the backstory of Smallville through the Queens' business connections with the Luthor, Teague, and Swann families; Oliver was a childhood friend and schoolmate, and later a teenage bully, of Lex Luthor. In the season eight episode "Requiem", Oliver risks his friendship with Clark by killing Lex, something which Clark would never support. Over the course of the series, Oliver and Clark become increasingly close friends and they establish themselves full-time as superheroes, working with other members of the Justice League when required. Oliver later becomes romantically involved with Clark's best friend, Lois's cousin Chloe Sullivan, whom he ultimately marries. In the series finale, Oliver serves as the best man at Clark and Lois' wedding service, and Chloe is shown to have a son in the future, who is implied to be Oliver's. Smallville Season Eleven, a comic book continuation of the show, reveals he is Oliver's son; Jonathan Queen, named after Clark's adoptive father.

During the sixth season of Smallville, there was talk of spinning off Justin Hartley's portrayal of the character Green Arrow into his own series. Hartley however refused to entertain the idea, feeling it was his duty to respect what Smallville had accomplished in five seasons, and not "steal the spotlight" because there was "talk" of a spin-off after his two appearances. According to Hartley, "talking" was as far as the spin-off idea ever got.[56][57] A spin-off series in which Oliver led the Justice League made it into early development. The series was to have been helmed by Stephen S. DeKnight, who would later go on to be the showrunner for the first season of Marvel's Daredevil.[58]

Arrowverse

 
Stephen Amell as Green Arrow, in the fifth season of the television series Arrow.

In January 2012, following Smallville's conclusion, The CW prepared a new series centered around the character Green Arrow. Andrew Kreisberg, Greg Berlanti and Marc Guggenheim were announced to be developing the series.[59] A week later, the series was ordered to pilot, to be directed by David Nutter, who had previously directed the pilot for Smallville.[60] When developing the series, producer Marc Guggenheim expressed that the creative team wanted to "chart [their] own course, [their] own destiny", and avoid any direct connections to Smallville. Thus rather than continuing on with Hartley's incarnation of the character, they opted to cast a new actor in the role and establish the series as its own separate continuity.[61] At the end of the same month, Canadian actor Stephen Amell was cast in the titular role of Oliver Queen.[62]

The series, titled simply Arrow, follows the story of former playboy billionaire turned vigilante Oliver Queen after he is rescued from a presumably deserted island, where he was shipwrecked five years earlier. It also features flashbacks to his time away.[63] Guggenheim described the show as more of a "hero show" than a superhero one, wanting the show to be realistic, and stated that much of the inspiration for the flashback sequences was drawn from Green Arrow: Year One.[64] Andrew Kreisberg explained that, "We designed [Oliver] as a character a little more tortured" than the comic series Green Arrow.[65] The series premiered in North America on October 10, 2012,[66] and was picked up for a full season later that month.[67] The show went on to air for seven full seasons,[68] with a shortened eighth and final season, consisting of ten episodes, concluding in January 2020.[69][70] The series became the progenitor of a franchise of television shows and other associated media based around adaptations of a variety of DC Comics characters, set within a shared universe, collectively known as the 'Arrowverse', including The Flash, Supergirl, Legends of Tomorrow, Black Lightning, and Batwoman.[71]

DC Extended Universe

Stephen Amell had expressed interest in portraying the DC Extended Universe version of Green Arrow but Warner Bros. have explicitly said to have their tv and film universes separate. Green Arrow is mentioned in the eighth episode of Peacemaker.[72]

Injustice 2

Oliver Queen / Green Arrow appears in the 2017 video games Injustice 2. In the game, he is married to Black Canary and is part of Batman's insurgency. He is tasked alongside other allies such as a reformed Harley Quinn to take down a group of supervillains formed by Gorilla Grodd known as "The Society".

Batman: Arkham Series

Queen Industries is first mentioned in Batman: Arkham Origins. In Batman: Arkham Knight, Queen Industries is shown owning various properties around Gotham. Green Arrow himself is never directly mentioned.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Greenberger, Robert (2008). "Green Arrow". In Dougall, Alastair (ed.). The DC Comics Encyclopedia. New York: Dorling Kindersley. pp. 142–143. ISBN 978-0-7566-4119-1. OCLC 213309017.
  2. ^ Brown, Elliot (December 2002). "Green Arrow's Weapons". Green Arrow Secret Files and Origins. 1 (1).
  3. ^ Green Lantern (vol. 2) #76 (April 1970) through 89 (April/May 1972)
  4. ^ David, Peter (May 14, 1999). "'Aw, C'mon!' and other awards" "But I Digress...". Comics Buyer's Guide (#1330).
  5. ^ a b Benton, Mike (1992). Superhero Comics of the Golden Age: The Illustrated History. Dallas: Taylor Publishing Company. pp. 101–102. ISBN 0-87833-808-X. Retrieved 15 January 2020.
  6. ^ France Herron entry, Who's Who of American Comic Books, 1928–1999.
  7. ^ McAvennie, Michael (2010). "1960s". In Dolan, Hannah (ed.). DC Comics Year By Year A Visual Chronicle. Dorling Kindersley. p. 134. ISBN 978-0-7566-6742-9. Artist Neal Adams targeted the Emerald Archer for a radical redesign that ultimately evolved past the surface level ... the most significant aspect of this issue was Adams's depiction of Oliver Queen's alter ego. He had rendered a modern-day Robin Hood, complete with goatee and mustache, plus threads that were more befitting an ace archer.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g Wells, John (December 2010). "Green Lantern/Green Arrow: And Through Them Change an Industry". Back Issue! (#45): 39–54.
  9. ^ O'Neil, Dennis (June 2004). "Introduction". Green Lantern/Green Arrow Vol. 1. DC Comics. ISBN 978-1-4012-0224-8.
  10. ^ Manning, Matthew K. "1980s" in Dolan, p. 201: "The Battling Bowman fought his way into his own four-issue miniseries at long last, thanks to writer Mike W. Barr and artist Trevor Von Eeden."
  11. ^ Manning "1980s" in Dolan, p. 229: "Writer/artist Mike Grell introduced a Green Arrow for the modern comic book reader in the three-issue prestige format Green Arrow: The Longbow Hunters."
  12. ^ "Here There be Dragons, Part Three" in Green Arrow vol. 2 #11 published December 1988
  13. ^ "Blood of the Dragon, Part 1: Uchiokoshi" in Green Arrow volume 2 issue 21 published August 1989
  14. ^ Cronin, Brian (April 10, 2008). "Comic Book Urban Legends Revealed #150". Comic Book Resources. Retrieved October 24, 2008.
  15. ^ Green Arrow #101.
  16. ^ Smith, Kevin; Phil Hester; Ande Parks (May 2003). Green Arrow: Quiver. DC Comics. ISBN 978-1-56389-965-2.
  17. ^ Green Arrow (vol. 3) #60 (May 2006)
  18. ^ Green Arrow (vol. 3) #75 (August 2007)
  19. ^ Diggle, Andy (April 2009). Green Arrow: Year One. DC Comics. ISBN 978-1-4012-1743-3.
  20. ^ Green Arrow (vol. 4) #31 (May 2010)
  21. ^ Justice League: Cry for Justice #1–7
  22. ^ Justice League of America (vol. 2) #41 (January 2010)
  23. ^ Justice League: Rise and Fall Special (March 2010)
  24. ^ Brightest Day #0
  25. ^ Brightest Day: Green Arrow #1
  26. ^ Brightest Day: Green Arrow #3
  27. ^ Billionaire World-Traveling Green Arrow Returns for DCnU, Newsarama, June 14, 2011
  28. ^ Red Hood and the Outlaws #3
  29. ^ "EXCLUSIVE: Geoff Johns Details "Rebirth" Plan, Seeks to Restore Legacy to DC Universe". 2016-02-18. Retrieved 2016-10-03.
  30. ^ "OLLIE is a 'Social Justice Warrior' in REBIRTH GREEN ARROW (Plus Preview)". Retrieved 2016-10-03.
  31. ^ Green Arrow (vol. 6) #15
  32. ^ Green Arrow #50 to Tie In With No Justice and Heroes In Crisis – and End -Bleeding Cool
  33. ^ ""Dawn of DC" Starts in January 2023". DC. 2022-11-18. Retrieved 2022-11-25.
  34. ^ Williamson, Joshua. "GREEN ARROW #1 (of 12!) has finally landed!!". joshuawilliamson.substack.com. Retrieved 2023-04-25.
  35. ^ Green Arrow (vol. 6) #15 (January 2017)
  36. ^ JLX #2
  37. ^ JLX #1
  38. ^ Crisis on Infinite Earths #10. DC Comics.
  39. ^ Crisis on Infinite Earths #12. DC Comics.
  40. ^ Countdown #24 (November 2007)
  41. ^ Countdown Presents: The Search for Ray Palmer – Superwoman/Batwoman #1 (February 2008)
  42. ^ Flashpoint: Green Arrow Industries one-shot (June 2011)
  43. ^ The Dark Knight Returns #4
  44. ^ Batman: The Dark Knight Strikes Again #3
  45. ^ JLA: The Nail #1
  46. ^ Batman: Holy Terror
  47. ^ Batman: Nine Lives
  48. ^ Batman: The Doom That Came to Gotham #2
  49. ^ Superman: Red Son #3
  50. ^ Kingdom Come #2
  51. ^ JLA: League of Justice #1-2
  52. ^ Superman: American Alien #3
  53. ^ Earth 2: World's End #21. DC Comics.
  54. ^ "The Legend of the Emerald Archer". YouTube.
  55. ^ Byrne, Craig (2010). "KryptonSite Interview: Geoff Johns Talks Absolute Justice!". KryptonSite. Retrieved February 8, 2020.
