fbpx
Wikipedia

Plastic Man

Plastic Man (Eel O'Brian) is a superhero first appearing in Police Comics #1, originally published by Quality Comics and later acquired by DC Comics, appearing in their American comic books.[1] Created by cartoonist Jack Cole, Plastic Man was one of the first superheroes to incorporate humor into mainstream action storytelling. This character has been published in several solo series and has interacted with other characters such as Batman and many others in the mainstream DC Universe as a member of the Justice League. He has additionally appeared in several television and video game adaptations, including a television show of his own named The Plastic Man Comedy/Adventure Show.

Plastic Man
Plastic Man and The Spirit on the cover of Police Comics #15 (January 1943), artwork by Gill Fox.
Publication information
PublisherQuality Comics (1941–1956)
DC Comics (1966–present)
First appearancePolice Comics #1 (August 1941)
Created byJack Cole
In-story information
Alter egoPatrick "Eel" O'Brian
SpeciesMetahuman
Team affiliationsJustice League
Federal Bureau of Investigation
National Bureau of Investigations
Justice League of Anarchy
All-Star Squadron
Freedom Fighters
Elastic Four
Secret Six
Terrifics
PartnershipsWoozy Winks
Offspring
Batman
Martian Manhunter
Notable aliasesRalph Johns
Abilities
  • Superhuman elasticity, malleability, and plasticity
  • Regeneration
  • Invulnerability
  • Telepathic immunity
  • Density control
  • Immortality
  • Shapeshifting
  • Sleuthing skills
  • Combat expertise

Publication history edit

Created by writer-artist Jack Cole, he first appeared in Police Comics #1 (August 1941).[2]

One of Quality Comics' signature characters during the Golden Age of Comic Books, Plastic Man can stretch his body into any imaginable form, for example a ball or a car, etc. His adventures were known for their quirky, offbeat structure and surreal slapstick humor. When Quality Comics was shut down in 1956, DC Comics acquired many of its characters, integrating Plastic Man into the mainstream DC Universe and giving him a short-lived series in the 1960s.

The character starred in his own Saturday morning cartoon titled The Plastic Man Comedy/Adventure Show from 1979 to 1981 and was also a recurring character on Batman: The Brave and the Bold from 2008 to 2011. He was also mentioned in an episode of Justice League Unlimited but was never shown owing to ownership arguments and copyright complaints.[citation needed] To get around these problems, the show used Elongated Man as a replacement.[citation needed]

Although the character has never been a significant commercial success, Plastic Man has been a favorite character of many modern comic book creators, including writer Grant Morrison, who included him in their 1990s revival of the Justice League; Art Spiegelman, who profiled Cole for The New Yorker magazine; painter Alex Ross, who has frequently included him in covers and stories depicting the Justice League; writer-artist Kyle Baker, who wrote and illustrated an award-winning Plastic Man series; and Frank Miller, who included him in the Justice League in the comics All Star Batman and Robin the Boy Wonder and Batman: The Dark Knight Strikes Again.

Fictional character biography edit

Original version by Jack Cole edit

Plastic Man was a crook named Patrick "Eel" O'Brian. Orphaned at age 10 and forced to live on the streets, he fell into a life of crime. As an adult, he became part of a burglary ring, specializing as a safecracker. During a late-night heist at the Crawford Chemical Works, he and his three fellow gang members were surprised by a night watchman. During the gang's escape, Eel was shot in the shoulder and doused with a large drum of unidentified chemical liquid. He escaped to the street only to discover that his gang had driven off without him.

Fleeing on foot and suffering increasing disorientation from the gunshot wound and the exposure to the chemical, Eel eventually passed out on the foothills of a mountain near the city. He awoke to find himself in a bed in a mountain retreat, being tended to by a monk who had discovered him unconscious that morning. This monk, sensing a capacity for great good in O'Brian, turned away police officers who had trailed Eel to the monastery. This act of faith and kindness—combined with the realization that his gang had left him to be captured without a moment's hesitation—fanned Eel's longstanding dissatisfaction with his criminal life and his desire to reform.

During his short convalescence at the monastery, he discovered that the chemical had entered his bloodstream and caused a radical physical change. His body now had all of the properties of rubber, allowing him to stretch, bounce and mold himself into any shape. He immediately determined to use his new abilities on the side of law and order, donning a red, black and yellow (later red and yellow) rubber costume and capturing criminals as Plastic Man. He concealed his true identity with a pair of white goggles and by re-molding his face. As O'Brian, he maintained his career and connections with the underworld as a means of gathering information on criminal activity.[2]

Plastic Man soon acquired comic-relief sidekick Woozy Winks, who was originally enchanted so that nature itself would protect him from harm. This power was eventually removed from the character and Woozy became simply a bumbling yet loyal friend to Plastic Man.

In his original Golden Age/Quality Comics incarnation, Plastic Man eventually became a member of the city police force and then the FBI. By the time he became a federal officer, he had nearly completely abandoned his Eel O'Brian identity.

Phil Foglio version edit

After the 1985 Crisis on Infinite Earths, a 1988–1989 four-issue Plastic Man miniseries by Phil Foglio introduced a new version of Plastic Man: Eel O'Brian, abandoned by his criminal gang after being shot and exposed to the unidentified chemical, wandered the streets as his new powers developed, frightening others and bringing the police and National Guard down on him as a dangerous monster. Eel was at first oblivious to the changes to his body, but after realizing that he was the monster at large, he used his new abilities to escape his pursuers. Eel soon became so despondent over his new condition that he attempted suicide by jumping off a bridge.

Fortunately, he was interrupted by Woozy Winks, a former mental patient who was kicked out of an institution due to lack of funding (or as Woozy put it, "something called Reaganomics"), who desired nothing more than to return to the warm safety of a straitjacket and padded room. Eel and Woozy decided to work together and capitalize on Eel's new powers to make their fortunes (Eel wanting to get rich quick, Woozy just wanting his "old room" back), but couldn't decide whether there was more money in crime or crime-fighting, and resorted to flipping a coin to choose serving the law (though Woozy had his doubts early on). Eel ended up with the name 'Plastic Man' after a reporter misinterpreted his first choice of 'Elastic Man'. Eel and Woozy set up a detective agency in New York City and go on to have various misadventures together.

JLA edit

Plastic Man was made a prominent member of the Justice League during Grant Morrison's run on the title. The story arc "Rock of Ages" shows Batman recruiting Eel to infiltrate Lex Luthor's Injustice League in the guise of the Joker, which he does successfully. He notably engages in combat with the goddess Circe, proving immune to her magical ability to turn humans into animals. He is later made a full-time member of the League and aids the League in several battles, including against Prometheus, Julian September, General Wade Eiling, an upgraded version of Amazo, a White Martian who assumes the identity of Bruce Wayne, and Queen Bee. During this period he becomes close friends with fellow new members Steel (due to the fact that they are both "lateral thinkers") and Zauriel (Plastic Man later implies in the JLA: Heaven's Ladder graphic novel that his Catholic upbringing is a factor behind this, and Zauriel's existence is a testament to his faith). After the extended League dissolves at the end of the "World War III" arc, he is the only member other than the 'Big Seven' heroes (Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman, Aquaman, The Flash, Martian Manhunter and Green Lantern) to retain full-time membership in the JLA.

Plastic Man has also been instrumental in defeating several foes by himself, such as a Jokerized version of Dr. Polaris and the 'Burning Martian' persona of J'onn J'onzz (Martian Manhunter). He has played substantial roles in nearly every major team-up and crossover featuring the League of this era: with the Titans (The Technis Imperative), Young Justice (World Without Grownups), the Justice Society of America (Virtue and Vice, where he is one of the heroes to be possessed by one of the Seven Deadly Sins), the Avengers (the JLA/Avengers crossover) and even the Looney Tunes (in the humorous Superman & Bugs Bunny miniseries). In the Tower of Babel arc, Plastic Man is frozen and shattered into pieces by Ra's al Ghul's League of Assassins, as part of an attack against the Justice League. Though he is put together again, this experience traumatizes him severely and when it is discovered that the assassins were following methods devised by Batman, Eel joins Wonder Woman and Aquaman in voting Batman out of the League. The heroes reconcile in following issues.

The fact that Plastic Man was initially in the superhero business for the money has had an effect on his character development, notably in the storyline "Divided We Fall" by Mark Waid where he, along with other Justice League members, was separated into two people, his normal "civilian" identity and his superhero persona, by the manipulative wish-granting Id. While Plastic Man devolved from a person with a sense of humor into a constantly wisecracking and almost ineffectual idiot, the now "normal" Eel O'Brian struggled with the criminal tendencies he had suppressed as he had become comfortable with his role as a superhero and wondered if he had actually changed for the better at all or this was just part of the super-hero "act". Ultimately, Eel was the driving force behind the other transformed Leaguers banding together to re-join with their superheroic selves, noting that Bruce Wayne in particular was approaching a mental breakdown as he struggled with his rage over his parents' murder – having lacked the ability to do anything about it, as Batman was the identity that had 'inherited' his skills. Eel demonstrates this to the other divided Leaguers by savagely beating Bruce Wayne with a gun in the guise of a mugger to prove Wayne's ineffectiveness, and demonstrate the degree of psychological damage he has suffered due to the split.[3] Later, Batman comments that it was a wise move "under the circumstances".[4] Later, Plastic Man approaches Batman for help when he learns that Eel's estranged ten-year-old son Luke has fallen in with a gang of criminals, and has inherited his father's shape-shifting abilities, possibly to an even greater degree than Plastic Man's own. Plastic Man admits to Batman that he doesn't know if he ran away from being a father because he was enjoying his new life as a hero, or because he was afraid of becoming a parent for his son. Batman later intimidates Luke into returning home, and informs Plastic Man that he is disappointed in his cowardice, imagining that Eel would have shown Luke fatherly love; in reality, Plastic Man chose only to hide in Batman's utility belt during the whole encounter with Luke.[5]

During the story arc "The Obsidian Age", Plastic Man and the other main members of the JLA were transported through time thousands of years earlier to the beginning days of Atlantis. During a battle with the antagonists, Plastic Man was frozen and then shattered into pieces. Having no way to locate all the pieces, much less fix him, with the technology of the day, the JLA returned to their own time. There they were eventually successful in finding all the pieces and restoring Plastic Man. Plastic Man had been conscious the entire time but unable to move, which had a profoundly negative effect on his mind. He admitted he had lost his nerve and quit the JLA, hoping to live a regular life. This return to normalcy was made easier after a new encounter with his now-teenage son, which made Eel feel that the boy needed a father and a normal life. Eventually, Batman convinced Plastic Man to return to his life as a super hero again when they needed his shape-shifting skills and immunity to telepathy to defeat the Martian Manhunter, who had regressed to a racial memory of the long-forgotten 'Burning Martians' after overcoming his weakness to fire. After a few more cases, Plastic Man is present at the memorial service held after this incarnation of the Justice League officially disbands during the Infinite Crisis storyline.

52, One Year Later, Countdown and Blackest Night edit

In the 2006 "One Year Later" DC Comics crossover storyline that followed the "Infinite Crisis" crossover, a young man with similar appearance and powers as Plastic Man appears briefly in the superteam series Teen Titans Vol. 3, #34 written by R.J. Carter. The character wears a white costume with red goggles, similar to that of Offspring, Plastic Man's son in the earlier 1999 DC miniseries The Kingdom by Mark Waid. While the Teen Titans story itself does not identify the character, page two of a published script supposedly by writer Geoff Johns' specifies it is "Plastic Man's son, Offspring".[6] Plastic Man's son is also shown in costume, and identified as Offspring, in the 2006 weekly series 52 in Week 35 (written by Geoff Johns, Grant Morrison, Greg Rucka and Mark Waid) when he is injured while rescuing a number of the depowered Everyman heroes. Eventually, Plastic Man and Offspring come together as father and son and briefly even had an idyllic family set up until Plastic Man was convinced that he couldn't deny his destiny as a super hero.

