Human Bomb
Human Bomb | |
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Publication information | |
Publisher | Quality Comics, later DC Comics |
First appearance | Police Comics #1 (August 1941) |
Created by | Paul Gustavson |
In-story information | |
Alter ego | Roy Lincoln |
Team affiliations | Freedom Fighters |
Abilities | Can explode objects he comes in contact with |
The Human Bomb is a fictional superhero from the Golden Age of Comic Books. The character was first published by Quality Comics in the 1940s, and decades later by DC Comics after it acquired Quality's characters. The Human Bomb first appeared in Police Comics #1 (August, 1941), an issue that also featured the first appearances of Plastic Man and the Phantom Lady, among others. The character was created by comic writer and artist Paul Gustavson.
Character origin and early publication history
Roy Lincoln was originally a scientist working with his father on a special explosive chemical called "27-QRX." However, when Nazi spies invaded his lab and killed his father, he resorted to ingesting the chemical to prevent it from falling into their hands. As a result, Lincoln gained the ability to cause explosions in any object he came into contact with, particularly through his hands; the only way to control it was to always wear special asbestos gloves (which were subsequently retconned into "fibro-wax" gloves after the human health hazards of asbestos were discovered). Donning a containment suit to prevent any accidental explosions, Lincoln became the "Human Bomb," removing his gloves only to expose his explosive powers against Nazi and Japanese enemies, as well as ordinary criminals. He later gained enough control over his powers to be able to remove the containment suit, though the gloves were always necessary.
A Human Bomb feature continued in Police Comics through issue 58, published in September, 1946. During that run, he was given a comic relief sidekick named "Hustace Throckmorton," who acquired a power like the Human Bomb's (though instead centered in his feet) after receiving an emergency blood transfusion from the superhero. Throckmorton was then briefly replaced by three youngsters who were collectively called "the Bombardiers."
DC Comics
Roy Lincoln
After Quality Comics went out of business in 1956, DC Comics acquired the rights to the Human Bomb as well as the other Quality Comics properties. The Human Bomb remained unpublished until he and several other former Quality properties were re-launched in Justice League of America #107 (October, 1973) as the Freedom Fighters. As was done with many other characters DC had acquired from other publishers or that were holdovers from Golden Age titles, the Freedom Fighters were located on a parallel world, one called "Earth-X" where Nazi Germany won World War II. The team were featured in their own series for fifteen issues (1976-1978), in which the team temporarily left Earth-X for "Earth-1" (where most DC titles were set). The Human Bomb was then an occasional guest star of All-Star Squadron, a superhero team title that was set on "Earth-2", the locale for DC's WWII-era superheroes, at a time prior to when he and the other Freedom Fighters were supposed to have left for Earth-X.
The character then appeared with the rest of DC's entire cast of superheroes in Crisis on Infinite Earths, a story that was intended to eliminate the similarly confusing histories that had DC had attached to its characters by retroactively merging the various parallel worlds into one. This erased the Human Bomb's Earth-X days, and merged the character's All-Star Squadron and Freedom Fighter histories so that the Freedom Fighters were merely a splinter group of the Squadron. The Human Bomb subsequently appeared in several issues of JSA in 2003. His death was depicted in Infinite Crisis #1 (Oct, 2005) at the hands of Bizarro, during a fight with the Secret Society of Super Villains. After the Human Bomb killed Doctor Polaris in a fit of rage Bizarro attacked the Bomb hammering his face to produce more colorful explosions. Lincoln's body was pulped by the brutal beating received, his explosive nature not harming the impervious Bizarro. The explosions stopped even though Bizarro continued punching, indicating that the power ended at the instant of death.
Andy Franklin
Template:Spoiler Revealed in Crisis Aftermath: The Battle For Blüdhaven #1, one of the experiments in the secret internment camps within the shattered city is a man named Andy Franklin, a former scientist caught in the blast that destroyed Blüdhaven. As a general explains the situation to Father Time, turning to Franklin, the general refers to him as "some kind of human bomb." As of issue 2, he is the new Human Bomb whose powers were exhibited in issue 3, where he plucked off a piece of his fingernail and flicked it at an oncoming troop of Atomic Knights, killing them in an explosion. However, his teammates have called him a freak because of his powers, especially Phantom Lady who nicknamed him "Explodo". Andy has a higher sense of morality then his teammates and refuses to fight people he doesn't see as enemies.
Elseworlds and other appearances
In Mark Waid and Alex Ross' Kingdom Come series, the Human Bomb is briefly seen in issue # 2 in the metahuman bar where Superman was recruiting for the Justice League. In a darkly comic scene, the Human Bomb was playing a game of "pull my finger" with a bar patron, with predictable results. This is a younger, amoral Human Bomb. The original Human Bomb is a member of the Justice League in the Kingdom Come series.