  56. ^ Byrne, Craig (March 2008). Smallville: The Official Companion Season 6. London: Titan Books. pp. 136–138. ISBN 978-1-84576-656-6.
  57. ^ Marnell, Blair (June 1, 2018). "Former Smallville Star reveals Green Arrow and Lois Lane nearly had a spin-off series'". SyFy. Retrieved October 12, 2019.
  58. ^ Byrne, Craig (August 31, 2016). "An Untold Tale: Steven DeKnight Discusses Smallville's Justice League Spinoff". Kryptonsite. Retrieved December 10, 2019.
  59. ^ Hibberd, Justin (January 12, 2012). "'Green Arrow' TV series near pilot order at The CW!". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved April 2, 2020.
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  63. ^ Eric Goldman (May 30, 2012). "Arrow Star Stephen Amell Talks About Playing TV's New Oliver Queen". IGN. Retrieved November 13, 2013.
  64. ^ Byrne, Craig (July 19, 2012). "Interview: Marc Guggenheim Unlocks The Secrets & Connections In Arrow". GreenArrowTV. from the original on June 19, 2018. Retrieved June 16, 2018.
  65. ^ Betancourt, David (April 24, 2013). "Green Arrow Has Hit a Bull's-Eye with Growing Fan Base". The Washington Post.
  66. ^ MacKenzie, Carina Adly (June 28, 2012). . Zap2It. Archived from the original on June 29, 2012. Retrieved June 28, 2012.
  67. ^ Kondolojy, Amanda (October 22, 2012). . TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on October 24, 2012. Retrieved October 22, 2012.
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    • Kondolojy, Amanda (February 13, 2014). . TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on February 22, 2014. Retrieved February 13, 2014.
    • Bibel, Sara (January 11, 2015). "'Arrow', 'Jane The Virgin', 'Reign', 'The 100', 'The Flash', 'The Originals' & 'The Vampire Diaries' Renewed by the CW". TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on January 18, 2015. Retrieved January 11, 2015.
    • Michael Ausiello (March 11, 2016). "The CW Renews The Flash, Vampire Diaries, The 100, Reign (!) and 7 Others". TVLine. from the original on November 17, 2016. Retrieved June 18, 2016.
    • Jayson, Jay (January 8, 2017). "The CW Renews Arrow, Supernatural, Crazy Ex and 4 Others". Comicbook.com. from the original on February 1, 2017. Retrieved January 8, 2017.
    • Goldberg, Lesley (April 2, 2018). "'Riverdale,' 'Flash,' 'Supernatural' Among 10 CW Renewals". The Hollywood Reporter. from the original on April 2, 2018. Retrieved April 2, 2018.
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  70. ^ "Arrow & Supernatural Series Finale, Legends of Tomorrow Premiere Dates Revealed". Screen Rant. November 8, 2019. Retrieved November 9, 2019.
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    • "DC Comics' Vixen Coming To CW Seed". KSiteTV. January 11, 2015. from the original on January 12, 2015. Retrieved January 11, 2015.
    • Kondolojy, Amanda (May 7, 2015). . TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on May 18, 2015. Retrieved May 7, 2015.
    • Agard, Chancellor (July 17, 2018). "Batwoman series from Greg Berlanti in development at The CW". Entertainment Weekly. from the original on July 17, 2018. Retrieved July 17, 2018.
    • Andreeva, Nellie (January 14, 2020). "'Superman & Lois' And 'Walker, Texas Ranger' Reboot With Jared Padalecki Get CW Series Orders". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved January 14, 2020.
    • Agard, Chancellor (January 14, 2020). "'Crisis on Infinite Earths' introduces a major change for the CW's superhero shows". Entertainment Weekly. from the original on January 16, 2020. Retrieved January 15, 2020.
  72. ^ Anderson, Jenna (February 19, 2022). "Stephen Amell Responds to Peacemaker's NSFW Green Arrow Reference". comicbook.com. Retrieved December 20, 2022.

External links

  • Green Arrow at the DC Database Project
  • Green Arrow's secret origin at DC Comics.com
  • Earth-1 Green Arrow Index
  • Earth-2 Green Arrow Index
  • Index of the Earth-One adventures of Green Arrow
  • Green Arrow at Don Markstein's Toonopedia. Archived from the original on August 29, 2016.
  • Green Arrow on the DC Animated Universe Wiki, an external wiki

green, arrow, this, article, about, comic, book, character, other, uses, disambiguation, oliver, queen, redirects, here, television, character, oliver, queen, arrowverse, superhero, appears, american, comic, books, published, comics, created, mort, weisinger, . This article is about the comic book character For other uses see Green Arrow disambiguation Oliver Queen redirects here For the television character see Oliver Queen Arrowverse Green Arrow is a superhero who appears in American comic books published by DC Comics Created by Mort Weisinger and designed by George Papp he first appeared in More Fun Comics 73 in November 1941 His real name is Oliver Jonas Queen a wealthy businessman owner of Queen Industries and a well known celebrity in Star City He uses this position to hide the fact that he is the Green Arrow 1 Partly inspired by Robin Hood Green Arrow is an archer who uses his skills to fight crime in his home cities of Star City and Seattle as well as alongside his fellow superheroes as a member of the Justice League The world s greatest archer as well as a competent swordsman and martial artist Green Arrow deploys a range of trick arrows in contemporary times they are referred as specialty arrows 2 with various special functions such as glue explosive tipped grappling hook flash grenade tear gas and even kryptonite arrows for use in a range of special situations Green ArrowTextless variant cover of Green Arrow 80 Years of the Emerald Archer collection March 2021 Art by Jim Lee Publication informationPublisherDC ComicsFirst appearanceMore Fun Comics 73 November 1941 Created byMort WeisingerGeorge PappIn story informationAlter egoOliver Jonas Ollie QueenSpeciesHumanPlace of originStar CityTeam affiliationsJustice LeagueJustice League UnitedQueen IndustriesOutsidersSeven Soldiers of VictoryJustice League EliteJustice League Task ForcePartnershipsDinah Laurel LanceSpeedy various Connor HawkeEmiko QueenGreen Lantern Hal Jordan Barry AllenAbilitiesPeak human physical and mental conditioning Highly skilled martial artist and hand to hand combatant Master archer and marksman Expert acrobat Utilizing high tech equipment armor compound bow and various types of specialty arrowsGreen Arrow enjoyed moderate success in his early years becoming the cover feature of More Fun as well as having occasional appearances in other comics Throughout his first twenty five years however the character never enjoyed greater popularity In the late 1960s writer Denny O Neil inspired by the character s dramatic visual redesign by Neal Adams chose to have him lose his fortune giving him the then unique role of a streetwise crusader for the working class and the disadvantaged In 1970 he was paired with a more law and order oriented hero Green Lantern in a ground breaking socially conscious comic book series 3 Since then he has been popular among comic book fans and most writers have taken an urban gritty approach to the character Oliver Queen was killed off in the 1990s and replaced by a new character Oliver s son Connor Hawke Connor however proved a less popular character and the original Oliver Queen character was resurrected in the 2001 Quiver storyline by writer Kevin Smith In the 2000s the character has been featured in bigger storylines focusing on Green Arrow and Black Canary such as the DC event The Green Arrow Black Canary Wedding and the high profile Justice League Cry for Justice storyline prior to the character s relaunch alongside most of DC s properties in 2011 Green Arrow was not initially a well known character outside of comic book fandom he had appeared in a single episode of the animated series Super Friends in 1973 In the 2000s the character appeared in a number of DC television properties including the animated series Justice League Unlimited Young Justice The Batman and Batman The Brave and the Bold and several DC Universe Animated Original Movies In live action he appeared in the series Smallville played by actor Justin Hartley and became a core cast member In 2012 the live action series Arrow debuted on The CW in which the title character was portrayed by Stephen Amell and launching several spin off series becoming the starting point for a shared television franchise called the Arrowverse Contents 1 Publication history 1 1 Beginnings 1941 1968 1 2 Neal Adams and Dennis O Neil 1969 1983 1 3 Longbow Hunters Mike Grell ongoing 1 4 Post Grell and character s temporary death 1 5 Smith Hester and Parks Meltzer 2000 2004 1 6 Judd Winick 2004 2008 1 7 Green Arrow Black Canary 1 8 Blackest Night 1 9 Cry for Justice amp Rise and Fall 1 10 Brightest Day 1 11 The New 52 1 12 DC Rebirth 1 13 Dawn of DC 2 Supporting characters 3 Other versions 3 1 Amalgam Comics 3 2 Earth Two 3 3 Modern DC alternate universes 3 4 Earth 31 The Dark Knight Returns 3 5 Other DC Elseworlds stories 3 6 Injustice series 3 7 Superman American Alien 3 8 Earth 2 4 Collected editions 5 In other media 5 1 Smallville 5 2 Arrowverse 5 3 DC Extended Universe 5 4 Injustice 2 5 5 Batman Arkham Series 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksPublication history EditBeginnings 1941 1968 Edit A panel of More Fun Comics 73 November 1941 featuring Green Arrow and Speedy s debut and their original costumes Art by George Papp Green Arrow and Speedy first appeared in More Fun Comics 73 cover dated November 1941 which was illustrated by artist George Papp When Mort Weisinger was creating the character aside from the obvious allusions to Robin Hood he took inspiration from a movie serial The Green Archer based on the novel by Edgar Wallace He retooled the concept into a superhero archer with obvious Batman influences 4 These include Green Arrow s sidekick Speedy his use of an Arrowcar and Arrow Plane for transportation his use of an Arrow Cave as his headquarters his alter ego as a wealthy playboy the use of an Arrow Signal to summon him as well as a clown like arch foe named Bull s Eye similar to Batman s arch foe the Joker His and Speedy s first origin stories were told in More Fun Comics 89 Green Arrow as he originally appeared during the 1940s on the cover of More Fun Comics 77 March 1942 Art by Papp Green Arrow began as a back up feature in More Fun Comics but within four months the Green Arrow and Speedy replaced Doctor Fate and the Spectre as the cover feature In Superhero Comics of the