In Countdown to Mystery #1 (2007) written by Matthew Sturges, Plastic Man is seduced by Eclipso, being made to believe he is a joke among his fellow heroes, and the only way for him to get some respect is through Eclipso. He is later freed of this corruption by Bruce Gordon. Plastic Man makes his next appearance within the pages of Green Arrow/Black Canary #8 by Judd Winick, having been freed from a stasis tube by Green Arrow. His DNA is taken by Sivana and used to augment an amnesiac Connor Hawke, in a bid to turn the young hero into a brainwashed slave with a strong healing factor.

Plastic Man appeared for a brief period in the 2009 Justice League of America vol. 2 series written by Len Wein. After joining up with the team following the events of Final Crisis, Plastic Man has his effectiveness questioned by his teammate Dr. Light, which starts a fight between the two, which Vixen breaks up.[7] Vixen reassigns Plastic Man to team up with Dr. Light to stop the Royal Flush Gang robbery. Though they experience some control issues between them, the Royal Flush Gang is defeated and Plastic Man and Dr. Light finally stop arguing.[8]

During a massive battle at the Justice League Satellite in Justice League: Cry for Justice, Prometheus injected Plastic Man with a chemical that badly damaged his plastic body. The chemicals caused Eel to suffer from a condition where it took great concentration to keep himself in his usual, semi-solid state and caused him pain when he even thought about changing shape, thus leaving him in an infirm state.[9][10]

In the Blackest Night crossover, while still suffering from his deteriorating state, Plastic Man had his heart torn out by the Black Lantern, Vibe, seemingly killing him.[11] However, due to his power of near-invulnerability, he was able to survive such an attack, albeit badly wounded.[12] Vixen states that Plastic Man was being taken care of at STAR Labs, and that he would be unable to return to the League.[13]

Plastic Man later appeared in Justice League: Generation Lost, helping a large coalition of heroes on an unsuccessful mission to trace Maxwell Lord. He had been seemingly cured of his condition, and was shown retaining his normal shape without issue or pain.[14]

Later, he aids the JLA on their mission into Hell, where he helps Batman defeat Geryon. The League learns Satanus' plans to use Dante's mask to become powerful. Plastic Man grabs the mask, which possesses him. The Leagues combines forces to remove the mask, which is incinerated, seemingly killing Plastic Man. It is later revealed that Zauriel transported him into another dimension before helping the League escape Hell.[15]

The New 52 edit

In September 2011, The New 52 rebooted DC's continuity. In this new timeline, Plastic Man is considered as one of the candidates for the United Nations-sponsored Justice League International. He is denied a spot on the team for being too unpredictable.[16] This cameo appearance was later retconned by "Eel" O'Brian's proper New 52 introduction in Justice League (Vol. 2) #25 (February 2014).

DC Rebirth edit

In 2016, DC Comics implemented another relaunch of its books called "DC Rebirth" which restored its continuity to a form much as it was prior to "The New 52". In Dark Days: The Forge, Batman unveils a containment unit to Mister Terrific in The Lunar Batcave bearing the Plastic Man logo and suggests it is time to release him.[17]

Plastic Man assists Mister Terrific into thwarting Simon Stagg's plot to open the portal to the Dark Multiverse using Metamorpho who had been transmuted to Nth Metal. While trying to get Simon Stagg to close the portal with the help of Plastic Man, Mister Terrific is sucked into the portal with Plastic Man and Metamorpho as Plastic Man shields them from the Dark Multiverse energy which he is immune to. Upon arriving on a lifeless world, they encounter Phantom Girl who has been trapped in her intangible form and who has no knowledge of sending a signal. When the four of them find a computer in the gut of a giant dead creature, they are greeted by a hologram of Tom Strong who states that they are needed to save the universe.[18] Mister Terrific, Plastic Man, and Metamorpho learn from Phantom Girl that she was stuck in an intangible form since she was a child. After the four of them make it back to their world, Mister Terrific tries to leave the three of them at Simon Stagg's compound only to be drawn back to them.[19] Due to the effects of the Dark Multiverse energy, Mister Terrific concludes that they can't go their separate ways due to this inescapable bond.[20] The team goes through several adventures whilst being attacked by a figure known as Doctor Dread, who is later revealed to be Java.[21] This revelation, coupled with the team being cured of their condition, causes everyone to split up. Plastic Man attempts to connect with his ex Angel and their son Luke, who has inherited his stretching powers.[22] Initially reluctant, the two bond over a game of basketball and stealing the Batmobile.[23] They are then called upon by the rest of the team to band together and save Mr. Terrifc from the Terribles, a team of their evil doppelgängers put together by Doctor Dread. Plas and Luke, now suited up in his Offspring look, work together to take down a vampiric version of Plastic Man from another dimension. Following the Terribles' defeat and imprisonment, the Terrifics officially reunite as a team, with Luke, Element Dog, and Miss Terrifics joining the roster.[24]

Plastic Man was later recruited by Obscura to help investigate a multi-dimensional conspiracy. This led them to find that it was being committed by a group of villains called the Cabal.[25]

Powers and abilities edit

Plastic Man's powers are derived from an accident in which his body was bathed in an unknown industrial chemical mixture that also entered into his bloodstream through a gunshot wound. This caused a body-wide mutagenic process that transformed his physiology. Eel exists in a fluid state, neither entirely liquid nor solid. He has complete control over his entire molecular structure. He can stretch his limbs and body to superhuman lengths and sizes. There is no known limit to how far Plastic Man can stretch his body. He can shrink himself down to a few inches tall (posed as one of Batman's utility belt pockets) or become a titan (the size of skyscrapers). He can contort his body into various positions and sizes impossible for ordinary humans, such as being entirely flat to slip under a door, using his fingers to pick conventional lock, compressing himself into a ball to ricochet off of things, and inflating his body. He can also use it for disguise by changing the shape of his face and body, contributory to his work as a sleuth. Due to his fluid state, Plastic Man can open holes in his body and turn himself into objects with mobile parts. In addition, he can alter his bodily mass and physical constitution at will, creating virtually no limit to the sizes and shapes he can contort himself into. There is nothing he cannot alter his body into, which includes basic shapes or dangerous weapons, avatars of other superheroes, and functional automobiles. These stretching capabilities grant Plastic Man agility, flexibility, and coordination far beyond the natural limits of the human body. He can alter his strength by growing or adding more muscle.

Plastic Man's powers extraordinarily augment his durability. Some stories, perhaps of anecdotal quality, have showed him susceptible to surprise attack by bullets, in one case oozing a substance similar to liquid plastic.[26] His unique physiology makes him impervious to conventional means of harm such as bullets, blasts, and blunt force. He is also able to withstand corrosives, punctures, and concussions without sustaining any injury (although he can be momentarily stunned). Batman once mentioned that he could presumably even withstand a nuclear detonation. This is mainly due to the fact that he has full control over his density, so he can willfully increase his durability as he wishes. His bodily mass can be dispersed, but for all intents and purposes, it is invulnerable, even from many forms of magic in the DC Universe. He is able to regenerate and/or assimilate lost or damaged tissue, although he needs to be reasonably intact for this process to begin. For example, Plastic Man was once reduced to individual, separate molecules and scattered across the Atlantic Ocean for centuries. He was only capable of returning to his usual form after the rest of the League were able to gather enough of his molecules and restore approximately 80% of his body mass, after which he began to regenerate the remaining 20% on his own.

Plastic Man has proven to be insusceptible to the effects of telepathy. As stated by Batman (in JLA #88, Dec. 2003), "Plastic Man's mind is no longer organic. It's untouchable by telepathy". Plastic Man does not appear to age; if he does, it is at a rate far slower than that of normal human beings. In the aftermath of the Justice League story Arc "Obsidian Age", Plastic Man was discovered to have survived for 3,000 years scattered into separate, individual molecules on the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean without decaying or being otherwise affected at all. He can autonomically detect ultrasonic frequencies because his body will start to "ripple" when an ultrasonic frequency is triggered.

As stated by the Black Lantern corpsman Vibe, Plastic Man's internal organs (such as his heart when Black Lantern Vibe tried to rip it out) couldn't be removed, unlike many of the Black Lanterns' victims. This perhaps implies that Plastic Man is himself more like one giant, living organ than he is a "whole" made of component parts and organs, etc.

His semi-liquid form remains stable at relatively high and low temperatures, provided that the temperature change is gradual. A sudden change induces a complete change of state, creating a truly solid or truly liquid form. Plastic Man was incapacitated in the JLA story arc "Tower of Babel" when mercenaries froze and shattered his body. Once thawed and reassembled, he was physically unharmed. In the JLA story arc "Divided We Fall", Plastic Man is shown to have some weakness to extreme heat (intense heat vision attack from a Martian) and was temporarily melted. In some versions, Plastic Man is also vulnerable to chemicals such as acetone, which melts and destabilizes his malleable form, although he eventually regenerated when the chemicals are gone. A famous hindrance of Plastic Man's abilities is that the only colors he can mimic are the colors of his body and costume (i.e. red, black, yellow, white, and flesh tone), although he can use these colors in various ways, once even managing to exactly duplicate the appearance of the Flash. Whether this is an inherent flaw in his powers or a mental block has never been explained, whereas, his son, Offspring, also gained his father's powers, but is able to willfully mimic any color he chooses. During Offspring's introduction, it was revealed that Plastic Man could change color, turning his nose blue to prove to Batman that he could. This color change, however, was possible only with a great deal of Plastic Man's concentration, even for such a very small area.

Plastic Man was once a very talented professional thief, specializing as a safecracker. Although no longer a criminal, he has thorough insight into their mindset, enabling him to be an effective sleuth. He is also considered to be a lateral thinker and much smarter than he lets on.

Enemies edit

Plastic Man has fought many enemies in his comics:

