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Blacksmith (character)

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Blacksmith
Publication information
PublisherDC Comics
First appearanceFlash: Iron Heights (2001)
Created byGeoff Johns, Ethan Van Sciver
In-story information
Alter egoAmunet Black
SpeciesMetahuman
Team affiliationsThe Rogues
PartnershipsKeith Kenyon (Goldface, ex-husband)
AbilitiesMerge metal with flesh and shape it to her will

Blacksmith (Amunet Black) is a DC Comics supervillain and a rogue to the Flash III (Wally West). Blacksmith first appeared in Flash: Iron Heights (2001) and was created by Geoff Johns and Ethan Van Sciver. She is the ex-wife of Goldface.

Amunet Black made her live appearance as a recurring character on the fourth and sixth seasons of The Flash played by Katee Sackhoff.

Fictional character biography

For 15 years, Amunet Black has been running and operating the Network, an underground black market in Central City and Keystone City, the twin cities, for supervillains to buy, sell, or move contraband. During that time, she had a brief marriage to Goldface. When they divorced, she stole the elixir that gave him his powers and changed it to gain the ability to merge metal with flesh and shape it to her will. She was able to keep the Network hidden from the authorities and if any villain reformed or quit crime, she made sure the memories of the Network were erased from their minds. Soon, with a vision of power, Blacksmith planned out her takeover of the twin cities, with her as the leader.[1]

First, she organized a new group of rogues, which consisted of the Weather Wizard, Mirror Master II, Magenta, Murmur, Girder, Plunder, and Trickster II. She made sure that her rogues were strong and had better control of their powers. She had Magenta use her powers to keep Girder from rusting and taught the Weather Wizard better control with his wand.[2]

Second, she and her rogues had Flash's allies removed or incapacitated. Mirror Master framed Piper for the murder of his parents. Plunder took out Chunk, shot his mirror image Detective Jared Morillo, and assumed his identity. Then, Mirror Master kidnapped Cyborg and police officer Fred Chyre, trapping them in a mirror universe along with all the other cops of Keystone City. The Rogues then removed the speedsters by giving Jesse Quick's company financial trouble and then sent Jay Garrick to a hospital in Denver when his wife got sick. Finally, Murmur and Mirror Master attacked radio stations and reprogrammed their antennas to broadcast a mirror shield around the twin cities to prevent anyone from coming in or getting out. After everything had been put into place, Blacksmith and her rogues launched their takeover and began by attacking the Flash. They attacked hard and fast, which left Flash tired and badly injured, but just as they were about to finish him off, they were stopped by the Thinker, who wanted to use the Flash's brain to upload information. After the Thinker was defeated, Blacksmith and the rogues resumed their plan and attacked Flash and Goldface. They successfully trounced Flash while Goldface escaped. During the fight, Blacksmith used her power to transform her body into ebony metal, while villains in the Network began to loot and pillage the two cities. Luckily, Goldface lead the people of the twin cities against the Network and Flash managed to defeat the Weather Wizard, Mirror Master, and Trickster II, before they escaped when Captain Cold froze the ground and Mirror Master used it to retreat. With her rogues defeated, she tried a desperate attack by collapsing the bridge that connects Keystone City and Central City. The Flash quickly managed to rebuild the bridge and finally defeat Blacksmith by stranding her on a barge in the middle of the river (she could not enter the water for fear of rusting her metal skin).[3] With her Network discontinued, she was sent to Iron Heights, where she was severely wounded by the escaping Gorilla Grodd.[4]

Although she survived her injuries, Blacksmith has not been seen since that incident, although she did show up for "Digger" Harkness' funeral.

Powers and abilities

Blacksmith's body has been mutated to be the perfect fusion between organic and inorganic. This has given her the ability to fuse organic and inorganic matter. Blacksmith has used the ability to fuse an inorganic object into an opponent causing serious damage. Blacksmith has also used the ability to cause serious damage to inorganic structures.

In other media

Katee Sackhoff portrays Amunet Black, debuting in season four of The Flash.[5] This version is a flight attendant turned crime lord named Leslie Jocoy. After gaining the power to telekinetically manipulate a metal alloy called alnico, Jocoy began carrying a quantity of shards of that metal, took on the alias of "Amunet Black", and became a crime lord specializing in black market metahuman trafficking. Amunet often wears the shards as a sort of large gauntlet (an easy way to carry the supply), but also often keeps them in a bucket close at hand (there must be times Amunet would want to use her bare hand). She once had Caitlin Snow in her employ, but when the latter left, Black refused to take this sitting down and made several attempts to get her back. Later in the season, Amunet is forced to work with the Flash and his allies to stop one of her henchmen after he betrays her in order to steal and sell off her valuable alnico shards. In return, Amunet provides Team Flash with a device to help them stop the Thinker, before escaping. She later returned during the season six episode, "Love is a Battlefield," after entering a turf war with her ex-boyfriend and fellow crime lord, Goldface, over a Rappaccini's Daughter flower that they both wanted to acquire. The Flash was able to stop them by burning the flower, exposing the two crime lords to its pollen and causing them to hear what they really think about each other.

References

  1. ^ Flash Vol. 2 #183. DC Comics.
  2. ^ Flash: Iron Heights. DC Comics.
  3. ^ Flash Vol. 2 #184-188. DC Comics.
  4. ^ Flash Vol. 2 #192. DC Comics.
  5. ^ Abrams, Natalie (August 21, 2017). "The Flash adds Katee Sackhoff as DC Comics villain". Entertainment Weekly. Archived from the original on August 21, 2017. Retrieved August 21, 2017.