Golden Age Mike Benton writes that their front cover star status was probably due to Speedy s appeal teenage sidekicks were the current rage 5 They were also given a spot as one of five back up features to be promoted in one of the earliest team up books Leading Comics starting with issue 1 Winter 1941 They appeared in More Fun until issue 107 January 1946 and then moved to Adventure Comics from 103 April 1946 to 269 February 1960 5 Green Arrow and Speedy also appeared in various issues of World s Finest Comics until issue 140 March 1964 He was one of the few DC characters to keep going after the Golden Age of Comic Books His longevity was due to the influence of creator Mort Weisinger who kept him as a back up feature to the headlining Superboy first in More Fun Comics and then Adventure Comics since Superman related titles were all but guaranteed success during this period Green Arrow endured the 1940s and 1950s relatively unchanged outlasting most of his Golden Age contemporaries As a result he avoided being revived and re imagined for the Silver Age as the Flash Green Lantern and others were Aside from sharing Adventure Comics with him issue 258 featured an encounter between a younger Oliver Queen and Superboy The Green Arrow and Speedy feature during this period included a short run in 1958 written by Dick and Dave Wood and drawn by Jack Kirby For much of this period Green Arrow s adventures were written by France Herron who was the character s primary scripter 1947 1963 6 Neal Adams and Dennis O Neil 1969 1983 Edit In 1969 artist Neal Adams updated the character s visual appearance by giving him a Van Dyke beard and costume of his own design in The Brave and the Bold 85 August September 1969 7 Writer Dennis O Neil followed up on Green Arrow s new appearance by completely remaking the character s attitude in Justice League of America 75 cover dated November 1969 having Oliver Queen lose his fortune and become an outspoken advocate of the underprivileged and the political left wing The story also turned teammate Black Canary into a love interest for Queen 8 Green Lantern vol 2 76 April 1970 Cover art by Neal Adams In the early 1970s Green Arrow became a co feature with Green Lantern Hal Jordan in an acclaimed series of stories by O Neil and Adams that dealt with various social and political issues The two co stars served to represent contrasting sociopolitical viewpoints Green Arrow spoke for radical change while Green Lantern was an establishment liberal figure wanting to work within existing institutions of government and law 8 Queen convinces Jordan to see beyond his strict obedience to the Green Lantern Corps to help those who were neglected or discriminated against O Neil explained He would be a hot tempered anarchist to contrast with the cerebral sedate model citizen who was Green Lantern 9 The duo embark on a quest in a beat up pickup truck to find America along the way witnessing the problems of corruption racism pollution as well as overpopulation confronting the nation One story in issues 78 79 was even widely interpreted as an allegory for the Manson Family cult murders though O Neil has emphasized that the story was about the authoritarian left and not Manson 8 In Green Lantern vol 2 85 86 it was revealed that Green Arrow s ward Speedy was addicted to heroin 1 Speedy overcame his addiction with the help of the Black Canary This story prompted a massive public reaction including a congratulatory letter from the mayor of New York John Lindsay 8 However Green Lantern sales had been in a major decline at the time Green Arrow was brought on as co star and the O Neil Adams stories failed to revive them 8 Green Lantern was canceled with issue 89 April May 1972 and the climactic story arc of the Green Lantern Green Arrow series was published as a back up feature in The Flash 217 through 219 In sharp contrast to the socially relevant tales which preceded it this story centered on emotional themes with Green Arrow struggling to deal with the guilt of having killed a man 8 Afterwards Green Arrow appeared in solo stories run as backups in Action Comics starting with 421 Elliot S Maggin who had made his comics debut with a Green Arrow story published in Green Lantern vol 2 87 was Green Arrow s writer for the next several years 8 In 1976 the Green Lantern Green Arrow title was re launched without the socially conscious themes of the original series with O Neil writing and Mike Grell drawing After the title moved to solo Green Lantern stories solo Green Arrow stories appeared in World s Finest Comics In his solo series Oliver landed a job as a newspaper columnist which allowed him to articulate his political beliefs in a more public field In World s Finest 255 1979 Queen unsuccessfully ran for Mayor of Star City In May through August 1983 Green Arrow appeared for the first time in his own comic book a four issue limited series 10 This miniseries introduced a running rivalry between Green Arrow and the supervillain Count Vertigo In 1985 the Earth Two Green Arrow died in the Crisis on Infinite Earths still wearing red boots and gloves The Golden Age Earth 2 character had been retconned as a time lost member of the original Seven Soldiers of Victory superhero team recovered by the Justice League and Justice Society After the Crisis the Earth Two Green Arrow and Speedy were retconned out of existence altogether given the end of DC s former multiverse Longbow Hunters Mike Grell ongoing Edit See also Green Arrow The Longbow Hunters Green Arrow The Longbow Hunters 1 the gritty redefinition of Green Arrow Cover by Mike Grell In 1987 DC Comics launched the character into a new ongoing title as part of their mature audience comic line Written and illustrated by Mike Grell the revamp was launched with Green Arrow The Longbow Hunters mini series 11 In this three issue prestige format limited series a routine adventure against a group of drug runners led to tragedy as the Black Canary was captured and brutally tortured In response Oliver murdered his girlfriend s attackers The mini series also introduced the enigmatic female Japanese archer Shado whose family had suffered in a World War II internment camp Shado later raped Oliver 12 and became pregnant by him producing a son named Robert after his father 13 Under Grell Green Arrow abandoned the use of his trademark gadget arrows and relocated from Star City to Seattle Washington As the series was part of DC Comics mature audience line it took on a more gritty violent as well as urban tone with Green Arrow often using deadly force against his enemies Grell wrote the series for the first 80 issues downplaying the super hero aspects of the characters Oliver abandoned his mask and was never actually referred to as Green Arrow and Black Canary was never shown using her sonic scream power sometimes this was explained as having lost it due to the events of The Longbow Hunters though this was not consistent with her appearances in other titles published during this period While crossover specials were conceived to allow other writers most notably Denny O Neil who wrote Batman and the mature audience comic The Question to use Green Arrow Grell wrote him as largely isolated from the rest of the DC Universe when other DC characters like longtime friend Hal Jordan also known as Green Lantern appeared they did so in street clothes and used only their civilian names 14 In place of the super hero community Grell created his own supporting cast In addition to Shado Grell introduced Seattle police Lieutenant Jim Cameron who was disgusted with Green Arrow s vigilante actions including killing criminals renegade CIA agent Greg Osborne who began to monitor Queen s activities as well as mercenary Eddie Fyers initially introduced as Queen s adversary but later to become a companion of necessity when Green Arrow was forced to leave Seattle after false accusations of aiding terrorists Grell s run ended with Green Arrow vol 2 80 shortly after Dinah dumped Oliver During this period the writer also redefined the character s origin in the four part 1992 limited series Green Arrow The Wonder Year Grell portrayed Oliver Queen as a thrill seeker who inherits his family business at a very young age Changed by his sojourn on the island Oliver decided to take up crime fighting as a means of rebelling against his responsibilities During his first adventure in Star City Oliver meets an old flame Brianna Stone a former college radical who warns him if he continued to carry his bow he would one day have to use it for real Grell s limited series also established Queen s attraction toward dangerous women Post Grell and character s temporary death Edit Connor Hawke and Oliver Queen as Green Arrows on the cover to Green Arrow Secret Files amp Origins 1 December 2002 Art by Matt Wagner Once Grell left the series DC almost immediately began restoring Green Arrow to the mainstream DC Universe His ongoing series mostly written by Kelley Puckett and drawn by artist Jim Aparo was removed from the Mature Audience line which had evolved into Vertigo with 63 prior to Grell s departure and Green Arrow began appearing in various super hero titles as a guest most notably Green Lantern vol 3 47 which had Oliver aiding Green Lantern in rescuing his longtime girlfriend Carol Ferris and her family from one of Hal s enemies as well as the 1994 DC Comics mini series Zero Hour In Zero Hour where Hal Jordan seeks to remake the universe after the trauma of Coast City s destruction drives him to destroy the Green Lantern Corps to gain the power to remake the universe Queen is forced to shoot his old friend at a pivotal moment Now tightly integrated in the DC Universe the character Connor Hawke was introduced and revealed as Oliver Queen s son from a previous relationship In Green Arrow vol 2 100 101 Queen infiltrated a group of eco terrorists known as the Eden Corps and sacrificed his life in order to prevent the group from detonating a bomb that would destroy the city of Metropolis 1 Superman attempted to intervene but ultimately did not after Queen rebuked him for suggesting that Queen allow him to sever the arm attached to the bomb 15 The exchange between Queen and Superman pays tribute to Frank Miller s 1986 work The Dark Knight Returns Queen later admits in the Quiver storyline where he is resurrected that he refused due to both his own issues at this point in his life and the more practical issue that he would be useless