  • Acid Tongue – A criminal who can spit acid at a target from several yards away.[27]
  • Abba and Dabba – Two wanted con-men.[28]
  • Ali Krim
  • Amorpho – A sentient blob of protoplasm from an unknown distant planet.[29]
  • Archie Type – A criminal that Plastic Man was after.[27]
  • Baldy Bushwhack
  • B. T. Tokus
  • Beauteous Bessie
  • Big Beaver
  • Bizarro – A backwards clone of Superman.[30]
  • Blind Ali – A blind would-be assassin.[27]
  • Boss Annova – The self-appointed king of all street crime in the city of Metropolis.[31]
  • Brain Trust
  • Brickface – A crime boss with a segmented face.[32]
  • Brotherhood of the Savage Caribou[33]
  • Bunyon O'Banyon
  • The Burning – Plastic Man was chosen by Batman to battle the Martian Manhunter when he was corrupted by The Burning.
  • Cabal – A group of villains that were behind a multi-dimensional conspiracy and ran afoul of Plastic Man and Obscura.[34]
  • Carrot-Man – A criminal that dresses up as a carrot.[36]
  • Cauldron
  • Chatterbox – Lou Kwashus is a disc jockey-themed supervillain with a sonic weapon.[37]
  • Cheeseface – A cheese-themed criminal who has been selling explosive bottles of milk.[38]
    • Edam O'Grotton – Cheeseface's henchman.[38]
  • Closets Kennedy
  • The Crab
  • Desperate Desmond
  • Doctor Dome – A supervillain in a dome-shaped helmet. He is the closest thing Plastic Man has to an arch-enemy.[39]
    • Lynx – Doctor Dome's sidekick.[39]
    • Professor X – A scientist who Doctor Dome used to cause havoc.[39]
  • Doctor Forklift – A half-man, half-forklift scientist.[40]
  • Doctor Honctoff – An evil robotics genius.[36]
    • Bogus Men – A group of androids that were created by Doctor Honctoff.[36]
  • Dopey Joe
  • Dr. Ameeba
  • Dr. Erudite
  • Dr. Phobia
  • Dr. Volt
  • Dollmaker – Marcel Mannequin is an extremely talented dollmaker who uses sentient dolls to commit crimes.[41]
  • Electra
  • Even Steven – A balanced-obsessed criminal.[42]
    • Dr. Meg LeMania – Even Steven's scientist minion.[42]
  • Fargo Freddie, The Lava Man – An unappreciated and underpaid employee who transformed himself into living lava via active volcano.[43]
  • Froggie Fink
  • The Gag Man
  • Goldzinger – A gold-magnetizing crook.[44]
  • Granite Lady – A former singer who turned down all men and her skin became rock-like, due to the serum's effects.[45]
  • The Grasshopper – An armed jewel thief who was subjected to a serum that granted him leaping abilities.[46]
  • The Green Terror
  • Hairy Arms – A gang leader who formerly served the Axis Powers, until his own pals found out and removed him from their group.[47]
  • Hands
  • Hate
  • The Hotrod
  • Ice Man - An ice delivery man who turned to a life of crime.[48]
  • Killer Joe – A professional hitman.[49]
  • King Lughead
  • King of Spades – The leader of a spade-themed gang.[50]
    • Jack of Spades – A member of the King of Spades' gang.[50]
    • Queen of Spades – A member of the King of Spades' gang.[50]
  • The King Of Zing
  • Kolonel Kool – Originally an agent at the NBI named Gulliver "Gully" Foyle, Plastic Man's success there at his expense made Foyle jealous and out for revenge. Kolonel Kool took over Boss Annova's gang before being nabbed by his former co-worker.[31]
  • Lawbook – He offers a reward to any crook who can find a way to kill Plastic Man.
  • League of Assassins – An organization of assassins.[51]
  • Lex Luthor – The CEO of LexCorp and enemy of Superman who was working as the President of the United States at the time.[30]
  • The Lobster
  • Louie The Lift
  • Lowbrow – A short and insanely confident criminal who killed Cindy Bloch.[52]
  • Lucky 7
  • Lucius D. Dratt, Doctor Dratt – A twisted neurochemist.[53]
  • Madam Brawn – A teacher who trains female ex-cons at her school to fight men on equal grounds. Dies in Police Comics #5.[54]
  • Madame Merciless – A female criminal hired by Doctor Dome to hypnotize Plastic Man.[55]
  • Madame Serpina – A sideshow entertainer-turned assassin.[56]
  • Malleable Man – A criminal associate of Eel O'Brien who recreated the accident that gave Plastic Man his powers.[57]
  • Man-Bat – Kirk Langstrom is a zoologist who takes a serum that transforms him into Man-Bat. After being subdued by Plastic Man, Man-Bat agreed to help him and Obscura investigate a multi-dimensional conspiracy.[58]
  • The Mangler
  • The Master Artist
  • Max the Knife – A gang leader that went up against Marty "The Mouse" Meeker" after he was given powers by two aliens from the Redinskian race.[59]
  • Meat By-Product – A monster spawned from a meat by-product.[60]
  • Molder – A sculpting plastic-themed criminal who fought Plastic Man and Batman.[61]
  • Mona Mayhem
  • The Moon Wizard
  • Mostolo
  • The Moulder
  • Mister Aqua – A former chemist who was experimenting with chemicals that turned him into living water. Woozy accidentally drank him.[62]
  • Mr. Cat
  • Mister Green – A supervillain who became a plant-based lifeform and then, dies after reverting to human form.[63]
  • Mr. Happiness
  • Mr. Misfit
  • (The Melancholy) Mister Morbid – A criminal who is always sad and dislikes happiness.[64]
  • Mr. Stingker
  • Mister Uglee – A masked criminal with a terrifyingly hideous face who wanted to disfigure all other men so he would be the most handsome man in the world in comparison.
  • Mister Wheels – The elderly leader of an organized crime ring called Crime Enterprises who confined himself to a wheelchair.[65]
  • Murray "the Swede" Schneiderman – A bank robber.[31]
  • Number Seven
  • Ooze Brothers – Clem, Flem, and Lem are three villains who use ooze in their crimes.[66]
  • The Owl
  • Pinkeye – An albino spy.[67]
  • Pinky Flowers
  • Poison Ivy – A plant-themed enemy of Batman. Poison Ivy posed as Angel O'Brien to get revenge on Plastic Man.[68]
  • Prankster – An enemy of Superman who uses pranks in his criminal activities. He once used robot duplicates of the Justice League to fool the police that Plastic Man was a criminal.[69]
  • Professor Goodman
  • Professor Dimwit
  • Professor Spindrift
  • Ramalama[70]
  • Red Herring – An anthropomorphic red herring who appears to meddle with the investigations of crimes he was not involved in.[71]
  • Remember
  • Rice O'Rooney – The "San Francisco Threat", he was considered to be the highest paid hitman in the country.[31]
  • Robby Reed – When Robby Reed's H-Dial was rusted, he ended up turning into evil versions of some of his hero forms.[72]
  • Rocky Goober
  • Roxanne Roller – A roller-skating villain seeking vengeance against rock stars who supposedly spurned her.[73]
  • Rubberneck – Perry Skope villain with super-strength and suggestions of a rubbery resiliency.[74] This character appears in the Batman: The Brave and the Bold episode "Long Arm of the Law". An action figure was created based on this sole appearance.
    • Puttyface – Mal E. Able is the partner of Rubberneck.[74]
  • Ruby Ryder – A ruthless business woman and owner of Ruby Ryder Inc. who fought Plastic Man and Batman.[75] She first appeared in the Batman: The Brave and the Bold episode "Bold Beginnings!".
  • SAPMALAL – Short for Society to Assassinate Plastic Man And Live A Little, they are a group who is out to eliminate Plastic Man.[76]
    • Assassin – A member of SAPMALAL who Plastic Man poses as.[76]
    • Ivan Byturnozov – A member of SAPMALAL.[76]
    • Jean Le Feet – A member of SAPMALAL.[76]
    • Lefty McGoon – A member of SAPMALAL.[76]
    • Sir Reginald Ratfinque – A member of SAPMALAL.[76]
  • Sadly Sadly – A man whose face is so pathetic that banks hand over money.
  • Saxon – A crook who always speaks in alliteration.
  • Skulllface
    • Eloc – Eloc is Cole spelled backwards.
  • Skunk – AKA the B.O. Bandit, the Skunk emanated an excruciatingly foul odor as a result of having never, in his entire life, bathed.[27]
  • Sleepy Eyes – A supervillain who puts people to sleep just by looking at them.
  • Slick Dandy
  • Sludge – A monster spawned from sludge.[60]
  • Snuffer – A cyborg killer in the employ of Rice O'Rooney, the San Francisco hitman directed the mechanical assassin to kill Plastic Man for Boss Annova.[31]
  • Sphinx – A super-strong crook that once tried to take over Doctor Dome's territory.[44]
  • Spider - Frank Stacy is a scientist who operated as a spider-themed villain.[77]
  • Stickyfinger – A criminal who has been sticking up a lot of people around Mammoth City.[78]
  • Stretcho
  • Supreme Leader[79]
  • Toyman – A toy-themed criminal and enemy of Superman. Plastic Man once helped Superman fight Toyman.[80]
  • Thrilla
  • Time Trapper II – Poison Ivy mind-controlled Metron to pose as Time Trapper.[81]
  • Weasel – Mr. Waisel is a criminal who took advantage of Plastic Man's amnesia.[82]
  • Weapons
  • Whirling Dervish – Big-toed ballet dancer turned assassin. Murdered by Pinkeye.
  • Words
  • The Yes-Man – A crime boss who only says Yes until Plastic Man forces him to say No at which time he snaps.
  • Zircon[83]

Other versions edit

The Dark Knight Strikes Again edit

In Batman: The Dark Knight Strikes Again (2001—2002), Frank Miller's miniseries (set on DC's new Earth-31 in post-Infinite Crisis continuity), Plastic Man was betrayed and locked in Arkham Asylum for years with his body forced into a perpetual egg-like shape by a pressurizing machine. The imprisonment and confinement drove him insane, and upon his release he lashed out at those around him. He fights Elongated Man, having the upper hand until Batman brings Plastic Man to his senses with a punch to the face. Batman declares that Plastic Man is the most powerful superhero in the room. Carrie Kelley (as Catgirl) describes him as being: "Immeasurably powerful. Absolutely nuts". In this continuity, he appears with silver hair and a few wrinkles.

All Star Batman and Robin edit

Plastic Man appears in issue #5 All Star Batman and Robin, also written by Miller, as a founding member of a proto-Justice League along with Wonder Woman, Superman, and Green Lantern Hal Jordan.

Kyle Baker's Plastic Man edit

Plastic Man (2004–2006), written and illustrated by Kyle Baker, harkens back to the Jack Cole version of Plastic Man featuring Eel O'Brian tended to by a monk in a mountain retreat following the events of his normal origin story. Inspired by the monk's kindness, Eel resolves to use his powers for good, becoming the crime fighter Plastic Man, and works for the FBI. In this series, Plastic Man gets a girlfriend (FBI Special Agent Morgan, later revealed as the surgically altered fiancée named Nancy who Plas' alter ego had left in the 1940s), and adopts a Goth teenage daughter, Edwina. The series won five Eisner Awards for Best New Series, Best Title for Younger Readers, Best Writer/Artist: Humor and one Harvey Award for Best New Series.

Tangent Comics edit

In the Tangent Comics imprint, set on the alternate universe Earth-9, Plastic Man is a member of the Secret Six. He is scientist Gunther Ganz, whose consciousness has been transferred to a "living polymer".

JLA/Avengers edit

In the DC Comics/Marvel Comics intercompany crossover JLA/Avengers, Plastic Man is a member of the JLA and teams with Martian Manhunter in the Marvel locale of Wakanda, where the two encounter the Marvel characters the Wasp and the Black Panther. Plastic Man is replaced by DC Comics' Elongated Man after the merging of worlds.

Flashpoint edit

In the alternate timeline of the Flashpoint event, Eel O'Brian is a villain. After Heat Wave was sent to death row for killing Jason Rusch, O'Brian arrives to break him out in the flying fortress of the military Doom prison, having been hiding, disguised in the body of his cellmate Cluemaster.[84] During the prison break, O'Brian dislikes being called "Plastic Man", when inmate Sportsmaster calls him this. While O'Brian helps him to retrieve his weapons, he discovers Heat Wave attacking the guards' control room and attempting to ram the flying prison at Cyborg's home city of Detroit.[85] O'Brian refuses to let him destroy the city, but Heat Wave turns on him and seems to kill Plastic Man by using his flame gun to melt his body. After Heat Wave is defeated by Cyborg and imprisoned in Belle Reve, O'Brian is revealed to have survived the flame gun attack and smuggles himself into the prison in Heat Wave's new cellmate's body, where he is later shown advancing on Heat Wave.[86]

Wednesday Comics edit

In the collected edition of Wednesday Comics (200 pages, DC Comics, June 2010, ISBN 1-4012-2747-3), Plastic Man is featured in a story by Evan Dorkin with art by Stephen DeStefano. Plastic Man and Woozy battle Professor Grushenko at the museum over a magic elixir with resulting hijinks.

Collected editions edit

Collected editions of Plastic Man comics
Title Material collected Published date ISBN
Plastic Man Archives Volume 1 Police Comics #1–20 February 1999 978-1563894688
Plastic Man Archives Volume 2 Police Comics #21–30, Plastic Man (Volume 1) #1 December 2000 978-1563896217
Plastic Man Archives Volume 3 Police Comics #31–39, Plastic Man (Volume 1) #2 December 2001 978-1563898471
Plastic Man Archives Volume 4 Police Comics #40–49, Plastic Man (Volume 1) #3 November 2002 978-1563898358
Plastic Man Archives Volume 5 Police Comics #50–58, Plastic Man (Volume 1) #4 October 2003 978-1563899867
Plastic Man Archives Volume 6 Police Comics #59–65, Plastic Man (Volume 1) #5–6 November 2004 978-1401201548
Plastic Man Archives Volume 7 Police Comics #66–71, Plastic Man (Volume 1) #7–8 January 2006 978-1401204136
Plastic Man Archives Volume 8 Police Comics #72–77, Plastic Man (Volume 1) #9–10 August 2006 978-1401207779
Plastic Man Volume 1: On the Lam Plastic Man (Volume 4) #1–6 November 2004 978-1401203436
Plastic Man Volume 2: Rubber Bandits Plastic Man (Volume 4) #8–11, 13–14 December 2005 978-1401207298
Plastic Man: Rubber Banded – The Deluxe Edition Plastic Man (Volume 4) #1–20 November 2020 978-1779504845
Convergence: Infinite Earths: Book Two Convergence: Plastic Man and the Freedom Fighters #1–2 and Convergence: Shazam! #1–2, Convergence: Booster Gold #1–2, Convergence: Blue Beetle #1–2, Convergence: Crime Syndicate #1–2 November 2015 978-1401258382
Plastic Man Plastic Man (Volume 5) #1–6 April 2019 978-1401289379

In other media edit

Television edit

  • A "Plastic Man" pilot was planned first by Hal Seeger Productions,[87] then by Filmation,[88] though neither came to pass.[citation needed]
  • Plastic Man makes a cameo appearance in the Super Friends episode "Professor Goodfellow's G.E.E.C.", voiced by Norman Alden.[citation needed]
  • Plastic Man appears in The Plastic Man Comedy/Adventure Show, voiced by Michael Bell.[89] This version is an operative of an unnamed covert agency partnered with a bumbling Hawaiian sidekick named Hula-Hula, his girlfriend Penny, and eventually his son Baby Plas. Additionally, Taylor Marks portrays Plastic Man in the syndicated version of the series.[citation needed]
  • Warner Bros. Animation and Cartoon Network commissioned a Plastic Man television pilot, "Puddle Trouble", in 2006, produced by Andy Suriano and Tom Kenny, with the latter also providing Plastic Man's voice, and designed and storyboarded by Stephen DeStefano.[90][91] However, Cartoon Network decided not to pick up Plastic Man as a series and has never aired the episode. "Puddle Trouble" was later released on the Plastic Man: The Complete Collection DVD set.[92]
  • Plastic Man appears in Batman: The Brave and the Bold, voiced again by Tom Kenny.[93][94] This version was originally an underling of Kite Man who lived in a suburban home with his family. While joining Kite Man for a heist, Batman intervened, inadvertently caused the accident that turned O'Brian into Plastic Man, and helped him become a superhero. Additionally, an Earth-Three counterpart of Plastic Man named Rubber Man makes a non-speaking appearance in the episode "Deep Cover for Batman!" as a member of the Injustice Syndicate.[citation needed]
  • Plastic Man makes non-speaking cameo appearances in Young Justice. After joining the Justice League in the episode "Revelation", he joins Batman, among other Leaguers, in resigning from the group as part of a pre-planned response to U.N. secretary general Lex Luthor's restrictions against the League so they can operate as vigilantes.
  • Plastic Man appears in the Mad segment "That's What Super Friends Are For", voiced by Dana Snyder.
  • Plastic Man appears in Robot Chicken.
  • Plastic Man appears in the DC Nation Shorts, voiced again by Tom Kenny.
  • Plastic Man appears in Justice League Action, voiced again by Dana Snyder.[95][94]

Film edit

Video games edit

Miscellaneous edit

  • Plastic Man appears in the April 19, 1999 issue of The New Yorker, which included a biography of Jack Cole by Art Spiegelman. Two years later, this would be included in the latter and Chip Kidd's book Jack Cole and Plastic Man: Forms Stretched to Their Limits.
  • Plastic Man appears in the Injustice: Gods Among Us prequel comics.[citation needed] He speaks out against Superman's altered ethics following the Metropolis bombing, but does not get physically involved until Superman arrests his son, Luke. After rescuing Luke from the Regime's underwater prison, freeing the other prisoners in the process, Plastic Man encourages them to fight against Superman.[104]
  • Plastic Man makes a cameo appearance in DC Super Hero Girls as a graduate of Super Hero High.[citation needed]
  • Plastic Man appears in the Injustice 2 prequel comic as a member of Batman's Justice League Task Force.[citation needed]
  • Plastic Man appears in Mad Magazine #499.

See also edit

  • Stacey Augmon, a professional basketball player sometimes nicknamed "Plastic Man".

Similar characters

References edit

  1. ^ Koolman, Mike; Amash, Jim (2011). The Quality Companion. TwoMorrows Publishing. pp. 162–170. ISBN 978-1605490373.
  2. ^ a b Benton, Mike (1992). Superhero Comics of the Golden Age: The Illustrated History. Dallas: Taylor Publishing Company. pp. 121-122. ISBN 0-87833-808-X. Retrieved 1 April 2020.
  3. ^ JLA #53
  4. ^ JLA #54
  5. ^ JLA #65
  6. ^ The Comic Bloc: "You Waited, Now See... Teen Titans #34", posted June 15, 2006 by anonymous "magicspoon"
  7. ^ Justice League of America (vol. 2) #35 (July 2009). DC Comics.
  8. ^ Justice League of America (vol. 2) #37 (September 2009). DC Comics.
  9. ^ Justice League: Cry for Justice #6 (January 2010). DC Comics.
  10. ^ Justice League of America (vol. 2) #38 (October 2009). DC Comics.
  11. ^ Justice League of America (vol. 2) #39 (November 2009). DC Comics.
  12. ^ Justice League of America (vol. 2) #40 (December 2009). DC Comics.
  13. ^ Justice League of America (vol. 2) #41 (January 2010). DC Comics.
  14. ^ Justice League: Generation Lost #1. DC Comics.
  15. ^ Justice League of America 80-Page Giant 2011. DC Comics.
  16. ^ Justice League International (Vol. 3) #1 (November 2011). DC Comics.
  17. ^ Dark Days: The Forge #1 (June 2017). DC Comics.
  18. ^ The Terrifics #1. DC Comics.
  19. ^ The Terrifics #2. DC Comics.
  20. ^ The Terrifics #3. DC Comics.
  21. ^ The Terrifics #10. DC Comics.
  22. ^ The Terrifics #11. DC Comics.
  23. ^ The Terrifics #12.
  24. ^ The Terrifics #14. DC Comics.
  25. ^ Plastic Man Vol. 5 #1–6. DC Comics.
  26. ^ "The Origin of Woozy Winks"
  27. ^ a b c d Adventure Comics #474. DC Comics.
  28. ^ Police Comics #20 (July 1943). Quality Comics.
  29. ^ Plastic Man #21 (January 1950). Quality Comics.
  30. ^ a b Plastic Man Vol. 4 #11. DC Comics.
  31. ^ a b c d e Plastic Man Vol. 2 #15. DC Comics.
  32. ^ Adventure Comics #470. DC Comics.
  33. ^ Plastic Man Special #1. DC Comics.
  34. ^ a b c d e f Plastic Man Vol. 5 #4. DC Comics.
  35. ^ Plastic Man Vol. 5 #5. DC Comics.
  36. ^ a b c Plastic Man Vol. 2 #12. DC Comics.
  37. ^ Super Friends #43. DC Comics.
  38. ^ a b Adventure Comics #746. DC Comics.
  39. ^ a b c Plastic Man 80-Page Giant #1. DC Comics.
  40. ^ Plastic Man Vol. 2 #11. DC Comics.
  41. ^ Plastic Man Vol. 2 #10. DC Comics.
  42. ^ a b Adventure Comics #475. DC Comics.
  43. ^ Plastic Man #2 (August 1944). Quality Comics.
  44. ^ a b Plastic Man Vol. 2 #6. DC Comics.
  45. ^ Police Comics #51 (February 1946). Quality Comics.
  46. ^ Plastic Man #6 (December 1947). Quality Comics.
  47. ^ Police Comics #9 (May 1942). Quality Comics.
  48. ^ Plastic Man #32 (November 1951). Quality Comics.
  49. ^ Plastic Man Vol. 2 #9. DC Comics.
  50. ^ a b c Plastic Man Vol. 2 #7. DC Comics.
  51. ^ a b c Plastic Man Vol. 4 #18. DC Comics.
  52. ^ Adventure Comics #471. DC Comics.
  53. ^ Police Comics Vol 1 #42 (May 1945). Quality Comics.
  54. ^ Police Comics Vol 1 #4 (November 1941). Quality Comics.
  55. ^ Plastic Man Vol. 2 #4. DC Comics.
  56. ^ Police Comics #21 (August 1943). Quality Comics.
  57. ^ DC Comics Presents Vol 1 #93 (May 1986)
  58. ^ Plastic Man Vol. 5 #2. DC Comics.
  59. ^ Plastic Man #19. DC Comics.
  60. ^ a b Plastic Man Vol. 2 #14. DC Comics.
  61. ^ The Brave and the Bold #76. DC Comics.
  62. ^ Plastic Man #25 (September 1950). Quality Comics.
  63. ^ Police Comics #58 (September 1946). Quality Comics.
  64. ^ Police Comics #76. Quality Comics.
  65. ^ Police Comics #82 (September 1948). Quality Comics.
  66. ^ Plastic Man Vol. 3 #2. DC Comics.
  67. ^ Adventure Comics #469. DC Comics.
  68. ^ Plastic Man Vol. 4 #8. DC Comics.
  69. ^ Plastic Man Vol. 4 #3. DC Comics.
  70. ^ Plastic Man Vol. 3 #3. DC Comics.
  71. ^ Plastic Man Vol. 4 #2. DC Comics.
  72. ^ Plastic Man Vol. 2 #13. DC Comics.
  73. ^ Adventure Comics #477. DC Comics.
  74. ^ a b Super Friends #45. DC Comics.
  75. ^ The Brave and the Bold Vol #95 (May 1971). DC Comics.
  76. ^ a b c d e f Plastic Man Vol. 2 #5. DC Comics.
  77. ^ Plastic Man #46. DC Comics.
  78. ^ Plastic Man Vol. 4 #12. DC Comics.
  79. ^ Adventure Comics #468. DC Comics.
  80. ^ DC Comics Presents #39. DC Comics.
  81. ^ Plastic Man Vol. 4 #9. DC Comics.
  82. ^ Plastic Man Vol. 2 #8. DC Comics.
  83. ^ Plastic Man Vol. 3 #4. DC Comics.
  84. ^ Flashpoint: Legion of Doom #1 (June 2011)
  85. ^ Flashpoint: Legion of Doom #2 (July 2011)
  86. ^ Flashpoint: Legion of Doom #3 (August 2011)
  87. ^ Plastic Man #2, Jan–Feb 1967, letters page. "[A Plastic Man TV show] pilot film was written by amiable Arnie Drake and made by Hal Seeger Productions... Negotiations with networks and sponsors are under way..."
  88. ^ . 2008-05-20. Archived from the original on 2014-01-30. Retrieved 2016-11-22.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  89. ^ Woolery, George W. (1983). Children's Television: The First Thirty-Five Years, 1946–1981, Part I: Animated Cartoon Series. Scarecrow Press. p. 223. ISBN 0-8108-1557-5. Retrieved 1 April 2020.
  90. ^ Harris, Will (4 August 2011). "Tom Kenny". Avclub.com. Retrieved 22 November 2017.
  91. ^ Forevergeek.com: "Plastic Man Animated Series Pilot Episode" (fan site; no date) October 21, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
  92. ^ "DVD Talk".
  93. ^ Holmes, Gordon. "SDCC '08 – Brave and the Bold Animated Panel", Newsarama.com, 25 July 2008
  94. ^ a b c d e f g "Plastic Man Voices (DC Universe) - Behind The Voice Actors". Behind The Voice Actors. Retrieved December 1, 2023. A green check mark indicates that a role has been confirmed using a screenshot (or collage of screenshots) of a title's list of voice actors and their respective characters found in its opening and/or closing credits and/or other reliable sources of information.
  95. ^ Marston, George (2016-07-21). "SDCC 2016: JUSTICE LEAGUE ACTION Panel". Newsarama.com. Retrieved 2016-11-22.
  96. ^ Army Archerd (1992-11-30). "Spielberg parks 'Jurassic' under sked, budget". Retrieved 2014-10-12.
  97. ^ . 2003-11-06. Archived from the original on 2007-02-24. Retrieved 2007-07-28.
  98. ^ "KEVIN SMITH PITCHED & WROTE PLASTIC MAN ANIMATED MOVIE". April 30, 2017. Retrieved February 18, 2018.
  99. ^ Fink, Richard (February 11, 2022). "Kevin Smith Wrote An Unmade Plastic Man Movie Starring Jim Parsons". Screen Rant. Retrieved February 11, 2022.
  100. ^ Gonzalez, Umberto (December 7, 2018). "Warner Bros and DC to Develop 'Plastic Man' Movie". The Wrap. Retrieved December 7, 2018.
  101. ^ "Cat Vasko to Pen Female-Starring Plastic Man Movie (Exclusive)". The Hollywood Reporter. 4 December 2020.
  102. ^ Couch, Aaron (2021-07-21). "DC's 'Injustice' Sets Cast for Animated Movie (Exclusive)". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 2021-07-21.
  103. ^ Reilly, Luke (12 November 2014). "Lego Batman 3 Credits Hint at Lego Jurassic World". IGN. Retrieved 9 March 2015.
  104. ^ Injustice: Gods Among Us- Year Four Annual #1 (December 2015)