as an archer with one arm Queen s death allowed the writers to shake up the status quo by making Connor Hawke a replacement Green Arrow The series now written by Chuck Dixon would continue with Hawke as the main focus until issue 137 when the series was canceled Smith Hester and Parks Meltzer 2000 2004 Edit See also Quiver comics This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Queen is revived in 2000 s Green Arrow vol 3 as part of the Quiver story arc written by Kevin Smith and illustrated by Phil Hester and Ande Parks It is revealed that Hal s resurrection of Oliver seen on the last page of Green Arrow vol 2 137 the final issue of the Oliver Connor ongoing series was in reality a deliberately flawed one In Hal s final hours before sacrificing his life to save the Earth during The Final Night Hal speaks with Oliver s soul in the afterlife The two agree to bring back a version of Oliver Queen one without a soul so Oliver may properly stay in Heaven and with no memory of the events of The Longbow Hunters mini series or of the subsequent events that followed up until his death Oliver reasoning that things went wrong for him after the events that drove him to kill for the first time and feeling that the copy of him was restored at the best point in his life For some years this resurrected Oliver lives in Star City as a vigilante hero completely under the radar of his other superhero friends but eventually he is discovered and learns the truth of his resurrection leaving the resurrected Oliver feeling uncertain about his state now that he knows he has no soul His resurrection is eventually used by the grandfather of Stanley Dover in an attempt to gain power over the monster that Dover accidentally bound to his grandson Dover intending to take Oliver s body possible only due to his lack of a soul and use his access to the JLA s resources to find the monster At the climax of the story Oliver s soul returns from heaven re inhabits his resurrected earthly form and helps his son Connor Hawke fight a horde of demons the body of Oliver having made contact with his soul and convincing him to return to save their son Dover is defeated and actually consumed by the Beast who then leaves of his own accord Oliver also finds himself independently wealthy again as Dover had transferred all his financial assets to Oliver in anticipation of taking over his body He also picked up a new sidekick Mia Dearden who would become the new Speedy under Oliver s tutelage 16 After the resurrection storyline Smith wrote a second and shorter arc involving a super powered serial killer calling himself Onomatopoeia who sought to claim Connor as his latest victim Smith then left the title and Brad Meltzer took over as writer Meltzer s single storyline for Green Arrow featured Oliver and his former sidekick Roy Harper reuniting and going on a cross country road trip to pick up old possessions of Oliver s most notably a spare Green Lantern power ring entrusted to him by Hal Jordan many years earlier The story also revealed that Oliver knew all along that Connor was his son and was even present at his birth but that Oliver ultimately abandoned Connor and his mother because of his fear of the responsibilities of fatherhood Meltzer s storyline would continue into the mini series Green Lantern Rebirth which featured Oliver s attempts to use the ring against Sinestro presumed dead for several years before the ring is reclaimed by the reborn Hal Jordan Meltzer went on to write the mini series Identity Crisis which heavily featured Green Arrow as one of the story s main characters investigating the murder of Sue Dibny the wife of the Elongated Man and revealing that the League had been involved in mind wiping various villains in the past to conceal their secret identities During this time the character also appeared in a number of other titles such as the Justice League when he is temporarily brought into a reserve League created by Batman after the original League is nearly killed by the powerful Gamemnae and Justice League Elite where Oliver joins a black ops super team as the team s tactical consultant His time in the Elite is notable for showing a brief affair with Dawn the wife of the team s magical expert Manitou Raven Judd Winick 2004 2008 Edit Judd Winick took over as Green Arrow s writer and made many changes Mia Dearden the new Speedy was revealed to be HIV positive and attempts were made to expand Green Arrow s Rogues Gallery with Merlyn the archer Constantine Drakon as well as Danny Brickwell the Brick joining the cast of existing Green Arrow villains such as the illusion casting Count Vertigo and the enigmatic Onomatopoeia the latter of whom himself was a relatively recent addition Other DC villains such as the Riddler made guest appearances throughout his run 2006 saw the title along with other DC comics titles jump One Year Later after the events in Infinite Crisis Oliver having once again amassed a large personal fortune is the newly elected mayor of Star City continuing his fight for justice both on the streets and within the political system 17 He also has a new costume which appears to be a combination of the classic Neal Adams costume and the Mike Grell Longbow Hunters costume In flashbacks it is revealed that Oliver survived a near fatal attack during the events of the Infinite Crisis as well as used his recuperation time to retrain He works with several expert instructors including a sensei known as Natas who also trained Deathstroke and becomes proficient in several martial arts including the use of swords which he makes use of on occasion during this time and proves that he and his family are now formidable combatants when battling Deathstroke and later Batman s rogue protege Jason Todd He is eventually forced to resign from his position as mayor after a scandal where he learns that he had been secretly funding the Outsiders essentially a bounty hunter team at this point in their history coupled with his uncertain position with the voting public having never had much more than 50 of the city on his side at a time Queen is convinced to resign his position in exchange for his successor leaving the various social aid organisations and resources he had established alone although Ollie was able to beat his opponent by resigning prior to the election and putting someone he trusted in charge of the city 18 The series concluded with Oliver proposing to Dinah Black Canary In 2007 Andy Diggle and Jock s Green Arrow Year One 19 presented the newest official version of his origin Using concepts from previous iterations Oliver Queen is a rich thrill seeking activist who is attacked thrown overboard and washes up on an island where he learns of a smuggling operation Upon witnessing the inhabitants slave like living conditions he begins to take down the smugglers operation He eventually returns to civilization changed by his experiences In the final part of the story Oliver claims that a mutiny or the actions of a group of heroin dealers could be used as a cover story for what transpired referencing the original Green Arrow origin story as well as Mike Grell s version Green Arrow Black Canary Edit Main article Green Arrow and Black Canary After the end of the ongoing series DC Comics published a four part bi monthly Black Canary miniseries in which Green Arrow teamed up with Black Canary to help get Sin into school and establish a new life This series concluded with the Black Canary accepting his proposal This resulted in DC Comics publishing three interconnected specials revolving around the Green Arrow Black Canary wedding that tied into that month s Countdown stories These were The Black Canary Wedding Planner JLA Wedding Special as well as The Green Arrow Black Canary Wedding Special The wedding special worked as a lead in for a new Green Arrow Black Canary series At the conclusion of the wedding special the Black Canary is forced to kill Green Arrow after he appears to go mad and attacks her The new ongoing series picked up on this quickly revealing that Green Arrow was alive the dead Green Arrow being an impostor and being held hostage by Athena The Black Canary Connor and Mia launch a rescue mission to save Green Arrow As the team is united and on their way to safety Connor is struck by a bullet meant for Oliver and is left in a vegetative state While Connor rests Oliver and Dinah go out and are officially married since they had never actually been married in the Wedding Special but they come home to find Connor has been kidnapped This storyline led directly into the second arc that followed the rescue of Connor from a mysterious foe Connor is eventually found now having recovered thanks to manipulation by Doctor Sivana With issue 15 Andrew Kreisberg took over as the series writer Blackest Night Edit Oliver is transformed into a Black Lantern Corps member and attacks his former allies notably his son wife and sidekick During the battle Connor says he never really forgave his father 20 while Oliver s internal monologue reveals his thoughts which express concerns for his family and disgust at his actions The team manage to disable Oliver by freezing him with liquid nitrogen Cry for Justice amp Rise and Fall Edit In the Cry for Justice miniseries JLA foe Prometheus destroys Star City as part of a grand scheme to hurt the Justice League community of heroes During the episode the identity of the Green Arrow was nearly revealed by an old friend Moreno After tricking the Justice League into releasing him Green Arrow tracks Prometheus to his hidden lair and kills him with a single arrow right between the eyes 21 This murder committed in secret is what Oliver considers justice for the bombings which also cost the life of Lian Harper Roy Harper s Red Arrow daughter who was killed in the bombing of Star City and this immediately leads into the Rise and Fall storyline in which Oliver obsessively hunts other super villains allied with Prometheus during the recent events 22 including Prometheus s former allies who were involved in the bombing When his JLA comrades learn of this plot they confront Green Arrow and he realizes he has crossed a line and turns himself in Black Canary returns her wedding ring and declares their marriage over The Green Arrow Black Canary series ends during this story arc as well as in the pages of Justice League Rise and Fall Special Oliver is tried but found not guilty as most of the jury sympathise with his