Further reading edit

plastic, other, uses, disambiguation, brian, superhero, first, appearing, police, comics, originally, published, quality, comics, later, acquired, comics, appearing, their, american, comic, books, created, cartoonist, jack, cole, first, superheroes, incorporat. For other uses see Plastic Man disambiguation Plastic Man Eel O Brian is a superhero first appearing in Police Comics 1 originally published by Quality Comics and later acquired by DC Comics appearing in their American comic books 1 Created by cartoonist Jack Cole Plastic Man was one of the first superheroes to incorporate humor into mainstream action storytelling This character has been published in several solo series and has interacted with other characters such as Batman and many others in the mainstream DC Universe as a member of the Justice League He has additionally appeared in several television and video game adaptations including a television show of his own named The Plastic Man Comedy Adventure Show Plastic ManPlastic Man and The Spirit on the cover of Police Comics 15 January 1943 artwork by Gill Fox Publication informationPublisherQuality Comics 1941 1956 DC Comics 1966 present First appearancePolice Comics 1 August 1941 Created byJack ColeIn story informationAlter egoPatrick Eel O BrianSpeciesMetahumanTeam affiliationsJustice LeagueFederal Bureau of Investigation National Bureau of Investigations Justice League of Anarchy All Star Squadron Freedom Fighters Elastic Four Secret Six TerrificsPartnershipsWoozy Winks Offspring Batman Martian ManhunterNotable aliasesRalph JohnsAbilitiesSuperhuman elasticity malleability and plasticity Regeneration Invulnerability Telepathic immunity Density control Immortality Shapeshifting Sleuthing skills Combat expertise Contents 1 Publication history 2 Fictional character biography 2 1 Original version by Jack Cole 2 2 Phil Foglio version 2 3 JLA 2 4 52 One Year Later Countdown and Blackest Night 2 5 The New 52 2 6 DC Rebirth 3 Powers and abilities 4 Enemies 5 Other versions 5 1 The Dark Knight Strikes Again 5 2 All Star Batman and Robin 5 3 Kyle Baker s Plastic Man 5 4 Tangent Comics 5 5 JLA Avengers 5 6 Flashpoint 5 7 Wednesday Comics 6 Collected editions 7 In other media 7 1 Television 7 2 Film 7 3 Video games 7 4 Miscellaneous 8 See also 9 References 10 Further readingPublication history editCreated by writer artist Jack Cole he first appeared in Police Comics 1 August 1941 2 One of Quality Comics signature characters during the Golden Age of Comic Books Plastic Man can stretch his body into any imaginable form for example a ball or a car etc His adventures were known for their quirky offbeat structure and surreal slapstick humor When Quality Comics was shut down in 1956 DC Comics acquired many of its characters integrating Plastic Man into the mainstream DC Universe and giving him a short lived series in the 1960s The character starred in his own Saturday morning cartoon titled The Plastic Man Comedy Adventure Show from 1979 to 1981 and was also a recurring character on Batman The Brave and the Bold from 2008 to 2011 He was also mentioned in an episode of Justice League Unlimited but was never shown owing to ownership arguments and copyright complaints citation needed To get around these problems the show used Elongated Man as a replacement citation needed Although the character has never been a significant commercial success Plastic Man has been a favorite character of many modern comic book creators including writer Grant Morrison who included him in their 1990s revival of the Justice League Art Spiegelman who profiled Cole for The New Yorker magazine painter Alex Ross who has frequently included him in covers and stories depicting the Justice League writer artist Kyle Baker who wrote and illustrated an award winning Plastic Man series and Frank Miller who included him in the Justice League in the comics All Star Batman and Robin the Boy Wonder and Batman The Dark Knight Strikes Again Fictional character biography editOriginal version by Jack Cole edit Plastic Man was a crook named Patrick Eel O Brian Orphaned at age 10 and forced to live on the streets he fell into a life of crime As an adult he became part of a burglary ring specializing as a safecracker During a late night heist at the Crawford Chemical Works he and his three fellow gang members were surprised by a night watchman During the gang s escape Eel was shot in the shoulder and doused with a large drum of unidentified chemical liquid He escaped to the street only to discover that his gang had driven off without him Fleeing on foot and suffering increasing disorientation from the gunshot wound and the exposure to the chemical Eel eventually passed out on the foothills of a mountain near the city He awoke to find himself in a bed in a mountain retreat being tended to by a monk who had discovered him unconscious that morning This monk sensing a capacity for great good in O Brian turned away police officers who had trailed Eel to the monastery This act of faith and kindness combined with the realization that his gang had left him to be captured without a moment s hesitation fanned Eel s longstanding dissatisfaction with his criminal life and his desire to reform During his short convalescence at the monastery he discovered that the chemical had entered his bloodstream and caused a radical physical change His body now had all of the properties of rubber allowing him to stretch bounce and mold himself into any shape He immediately determined to use his new abilities on the side of law and order donning a red black and yellow later red and yellow rubber costume and capturing criminals as Plastic Man He concealed his true identity with a pair of white goggles and by re molding his face As O Brian he maintained his career and connections with the underworld as a means of gathering information on criminal activity 2 Plastic Man soon acquired comic relief sidekick Woozy Winks who was originally enchanted so that nature itself would protect him from harm This power was eventually removed from the character and Woozy became simply a bumbling yet loyal friend to Plastic Man In his original Golden Age Quality Comics incarnation Plastic Man eventually became a member of the city police force and then the FBI By the time he became a federal officer he had nearly completely abandoned his Eel O Brian identity Phil Foglio version edit After the 1985 Crisis on Infinite Earths a 1988 1989 four issue Plastic Man miniseries by Phil Foglio introduced a new version of Plastic Man Eel O Brian abandoned by his criminal gang after being shot and exposed to the unidentified chemical wandered the streets as his new powers developed frightening others and bringing the police and National Guard down on him as a dangerous monster Eel was at first oblivious to the changes to his body but after realizing that he was the monster at large he used his new abilities to escape his pursuers Eel soon became so despondent over his new condition that he attempted suicide by jumping off a bridge Fortunately he was interrupted by Woozy Winks a former mental patient who was kicked out of an institution due to lack of funding or as Woozy put it something called Reaganomics who desired nothing more than to return to the warm safety of a straitjacket and padded room Eel and Woozy decided to work together and capitalize on Eel s new powers to make their fortunes Eel wanting to get rich quick Woozy just wanting his old room back but couldn t decide whether there was more money in crime or crime fighting and resorted to flipping a coin to choose serving the law though Woozy had his doubts early on Eel ended up with the name Plastic Man after a reporter misinterpreted his first choice of Elastic Man Eel and Woozy set up a detective agency in New York City and go on to have various misadventures together JLA edit Plastic Man was made a prominent member of the Justice League during Grant Morrison s run on the title The story arc Rock of Ages shows Batman recruiting Eel to infiltrate Lex Luthor s Injustice League in the guise of the Joker which he does successfully He notably engages in combat with the goddess Circe proving immune to her magical ability to turn humans into animals He is later made a full time member of the League and aids the League in several battles including against Prometheus Julian September General Wade Eiling an upgraded version of Amazo a White Martian who assumes the identity of Bruce Wayne and Queen Bee During this period he becomes close friends with fellow new members Steel due to the fact that they are both lateral thinkers and Zauriel Plastic Man later implies in the JLA Heaven s Ladder graphic novel that his Catholic upbringing is a factor behind this and Zauriel s existence is a testament to his faith After the extended League dissolves at the end of the World War III arc he is the only member other than the Big Seven heroes Superman Batman Wonder Woman Aquaman The Flash Martian Manhunter and Green Lantern to retain full time membership in the JLA Plastic Man has also been instrumental in defeating several foes by himself such as a Jokerized version of Dr Polaris and the Burning Martian persona of J onn J onzz Martian Manhunter He has played substantial roles in nearly every major team up and crossover featuring the League of this era with the Titans The Technis Imperative Young Justice World Without Grownups the Justice Society of America Virtue and Vice where he is one of the heroes to be possessed by one of the Seven Deadly Sins the Avengers the JLA Avengers crossover and even the Looney Tunes in the humorous Superman amp Bugs Bunny miniseries In the Tower of Babel arc Plastic Man is frozen and shattered into pieces by Ra s al Ghul s League of Assassins as part of an attack against the Justice League Though he is put together again this experience traumatizes him severely and when it is discovered that the assassins were following methods devised by Batman Eel joins Wonder Woman and Aquaman in voting Batman out of the League The heroes reconcile in following issues The fact that Plastic Man was initially in the superhero business for the money has had an effect on his character development notably in the storyline Divided We Fall by Mark Waid where he along with other Justice League members was separated into two people his normal civilian identity and his superhero persona by the manipulative wish granting Id While Plastic Man devolved from a person with a sense of humor into a constantly wisecracking and almost ineffectual idiot the now normal Eel O Brian struggled with the criminal tendencies he had suppressed as he had become comfortable with his role as a superhero and wondered if he had actually changed for the better at all or this was just part of the super hero act Ultimately Eel was the driving force behind the other transformed Leaguers banding together to re join with their superheroic selves noting that Bruce Wayne in particular was approaching a mental breakdown as he struggled with his rage over his parents murder having lacked the ability to do anything about it as Batman was the identity that had inherited his skills Eel demonstrates this to the other divided Leaguers by savagely beating Bruce Wayne with a gun in the guise of a mugger to prove Wayne s ineffectiveness and demonstrate the degree of psychological damage he has suffered due to the split 3 Later Batman comments that it was a wise move under the circumstances 4 Later Plastic Man approaches Batman for help when he learns that Eel s estranged ten year old son Luke has fallen in with a gang of criminals and has inherited his father s shape shifting abilities possibly to an even greater degree than Plastic Man s own Plastic Man admits to Batman that he doesn t know if he ran away from being a father because he was enjoying his new life as a hero or because he was afraid of becoming a parent for his son Batman later intimidates Luke into returning home and informs Plastic Man that he is disappointed in his cowardice imagining that Eel would have shown Luke fatherly love in reality Plastic Man chose only to hide in Batman s utility belt during the whole encounter with Luke 5 During the story arc The Obsidian Age Plastic Man and the other main members of the JLA were transported through time thousands of years earlier to the beginning days of Atlantis During a battle with the antagonists Plastic Man was frozen and then shattered into pieces Having no way to locate all the pieces much less fix him with the technology of the day the JLA returned to their own time There they were eventually successful in finding all the pieces and restoring Plastic Man Plastic Man had been conscious the entire time but unable to move which had a profoundly negative effect on his mind He admitted he had lost his nerve and quit the JLA hoping to live a regular life This return to normalcy