motives He is exiled from Star City s remains as a result choosing to live in the mysterious forest which has grown at its centre 23 Brightest Day Edit Following the events of Blackest Night Deadman was brought to the ruins of Star City by his white ring Powered by the entity of life on Earth the ring created a vast green forest that instantly grew in the presence of the white light in much of what remained of Star City 24 Unbeknownst to the populace of Star City Green Arrow returns and lives within the new forest trying his best to protect a city still reeling from the death and destruction of Prometheus s attacks With the law breaking down and numerous public figures being murdered a new owner of Queen Industries the result of a hostile takeover arrives to enforce peace and rebuild the city 25 This self proclaimed Queen has a connection to Green Arrow s father and claims to be upholding the Queen family legacy where Oliver failed 26 The New 52 Edit The New 52 Green Arrow on the cover of Green Arrow vol 5 17 February 2013 Art by Andrea Sorrentino In 2011 DC chose to relaunch its titles with new 1 issues and a refreshed continuity and called this initiative The New 52 Green Arrow was one of 52 titles included in this 27 In the post Flashpoint continuity Oliver Queen is Green Arrow and he balances his own breaking of laws with his efforts to bring outlaws to justice across the globe In the new continuity Queen runs Q Core a communications technology company that is part of Queen Industries through which he funds and armors himself as Green Arrow He makes scarce allusion to his former partnership with Roy Harper but Roy s memories in Red Hood and the Outlaws establish that the pair fell out badly leading Oliver to expel him from Q Core as well as prompting Roy s own downward spiral 28 He is based once again in Seattle and supported in his vigilante activities by a small team of close friends who are tech geniuses In addition his romantic history with the Black Canary his friendship with Green Lantern Hal Jordan and his being a father to both Connor Hawke and Shado s son Robert Queen II did not take place as the result of the reboot The New 52 series was originally written by J T Krul who was later replaced by Keith Giffen and Dan Jurgens who were in turn replaced by Ann Nocenti None of these writers runs were well received by critics or fans Beginning with issue 17 the series received a new creative team in writer Jeff Lemire and artist Andrea Sorrentino who brought more positive reception to the book Lemire s story introduces new mysteries concerning Oliver s original time on the island where he was shipwrecked as well as a central mythology concerning the ancient Arrow Clan and several other weapon themed analogues to the Arrow known as the Outsiders New antagonists include Komodo who Oliver learns was his father s archer apprentice and apparent murderer It has also seen the New 52 debut of several characters such as Count Vertigo Shado the Clock King Richard Dragon as well as John Diggle a character originally created for the TV series Arrow When Oliver meets Shado he learns she had a daughter from Oliver s father Robert Queen named Emiko whom Komodo has raised as his own daughter When Oliver returns to the island as part of his investigation into the Outsiders and in search of a relic known as the green arrow he discovers that his father had survived to the present and disguised as one of Oliver s torturers on the island he manipulated Oliver s time there culminating in Oliver s transformation into the warrior he is today and the hero known as Green Arrow Disgusted at this revelation and taking the arrow relic with him Oliver leaves Shado and his father behind stranded on the island before returning to America to take down the Outsiders Shado and Robert followed Oliver to Prague and Emiko turned against Komodo after learning the truth of her parentage Robert was killed by Komodo in an attempt to save his daughter and Komodo was later killed himself by Emiko From 2013 DC also chose to include Green Arrow as a headlining character in its Justice League of America vol 3 series which runs alongside Justice League vol 2 and Justice League Dark In this book Queen is part of a crack state sponsored team assembled by Amanda Waller and Steve Trevor of A R G U S to bring in good PR for the US government and serve as a defense against the independent Justice League headed by Superman and Batman should they ever go rogue Following the cancellation of JLA at the conclusion of the Forever Evil storyline Green Arrow appears in its replacement series Justice League United also written by Lemire Lemire and Sorrentino left Green Arrow after issue 34 to be replaced by writers Andrew Kreisberg and Ben Sokolowski and artist Daniel Sampere Kreisberg was the executive producer of Arrow and Sokolowski served as a writer for the show Kreisberg and Sokolowski s first issue featured The New 52 debuts of Felicity Smoak and Mia Dearden Kreisberg s run saw him face off against the influential magnate John King who is Mia s father and his hired gun Merlyn At a moment of desperation given King s infinite resources and litany of loyal subjects Felicity and Diggle recruit some of Green Arrow s allies and old enemies to help in the fight Batman Arsenal Emiko Katana Onyx Cupid and even Lex Luthor at that time a Justice League member Following DC s Convergence storyline in April May 2015 the title again received a new creative team in writer Ben Percy and artist Patrick Zircher whose run was more influenced by the horror genre Elements from Arrow were removed and characters created by Lemire such as Emiko and Henry Fyff were restored to major roles Percy s first arc depicts Green Arrow confronting a racist serial killer using drone like security technology in Seattle to systematically target criminals and potential criminals based on computer profiling and police data DC Rebirth Edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it March 2017 Textless variant cover of Green Arrow vol 6 1 August 2016 Art by Neal Adams In 2016 DC relaunched its entire line of titles once again with the DC Rebirth event this time intending to restore elements from the DC Universe prior to Flashpoint while also maintaining the continuity of the New 52 29 Ben Percy remained the principal writer for the series with a rotating art team consisting of Otto Schmidt Juan Ferreyra and Stephen Byrne During this run Green Arrow is seemingly betrayed by Emiko as Percy reintroduces Shado echoing elements from the Grell run as well as John Diggle In addition to restoring Green Arrow s trademark Van Dyke beard the series revisited a romance between Green Arrow and Black Canary for the first time since 2011 Percy also reestablished Green Arrow as a politically conscious figure with the writer describing him as a social justice warrior 30 After it was revealed that Emiko was still on Oliver s side she eventually adopted the codename of Red Arrow 31 This volume finished in March 2019 with issue 50 serving as an extra sized final issue 32 Dawn of DC Edit In November 2022 it was announced that Joshua Williamson would write a new Green Arrow series following Oliver s disappearance at the end of Dark Crisis on Infinite Earths with Sean Izaakse illustrating and launching in April 2023 33 On April 25 the day of the first issue s release it was announced that the initial six issue miniseries would become a twelve issue maxiseries 34 Supporting characters EditSee also List of Green Arrow supporting characters and List of Green Arrow enemies This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message As with other DC superheroes Green Arrow has an extensive supporting cast of characters sometimes called Team Arrow along with a unique rogues gallery of villains His supporting cast has changed wildly over the course of the series but has tended to include his sidekick Speedy Roy Harper and Mia Dearden and his fellow superhero and main romantic interest Black Canary His son Connor Hawke has also been a part of the Arrow vigilante family along with Black Canary s adopted daughter Sin For a brief time Green Arrow was also assisted by the aspiring superhero Miss Arrowette with whom he had a brief affair The New 52 reboot of Green Arrow has also introduced a number of new supporting characters for Oliver including ex Queen Industries technology experts Naomi Singh and Henry Fyff and his archer half sister Emiko Queen who later takes up the code name Red Arrow 35 The characters of Felicity Smoak and John Diggle from the Arrow TV series were also adapted into the comic books in 2015 though Felicity was later removed from the continuity The archer Shado though not part of Oliver s unit of heroes has also been a recurring character in Oliver s life Additionally Green Arrow has been regularly paired with his fellow superhero Green Lantern Hal Jordan in comics as the two co starred in the series Green Lantern Green Arrow together for many years As a Justice League member Green Arrow will also appear in crossovers with stories featuring other DC flagship characters from time to time Of his Justice League colleagues classic stories depict Ollie as having an ongoing feud with Hawkman owing to their differing outlooks on life and more recently he has been depicted as a good friend of his Justice League United colleague Animal Man Green Arrow has also been a member of the Outsiders both in its incarnation as a covert superhero team led by Batman and in its New 52 form as a secret society based around various weapon clans including an Arrow Clan which Oliver is the rightful head of In the Golden Age of Comic Books Green Arrow and Speedy were also affiliated with the superhero group the Seven Soldiers of Victory Recurring Green Arrow villains of course include his archenemies Merlyn a master archer and Count Vertigo a foreign dignitary with the power to disrupt his enemy s balance and perception Other recurring villains have included China White Clock King Cupid Brick and Constantine Drakon Since the 2000s the longstanding DC supervillain Deathstroke has often been depicted as having a particular grudge against Green Arrow Other versions EditAmalgam Comics Edit Two versions of Green Arrow exist in the Amalgam universe Oliver Queen aka Goliath is an amalgamation of Green Arrow and the Marvel Comics character Erik Josten Goliath 36 Clinton Archer as Hawkeye an amalgam of Green Arrow and Clint Barton 37 Earth Two Edit See also Crisis on Infinite Earths and Multiverse DC Comics For many years DC Comics wrote stories in what it called a Multiverse or a series of infinite parallel Earths This allowed DC writers to freely retcon and retell stories as well as explain continuity mistakes The Green Arrow of the 1940s like all Golden Age characters at that time resided on Earth Two and was a member of the Seven Soldiers of Victory and All Star Squadron along with his sidekick Speedy Despite having a different origin than the modern Green Arrow the Golden Age character s development largely parallels the modern one s During DC s landmark event Crisis on Infinite Earths Green Arrow assists Changeling of Earth One and Mento of Earth One in fighting Shaggy Man II of Earth One While noticing that Shaggy Man is not a living being he defeated it with an explosive arrow 38 Green Arrow was among those who were killed by the Anti Monitor s Shadow Demons which he tried to fight in Chicago as Peacemaker of Earth Four was unable to get to him in time This was because Green Arrow of Earth Two was not as fast as he used to be The Anti Monitor s defeat destroyed all the planets of the Multiverse and rebooted the DC universe with a single Earth 39 Modern DC alternate universes Edit DC s weekly series 52 established a new 52 Earth Multiverse The ongoing series Countdown showcased several of these On Earth 3 an evil equivalent of Green Arrow is a member of the supervillain co op called the Crime Society of America Another evil equivalent exists in the Antimatter Universe calledDeadeye On Earth 15 Roy Harper has replaced Oliver as Green Arrow 40 In the gender reversed world of Earth 11 Oliver is now Olivia Queen and that world s version of the Black Canary closely resembles him in appearance 41 The Kingdom Come Earth 22 and Dark Knight Returns Earth 31 stories and their variations of Oliver were later amalgamated into the 52 Earth Multiverse In the alternate timeline of the Flashpoint event Oliver Queen is the head of Green Arrow Industries a major military contracting company as well as leads an ex military band of Green Arrows Even though Oliver is an inventive genius he steals advanced gadgets from super villains for military use one day Oliver discovers his Green Arrows were killed by a female raider at his base at Starfish Island and killing his best friend head of security Roy Harper Taking his weapons and gadgets to hunt down the woman in battle Oliver shockingly learns that she is a daughter of his and Vixen Oliver s former lover as well as the reason she attacked him was because Green Arrow Industries built factories which specializing in testing super villain weapons in American towns that inadvertently became targets for the super villains looking to gain their weapons back Shocked by her revelation Oliver had only been stalling before his daughter is killed by his reserve teams he earlier called 42 Green Arrow with one arm in The Dark Knight Returns Art by Frank Miller Earth 31 The Dark Knight Returns Edit The character appears in Frank Miller s Batman The Dark Knight Returns and the sequel Batman The Dark Knight Strikes Again listed as Earth 31 Despite missing an arm implied to be because of Superman 43 Oliver still proves to be an effective archer he grasps the nocks of his arrows in his teeth Oliver was later requested by Batman to help the Dark Knight fight against Superman Oliver accepts and implants Batman s synthetic kryptonite into the tip of one of his arrows causing Batman to emerge as the winner After Batman fakes his death in order for him to go underground Oliver sporting a mechanical arm as a prosthesis for his left arm joins Batman in his war against a corrupted American government run by Alexander Luthor In The Dark Knight Returns Queen is portrayed as an anarchist while in The Dark Knight Strikes Again he is explicitly described as a billionaire turned Communist 44 Other DC Elseworlds stories Edit In JLA The Nail and its sequel Oliver is a featured as a disabled ex hero having lost an arm an eye and the use of his legs in a fight with Amazo which also resulted in the death of Hawkman Bitter and furious he now spreads fear on Perry White s talk show about the JLA being aliens and claims that they are planning to conquer the world his former teammates speculate that this is his method of coping 45 In the sequel Oliver s brain is transplanted into Amazo s body the Flash having removed Amazo s computerized brain in an earlier fight restoring his sanity allowing him to defeat the creature threatening the universe at the cost of his own life after mending fences with his former teammates In Batman Holy Terror Oliver Queen is mentioned as having been executed found guilty of supporting underground Jewish pornographers 46 He has a cameo as Bruce Wayne s society friend in Dean Motter s Batman Nine Lives 47 Oliver Queen also appears in Mike Mignola s Batman The Doom That Came to Gotham where he is portrayed as a guilt ridden latter day Templar equipped with magic arrows dipped in the blood of Saint Sebastian He is killed in issue 2 by Poison Ivy 48 Oliver appears in Superman Red Son where Oliver Queen is a reporter for the Daily Planet working underneath Perry White and eventually Lois Lane 49 An older balding Green Arrow appears in Mark Waid and Alex Ross futuristic Kingdom Come in which Oliver has joined forces with Batman to oppose Superman s army Justice League He married his longtime love Dinah Lance and they have a daughter Olivia Queen aka Black Canary II 50 Green Arrow appears in League of Justice a The Lord of the Rings inspired fantasy where the character is renamed Longbow Greenarrow a mysterious wizard resembling Gandalf JLA Age of Wonder shows Green Arrow as a defender of the poor and an enemy of oppression 51 Injustice series Edit In the Injustice universe where the Joker kills Lois Lane and her unborn child driving Superman to autocratic madness Green Arrow joins Batman s Insurgency against Superman s Regime recognizing the corrupt Man of Steel s harsher approach to ending crime In Injustice Gods Among Us he is married to Black Canary and also unintentionally becomes close to Harley Quinn who he saves from a near death encounter with Superman Near the end of Year One the comic s first volume he is beaten to death by Superman in his Fortress of Solitude after the former mistakenly believes that the Insurgency has come to harm his adopted parents kept there though in reality it was a botched attempt to gain a super pill meant to give humans great power With his final action Oliver is able to use an arrow to deliver the super pill to the Insurgency so that the mission was not in vain Year Two reveals Canary to be pregnant with Oliver s child leaving her determined to take down Superman for his murder When Superman nearly kills Black Canary trying to avenge Green Arrow Doctor Fate heals and takes Dinah to an alternate universe where a different version of Oliver Queen remains alive but his own Black Canary along with most of his allies are deceased Doctor Fate leaves the two to raise the baby named Conner together giving each other a chance at happiness Five years later in the prequel comic of the game s sequel Injustice 2 alternate Oliver and Dinah receive news from Doctor Fate of Superman s defeat at the hands of his Prime Earth counterpart While Dinah is brought home by Doctor Fate to help Batman restore Earth the alternate Oliver joins in to honor his late counterpart The alternate Oliver discovers that unlike himself his deceased counterpart maintained his wealth and resources and while the public is unaware that its Oliver Queen is dead alternate Green Arrow is able to access them for the heroes needs He learns his counterpart s marriage to Dinah prompting her to ask the alternate Green Arrow his hand in marriage which he accepts He and Batman also do not get along waiting for an opportunity to duel after Oliver reveals that based on what he learned from Dinah he has more training than his counterpart Superman American Alien Edit In the 2016 comic book Superman American Alien by Max Landis which features an alternate retelling of Clark s journey to becoming Superman Oliver Queen encounters Clark Kent two times in his life First is when Clark was nineteen and Oliver mistakes him for Bruce Wayne whom he had thrown a birthday party for despite being aware that Wayne would never show up Clark after some hesitation decides to enjoy himself and befriends Oliver though he briefly becomes annoyed and shocked at how much money Oliver and his friends waste Years later after getting off Starfish Island Oliver has matured more and encounters Clark again who has begun his new career at the Daily Planet At first believing him to be Bruce Clark quickly comes clean Oliver forgives him before introducing him to Lex Luthor partly to annoy the latter 52 Earth 2 Edit In the pages of Earth 2 World s End Oliver Queen is an ally of Batman and operates as Red Arrow When Batman was killed during the Apokoliptian invasion Red Arrow continued to guard the Codex that contained the DNA of every animal plant and organism in an underwater fortress built by Bruce Wayne When Batman and Huntress arrive at the underwater fortress they meet Oliver Queen who assists in fighting the second Apokoliptian invasion He and the Codex are among those evacuated from Earth when it was destroyed 53 Collected editions EditThe trade paperback edition of The Archer s Quest 16 21 was released as Volume 4 in the series after Straight Shooter 26 31 was released as Volume 3 The hardcover editions of Quiver The Sounds of Violence as well as The Archer s Quest were never numbered The hardcover edition of Green Arrow Black Canary The Wedding Album was reprinted minus the last two pages of issue 5 Title Material collected ISBNBeginnings and team up with Green LanternGreen Arrow The Golden Age Omnibus More Fun Comics 73 107 Adventure Comics 103 117 World s Finest Comics 7 28 SC 978 1401277208The Green Arrow by Jack Kirby Adventure Comics 250 256 World s Finest Comics 96 99Showcase Presents Green Arrow Adventure Comics 250 266 268 269 Brave and the Bold 50 71 85 Justice League of America 4 World s Finest Comics 95 140 SC 978 1 4012 0785 4Green Lantern Green Arrow Vol 1 Green Lantern Vol 2 76 82 per indicia it actually 76 81 83 The 1992 edition is titled Hard Traveling Heroes Strangely 82 wasn t reprinted in this collection but 83 was Issue 82 s