was made easier after a new encounter with his now teenage son which made Eel feel that the boy needed a father and a normal life Eventually Batman convinced Plastic Man to return to his life as a super hero again when they needed his shape shifting skills and immunity to telepathy to defeat the Martian Manhunter who had regressed to a racial memory of the long forgotten Burning Martians after overcoming his weakness to fire After a few more cases Plastic Man is present at the memorial service held after this incarnation of the Justice League officially disbands during the Infinite Crisis storyline 52 One Year Later Countdown and Blackest Night edit In the 2006 One Year Later DC Comics crossover storyline that followed the Infinite Crisis crossover a young man with similar appearance and powers as Plastic Man appears briefly in the superteam series Teen Titans Vol 3 34 written by R J Carter The character wears a white costume with red goggles similar to that of Offspring Plastic Man s son in the earlier 1999 DC miniseries The Kingdom by Mark Waid While the Teen Titans story itself does not identify the character page two of a published script supposedly by writer Geoff Johns specifies it is Plastic Man s son Offspring 6 Plastic Man s son is also shown in costume and identified as Offspring in the 2006 weekly series 52 in Week 35 written by Geoff Johns Grant Morrison Greg Rucka and Mark Waid when he is injured while rescuing a number of the depowered Everyman heroes Eventually Plastic Man and Offspring come together as father and son and briefly even had an idyllic family set up until Plastic Man was convinced that he couldn t deny his destiny as a super hero In Countdown to Mystery 1 2007 written by Matthew Sturges Plastic Man is seduced by Eclipso being made to believe he is a joke among his fellow heroes and the only way for him to get some respect is through Eclipso He is later freed of this corruption by Bruce Gordon Plastic Man makes his next appearance within the pages of Green Arrow Black Canary 8 by Judd Winick having been freed from a stasis tube by Green Arrow His DNA is taken by Sivana and used to augment an amnesiac Connor Hawke in a bid to turn the young hero into a brainwashed slave with a strong healing factor Plastic Man appeared for a brief period in the 2009 Justice League of America vol 2 series written by Len Wein After joining up with the team following the events of Final Crisis Plastic Man has his effectiveness questioned by his teammate Dr Light which starts a fight between the two which Vixen breaks up 7 Vixen reassigns Plastic Man to team up with Dr Light to stop the Royal Flush Gang robbery Though they experience some control issues between them the Royal Flush Gang is defeated and Plastic Man and Dr Light finally stop arguing 8 During a massive battle at the Justice League Satellite in Justice League Cry for Justice Prometheus injected Plastic Man with a chemical that badly damaged his plastic body The chemicals caused Eel to suffer from a condition where it took great concentration to keep himself in his usual semi solid state and caused him pain when he even thought about changing shape thus leaving him in an infirm state 9 10 In the Blackest Night crossover while still suffering from his deteriorating state Plastic Man had his heart torn out by the Black Lantern Vibe seemingly killing him 11 However due to his power of near invulnerability he was able to survive such an attack albeit badly wounded 12 Vixen states that Plastic Man was being taken care of at STAR Labs and that he would be unable to return to the League 13 Plastic Man later appeared in Justice League Generation Lost helping a large coalition of heroes on an unsuccessful mission to trace Maxwell Lord He had been seemingly cured of his condition and was shown retaining his normal shape without issue or pain 14 Later he aids the JLA on their mission into Hell where he helps Batman defeat Geryon The League learns Satanus plans to use Dante s mask to become powerful Plastic Man grabs the mask which possesses him The Leagues combines forces to remove the mask which is incinerated seemingly killing Plastic Man It is later revealed that Zauriel transported him into another dimension before helping the League escape Hell 15 The New 52 edit In September 2011 The New 52 rebooted DC s continuity In this new timeline Plastic Man is considered as one of the candidates for the United Nations sponsored Justice League International He is denied a spot on the team for being too unpredictable 16 This cameo appearance was later retconned by Eel O Brian s proper New 52 introduction in Justice League Vol 2 25 February 2014 DC Rebirth edit In 2016 DC Comics implemented another relaunch of its books called DC Rebirth which restored its continuity to a form much as it was prior to The New 52 In Dark Days The Forge Batman unveils a containment unit to Mister Terrific in The Lunar Batcave bearing the Plastic Man logo and suggests it is time to release him 17 Plastic Man assists Mister Terrific into thwarting Simon Stagg s plot to open the portal to the Dark Multiverse using Metamorpho who had been transmuted to Nth Metal While trying to get Simon Stagg to close the portal with the help of Plastic Man Mister Terrific is sucked into the portal with Plastic Man and Metamorpho as Plastic Man shields them from the Dark Multiverse energy which he is immune to Upon arriving on a lifeless world they encounter Phantom Girl who has been trapped in her intangible form and who has no knowledge of sending a signal When the four of them find a computer in the gut of a giant dead creature they are greeted by a hologram of Tom Strong who states that they are needed to save the universe 18 Mister Terrific Plastic Man and Metamorpho learn from Phantom Girl that she was stuck in an intangible form since she was a child After the four of them make it back to their world Mister Terrific tries to leave the three of them at Simon Stagg s compound only to be drawn back to them 19 Due to the effects of the Dark Multiverse energy Mister Terrific concludes that they can t go their separate ways due to this inescapable bond 20 The team goes through several adventures whilst being attacked by a figure known as Doctor Dread who is later revealed to be Java 21 This revelation coupled with the team being cured of their condition causes everyone to split up Plastic Man attempts to connect with his ex Angel and their son Luke who has inherited his stretching powers 22 Initially reluctant the two bond over a game of basketball and stealing the Batmobile 23 They are then called upon by the rest of the team to band together and save Mr Terrifc from the Terribles a team of their evil doppelgangers put together by Doctor Dread Plas and Luke now suited up in his Offspring look work together to take down a vampiric version of Plastic Man from another dimension Following the Terribles defeat and imprisonment the Terrifics officially reunite as a team with Luke Element Dog and Miss Terrifics joining the roster 24 Plastic Man was later recruited by Obscura to help investigate a multi dimensional conspiracy This led them to find that it was being committed by a group of villains called the Cabal 25 Powers and abilities editThis 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 Find sources Plastic Man news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2024 Learn how and when to remove this template message Plastic Man s powers are derived from an accident in which his body was bathed in an unknown industrial chemical mixture that also entered into his bloodstream through a gunshot wound This caused a body wide mutagenic process that transformed his physiology Eel exists in a fluid state neither entirely liquid nor solid He has complete control over his entire molecular structure He can stretch his limbs and body to superhuman lengths and sizes There is no known limit to how far Plastic Man can stretch his body He can shrink himself down to a few inches tall posed as one of Batman s utility belt pockets or become a titan the size of skyscrapers He can contort his body into various positions and sizes impossible for ordinary humans such as being entirely flat to slip under a door using his fingers to pick conventional lock compressing himself into a ball to ricochet off of things and inflating his body He can also use it for disguise by changing the shape of his face and body contributory to his work as a sleuth Due to his fluid state Plastic Man can open holes in his body and turn himself into objects with mobile parts In addition he can alter his bodily mass and physical constitution at will creating virtually no limit to the sizes and shapes he can contort himself into There is nothing he cannot alter his body into which includes basic shapes or dangerous weapons avatars of other superheroes and functional automobiles These stretching capabilities grant Plastic Man agility flexibility and coordination far beyond the natural limits of the human body He can alter his strength by growing or adding more muscle Plastic Man s powers extraordinarily augment his durability Some stories perhaps of anecdotal quality have showed him susceptible to surprise attack by bullets in one case oozing a substance similar to liquid plastic 26 His unique physiology makes him impervious to conventional means of harm such as bullets blasts and blunt force He is also able to withstand corrosives punctures and concussions without sustaining any injury although he can be momentarily stunned Batman once mentioned that he could presumably even withstand a nuclear detonation This is mainly due to the fact that he has full control over his density so he can willfully increase his durability as he wishes His bodily mass can be dispersed but for all intents and purposes it is invulnerable even from many forms of magic in the DC Universe He is able to regenerate and or assimilate lost or damaged tissue although he needs to be reasonably intact for this process to begin For example Plastic Man was once reduced to individual separate molecules and scattered across the Atlantic Ocean for centuries He was only capable of returning to his usual form after the rest of the League were able to gather enough of his molecules and restore approximately 80 of his body mass after which he began to regenerate the remaining 20 on his own Plastic Man has proven to be insusceptible to the effects of telepathy As stated by Batman in JLA 88 Dec 2003 Plastic Man s mind is no longer organic It s untouchable by telepathy Plastic Man does not appear to age if he does it is at a rate far slower than that of normal human beings In the aftermath of the Justice League story Arc Obsidian Age Plastic Man was discovered to have survived for 3 000 years scattered into separate individual molecules on the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean without decaying or being otherwise affected at all He can autonomically detect ultrasonic frequencies because his body will start to ripple when an ultrasonic frequency is triggered As stated by the Black Lantern corpsman Vibe Plastic Man s internal organs such as his heart when Black Lantern Vibe tried to rip it out couldn t be removed unlike many of the Black Lanterns victims This perhaps implies that Plastic Man is himself more like one giant living organ than he is a whole made of component parts and organs etc His semi liquid form remains stable at relatively high and low temperatures provided that the temperature change is gradual A sudden change induces a complete change of state creating a truly solid or truly liquid form Plastic Man was incapacitated in the JLA story arc Tower of Babel when mercenaries froze and shattered his body Once thawed and reassembled he was physically unharmed In the JLA story arc Divided We Fall Plastic Man is shown to have some weakness to extreme heat intense heat vision attack from a Martian and was temporarily melted In some versions Plastic Man is also vulnerable to chemicals such as acetone which melts and destabilizes his malleable form although he eventually regenerated when the chemicals are gone A famous hindrance of Plastic Man s abilities is that the only colors he can mimic are the colors of his body and costume i e red black yellow white and flesh tone although he can use these colors in various ways once even managing to exactly duplicate the appearance of the Flash Whether this is an inherent flaw in his powers or a mental block has never been explained whereas his son Offspring also gained his father s powers but is able to willfully mimic any color he chooses During Offspring s introduction it was revealed that Plastic Man could change color turning his nose blue to prove to Batman that he could This color change however was possible only with a great deal of Plastic Man s concentration even for such a very small area Plastic Man was once a very talented professional thief specializing as a safecracker Although no longer a criminal he has thorough insight into their mindset enabling him to be an effective sleuth He is also considered to be a lateral thinker and much smarter than he lets on Enemies editThis article is missing information about section Please expand the article to include this information Further details may exist on the talk page November 2011 Plastic Man has fought many enemies in his comics Acid Tongue A criminal who can spit acid at a target from several yards away 27 Abba and Dabba Two wanted con men 28 Ali Krim Amorpho A sentient blob of protoplasm from an unknown distant planet 29 Archie Type A criminal that Plastic Man was after 27 Baldy Bushwhack B T Tokus Beauteous Bessie Big Beaver Bizarro A backwards clone of Superman 30 Blind Ali A blind would be assassin 27 Boss Annova The self appointed king of all street crime in the city of Metropolis 31 Brain Trust Brickface A crime boss with a segmented face 32 Brotherhood of the Savage Caribou 33 Bunyon O Banyon The Burning Plastic Man was chosen by Batman to battle the Martian Manhunter when he was corrupted by The Burning Cabal A group of villains that were behind a multi dimensional conspiracy and ran afoul of Plastic Man and Obscura 34 Amazo An android that can copy the powers of the Justice League 34 Doctor Psycho A dwarfish telepath and an enemy of Wonder Woman 34 Hugo Strange A mad scientist and an enemy of Batman 34 Per Degaton A supervillain obsessed with time travel 34 Queen Bee An alien bee themed criminal 34 Teel 35 Carrot Man A criminal that dresses up as a carrot 36 Cauldron Chatterbox Lou Kwashus is a disc jockey themed supervillain with a sonic weapon 37 Cheeseface A cheese themed criminal who has been selling explosive bottles of milk 38 Edam O Grotton Cheeseface s henchman 38 Closets Kennedy The Crab Desperate Desmond Doctor Dome A supervillain in a dome shaped helmet He is the closest thing Plastic Man has to an arch enemy 39 Lynx Doctor Dome s sidekick 39 Professor X A scientist who Doctor Dome used to cause havoc 39 Doctor Forklift A half man half forklift scientist 40 Doctor Honctoff An evil robotics genius 36 Bogus Men A group of androids that were created by Doctor Honctoff 36 Dopey Joe Dr Ameeba Dr Erudite Dr Phobia Dr Volt Dollmaker Marcel Mannequin is an extremely talented dollmaker who uses sentient dolls to commit crimes 41 Electra Even Steven A balanced obsessed criminal 42 Dr Meg LeMania Even Steven s scientist minion 42 Fargo Freddie The Lava Man An unappreciated and underpaid employee who transformed himself into living lava via active volcano 43 Froggie Fink The Gag Man Goldzinger A gold magnetizing crook 44 Granite Lady A former singer who turned down all men and her skin became rock like due to the serum s effects 45 The Grasshopper An armed jewel thief who was subjected to a serum that granted him leaping abilities 46 The Green Terror Hairy Arms A gang leader who formerly served the Axis Powers until his own pals found out and removed him from their group 47 Hands Hate The Hotrod Ice Man An ice delivery man who turned to a life of crime 48 Killer Joe A professional hitman 49 King Lughead King of Spades The leader of a spade themed gang 50 Jack of Spades A member of the King of Spades gang 50 Queen of Spades A member of the King of Spades gang 50 The King Of Zing Kolonel Kool Originally an agent at the NBI named Gulliver Gully Foyle Plastic Man s success there at his expense made Foyle jealous and out for revenge Kolonel Kool took over Boss Annova s gang before being nabbed by his former co worker 31 Lawbook He offers a reward to any crook who can find a way to kill Plastic Man League of Assassins An organization of assassins 51 Ra s al Ghul The leader of the League of Assassins 51 Talia al Ghul The daughter of Ra s al Ghul and member of the League of Assassins 51 Lex Luthor The CEO of LexCorp and enemy of Superman who was working as the President of the United States at the time 30 The Lobster Louie The Lift Lowbrow A short and insanely confident criminal who killed Cindy Bloch 52 Lucky 7 Lucius D Dratt Doctor Dratt A twisted neurochemist 53 Madam Brawn A teacher who trains female ex cons at her school to fight men on equal grounds Dies in Police Comics 5 54 Madame Merciless A female criminal hired by Doctor Dome to hypnotize Plastic Man 55 Madame Serpina A sideshow entertainer turned assassin 56 Malleable Man A criminal associate of Eel O Brien who recreated the accident that gave Plastic Man his powers 57 Man Bat Kirk Langstrom is a zoologist who takes a serum that transforms him into Man Bat After being subdued by Plastic Man Man Bat agreed to help him and Obscura investigate a multi dimensional conspiracy 58 The Mangler The Master Artist Max the Knife A gang leader that went up against Marty The Mouse Meeker after he was given powers by two aliens from the Redinskian race 59 Meat By Product A monster spawned from a meat by product 60 Molder A sculpting plastic themed criminal who fought Plastic Man and Batman 61 Mona Mayhem The Moon Wizard Mostolo The Moulder Mister Aqua A former chemist who was experimenting with chemicals that turned him into living water Woozy accidentally drank him 62 Mr Cat Mister Green A supervillain who became a plant based lifeform and then dies after reverting to human form 63 Mr Happiness Mr Misfit The Melancholy Mister Morbid A criminal who is always sad and dislikes happiness 64 Mr Stingker Mister Uglee A masked criminal with a terrifyingly hideous face who wanted to disfigure all other men so he would be the most handsome man in the world in comparison Mister Wheels The elderly leader of an organized crime ring called Crime Enterprises who confined himself to a wheelchair 65 Murray the Swede Schneiderman A bank robber 31 Number Seven Ooze Brothers Clem Flem and Lem are three villains who use ooze in their crimes 66 The Owl Pinkeye An albino spy 67 Pinky Flowers Poison Ivy A plant themed enemy of Batman Poison Ivy posed as Angel O Brien to get revenge on Plastic Man 68 Prankster An enemy of Superman who uses pranks in his criminal activities He once used robot duplicates of the Justice League to fool the police that Plastic Man was a criminal 69 Professor Goodman Professor Dimwit Professor Spindrift Ramalama 70 Red Herring An anthropomorphic red herring who appears to meddle with the investigations of crimes he was not involved in 71 Remember Rice O Rooney The San Francisco Threat he was considered to be the highest paid hitman in the country 31 Robby Reed When Robby Reed s H Dial was rusted he ended up turning into evil versions of some of his hero forms 72 Rocky Goober Roxanne Roller A roller skating villain seeking vengeance against rock stars who supposedly spurned her 73 Rubberneck Perry Skope villain with super strength and suggestions of a rubbery resiliency 74 This character appears in the Batman The Brave and the Bold episode Long Arm of the Law An action figure was created based on this sole appearance Puttyface Mal E Able is the partner of Rubberneck 74 Ruby Ryder A ruthless business woman and owner of Ruby Ryder Inc who fought Plastic Man and Batman 75 She first appeared in the Batman The Brave and the Bold episode Bold Beginnings SAPMALAL Short for Society to Assassinate Plastic Man And Live A Little they are a group who is out to eliminate Plastic Man 76 Assassin A member of SAPMALAL who Plastic Man poses as 76 Ivan Byturnozov A member of SAPMALAL 76 Jean Le Feet A member of SAPMALAL 76 Lefty McGoon A member of SAPMALAL 76 Sir Reginald Ratfinque A member of SAPMALAL 76 Sadly Sadly A man whose face is so pathetic that banks hand over money Saxon A crook who always speaks in alliteration Skulllface Eloc Eloc is Cole spelled backwards Skunk AKA the B O Bandit the Skunk emanated an excruciatingly foul odor as a result of having never in his entire life bathed 27 Sleepy Eyes A supervillain who puts people to sleep just by looking at them Slick Dandy Sludge A monster spawned from sludge 60 Snuffer A cyborg killer in the employ of Rice O Rooney the San Francisco hitman directed the mechanical assassin to kill Plastic Man for Boss Annova 31 Sphinx A super strong crook that once tried to take over Doctor Dome s territory 44 Spider Frank Stacy is a scientist who operated as a spider themed villain 77 Stickyfinger A criminal who has been sticking up a lot of people around Mammoth City 78 Stretcho Supreme Leader 79 Toyman A toy themed criminal and enemy of Superman Plastic Man once helped Superman fight Toyman 80 Thrilla Time Trapper II Poison Ivy mind controlled Metron to pose as Time Trapper 81 Weasel Mr Waisel is a criminal who took advantage of Plastic Man s amnesia 82 Weapons Whirling Dervish Big toed ballet dancer turned assassin Murdered by Pinkeye Words The Yes Man A crime boss who only says Yes until Plastic Man forces him to say No at which time he snaps Zircon 83 Other versions editThe Dark Knight Strikes Again edit In Batman The Dark Knight Strikes Again 2001 2002 Frank Miller s miniseries set on DC s new Earth 31 in post Infinite Crisis continuity Plastic Man was betrayed and locked in Arkham Asylum for years with his body forced into a perpetual egg like shape by a pressurizing machine The imprisonment and confinement drove him insane and upon his release he lashed out at those around him He fights Elongated Man having the upper hand until Batman brings Plastic Man to his senses with a punch to the face Batman declares that Plastic Man is the most powerful superhero in the room Carrie Kelley as Catgirl describes him as being Immeasurably powerful Absolutely nuts In this continuity he appears with silver hair and a few wrinkles All Star Batman and Robin edit Plastic Man appears in issue 5 All Star Batman and Robin also written by Miller as a founding member of a proto Justice League along with Wonder Woman Superman and Green Lantern Hal Jordan Kyle Baker s Plastic Man edit Plastic Man 2004 2006 written and illustrated by Kyle Baker harkens back to the Jack Cole version of Plastic Man featuring Eel O Brian tended to by a monk in a mountain retreat following the events of his normal origin story Inspired by the monk s kindness Eel resolves to use his powers for good becoming the crime fighter Plastic Man and works for the FBI In this series Plastic Man gets a girlfriend FBI Special Agent Morgan later revealed as the surgically altered fiancee named Nancy who Plas alter ego had left in the 1940s and adopts a Goth teenage daughter Edwina The series won five Eisner Awards for Best New Series Best Title for Younger Readers Best Writer Artist Humor and one Harvey Award for Best New Series Tangent Comics edit In the Tangent Comics imprint set on the alternate universe Earth 9 Plastic Man is a member of the Secret Six He is scientist Gunther Ganz whose consciousness has been transferred to a living polymer JLA Avengers edit In the DC Comics Marvel Comics intercompany crossover JLA Avengers Plastic Man is a member of the JLA and teams with Martian Manhunter in the Marvel locale of Wakanda where the two encounter the Marvel characters the Wasp and the Black Panther Plastic Man is replaced by DC Comics Elongated Man after the merging of worlds Flashpoint edit In the alternate timeline of the Flashpoint event Eel O Brian is a villain After Heat Wave was sent to death row for killing Jason Rusch O Brian arrives to break him out in the flying fortress of the military Doom prison having been hiding disguised in the body of his cellmate Cluemaster 84 During the prison break O Brian dislikes being called Plastic Man when inmate Sportsmaster calls him this While O Brian helps him to retrieve his weapons he discovers Heat Wave attacking the guards control room and attempting to ram the flying prison at Cyborg s home city of Detroit 85 O Brian refuses to let him destroy the city but Heat Wave turns on him and seems to kill Plastic Man by using his flame gun to melt his body After Heat Wave is defeated by Cyborg and imprisoned in Belle Reve O Brian is revealed to have survived the flame gun attack and smuggles himself into the prison in Heat Wave s new cellmate s body where he is later shown advancing on Heat Wave 86 Wednesday Comics edit In the collected edition of Wednesday Comics 200 pages DC Comics June 2010 ISBN 1 4012 2747 3 Plastic Man is featured in a story by Evan Dorkin with art by Stephen DeStefano Plastic Man and Woozy battle Professor Grushenko at the museum over a magic elixir with resulting hijinks Collected editions editCollected editions of Plastic Man comics Title Material collected Published date ISBNPlastic Man Archives Volume 1 Police Comics 1 20 February 1999 978 1563894688Plastic Man Archives Volume 2 Police Comics 21 30 Plastic Man Volume 1 1 December 2000 978 1563896217Plastic Man Archives Volume 3 Police Comics 31 39 Plastic Man Volume 1 2 December 2001 978 1563898471Plastic Man Archives