cover is shown in the cover gallery DC didn t correct this release at all SC 1992 1 56389 038 0 SC 2004 1 4012 0224 1Green Lantern Green Arrow Vol 2 Green Lantern Vol 2 84 87 89 The Flash 217 219 226 only in the 2004 collections onwards The 1993 edition is sub titled More Hard Traveling Heroes SC 1993 1 56389 086 0 SC 2004 978 1 4012 0230 9The Green Lantern Green Arrow Collection Green Lantern Vol 2 76 87 89 The Flash 217 219 did not include 226 This release was a slipcased hardcover HC 978 1 5638 9639 2Green Arrow Black Canary For Better or for Worse Justice League of America 75 backups from Action Comics 428 amp 434 Joker 4 Green Lantern Vol 2 94 95 backup from Detective Comics 549 550 amp excerpts from Green Arrow Longbow Hunters 1 Green Arrow vol 2 75 amp 101 amp Green Arrow Vol 3 4 5 12 amp 21 SC 978 1 4012 1446 3Green Arrow Vol 1 Hunters Moon Green Arrow Vol 2 1 6 SC 978 1 4012 4326 5Green Arrow Vol 2 Here There Be Dragons Green Arrow Vol 2 7 12 SC 978 1 4012 5133 8Green Arrow Vol 3 The Trial of Oliver Queen Green Arrow Vol 2 13 20 SC 978 1 4012 5523 7Green Arrow Vol 4 Blood of the Dragon Green Arrow Vol 2 21 28 SC 978 1 4012 5822 1Green Arrow Vol 5 Black Arrow Green Arrow Vol 2 29 38 SC 978 1 4012 6079 8Green Arrow Vol 6 Last Action Hero Green Arrow Vol 2 39 50 SC 978 1401264574Green Arrow Vol 7 Homecoming Green Arrow Vol 2 51 62 SC 978 1401265748Green Arrow Vol 8 The Hunt for the Red Dragon Green Arrow Vol 2 63 72 SC 978 1401269036Green Arrow Vol 9 Old Tricks Green Arrow Vol 2 73 80 Green Arrow The Wonder Year 1 4 SC 978 1401275310Green Arrow Connor Hawke Where Angels Fear to Tread Green Arrow Vol 2 0 91 101 SC 978 1779509192Green Lantern Emerald Allies featuring Green Arrow Green Arrow Vol 2 104 110 111 125 126 Green Lantern Vol 3 76 77 92 SC 978 1 5638 9603 3Green Lantern Emerald Knights featuring Green Arrow Green Arrow Vol 2 136 Green Lantern Vol 3 99 106 SC 978 1 563 89475 6Green Arrow ReturnGreen Arrow Quiver Green Arrow Vol 3 1 10 HC 978 1 5638 9802 0SC 978 1 5638 9965 2Green Arrow The Sounds of Violence Green Arrow Vol 3 11 15 HC 978 1 5638 9976 8SC 978 1 4012 0045 9Green Arrow by Kevin Smith Deluxe Edition Green Arrow Vol 3 1 15 HC 978 1 4012 4596 2Green Arrow The Archer s Quest Green Arrow Vol 3 16 21 HC 978 1 4012 0010 7SC 978 1 4012 0044 2Green Arrow Straight Shooter Green Arrow Vol 3 26 31 SC 978 1 4012 0200 2Green Arrow City Walls Green Arrow Vol 3 32 34 39 SC 978 1 4012 0464 8Green Arrow Moving Targets Green Arrow Vol 3 40 50 SC 978 1 4012 0930 8Green Arrow Heading Into the Light Green Arrow Vol 3 52 54 59 SC 978 1 4012 1094 6Green Arrow Crawling From the Wreckage Green Arrow Vol 3 60 65 SC 978 1 4012 1232 2Green Arrow Road to Jericho Green Arrow Vol 3 66 75 SC 978 1 4012 1508 8Green Arrow Black CanaryGreen Arrow Black Canary Road to the Altar Birds of Prey 109 Black Canary 1 4 Black Canary Wedding Planner SC 978 1 4012 1863 8Green Arrow Black Canary The Wedding Album Green Arrow Black Canary 1 5 Green Arrow Black Canary Wedding Special HC 978 1 4012 1841 6SC 978 1 4012 2219 2Green Arrow Black Canary Family Business Green Arrow Black Canary 6 10 SC 978 1 4012 2016 7Green Arrow Black Canary A League of Their Own Green Arrow Black Canary 11 14 Green Arrow Secret Files 1 SC 978 1 4012 2250 5Green Arrow Black Canary Enemies List Green Arrow Black Canary 15 20 SC 978 1 4012 2498 1Green Arrow Black Canary Big Game Green Arrow Black Canary 21 26 SC 978 1 4012 2709 8Green Arrow Black Canary Five Stages Green Arrow Black Canary 27 29 Green Arrow 30 SC 978 1 4012 2898 9Brightest DayGreen Arrow Into the Woods Green Arrow Vol 4 1 7 HC 1 4012 3073 3Green Arrow Salvation Green Arrow Vol 4 8 15 HC 1 4012 3394 5The New 52Green Arrow Vol 1 The Midas Touch Green Arrow Vol 5 1 6 SC 978 1 4012 3486 7Green Arrow Vol 2 Triple Threat Green Arrow Vol 5 7 13 SC 978 1 4012 3842 1Green Arrow Vol 3 Harrow Green Arrow Vol 5 0 14 16 The Savage Hawkman 14 Justice League Vol 2 8 SC 978 1 4012 4405 7Green Arrow Vol 4 The Kill Machine Green Arrow Vol 5 17 24 23 1 Count Vertigo SC 978 1 4012 4690 7Green Arrow Vol 5 The Outsiders War Green Arrow Vol 5 25 31 SC 978 1 4012 5044 7Green Arrow Vol 6 Broken Green Arrow Vol 5 32 34 Green Arrow Futures End 1 Secret Origins Vol 3 4 SC 978 1 4012 5474 2Green Arrow Vol 7 Kingdom Green Arrow Vol 5 35 40 SC 978 1 4012 5762 0Green Arrow Vol 8 The Nightbirds Green Arrow Vol 5 41 47 Green Arrow Annual 2 Convergence Speed Force 2 SC 978 1 4012 6255 6Green Arrow Vol 9 Outbreak Green Arrow Vol 5 48 52 Green Arrow Annual 1 SC 978 1 4012 7002 5RebirthGreen Arrow Vol 1 The Death and Life Of Oliver Queen Green Arrow Vol 6 1 5 Green Arrow Rebirth 1 SC 978 1 4012 6781 0Green Arrow Vol 2 Island of Scars Green Arrow Vol 6 6 11 SC 978 1 4012 7040 7Green Arrow Vol 3 Emerald Outlaw Green Arrow Vol 6 12 17 SC 978 1 4012 7133 6Green Arrow Vol 4 Rise of Star City Green Arrow Vol 6 18 25 SC 978 1 4012 7454 2Green Arrow Vol 5 Hard Traveling Hero Green Arrow Vol 6 26 31 SC 978 1 4012 7853 3Green Arrow Vol 6 Trial of Two Cities Green Arrow Vol 6 32 38 SC 978 1 4012 8171 7Green Arrow Vol 7 Citizen s Arrest Green Arrow Vol 6 43 47 Green Arrow Annual 1 SC 978 1 4012 8523 4Green Arrow Vol 8 The End of the Road Green Arrow Vol 6 39 42 48 50 SC 978 1 4012 9899 9MiscellaneousGreen Arrow Year One Green Arrow Year One 1 6 HC 978 1 4012 1687 0SC 978 1 4012 1743 3Green Arrow The Longbow Hunters Green Arrow The Longbow Hunters 1 3 SC 978 0 9302 8938 6Justice League Rise and Fall Justice League Rise and Fall Special 1 Green Arrow 31 32 Rise of Arsenal 1 4 Justice League Vol 2 43 HC 1 4012 3013 XAquaman Green Arrow Deep Target Aquaman Green Arrow Deep Target 1 7 SC 978 1 7795 1689 3In other media EditMain article Green Arrow in other media Smallville Edit Justin Hartley as Green Arrow in the television series Smallville Main articles Smallville and Justice League Smallville Justin Hartley portrayed Oliver Queen Green Arrow in Smallville and is first introduced in the season six episode Sneeze DC Comics writer Mark Waid had particular praise for Hartley s performance stating I think Justin Hartley nails Green Arrow perfectly I mean there s that brashness that cockiness but not to the point where you want to smack him but right up to the edge 54 Geoff Johns former President and CCO of DC Entertainment and who wrote for Hartley in the episode Absolute Justice concurred saying I love Justin as Green Arrow I didn t realize how good he was until I saw him on screen Like I knew he was good but every line he delivered was perfect He can make any line sound good So I was pleasantly surprised by how much he stole the scenes 55 The character starts off as a recurring character who is already an established vigilante in his home of Star City and is originally paired with Lois Lane in a romantic storyline After a rough start he becomes a trusted ally and friend of Clark Kent Green Arrow retains his many unique arrows and demonstrates expert archery skill along with skilled use of a crossbow with many trick arrows In the episode Justice Oliver teams up with Clark to put an end to Lex Luthor s experimentation with supervillains by teaming up with other superheroes Clark has met on his journeys forming a prototypical Justice League Oliver is seen again in season seven for the episode Siren in which he continues his fight against LuthorCorp and meets another superhero Black Canary whom he recruits for his Justice League In a flashback sequence in the season seven episode Veritas a young version of Oliver Queen can be seen being played by Luke Gair From season eight through season ten Hartley is a series regular and is woven into the backstory of Smallville through the Queens business connections with the Luthor Teague and Swann families Oliver was a childhood friend and schoolmate and later a teenage bully of Lex Luthor In the season eight episode Requiem Oliver risks his friendship with Clark by killing Lex something which Clark would never support Over the course of the series Oliver and Clark become increasingly close friends and they establish themselves full time as superheroes working with other members of the Justice League when required Oliver later becomes romantically involved with Clark s best friend Lois s cousin Chloe Sullivan whom he ultimately marries In the series finale Oliver serves as the best man at Clark and Lois wedding service and Chloe is shown to have a son in the future who is implied to be Oliver s Smallville Season Eleven a comic book continuation of the show reveals he is Oliver s son Jonathan Queen named after Clark s adoptive father During the sixth season of Smallville there was talk of spinning off Justin Hartley s portrayal of the character Green Arrow into his own series Hartley however refused to entertain the idea feeling it was his duty to respect what Smallville had accomplished in five seasons and not steal the spotlight because there was talk of a spin off after his two appearances According to Hartley talking was as far as the spin off idea ever got 56 57 A spin off series in which Oliver led the Justice League made it into early development The series was to have been helmed by Stephen S DeKnight who would later go on to be the showrunner for the first season of Marvel s Daredevil 58 Arrowverse Edit Stephen Amell as Green Arrow in the fifth season of the television series Arrow Main article Oliver Queen Arrowverse See also Arrowverse Arrow TV series List of Arrow episodes and List of Arrow characters In January 2012 following Smallville s conclusion The CW prepared a new series centered around the character Green Arrow Andrew Kreisberg Greg Berlanti and Marc Guggenheim were announced to be developing the series 59 A week later the series was ordered to pilot to be directed by David Nutter who had previously directed the pilot for Smallville 60 When developing the series producer Marc Guggenheim expressed that the creative team wanted to chart their own course their own destiny and avoid any direct connections to Smallville Thus rather than continuing on with Hartley s incarnation of the character they opted to cast a new actor in the role and establish the series as its own separate continuity 61 At the end of the same month Canadian actor Stephen Amell was cast in the titular role of Oliver Queen 62 The series titled simply Arrow follows the story of former playboy billionaire turned vigilante Oliver Queen after he is rescued from a presumably deserted island where he was shipwrecked five