Volume 4 Police Comics 40 49 Plastic Man Volume 1 3 November 2002 978 1563898358Plastic Man Archives Volume 5 Police Comics 50 58 Plastic Man Volume 1 4 October 2003 978 1563899867Plastic Man Archives Volume 6 Police Comics 59 65 Plastic Man Volume 1 5 6 November 2004 978 1401201548Plastic Man Archives Volume 7 Police Comics 66 71 Plastic Man Volume 1 7 8 January 2006 978 1401204136Plastic Man Archives Volume 8 Police Comics 72 77 Plastic Man Volume 1 9 10 August 2006 978 1401207779Plastic Man Volume 1 On the Lam Plastic Man Volume 4 1 6 November 2004 978 1401203436Plastic Man Volume 2 Rubber Bandits Plastic Man Volume 4 8 11 13 14 December 2005 978 1401207298Plastic Man Rubber Banded The Deluxe Edition Plastic Man Volume 4 1 20 November 2020 978 1779504845Convergence Infinite Earths Book Two Convergence Plastic Man and the Freedom Fighters 1 2 and Convergence Shazam 1 2 Convergence Booster Gold 1 2 Convergence Blue Beetle 1 2 Convergence Crime Syndicate 1 2 November 2015 978 1401258382Plastic Man Plastic Man Volume 5 1 6 April 2019 978 1401289379In other media editTelevision edit A Plastic Man pilot was planned first by Hal Seeger Productions 87 then by Filmation 88 though neither came to pass citation needed Plastic Man makes a cameo appearance in the Super Friends episode Professor Goodfellow s G E E C voiced by Norman Alden citation needed Plastic Man appears in The Plastic Man Comedy Adventure Show voiced by Michael Bell 89 This version is an operative of an unnamed covert agency partnered with a bumbling Hawaiian sidekick named Hula Hula his girlfriend Penny and eventually his son Baby Plas Additionally Taylor Marks portrays Plastic Man in the syndicated version of the series citation needed Warner Bros Animation and Cartoon Network commissioned a Plastic Man television pilot Puddle Trouble in 2006 produced by Andy Suriano and Tom Kenny with the latter also providing Plastic Man s voice and designed and storyboarded by Stephen DeStefano 90 91 However Cartoon Network decided not to pick up Plastic Man as a series and has never aired the episode Puddle Trouble was later released on the Plastic Man The Complete Collection DVD set 92 Plastic Man appears in Batman The Brave and the Bold voiced again by Tom Kenny 93 94 This version was originally an underling of Kite Man who lived in a suburban home with his family While joining Kite Man for a heist Batman intervened inadvertently caused the accident that turned O Brian into Plastic Man and helped him become a superhero Additionally an Earth Three counterpart of Plastic Man named Rubber Man makes a non speaking appearance in the episode Deep Cover for Batman as a member of the Injustice Syndicate citation needed Plastic Man makes non speaking cameo appearances in Young Justice After joining the Justice League in the episode Revelation he joins Batman among other Leaguers in resigning from the group as part of a pre planned response to U N secretary general Lex Luthor s restrictions against the League so they can operate as vigilantes Plastic Man appears in the Mad segment That s What Super Friends Are For voiced by Dana Snyder Plastic Man appears in Robot Chicken Plastic Man appears in the DC Nation Shorts voiced again by Tom Kenny Plastic Man appears in Justice League Action voiced again by Dana Snyder 95 94 Film edit Warner Bros Pictures began development on a film centered around Plastic Man in the early 1990s with Amblin Entertainment producing and Bryan Spicer directing 96 The Wachowskis wrote the screenplay in 1995 97 Plastic Man makes a non speaking cameo appearance in Justice League The New Frontier citation needed Plastic Man appears in Lego DC Comics Super Heroes Justice League vs Bizarro League voiced again by Tom Kenny 94 Plastic Man appears in Scooby Doo amp Batman The Brave and the Bold voiced again by Tom Kenny 94 Kevin Smith stated at Calgary Comic and Entertainment Expo that he met with Geoff Johns and pitched an animated Plastic Man film that he wrote for DC 98 with Jim Parsons voicing the titular character before the film was scrapped 99 In December 2018 development for a new Plastic Man film was announced with Amanda Idoko writing the screenplay and Robert Shaye as executive producer 100 In December 2020 it was reported that Cat Vasko was hired to rewrite Idoko s screenplay while the project is being reworked into a female centered film 101 Plastic Man appears in Lego DC Comics Super Heroes The Flash voiced again by Tom Kenny 94 Plastic Man appears in Teen Titans Go To the Movies voiced by Joey Cappabianca 94 Plastic Man appears in Injustice voiced by Oliver Hudson 102 94 Video games edit Plastic Man appears as a playable character in Batman The Brave and the Bold The Videogame voiced again by Tom Kenny citation needed Plastic Man appears as a character summon in Scribblenauts Unmasked A DC Comics Adventure citation needed Plastic Man appears as a playable character in Lego Batman 3 Beyond Gotham voiced by Dee Bradley Baker 103 Plastic Man appears as a playable character in Lego DC Super Villains voiced by JP Karliak citation needed Miscellaneous edit Plastic Man appears in the April 19 1999 issue of The New Yorker which included a biography of Jack Cole by Art Spiegelman Two years later this would be included in the latter and Chip Kidd s book Jack Cole and Plastic Man Forms Stretched to Their Limits Plastic Man appears in the Injustice Gods Among Us prequel comics citation needed He speaks out against Superman s altered ethics following the Metropolis bombing but does not get physically involved until Superman arrests his son Luke After rescuing Luke from the Regime s underwater prison freeing the other prisoners in the process Plastic Man encourages them to fight against Superman 104 Plastic Man makes a cameo appearance in DC Super Hero Girls as a graduate of Super Hero High citation needed Plastic Man appears in the Injustice 2 prequel comic as a member of Batman s Justice League Task Force citation needed Plastic Man appears in Mad Magazine 499 See also editStacey Augmon a professional basketball player sometimes nicknamed Plastic Man Similar characters Elongated Man another DC Comics character with similar powers Elasti Girl a fellow DC Comics hero from Doom Patrol who can stretch as well Elastic Lad Superman s pal Jimmy Olsen who gains Plastic Man like powers when drinking a special serum Lastikman a Filipino character with similar powers developed by Mars Ravelo in 1964 Monkey D Luffy a manga character who has abilities similar to Plastic Man starring in the Japanese comic One Piece Mister Fantastic a Marvel Comics superhero from Fantastic Four with abilities similar to Plastic Man Poly Mer of PS238 a gender swapped child version of Plastic Man with similar abilities and personality Thin Man another elastic superhero from Marvel Comics who first appeared in Marvel s predecessor Timely Comics Flatman another Marvel hero with the ability to stretch Tiramolla an Italian comic book character with a similar elastic body References edit Koolman Mike Amash Jim 2011 The Quality Companion TwoMorrows Publishing pp 162 170 ISBN 978 1605490373 a b Benton Mike 1992 Superhero Comics of the Golden Age The Illustrated History Dallas Taylor Publishing Company pp 121 122 ISBN 0 87833 808 X Retrieved 1 April 2020 JLA 53 JLA 54 JLA 65 The Comic Bloc You Waited Now See Teen Titans 34 posted June 15 2006 by anonymous magicspoon Justice League of America vol 2 35 July 2009 DC Comics Justice League of America vol 2 37 September 2009 DC Comics Justice League Cry for Justice 6 January 2010 DC Comics Justice League of America vol 2 38 October 2009 DC Comics Justice League of America vol 2 39 November 2009 DC Comics Justice League of America vol 2 40 December 2009 DC Comics Justice League of America vol 2 41 January 2010 DC Comics Justice League Generation Lost 1 DC Comics Justice League of America 80 Page Giant 2011 DC Comics Justice League International Vol 3 1 November 2011 DC Comics Dark Days The Forge 1 June 2017 DC Comics The Terrifics 1 DC Comics The Terrifics 2 DC Comics The Terrifics 3 DC Comics The Terrifics 10 DC Comics The Terrifics 11 DC Comics The Terrifics 12 The Terrifics 14 DC Comics Plastic Man Vol 5 1 6 DC Comics The Origin of Woozy Winks a b c d Adventure Comics 474 DC Comics Police Comics 20 July 1943 Quality Comics Plastic Man 21 January 1950 Quality Comics a b Plastic Man Vol 4 11 DC Comics a b c d e Plastic Man Vol 2 15 DC Comics Adventure Comics 470 DC Comics Plastic Man Special 1 DC Comics a b c d e f Plastic Man Vol 5 4 DC Comics Plastic Man Vol 5 5 DC Comics a b c Plastic Man Vol 2 12 DC Comics Super Friends 43 DC Comics a b Adventure Comics 746 DC Comics a b c Plastic Man 80 Page Giant 1 DC Comics Plastic Man Vol 2 11 DC Comics Plastic Man Vol 2 10 DC Comics a b Adventure Comics 475 DC Comics Plastic Man 2 August 1944 Quality Comics a b Plastic Man Vol 2 6 DC Comics Police Comics 51 February 1946 Quality Comics Plastic Man 6 December 1947 Quality Comics Police Comics 9 May 1942 Quality Comics Plastic Man 32 November 1951 Quality Comics Plastic Man Vol 2 9 DC Comics a b c Plastic Man Vol 2 7 DC Comics a b c Plastic Man Vol 4 18 DC Comics Adventure Comics 471 DC Comics Police Comics Vol 1 42 May 1945 Quality Comics Police Comics Vol 1 4 November 1941 Quality Comics Plastic Man Vol 2 4 DC Comics Police Comics 21 August 1943 Quality Comics DC Comics Presents Vol 1 93 May 1986 Plastic Man Vol 5 2 DC Comics Plastic Man 19 DC Comics a b Plastic Man Vol 2 14 DC Comics The Brave and the Bold 76 DC Comics Plastic Man 25 September 1950 Quality Comics Police Comics 58 September 1946 Quality Comics Police Comics 76 Quality Comics Police Comics 82 September 1948 Quality Comics Plastic Man Vol 3 2 DC Comics Adventure Comics 469 DC Comics Plastic Man Vol 4 8 DC Comics Plastic Man Vol 4 3 DC Comics Plastic Man Vol 3 3 DC Comics Plastic Man Vol 4 2 DC Comics Plastic Man Vol 2 13 DC Comics Adventure Comics 477 DC Comics a b Super Friends 45 DC Comics The Brave and the Bold Vol 95 May 1971 DC Comics a b c d e f Plastic Man Vol 2 5 DC Comics Plastic Man 46 DC Comics Plastic Man Vol 4 12 DC Comics Adventure Comics 468 DC Comics DC Comics Presents 39 DC Comics Plastic Man Vol 4 9 DC Comics Plastic Man Vol 2 8 DC Comics Plastic Man Vol 3 4 DC Comics Flashpoint Legion of Doom 1 June 2011 Flashpoint Legion of Doom 2 July 2011 Flashpoint Legion of Doom 3 August 2011 Plastic Man 2 Jan Feb 1967 letters page A Plastic Man TV show pilot film was written by amiable Arnie Drake and made by Hal Seeger Productions Negotiations with networks and sponsors are under way The Aquaman Shrine Aquaman Meets The Blackhawks 2008 05 20 Archived from the original on 2014 01 30 Retrieved 2016 11 22 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Woolery George W 1983 Children s Television The First Thirty Five Years 1946 1981 Part I Animated Cartoon Series Scarecrow Press p 223 ISBN 0 8108 1557 5 Retrieved 1 April 2020 Harris Will 4 August 2011 Tom Kenny Avclub com Retrieved 22 November 2017 Forevergeek com Plastic Man Animated Series Pilot Episode fan site no date Archived October 21 2006 at the Wayback Machine DVD Talk Holmes Gordon SDCC 08 Brave and the Bold Animated Panel Newsarama com 25 July 2008 a b c d e f g Plastic Man Voices DC Universe Behind The Voice Actors Behind The Voice Actors Retrieved December 1 2023 A green check mark indicates that a role has been confirmed using a screenshot or collage of screenshots of a title s list of voice actors and their respective characters found in its opening and or closing credits and or other reliable sources of information Marston George 2016 07 21 SDCC 2016 JUSTICE LEAGUE ACTION Panel Newsarama com Retrieved 2016 11 22 Army Archerd 1992 11 30 Spielberg parks Jurassic under sked budget Retrieved 2014 10 12 Plastic Man 2003 11 06 Archived from the original on 2007 02 24 Retrieved 2007 07 28 KEVIN SMITH PITCHED amp WROTE PLASTIC MAN ANIMATED MOVIE April 30 2017 Retrieved February 18 2018 Fink Richard February 11 2022 Kevin Smith Wrote An Unmade Plastic Man Movie Starring Jim Parsons Screen Rant Retrieved February 11 2022 Gonzalez Umberto December 7 2018 Warner Bros and DC to Develop Plastic Man Movie The Wrap Retrieved December 7 2018 Cat Vasko to Pen Female Starring Plastic Man Movie Exclusive The Hollywood Reporter 4 December 2020 Couch Aaron 2021 07 21 DC s Injustice Sets Cast for Animated Movie Exclusive The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved 2021 07 21 Reilly Luke 12 November 2014 Lego Batman 3 Credits Hint at Lego Jurassic World IGN Retrieved 9 March 2015 Injustice Gods Among Us Year Four Annual 1 December 2015 Further reading editJack Cole and Plastic Man Forms Stretched to Their Limits by Art Spiegelman and Chip Kidd Chronicle Books 2001 ISBN 0 8118 3179 5 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Plastic Man amp oldid 1217243055, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.