years earlier It also features flashbacks to his time away 63 Guggenheim described the show as more of a hero show than a superhero one wanting the show to be realistic and stated that much of the inspiration for the flashback sequences was drawn from Green Arrow Year One 64 Andrew Kreisberg explained that We designed Oliver as a character a little more tortured than the comic series Green Arrow 65 The series premiered in North America on October 10 2012 66 and was picked up for a full season later that month 67 The show went on to air for seven full seasons 68 with a shortened eighth and final season consisting of ten episodes concluding in January 2020 69 70 The series became the progenitor of a franchise of television shows and other associated media based around adaptations of a variety of DC Comics characters set within a shared universe collectively known as the Arrowverse including The Flash Supergirl Legends of Tomorrow Black Lightning and Batwoman 71 DC Extended Universe Edit Stephen Amell had expressed interest in portraying the DC Extended Universe version of Green Arrow but Warner Bros have explicitly said to have their tv and film universes separate Green Arrow is mentioned in the eighth episode of Peacemaker 72 Injustice 2 Edit Oliver Queen Green Arrow appears in the 2017 video games Injustice 2 In the game he is married to Black Canary and is part of Batman s insurgency He is tasked alongside other allies such as a reformed Harley Quinn to take down a group of supervillains formed by Gorilla Grodd known as The Society Batman Arkham Series Edit Queen Industries is first mentioned in Batman Arkham Origins In Batman Arkham Knight Queen Industries is shown owning various properties around Gotham Green Arrow himself is never directly mentioned See also EditList of Green Arrow comicsReferences Edit a b c Greenberger Robert 2008 Green Arrow In Dougall Alastair ed The DC Comics Encyclopedia New York Dorling Kindersley pp 142 143 ISBN 978 0 7566 4119 1 OCLC 213309017 Brown Elliot December 2002 Green Arrow s Weapons Green Arrow Secret Files and Origins 1 1 Green Lantern vol 2 76 April 1970 through 89 April May 1972 David Peter May 14 1999 Aw C mon and other awards But I Digress Comics Buyer s Guide 1330 a b Benton Mike 1992 Superhero Comics of the Golden Age The Illustrated History Dallas Taylor Publishing Company pp 101 102 ISBN 0 87833 808 X Retrieved 15 January 2020 France Herron entry Who s Who of American Comic Books 1928 1999 McAvennie Michael 2010 1960s In Dolan Hannah ed DC Comics Year By Year A Visual Chronicle Dorling Kindersley p 134 ISBN 978 0 7566 6742 9 Artist Neal Adams targeted the Emerald Archer for a radical redesign that ultimately evolved past the surface level the most significant aspect of this issue was Adams s depiction of Oliver Queen s alter ego He had rendered a modern day Robin Hood complete with goatee and mustache plus threads that were more befitting an ace archer a b c d e f g Wells John December 2010 Green Lantern Green Arrow And Through Them Change an Industry Back Issue 45 39 54 O Neil Dennis June 2004 Introduction Green Lantern Green Arrow Vol 1 DC Comics ISBN 978 1 4012 0224 8 Manning Matthew K 1980s in Dolan p 201 The Battling Bowman fought his way into his own four issue miniseries at long last thanks to writer Mike W Barr and artist Trevor Von Eeden Manning 1980s in Dolan p 229 Writer artist Mike Grell introduced a Green Arrow for the modern comic book reader in the three issue prestige format Green Arrow The Longbow Hunters Here There be Dragons Part Three in Green Arrow vol 2 11 published December 1988 Blood of the Dragon Part 1 Uchiokoshi in Green Arrow volume 2 issue 21 published August 1989 Cronin Brian April 10 2008 Comic Book Urban Legends Revealed 150 Comic Book Resources Retrieved October 24 2008 Green Arrow 101 Smith Kevin Phil Hester Ande Parks May 2003 Green Arrow Quiver DC Comics ISBN 978 1 56389 965 2 Green Arrow vol 3 60 May 2006 Green Arrow vol 3 75 August 2007 Diggle Andy April 2009 Green Arrow Year One DC Comics ISBN 978 1 4012 1743 3 Green Arrow vol 4 31 May 2010 Justice League Cry for Justice 1 7 Justice League of America vol 2 41 January 2010 Justice League Rise and Fall Special March 2010 Brightest Day 0 Brightest Day Green Arrow 1 Brightest Day Green Arrow 3 Billionaire World Traveling Green Arrow Returns for DCnU Newsarama June 14 2011 Red Hood and the Outlaws 3 EXCLUSIVE Geoff Johns Details Rebirth Plan Seeks to Restore Legacy to DC Universe 2016 02 18 Retrieved 2016 10 03 OLLIE is a Social Justice Warrior in REBIRTH GREEN ARROW Plus Preview Retrieved 2016 10 03 Green Arrow vol 6 15 Green Arrow 50 to Tie In With No Justice and Heroes In Crisis and End Bleeding Cool Dawn of DC Starts in January 2023 DC 2022 11 18 Retrieved 2022 11 25 Williamson Joshua GREEN ARROW 1 of 12 has finally landed joshuawilliamson substack com Retrieved 2023 04 25 Green Arrow vol 6 15 January 2017 JLX 2 JLX 1 Crisis on Infinite Earths 10 DC Comics Crisis on Infinite Earths 12 DC Comics Countdown 24 November 2007 Countdown Presents The Search for Ray Palmer Superwoman Batwoman 1 February 2008 Flashpoint Green Arrow Industries one shot June 2011 The Dark Knight Returns 4 Batman The Dark Knight Strikes Again 3 JLA The Nail 1 Batman Holy Terror Batman Nine Lives Batman The Doom That Came to Gotham 2 Superman Red Son 3 Kingdom Come 2 JLA League of Justice 1 2 Superman American Alien 3 Earth 2 World s End 21 DC Comics The Legend of the Emerald Archer YouTube Byrne Craig 2010 KryptonSite Interview Geoff Johns Talks Absolute Justice KryptonSite Retrieved February 8 2020 Byrne Craig March 2008 Smallville The Official Companion Season 6 London Titan Books pp 136 138 ISBN 978 1 84576 656 6 Marnell Blair June 1 2018 Former Smallville Star reveals Green Arrow and Lois Lane nearly had a spin off series SyFy Retrieved October 12 2019 Byrne Craig August 31 2016 An Untold Tale Steven DeKnight Discusses Smallville s Justice League Spinoff Kryptonsite Retrieved December 10 2019 Hibberd Justin January 12 2012 Green Arrow TV series near pilot order at The CW Entertainment Weekly Retrieved April 2 2020 Goldman Eric January 18 2012 Green Arrow TV Pilot Ordered by CW IGN Retrieved April 2 2020 Hibberd James July 30 2012 Arrow producers explain why Justin Hartley wasn t cast Entertainment Weekly Retrieved October 9 2019 Andreeva Natalie January 31 2012 Stephen Amell Is Green Arrow Lands Title Role In CW Drama Pilot Arrow Deadline Hollywood Retrieved April 2 2020 Eric Goldman May 30 2012 Arrow Star Stephen Amell Talks About Playing TV s New Oliver Queen IGN Retrieved November 13 2013 Byrne Craig July 19 2012 Interview Marc Guggenheim Unlocks The Secrets amp Connections In Arrow GreenArrowTV Archived from the original on June 19 2018 Retrieved June 16 2018 Betancourt David April 24 2013 Green Arrow Has Hit a Bull s Eye with Growing Fan Base The Washington Post MacKenzie Carina Adly June 28 2012 CW announces 2012 season premiere dates Why do The Vampire Diaries Supernatural and more start late Zap2It Archived from the original on June 29 2012 Retrieved June 28 2012 Kondolojy Amanda October 22 2012 Arrow Officially Picked Up for Full Season TV by the Numbers Archived from the original on October 24 2012 Retrieved October 22 2012 See Villarreal Yvonne February 11 2013 CW s Arrow Vampire Diaries Supernatural get early renewal Los Angeles Times Retrieved February 13 2013 Kondolojy Amanda February 13 2014 Reign Arrow Supernatural The Originals amp The Vampire Diaries Renewed by The CW TV by the Numbers Archived from the original on February 22 2014 Retrieved February 13 2014 Bibel Sara January 11 2015 Arrow Jane The Virgin Reign The 100 The Flash The Originals amp The Vampire Diaries Renewed by the CW TV by the Numbers Archived from the original on January 18 2015 Retrieved January 11 2015 Michael Ausiello March 11 2016 The CW Renews The Flash Vampire Diaries The 100 Reign and 7 Others TVLine Archived from the original on November 17 2016 Retrieved June 18 2016 Jayson Jay January 8 2017 The CW Renews Arrow Supernatural Crazy Ex and 4 Others Comicbook com Archived from the original on February 1 2017 Retrieved January 8 2017 Goldberg Lesley April 2 2018 Riverdale Flash Supernatural Among 10 CW Renewals The Hollywood Reporter Archived from the original on April 2 2018 Retrieved April 2 2018 Goldberg Lesley January 31 2019 CW Renews The Flash Charmed Riverdale Supernatural 6 More The Hollywood Reporter Archived from the original on February 2 2019 Retrieved January 31 2019 Arrow amp Supernatural Series Finale Legends of Tomorrow Premiere Dates Revealed Screen Rant November 8 2019 Retrieved November 9 2019 See Andreeva Nellie November 18 2013 CW s The Flash To Do Stand Alone Pilot Instead Of Arrow Backdoor Pilot Episode Deadline Hollywood Archived from the original on November 19 2013 Retrieved November 18 2013 DC Comics Vixen Coming To CW Seed KSiteTV January 11 2015 Archived from the original on January 12 2015 Retrieved January 11 2015 Kondolojy Amanda May 7 2015 DC s Legends of Tomorrow Crazy Ex Girlfriend amp Cordon Ordered to Series by The CW TV by the Numbers Archived from the original on May 18 2015 Retrieved May 7 2015 Agard Chancellor July 17 2018 Batwoman series from Greg Berlanti in development at The CW Entertainment Weekly Archived from the original on July 17 2018 Retrieved July 17 2018 Andreeva Nellie January 14 2020 Superman amp Lois And Walker Texas Ranger Reboot With Jared Padalecki Get CW Series Orders Deadline Hollywood Retrieved January 14 2020 Agard Chancellor January 14 2020 Crisis on Infinite Earths introduces a major change for the CW s superhero shows Entertainment Weekly Archived from the original on January 16 2020 Retrieved January 15 2020 Anderson Jenna February 19 2022 Stephen Amell Responds to Peacemaker s NSFW Green Arrow Reference comicbook com Retrieved December 20 2022 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Green Arrow and his cast Green Arrow at the DC Database Project Green Arrow s secret origin at DC Comics com Earth 1 Green Arrow Index Earth 2 Green Arrow Index Index of the Earth One adventures of Green Arrow Green Arrow at Don Markstein s Toonopedia Archived from the original on August 29 2016 Green Arrow on the DC Animated Universe Wiki an external wiki Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Green Arrow amp oldid 1154270548, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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